Unfortunately, I think this whole episode has exposed some real loopholes in the Riverside Avondale Zoning Overlay. The Overlay was the end-result of countless meetings between residents, developers, consultants and neighborhood representatives, and its goal (among others) was to create zones that would be both conducive to development and enhance the neighborhood's human-scale and historic character.
Now, with the very first development proposed since the Overlay, we're getting a building that, quite frankly, couldn't have been built in, say, Arlington. I'm not talking about the design--personally, I'm fine with it--but rather the shockingly few parking spaces the developer is being required to provide for a 100+ seat restaurant and associated residential and office uses. Councilman Bill Bishop got the developers on record as not wanting to commit to actually building the 11 actual additional spaces on Oak St. across from their parcel that they included in their site plan. At the very least, I think some sort of shared parking arrangement with area surface lots (McIver, Publix etc.) should have been required, because the parking load on surrounding streets unquestionably is going to increase.
The parking credits/reductions built into the Overlay have somehow netted us a situation in which the developer is being allowed to create exactly ONE NEW SPACE beyond what's already there (and already heavily utilized). IMHO, that's just crazy.