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Feb 2, 2015
Maps
Maps are an important, perhaps the most important, way to look at land use issues, and the county zoning map has been principal representation of the ordinances used to protect the agricultural economy these last 45 years. Other maps are beginning to crop up in this discussion of the future of Napa county and I will start putting them all in one place here.
In 2022 RH, formerly Restoration Hardware, purchased the Napa Soda Springs property with the intent to revive, and probably expand, the resort that existed there at the turn of the 20th Century, the ruins of which still exist today. The corporate entity of the project is called 1990 Soda Canyon Road LLC.
Amber Manfree has created a map of the property showing it's developable areas.
SCR will be covering the development of this project on this page. It has the potential to generate as much concern as the Walt Ranch project has.
2017 Atlas Fire maps showing the extent, progression by day, and sequence of reopening areas to residents. The deep indentation in the upper edge of the fire line encircles the whole of the residences on the Foss Valley Plateau at the end of Soda Canyon Road
..one more find I just turned up - a map designed for wine makers that shows locations of vineyards with grapes available for purchase. Not directly helpful in any way that's obvious, but a really interesting project nonetheless.
The map below is not mine. It is a poster available on the internet. They might be using the free, open source dataset from David Thompson's Napa Wine Project website which lists 1,100+ commercial wine producers in Napa. Even Draselle's place is in their list, so a lot of that may be low-impact, small places that happen to have a permit.
Update 5/4/21Kelli Anderson sent over an email from her archives in which Planning Director Morrison supplied a map from 2015 of legally potential winery development in the County, a worst case scenario that should have been analyzed in an EIR at the time of the WDO in 1990 or with the General Plan EIR in 2007.
On Tue, May 4, 2021 at 4:56 PM Morrison, David wrote:
Kellie,
During the Joint Board of Supervisors/Planning Commission meeting on March 10, 2015, the slide provided below was included in my presentation:
The estimate provided was based on GIS analysis performed by County staff. It looked at all existing parcels (in 2015) that met the following criteria:
· Unincorporated area;
· No existing on-site winery;
· A minimum of 10 acres in size for parcels zoned AW or AP; or all parcels without a winery zoned I, IP, or GI; and
· Excluded conservation easements, protected lands, and water bodies.
No other factors were considered such as traffic, fire, biological resources, water availability, slope, earthquake faults, utilities, etc.
Of course, the County could not approve 4,523 new wineries. The current General Plan Program EIR only analyzed a total of 225 new wineries between 2005 and 2030. To date, 138 new wineries have been approved since January 1, 2005. To allow more than 225 new wineries would likely require a new Program EIR.
David
Original Post 10/2/14Map commissioned by Geoff Ellsworth to show the potential number of wineries that could be developed given existing county codes prior to the county's own tabulation..