Fort Mill and Lake Wylie homes, Rock Hill businesses among latest York County plans.
When the York County planning commission next meets, items on the table will include more than 200 homes and two gas stations.
Proposals span the Lake Wylie, Fort Mill and Rock Hill areas. The largest involves yet more homes at an existing Lake Wylie development off S.C. 274.
Here are the items facing the commission when it meets March 9:
▪ Fielding Homes has an application in for the next four phases of Paddlers Cove in Lake Wylie. Plans involve 195 homes on almost 135 acres.
The property is on the east side of Bethel Road, off Paddlers Cove Drive. Back in 2014 the county rezoned for Paddlers Cove, overall a 396-acre project off S.C. 274. The newest phases would bring about a dozen new roads or road extensions, plus a required turn lane off Bethel School.
▪ Virginia developer GRM Investments Inc. applied for a new road to allow for commercial development off I-77. Scotchman Drive would be more than 800 feet, across from the existing Flying J location at 2435 Mt. Holly Road.
The site is almost 53 acres. Plans include a new service station and one adjacent outparcel. A traffic impact analysis for the project notes a 5,000-square-foot convenience center with 20 standard and six diesel fueling stations. A site plan shows the existing service station across from the Flying J would be demolished during buildout of the new roadway.
The new road for the service station would align with the Flying J entrance on the opposite side of Mt. Holly.
▪ Mainbrook Estates would add 10 homes on almost 10 acres on Osborne Farm Road in Fort Mill. Tysniger Acquisitions applied for the new subdivision. Submitted plans show the new, cul-de-sac Mainbrook Circle with lots at 12,000 to almost 15,000 square feet. The homes would be east of York Southern Road, south of Hammond Road.
▪ The owner of almost three acres on Saluda Road in Rock Hill wants to rezone the site to allow for a convenience store. The site comes to the Saluda and Craig Road intersection. The site has a mix of residential and non-residential buildings on it now. County staff recommends against the rezoning, citing a lack of utilities in the area.