May 27, 2022

Kettlesong Summer Update

Hey Everybody!

Craig and I wanted to give you all a quick update before everyone settles into their typical long southern summer season, or is lucky enough to go away for a while to a place that has a lot of shade and cool breezes.

First off, York Prep has water! The City and YPA have recently come to a tentative agreement that would allow a water utility extension to the school site at Kettlesong. That’s no small thing and City Council will need to approve the proposed extension to make it official, but we’re confident that we will get an official go ahead at that time. Upon approval, we expect to begin sitework for the school.

Secondly - we know there’s no one thing that makes Kettlesong unique. It’s a lot of things that when carefully crafted and intentionally fashioned make it one of a kind, so it should come as no surprise that we’re writing our own community code. And we’re especially happy about last week’s submission of our community development standards for Kettlesong to Rock Hill’s Planning Department. It includes a lot of technical information including a traffic impact analysis, a master utility plan, architectural design standards, wetlands preservation work, and even a planned phasing strategy for a walkable, mixed-use master planned project. There’s more, but you get the picture. It’s a benchmark submission and marks the culmination of over 2 ½ yrs. in development and design and the contributions of some very talented professionals.

Lastly, and maybe the most perplexing of all the many hurdles we have to overcome is the question of a utility extension that would provision sewer and water to Kettlesong. It’s a tough one, and to date we have not yet been able to secure a commitment from the City for those services. We say ‘yet’ because we are confident that it is not a matter of “if” but “when” we are able to reach an agreement that is mutually beneficial to both the city and for Kettlesong. 

Unfortunately, there’s no ‘easy button’ when you’re going for great so we’re just going to have to get good with things taking a bit more time.

Hope you all have the best summer yet!

-Nik

April 13, 2022

The Roost: Making Sense of Things

I was in the parking lot of our local Walmart Neighborhood Market (that ‘neighborhood market’ part always strikes me as odd) the other day to pick up some stuff that we had run out of when I saw this–

Things seemed out of place and to my eye. This was off.

As is my want, I thought about other things that felt off. Things that belie a deeper understanding or meaning. Things that are different than what meets the eye. Let’s see how that applies to a new community development.

If you live in a suburb, your house is probably sitting on a lot that feels reasonably spacious – a front yard, a backyard, and side yards that maintain enough distance from your neighbors and the street to ensure that you’ll be able to maintain a level of privacy. We’re made to believe that a house must have enough room around it to be livable and proper. 

When considering a whole subdivision, this ‘spacious’ suburban formula also makes it more likely that some other, not so great stuff happens–

  • Dogwood Lane is a no-man’s land – most of your living will happen in the back of the house, leaving the street and your neighborhood feeling like a non-place.
  • Fat Houses – bigger lots encourage oversized and out-of-scale buildings that cost more to build and maintain. 
  • Increased utility costs are often the result of having to run more pipe, cable, and asphalt to cover the distances. 
  • Not a whole lot of natural open space left to enjoy – all the land was used for bigger lots.
  • No places in the neighborhood to go shop, worship or just hang out – all the land was used for bigger lots.
  • More trips to the gas station and the shop – you’d better love driving, because you’ll need your car to do most anything.

The term most often used to describe this infamous list is a phenomenon called ‘sprawl’. That’s a post all by itself. But that doesn’t have to be our fate. Let’s consider a better, smaller lot-size option (see Kettlesong). Some things that may not be so apparent to the uninitiated. 

A smaller, more compact lot size may feel – well – smaller, that’s true, but think about all the goodness in that smaller package–

  • Dogwood Lane becomes a place to see and be seen. A smaller lot means your house/porch is closer to the street, which in turn means that you can keep an eye on things and get to know your neighbor. Things feel safer and more welcoming. 
  • Homes are smaller, but they’re more efficient, less costly, and emphasize quality (good design) over quantity (more square footage). They are ‘right-sized’
  • Lower utility bills. The homes are closer to one another, so the roads are shorter (good for walking), and so are the things you don’t see (like the pipes in the ground).
  • Lots of open space. You didn’t have to cut down all those trees and destroy that lovely meadow because – you guessed it – the lots are smaller. Compact neighborhoods = preserved wild places.
  • Dense (there I said it) development means that you have more space for a better mix of uses like a YMCA, a local eatery, or a neighborhood grocer. 
  • You can leave your car in the driveway. Remember, the roads are shorter, which means you can lead a healthier lifestyle by walking, riding a bike, or jumping in your tricked out golf cart to get where you have to go.

The term most often used to describe this list of ingredients is the phenomena called ‘better living’ (that’s its own post too). Congratulations! You now know something that most people don’t – density is your friend. 

BTW - I waited for the occupants of the Audi R8 (MSRP ~ $175K) to emerge from our ‘neighborhood market’ and out she came. Granny was taking it slow. Aided by a walker and who I imagined was her very attentive son. Sometimes a little more information is all you need for things to make sense.  

Nik

April 8, 2022

Update: YPA Utilities Approval

On January 24th, York Preparatory Academy requested a utility service extension for their new campus off Mt. Holly Road. The request was unanimously approved by Rock Hill City Council which gets them one step closer to beginning construction of a new YPA campus at KS! The innovative, nature-based teaching approach - Place Based Education - will be the first of its kind in the area.

April 5, 2022

York Prep’s Lanny Adamson Talks Place-Based Education and YPA Kettlesong

Our friends at RevenFlo talked with another of our friends, Lanny Adamson, for their podcast, Old Town New World. Lanny is Associate Managing Director of York Preparatory Academy and will serve as the principal of the new YPA Kettlesong Campus.

Hear how YPA was awarded the 2021 Best High School Award by the US News and World Report and a National Blue Ribbon for being in the top 1% of schools in the entire country. Oh, and they were also named a School of Distinction and added to the Advanced Placement Honor Roll.

Lanny speaks on Old Town New World about how place-based education uses the natural world and surrounding community to round out students' experiences. This "experiential" education curriculum gives students a foundation in their immediate environment that also strengthens their understanding and confidence in the larger world.

Click here to listen to the full episode.

April 4, 2022

Kettlesong Community Events Survey

There’s a long list of ingredients that goes into creating a community. Typically, that list includes shared values and interests, but it also requires a lot of thoughtful planning and importantly – great event programming. An added benefit beyond the entertainment value that comes with most events is the opportunity for people to connect and come together.

In January, we asked about the kinds of community events you think you might want to see at KS and there was a lot of participation, including some good suggestions for what we ought to consider. Check out the results below.

Apparently, there wasn’t a whole lot of interest in our totally made up green worm festival (aka Archips semiferanus, ‘oak leaf rollers’) but there was a lot of energy around live music, food trucks, and craft fairs.

Those of you writing in your own responses were big on family-focused events like Halloween costume contests, Easter egg hunts, and other ideas that oriented around the holidays. Other choices included an outdoor theater and symphony events.

As always, our surveys are totally reliant on your participation so thanks for contributing! In the meantime, keep a lookout for our next survey.

March 31, 2022

York Prep Kettlesong

Bringing Place-Based Education to South Carolina

The shovels are about to break ground on a new educational option in our area, York Preparatory Academy Kettlesong. But who is York Prep and what does this mean for local families?

The History

York Preparatory Academy opened its doors in 2010 with the goal to provide South Carolina students a quality charter education that would prepare them for success and for life. At their Eastview Road location, York Prep serves 1,665 students each year in grades Kindergarten through 12th grade with the support of over 175 faculty and staff members. Their mission is simple: grow each child (academically, emotionally, and in character) to their fullest potential each year in partnership with their family, teachers, and community.

York Prep’s model of individual student growth has created a track record of success. Since 2010, York Prep has won awards such as the Palmetto Gold Award (2012), School of Distinction Award for Student Academic Growth (2017, 2018), and the Advanced Placement District Honor Roll (2018). In 2018, York Preparatory Academy was awarded the National Blue Ribbon Award for Exemplary High Performing School being in the top 1% of schools in the United States for student growth. In 2021, York Prep High School was named a 2021 Best High School by the U.S. News and World Report.

family walking on nature trail

Kettlesong Location

Due to York Prep’s success and the 1,000+ student admission wait list each year, York Prep was approached by the state to replicate its campus, providing additional school choice options for students in South Carolina. Researching educational needs in various locations, York Preparatory Academy committed to build the new campus within the Kettlesong planned community due to its location, proximity to the highway, and vision for connection to nature.

"The location of the new campus will provide an answer to the need for a high-quality, innovative choice in education for families living in the Kettlesong, Rock Hill, Fort Mill communities and surrounding communities. With a community focus in connecting families to nature, Kettlesong is the ideal setting for York Preparatory Academy’s place-based education school. In this model, the new campus will allow students time spent outdoors, thus increasing their mental, physical, and social well-being. The Board of Trustees and staff of the district look forward to continued collaboration with the York Preparatory Academy team as they engage in our joint mission of putting kids first.”

- Chris Neeley, Superintendent of the South Carolina Public Charter School District

Place-Based Education

York Prep Kettlesong will continue the tradition of high academic excellence and student growth through a new educational model of place-based education. What is place-based education and how does it fit in the Kettlesong planned community?

Placed- based education is authentic learning infused in the community, where students become critical thinkers and problem solvers by understanding the world they live in. Focusing on their place in their culture, environment, and economies, students learn how to strategically maneuver through complex local and global issues beginning in the early grades and deepening as the years progress.

In place-based education, a student’s learning environment can be located inside or outside the classroom with the emphasis placed on connecting the minds and hearts of students to the interdisciplinary world. On the school grounds, the new 22-acre campus will promote critical thinking and a connection with the natural environment featuring indoor and outdoor classroom spaces, theater-style meeting spaces, and classrooms for group collaboration. The grounds feature a greenhouse, wetlands, orchards, and outdoor learning spaces to grow the students’ understanding of environmental stewardship. York Prep’s teachers and staff will coordinate with local businesses and non-profit organizations to build hands-on learning experiences built around the environment, local cultural, and economic activities fostering their understanding of civic responsibility. Such curriculum and assessments would follow the South Carolina State Education Standards and Law. With the resources of the surrounding community, York Prep will work to develop learners who can grasp these foundational analytical and problem solving skills so that each student “possesses a lifelong connection to their place and the knowledge, skills, and determination to positively impact it throughout their lives.”

"Because of our place, we have a duty of respect and remembrance to those who have come before us. We have a duty of care for those who will come after."

- Brian Myrup, Managing Director of York Prep

York Preparatory Academy Kettlesong

Enrollment and Information

York Preparatory Academy at Kettlesong is projected to open Fall 2023 serving grades Kindergarten through 5th, with 6th-8th grade added in subsequent years. As a public charter school, York Prep is open to all students in South Carolina regardless of their zoned district. York Prep will publish information about the application process and lottery information on YorkPrepSC.org. Parent Information Sessions will be offered in the future and dates will be posted to York Prep’s website. York Prep welcomes all families interested in learning more about our exciting new campus! To be added to the York Prep Kettlesong newsletter, please complete the interest form available at the link below.

January 10, 2022

The Roost: 2022 – Exactly Where You Are

This post was supposed to be some version of a year in review. Well, we know how that went. And then I thought, “Okay, I’ll say something about what we have to look forward to in this year coming up.” Well, we know how that’s going, which kind of left me with nowhere to go. As I tortured this age old dilemma of how to ring in the new year, it occurred to me that rather than relive all those missed opportunities – and other moments I’d rather forget about or wring my hands about an uncertain future – I could just relax and take in the moment. You know, the ‘Here & Now’.

I know you’ve all heard some tired version of how to ‘find your bliss’ and all of that, so if nothing else, this is just a friendly reminder to all of you (and to myself) that sometimes the best place to be is right where you are.

Happy New Year Everyone!

Nik

January 10, 2022

Community Input: Dec. 9, 2021

On Thursday, Dec. 9th, we gathered in the evening with fellow members of the community at Pinetuck Golf Course to discuss the future of the region in which Kettlesong will be developed.

Currently this area south of Rock Hill is mostly woods and meadows, but it runs alongside Interstate 77, and it will definitely feel the impact of growth and development in the near future.

The question, of course, is not whether development will come, but what it will look like. How will the region evolve over the next 10, 20, 30 years? This unknown future was the topic of the input session we hosted on Thursday. We are following up with those who attended, and we plan to have another meeting - for any concerned - in January.

We hope the community can continue to come together and weigh in on the future that we want in this place. See you in January!

January 10, 2022

Kettlesong Grocery Shopping Survey

How do you like to shop for groceries? Maybe you use a list and stock up every week or two. Maybe you swing by the store every couple of days to grab a few things you can carry in one load. However you shop, you probably have a favorite place to buy your food and other everyday essentials.

You all delivered some valuable feedback, showing a fondness for traditional grocery stores like Harris Teeter, Publix, or Food Lion. You were also interested in specialty stores and farmers markets, which helps us narrow down the types of stores we'll try to put in Kettlesong.

With the goal of creating the best place ever, our next survey will ask you what types of community events you enjoy. Stay tuned!

January 10, 2022

Community

How do you create the right set of conditions that encourage people to come together as a community? At the top of the list is walkability; a place that’s easy to get around in without having to get in a car. To get people out and about, we've designed Kettlesong to be compact and efficient with lots of tree-lined streets that create shady sidewalks, and other event-rich environments that get people out into the public square. The architecture is also designed in a way that respects and compliments the people it serves. These things help to create a ‘home place’.

Rediscovering What Neighbors and Neighborhoods Can Be

When homes sit comfortably on a street, next to a park, next to a market, next to untamed woods with people of all shapes and sizes—a picture of a neighborhood begins to emerge. We think the home town should move closer to home. Kettlesong's home town will have shops, a public library, a YMCA and a public school all easily accessible by Kettlesong's homes.

Places to Gather or Meander—On Occasion and on the Daily.

We're bringing back the art of the old fashioned village square with an eye towards the future by making a gathering place, not a crowded strip mall. Think of it like an outdoor living room for friends, families and neighbors. It's Kettlesong's front porch to hang out, people-watch and support the craft and commerce of our community.

Bikes whizzing by, kids throwing the ball around, people walking back from the community garden with veggies to share. From hobby clubs and youth activities to parks, pavilions and gardens, Kettlesong provides a lively backdrop for whatever interests you.

We’re expanding the Kettlesong family spirit into the region as a whole by creating a people link between Kettlesong and other communities in the region. Expect to walk, run or bike from Kettlesong to Rock Hill in a pedestrian friendly environment.

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