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Developer's gated community plan tests old land protections
Developer's gated community plan tests old land protections

Yahoo

time30-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Developer's gated community plan tests old land protections

ST. HELENA ISLAND, S.C. (WSAV) — No golf courses, gated communities or resort developments. That's the deal that was made decades ago, protecting St. Helena Island. One developer has been looking to flip the script through a property of Dalamo Road. 'We don't believe that just because you can bring in $18 million, that you get to make new rules from rules that have been made 25-27 years ago,' Executive Director of the Penn Center Robert Adams, Ph.D., said. The plan for the Pine Island Development is a private gated community with a golf course. Adams, along with other members of the St. Helena community, think that goes against the Cultural Protection Overlay (CPO) set in 1999. Adams believes it also goes against the counties current goal of smart growth. 'We have to sort of manage our development and our growth here. We are overwhelmed with growth at the moment. Our infrastructure is overwhelmed,' said Adams. But developer, Elvio Tropeano claimed Pine Island wouldn't interfere with the counties goal. It's been shaped in a manner that aligns with all of the goals of Beaufort County with responsible growth, with minimizing infrastructure stresses, with increasing tax basis while not creating additional tax stress,' Tropeano said. Adams believes a golf resort will push St. Helena natives away from the grounds they have long protected. But Tropeano believes the development would provide them with a resource. 'It'll be the single largest employer on St. Helena Island. It'll be the single largest investment on Saint Helena Island ever. It'll be the development with the largest amounts of open space in all of Beaufort County,' said Tropeano. Tropeano has submitted a map amendment request to remove the property from the protected district. He will have to take that proposal in front of the county's planning commission. That meeting is scheduled for May 5. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Developer submits revised plan to build golf course on St. Helena Island
Developer submits revised plan to build golf course on St. Helena Island

Axios

time17-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Axios

Developer submits revised plan to build golf course on St. Helena Island

Nearly two years after Beaufort County, South Carolina, officials rejected a controversial plan to build a golf course and gated community on St. Helena Island, the property owner is taking another shot at getting his project approved. Why it matters: The island, which is near Georgia's border, is home to significant Gullah Geechee and civil rights history. It is home to the Penn Center, which in the 1860s became the first school in the South established for formerly enslaved Black people. During the 1960s, the campus served as a planning center for Martin Luther King Jr., John Lewis and other members of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. Driving the news: Developer Elvio Tropeano of Pine Island Property Holdings LLC submitted an application to planning officials to build 49 homes and an 18-hole golf course this month. Tropeano wants the county to remove the cultural protection overlay from the island that prohibits certain new developments, like golf courses and gated communities. What they're saying: Tropeano did not respond to Axios' requests for comment, but in the application he notes the proposal will have a "higher ratio of open space compared to any development in the county." According to the application, the developer said the project will protect more than 7 miles of shoreline. Tropeano, who sued the county after his original request was rejected, states in the application the current zoning designation would allow him to build 149 homes, much higher than what he's proposing. "My property will be developed with an outcome where everyone wins, or 'by right' development requiring no public input at all," he told The Island News in September 2024. The other side: David Mitchell, Atlanta Preservation Center executive director and board chair of the Penn Center, told Axios the new project would still be prohibited under the cultural protection overlay. "In the event that the worst case scenario occurred, what it does is further dismantle the value of an identity of the [Gullah Geechee] people and it lays bare that want overwhelms anything," he said. Context: The Gullah Geechee people are descendants of Africans who were enslaved on plantations along the Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina and Florida coasts. The Gullah Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor Commission notes that the isolated nature of the plantations created a unique identity visible in its language, food, music and arts. Threat level: Over the last few decades, developers have encroached onto Gullah Geechee land, constructing large vacation homes and other projects that attract wealthier people to the coast. Yes, but: Gullah Geechee residents are fighting to protect their heritage. On Georgia's Sapelo Island, residents in the Hogg Hummock community are fighting a rezoning proposal that would allow larger houses to be built on the island. On Hilton Head Island, 94-year-old Josephine Wright was sued by a developer after she refused to sell her property to accommodate their plans. Wright died last year, and the developer reached a settlement with her family. What's next: The application has to be considered by the Beaufort County Planning Commission, which would recommend it for approval or denial.

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