The city is currently waiting for a decision by the Bavarian Administrative Court to develop the Kreuzlinger Feld.
Now the investor is also speaking.
Germering - The main question is whether the city rightly classified the petition against the current development plan procedure as inadmissible.
Should the court see this differently, the proceedings would have to be stopped.
A decision is expected in the town hall this year.
Citizens involved several times
One of the main reasons that led to the referendum was the opinion that the public was not sufficiently involved in the process.
Investor Thomas Vilgertshofer now rejects this once again.
In a detailed statement, the Allingen building contractor writes that the citizens have been involved several times since 2018 and beyond what is legally required - in September 2018 the city council decided by a large majority to draw up a development plan.
From Vilgertshofer's point of view, this participation has borne fruit.
Based on public discussions, the city council decided to limit the maximum building heights.
Instead of the original plan with up to five-story buildings, most of the buildings now have to be two- and three-story.
In addition to these suggestions, there were, according to Vilgertshofer, expert discussions with participants in the citizens' initiative “Germering worth living in”.
On this basis, an urban planning draft was created, which resulted in the present development plan.
According to the investor Vilgertshofer, it is in the nature of things that not all suggestions can be implemented in one plan: "There will never be a plan that meets everyone's wishes."
Like in the neighborhood
According to Vilgertshofer, the present development plan adapts to the surroundings: "The planned development of the Kreuzlinger Feld is just as dense as the existing development in the neighborhood." Make living space more expensive. The investor explains why this is so: “The amount of land in a development is the decisive cost factor in the region. In addition, the reduction in development would blatantly run counter to the principle of economical use of space and land as a resource. "
Thomas Vilgertshofer also points out that the development will create 150 socially supported and an additional ten multi-generational apartments.
The school, which is also planned on the site, and a daycare center are also urgently needed by the city.