The controversial remodel of the Point Reyes Station gas station will go before the Board of Supervisors next Tuesday, and opponents of the project are poised to pack the hearing room. The project would include five apartments, including one affordable unit, as well as a full-sized convenience store at a busy intersection at the entrance to town. In April, the Planning Commission approved a trimmed proposal, agreeing with opponents that the proposed 1,900-square-foot convenience store would violate the county’s coastal zoning rules. The commissioners cut the square footage by more than half and agreed with critics that the building’s front porch should be preserved, contending that it is a key historical feature. They also eliminated a proposed 1,000-gallon propane tank. But one week after the commissioners scaled back the plan, Redwood Oil, the regional company that owns the station, appealed the decision to the Board of Supervisors. The company agreed to eliminate the commercial propane tank but said a full-scale store was necessary to make the project economically feasible. The board will hear Redwood’s appeal—which the company updated this weekend—on Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. at the Civic Center. The Point Reyes Station Village Association has battled the proposal from the start. Besides arguing that the remodel would compromise the building’s character and worsen traffic at already busy intersections, the village association has raised health and safety concerns related to gas emissions. Meanwhile, parents sent a letter to supervisors arguing that it was inappropriate to locate a large convenience store so close to West Marin School. Supervisor Dennis Rodoni, who is a partial owner of a downtown property, will recuse himself from the vote to comply with state ethics rules.