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©
2002 |
Circle
5 changing to permanent residences
New manufactured homes are making
a residential area out of the Circle Five Mobile Home and RV Park on the
outskirts of Sisters on Highway 20.
New owners Scott and Jane
McCleery have hired new managers Cory and Denise Smith and have changed
the name to Sisters Mobile Home and RV Park.
"We bought five double wides
from Fuqua Homes in Bend," McCleery said. "Each is a two bedroom, two
bath with about 900 square feet of living space. They'll look like a stick-built
house once we put on siding and dormers -- they're real nice.
"We'll be renting them out,
as soon as we can get permits from the city."
He noted that he would also
like to have space rental available for those who own mobile homes and
need a place to live.
It's part of a gradual plan
to change the makeup of the park. What was once a place for out-of-town
contractors or vacationers to park a recreational vehicle for a long or
a short-term stay will make way for a more permanent residential community.
According to city planner
Neil Thompson, the zoning of the park is residential. The RV use is not
an appropriate use of residential zoning, according to Thompson, but was
grandfathered in when the park was brought into the city.
The changes at the park are
gradual enough that they won't trigger city review.
"Right now, they have told
me that they are exchanging five units of manufactured homes for another
five units," Thompson said. "They are taking older units out and newer
units are going in their place. This kind of a one-for-one trade out does
not require a site plan review."
Assistant Manager Charlotte
Goodenough said that dual use of the park will continue for now.
"Right now, as well as a mobile
home park, it's an RV park. We have RVs that live here," she said. "Existing
mobile homes will either be sold or they will be re-done. Most are so
old, they will probably have to be sold, and new ones brought in."
Thompson also indicated that
replacing a single wide with a double wide mobile home is a less intensive
use and probably wouldn't require a site review plan either. Such a plan
would be required if individual lots within the park were to be re-configured,
or different driveways put in.
The park is not hooked up
to the sewer, although it may be required to hook up once the system is
completed.
Septic systems won't be a
problem, according to the planner. "All the chemicals of an RV toilet
are harder on the environment than a septic system," Thompson said. "Sewage
from houses is actually much less difficult to deal with."
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