Politics & Government
Mooresville Commissioners Meet Tonight, Could Decide On Mega Development
Mooresville's Board of Commissioners will likely vote on a controversial high-density development plan Monday night, reports say.

MOORESVILLE, NC -- The Mooresville Board of Commissioners convenes Monday evening, and could possibly make a decision on a controversial rezoning measure that would turn more than 100 acres of pastoral land on the bank of Lake Davidson into high-density residential and commercial development.
Mooresville’s Board of Commissioners delayed a vote on the contentious plan in early June due to opposition but now seem likely to bring the measure to a vote at the July 10 meeting, which starts at 6 p.m., according to the Mooresville Tribune.
The commissioners had been poised to vote at the June 5 meeting on rezoning the 140-acre tract of land on Highway 115, also known as Mecklenburg Highway, that sits in Iredell County right at the Mecklenburg County line in order to accommodate high-density development. The scheduled vote, however, drew intense criticism from some area residents who say the scheme to develop the land would create environmental and quality of life problems.
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Around 145 people attended the June 5 meeting at Mooresville’s town hall, most in opposition to the development plan, the Tribune said at the time.
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The rezoning plan, spearheaded by developer Hinckley Gauvain, would rezone the current single family residential property to commercial mixed use and neighborhood mixed use. Rezoning would pave the way for up to 115 single-family homes, up to 300 condominiums, 120 townhomes and up to 300 multi-family apartments, and up to 65,000 square feet of commercial and retail space.
Critics of the development plan have started a petition, which has more than 1,000 signature. The petition asked the town’s board to deny the rezoning application, arguing that the plan is too high density to meet watershed protection mandates, would add a significant traffic burden to the region and would “destroy the lake, environment and rural nature of this area.” Within hours of its creation, hundreds of residents had already signed it.
“The traffic on this road is already a problem,” said Robin Rosenfeld on the Change.org petition page. “Adding more cars without adding more infrastructure is absurd.”
“Traffic nightmare,” said Francoise Wolf. “Also any time there is an accident on 77 (daily), traffic gets re-routed to 115. A one-way 10 minutes commute to work to Ingersoll Rand sometimes takes me 45 minutes. One of the reason I live in the Lake Norman area is for quality of living, but it seems that this area is becoming saturated and over-crowded very quickly.”
“There are too many variables that have not been addressed,” said Alan White in comments on the petition page.
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Photo via the Town of Mooresville
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