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MORNING HEADLINES  |  Charleston City Council on Tuesday unanimously approved a fast-moving proposal to create a special development district that would allow the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC) to be exempt from some of the city’s zoning restrictions.

  • (Editor’s Note: Click here for an updated version of this story.)

The project, which has reportedly been in the works for nearly a year but has not been widely discussed by the public, would allow for rapid growth and expansion in a zone around MUSC.

“A lot of tweaking and changes have been going on as a result of community input and advocacy input,” Charleston Mayor William Cogswell said at the Sept. 23 meeting. 

The district overlay zone would allow MUSC to demolish 17 properties near the hospital without approval from the city’s Board of Architectural Review — though approval would still be needed for other buildings and for new construction. It would increase height limitations on new construction to up to 250 feet in some areas and remove restrictions for off-site park-and-ride facilities or garages. It also would remove restrictions on hours of operation for businesses, among other changes. 

Despite the seeming victory for the university and project leaders, Cogswell called the proposal a “compromise.”

“Did MUSC get everything they want? No,” he said at Tuesday’s meeting. “It’s an example of how things should work, and I appreciate everyone being willing to lean in.

The city received more than a dozen public comments on the proposal at the start of the Sept. 23 meeting. While many shared support for MUSC’s efforts to expand and provide higher quality care for Lowcountry patients, they also shared concerns for historic preservation, flooding, increasingly bad traffic and a growing lack of available parking in the area. 

But council member and chair of CARTA Mike Seekings, who chairs the Charleston Area Regional Transit Authority (CARTA), said he is not as worried about traffic worsening in the area.

“Today, MUSC is the biggest customer of CARTA,” he said. “We move on and off campus every month 40,000 riders. That’s 40,000 cars that don’t come onto the peninsula.”

In fact, he added, it’s probably going to get better with time.

“If you think about this holistically, as a large campus that is going to plan across the board, it’s going to be a long time before you see anything come out of the ground, including a brand-new cancer center,” Seekings said. 

“We feel really comfortable that we can work with [MUSC] to take care of this.”

Historic Charleston Foundation President and CEO Winslow Hastie said in late August he was excited that MUSC wants to double down on the Charleston peninsula, but he added he was concerned about the lack of commitment on preserving historic sites on the campus.

Representatives from the Harleston Village community adjacent to  the MUSC campus listed several concerns in an Aug. 26 statement, including a lack of clarity and robust language on traffic impacts and stormwater management. 

“How this overlay is handled will be a test of the city’s seriousness in managing development transparently, implementing the Comprehensive Water Plan effectively and safeguarding neighborhood livability,” the statement said. —Skyler Baldwin

  • Check out a longer version of this story in the Sept. 26 print edition of the Charleston City Paper.
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