City of Northfield MN
File #: PC M2025-003    Version: 1 Name:
Type: PC Motion Status: Failed
File created: 2/11/2025 In control: Planning Commission
On agenda: 2/20/2025 Final action:
Title: Recommendation to Designate Central Park (421 4th St. E.) as a Local Heritage Preservation Site.
Attachments: 1. 1 - HPC 2025-001 Resolution, 2. 2 - Central Park Designation Form and Appendices, 3. 3 - Original Northfield Plat, 4. 4 - Northfield Central Park SHPO Letter, 5. 5 - Central Park Presentation

PC Meeting Date:                     February 20, 2025

 

To:                                          Members of the Planning Commission

 

From:                                          Mathias Hughey, Associate City Planner

                                          Mikayla Schmidt, City Planner

 

Title

Recommendation to Designate Central Park (421 4th St. E.) as a Local Heritage Preservation Site.

 

Body

Action Requested:                     

The Planning Commission (PC) is asked to recommend to City Council, by a motion of support, that Central Park (421 4th St. E.) be designated a local Heritage Preservation Site and provide comment on the compatibility of the nomination with the Comprehensive Plan.

 

Summary Report:

The city may determine certain places, buildings, structures, properties, district areas, or properties within the community are significant in American history, architecture, archeology, engineering, landscaping, and culture and that those locations should be subject to additional review as they relate to the Land Development Code (LDC).

 

The Heritage Preservation Commission (HPC) initiated an application for Heritage Preservation Site Designation for Central Park, located at 421 4th St. E, at their November 2024 meeting. After submitting the proposal to the State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO) (in accordance with city code and state statute) the HPC received a letter from them describing the nomination as “ideal.” At their January 2025 meeting, the HPC voted to recommend to City Council that Central Park be designated a local Heritage Preservation Site.

 

City code establishes six criteria that need to be considered in review of heritage preservation site designations. They are:

(1)                     That the quality of significance in American history, architecture, archeology, engineering, and culture is present in districts, sites, buildings, structures, landscaping, and objects that possess integrity of location, design, setting, materials, workmanship, feeling, and association; or

(2)                     That are associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad patterns of our history; or

(3)                     That are associated with the lives of persons significant in our past; or

(4)                     That embody the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction, or that represent the work of a master, or that possess high artistic values, or that represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction; or

(5)                     That have yielded, or may be likely to yield, information important in prehistory or history; or

(6)                     That have a unique location or singular physical characteristics representing established and familiar aspects of a view, vista, site, area, or district in the city.

 

The HPC made a series of findings to justify the recommendation to the City Council, attached as Exhibit B of the HPC resolution, finding that Central Park met four of the six potential designation criteria.

 

In establishing the process to designate a local heritage preservation site, city code requires the PC review the application and make a recommendation to City Council, it also provides City Council the option to request the PC provide a statement on the compatibility of the designation with the Comprehensive Plan.

 

In addition to SHPO’s description of the park as an “ideal” candidate for a local designation, the 1991 Historic Sites Survey identified Central Park as a historic site noting it was, “significant for the retention of its nineteenth-century feeling.” The attached application provides a detailed account of the history of the park, and the justification for designating it a heritage preservation site. The key points are:

1.                     Central Park was designated a public square on the original 1856 plat for the town. At that time, the surveyor placed a large stone at each of the four corners of the park and surveyed the rest of the blocks and streets using that block as the foundation.

2.                     The park has retained much of its form and configuration throughout the past 149 years.

3.                     The park was the subject of two Minnesota Supreme Court cases that are responsible for the retention of much of its historic character.

4.                     The park is a defining feature of Northfield’s oldest residential neighborhood, predating most or all of the houses in the vicinity.

5.                     The park was dedicated by John North from his original purchase of 160 acres for use as a public square “for ornamentation and improvement as grounds of pleasure, amusement, recreation, or health.”

 

Character-defining features of Central Park include:

1.                     The diagonal crosswalks that intersect in the center.

2.                     The central circular feature - formerly a fountain, the seat wall and plaza were originally constructed in 1954.

3.                     The rows of trees around the perimeter.

 

The HPC identified the period of significance as 1855 - 1954 with the expressed intent to include the construction of the seat wall.

 

By designating Central Park a local heritage preservation site, any proposed changes to or construction within the park would require a Certificate of Appropriateness. Street projects adjacent to the park exceeding a cost of 1 million dollars would trigger a non-binding review by the HPC, which could submit written comments to the City Council regarding the project.

 

Staff presented to the Parks and Recreation Advisory Board (PRAB) at the January 22, 2025, meeting to provide an opportunity to comment. The PRAB voted to recommend designation as a Heritage Preservation Site.

 

Staff Recommendation:

Staff recommends the Commission recommend Central Park receive a local Heritage Preservation Site designation.

 

Alternative Options:

The PC may recommend against designating Central Park as a local heritage preservation site or may table the matter pending additional information. 

 

Financial Impacts:                     

NA

 

Tentative Timelines:                     

November - Heritage Preservation Commission initiates application

January - Heritage Preservation Commission review and recommendation

January - Park and Recreation Advisory Board review and recommendation

February - Planning Commission review and recommendation

March - Public hearing at City Council, and City Council review and decision

April - If designated, the ordinance goes into effect