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Auburn planning board approves Chick‑fil‑A site plan with sidewalk review condition

5335853 · July 9, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

The Auburn Main Planning Board on July 8 approved a site plan and special‑exception request to build a Chick‑fil‑A restaurant at 65 Mount Auburn Ave, but attached a condition requiring the applicant to coordinate with the city engineer on final pedestrian connectivity before a building permit is issued.

The Auburn Main Planning Board on July 8 approved a site plan and special‑exception request to build a Chick‑fil‑A restaurant at 65 Mount Auburn Ave, but attached a condition requiring the applicant to coordinate with the city engineer on final pedestrian connectivity before a building permit is issued.

The board approved the proposal after discussing vehicle access, parking and multiple options for pedestrian access to the shopping plaza. The applicant is proposing a roughly 5,100–5,200 square‑foot Chick‑fil‑A with a dual‑lane drive‑through, two covered drive‑through canopies, about 90 interior seats and outdoor patio seating, plus a trash enclosure and site lighting.

Why it matters: the site sits at the rear of the Turner Street Center Plaza, adjacent to Hobby Lobby and Mattress Firm, near a rotary on Turner Street. Staff, the applicant and the board debated whether to require a new sidewalk connection to Turner Street (which would involve steep grade changes and crosswalks near the rotary) or to require a shorter connection to the existing Hobby Lobby walkway inside the plaza. The board’s final condition asks the applicant to work with the city engineer to finalize a Turner Street connection if feasible, and to provide a sidewalk connection to the Hobby Lobby walkway.

Applicant presentation and site details Joey Fonseca, project manager with Bowler, summarized the proposal, saying the development would use a roughly 40,000 square‑foot pad on a 3.9‑acre parcel. Fonseca said the project would provide about 25 parking spaces within the Chick‑fil‑A pad itself and rely on shared parking across the plaza; utilities are currently stubbed to the site and stormwater already flows to an existing basin near Turner Street. Fonseca said, “we're proposing a 5,200…

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