
In our front page article from our Nov. 26, 2024, issue entitled, “Will Historic Flooding from Milton Impact Pasco’s Future Land Use Decisions?,” we talked about a potential mixed use development off the north end of Kenton Rd., just on the north end of Wesley Chapel, part of what is planned as Pasco County’s “Connected City.”

Kenton Rd. will end up being an important travel corridor of this ‘new city’ and many of the properties along it have been gearing up for major redevelopment.
The latest one, at the very opposite south end of Kenton Rd. and Elam Rd., on the northwest corner of the intersection, is a currently overgrown rural site of just under 10 acres, with an old, unkempt and boarded-up house, a blown-down fence, a barn, a dirt road and an unfinished concrete block building that is rumored by locals to possibly have a few old cars in it.
On Dec. 19, a rezoning request was filed for this property to take it from an agricultural designation to become a commercial Master Planned Unit Development (or MPUD) and, according to Pasco’s website, “to allow for the development of a maximum of 10,000 sq. ft. of Commercial/Retail/Office Space, 90,000 sq. ft. of Self-Storage facility and 120 hotel rooms.”

While that request may seem out of character for this currently rural area, the request may be exactly what Pasco County officials have in mind for the location, given what else is coming along Kenton Rd. and the near-future road widening plans currently under county review that extend a mile north, but would eventually go another half mile up to Tyndall Rd. (right map), changing the dirt Kenton Rd. into something much more suburban in nature.
A plan first submitted in 2022 showed Kenton Rd. becoming a two-lane divided roadway with a median, and Elam Rd. to be widened to accommodate a left turn lane onto Kenton Rd. This widening is planned to serve traffic for a roughly 100-acre development on the east side of Kenton Rd. just north of Elam Rd. That plan made it through to Dec. 2023, with a Notice of Intent (NOI) issued from the county.
Phase 2 of the Kenton Rd. widening was submitted later, and would serve a 150-acre mixed-use project on the northwest end of Kenton Rd. Plans for this road work were submitted as recently as Nov. 2024 and are actively moving forward.
The developers of this new 10-acre commercial project (labeled “PROJECT SITE” on left map) plan to time their project to take advantage of all this widening, because their “Substandard Road Application” references the road work being done by the other developments.
Since this is a rezoning request, it will still require public hearings with both the Pasco Planning Commission and later with the Pasco Board of County Commissioners for approval, with those dates still to be determined.
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