An effort to reopen a revitalized version of the Wrightstown Country Store is gaining momentum.
The owner of the popular institution in Wrightstown has been granted zoning relief by the township’s Zoning Hearing Board, a hurdle that had to be cleared if the newly imagined store was to come to fruition.
Owner Eric Kretschman wants the location to feature a new deli, food store and flower shop. But to create things as envisioned, he needed variances from local zoning law.
After a recent hearing, the proposed project earned relief that included zoning variances that will allow parking on the front and side yards of the property, the expansion of the existing retail use beyond 25%, a higher-than-standard-allowance maximum impervious surface coverage ratio of 67.9%, and more.
The zoning relief may be good news for Kretschman and others who want to see the store reopened, but it doesn’t mean that work can begin.
Chester Pogonowski, chairman of the Wrightstown Board of Supervisors, the three-person board that locally governs the township, noted that land development approval still must be obtained. That would come, if at all, from supervisors only after a public hearing or hearings.
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