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30 results for “commercial industrial”

  • 25-ZONE-0097: Request: Change in Zoning from M-2 Industrial to C-2 Commercial and a Detailed District Development plan with and binding elements. Project Name: Hull St. Brew Pub Location: 524 Baxter Ave. Applicant: Auckland Land Trust Representative: Scot Heath Jurisdiction: Louisville Metro Council District: 4 - Ken Herndon Case Manager: Jude Mattingly, Planner II

    May 1, 2026

    ·Louisville, KY
    Proposal
    Source
  • Zoning Commission September 10, 2025 – Meeting Minutes

    Sep 10, 2025

    ·Fort Worth, TX
    Minutes

    The Zoning Commission met on September 10, 2025, with 10 commissioners present, approving the previous month's minutes unanimously. Two continued cases were considered: ZC-25-120, a request to rezone 1.73 acres at 3401 Longvue Avenue from Neighborhood Commercial to Light Industrial, was recommended for denial unanimously; and ZC-25-131, a request to add 119.98 acres to a Planned Development for light industrial uses (limited to data centers, governmental, educational, and health care facilities) with enhanced setback requirements adjacent to residential districts, was presented but the document appears incomplete regarding the commission's action.

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zoningrezoningplanned development
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  • CB 121005: AN ORDINANCE relating to land use and zoning; updating and clarifying requirements for solid waste storage, staging areas, and access for residential, commercial, and industrial development; adding new requirements for Neighborhood Residential and industrial zones; updating provisions for alternative arrangements to meet requirements; and amending Sections 23.49.025, 23.54.040, and 23.84A.036 of the Seattle Municipal Code.

    Mar 31, 2025

    ·Seattle, WA
    Proposal
    Source
  • Tulsa County Zoning Regulations Adopted by Resolution September 30, 2024

    Sep 30, 2024

    ·Tulsa, OK
    Proposal

    Tulsa County adopted comprehensive zoning regulations by resolution on September 30, 2024 (CMF# 20241854). The 179-page document establishes zoning standards organized into 19 chapters covering agricultural, residential, office, commercial, and industrial zoning districts; allowed uses; parking and signage; procedures; and enforcement. The regulations address supplemental use requirements, accessory structures, temporary uses, nonconformities, violations and penalties, and measurement standards.

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  • 2023-1723: Ordinance amending the Pittsburgh Code, Title Nine, Zoning, Article I, Section 902.03 Zoning Map, by changing from HC, Highway Commercial District to SP-9/Bakery Square District, certain property roughly bounded by Penn Avenue, East Liberty Boulevard and the Pittsburgh Regional Transit East Busway, all in the Allegheny County Block and Lot System, 11th Ward; and by changing from UI, Urban Industrial District to SP-9/Bakery Square District, that certain property roughly bounded by Penn Avenue and the existing easternmost boundary of the SP-9/Bakery Square District; in the Allegheny County Block and Lot System, 12th Ward; and by changing from HC, Highway Commercial District to UI, Urban Industrial District, that certain property roughly bounded by the northwestern boundary of the SP-9/Bakery Square District and Norfolk Southern Rail line, in the Allegheny County Block and Lot System, 11th Ward. (Sent to the Planning Commission for a report and recommendation on 7/12/23) (Report and Recommendation received on 1/24/25) (Public Hearing held 7/8/25)

    Jul 10, 2023

    ·Pittsburgh, PA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 23-ZONE-0051: Request: Change in Zoning from M-2 Industrial to C-2 Commercial with a Detailed District Development Plan with Binding Elements Project Name: Dixie Highway Auto Sales Location: 7791 Dixie Highway Owner: BHPH Properties, LLC Applicant: BHPH Properties, LLC Representative: Bowman Consulting Group Jurisdiction: Louisville Metro Council District: 12- Rick Blackwell Case Manager: Jay Luckett, AICP, Planner II

    Jul 7, 2023

    ·Louisville, KY
    Proposal
    Source
  • 22-ZONE-0142: Request: Change in Zoning from C-2 commercial and M-2 industrial to PEC Planned Employment Center with a Revised Detailed District Development Plan for a truck parking lot with Binding Elements. Project Name: 13300 Old Henry Rd Location: 13300 Old Henry Rd Owner: Fetter Properties, LLC. Applicant: Fetter Properties, LLC. Jurisdiction: Louisville Metro Council District: 17 - Markus Winkler Case Manager: Jay Luckett, AICP, Planner II

    Jul 7, 2023

    ·Louisville, KY
    Proposal
    Source
  • CB 120570: AN ORDINANCE relating to land use and zoning; removing certain existing provisions for the Industrial Commercial zone; and amending Sections 23.42.126, 23.49.014, 23.50.002, 23.50.012, 23.50.014, 23.50.020, 23.50.027, 23.50.028, 23.50.034, 23.50.046, 23.69.022, and 23.74.010, and repealing Sections 23.50.026, 23.50.032, 23.50.033, 23.50.038, 23.50.039, 23.50.041, 23.50.053, and 23.50.055, of the Seattle Municipal Code.

    Mar 31, 2023

    ·Seattle, WA
    Proposal
    Source
  • CB 120533: AN ORDINANCE relating to land use and zoning; amending Chapter 23.32 of the Seattle Municipal Code at page 53 of the Official Land Use Map to rezone the western 15,943 square feet of the parcel located at 2501 Northwest Market Street from Industrial Commercial with a 65 foot height limit and an M Mandatory Housing Affordability Suffix (IC 65 (M)) to Neighborhood Commercial 3 with a 75 foot height limit, P pedestrian designation, and M Mandatory Housing Affordability Suffix (NC3P 75 (M)) and accepting a Property Use and Development Agreements as a condition of rezone approval. (Application of Pacific Fishermen, Inc. C.F. 314470, SDCI Project 3037590-LU)

    Mar 14, 2023

    ·Seattle, WA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 2022-0817: Ordinance amending the Pittsburgh Code, Title Nine, Zoning, Article I, Section 902.03 Zoning Map, by changing from LN., Local Neighborhood Commercial to UI, Urban Industrial, 3 parcels in the Allegheny County Block and Lot System, 12th Ward. (Public Hearing held 12/14/22)

    Oct 7, 2022

    ·Pittsburgh, PA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 0367-2022: To grant a Variance from the provisions of Sections 3312.03(D), Administrative requirements; 3312.25, Maneuvering; 3312.29, Parking space; and 3312.51(1)(2), Loading space, of the Columbus City Codes; for the property located at 2189 STELZER RD. (43219), to permit reduced development standards for an industrial and commercial development in the L-M, Limited Manufacturing District (Council Variance #CV21-106).

    Jan 28, 2022

    ·Columbus, OH
    Proposal
    Source
  • Columbia, South Carolina August 20, 2019

    Aug 20, 2019

    ·Columbia, SC
    Other

    This document outlines Article 4 of Columbia, South Carolina's Zoning Ordinance and Land Development Regulations, effective August 20, 2019, establishing the organization and framework for land use regulations. The article is divided into three main sections covering principal uses (allowed land uses by zoning district), accessory uses and structures, and temporary uses and structures, each with corresponding permit requirements and applicable standards. The principal use table systematically classifies allowable uses into broad classifications (residential, commercial, industrial, etc.), use categories, and specific use types to provide a structured basis for identifying permitted uses within each zoning district.

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  • 6/12/2016 Wilmington, DE Code of Ordinances

    Jun 12, 2016

    ·Wilmington, DE
    Other

    The document is the Wilmington, Delaware Code of Ordinances Article III regarding noise control and abatement, effective June 12, 2016. It establishes definitions for key noise-related terms including A-weighted sound pressure levels, ambient noise levels, decibels, and various categories of events (city-sponsored, commercial) and zoning districts (residential, business, industrial). The article also defines emergency vehicles and other relevant terminology to be used in the enforcement of noise regulations throughout the city.

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    noise controlordinancezoning districtspublic health
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  • 6/11/2016 Knoxville, TN Code of Ordinances

    Jun 11, 2016

    ·Knoxville, TN
    Other

    This document presents Chapter 18 of the Knoxville, Tennessee Code of Ordinances, which establishes regulations for noise control within the city. The ordinance declares that excessive noise is detrimental to citizens' physical, mental, and social well-being and establishes standards to eliminate or reduce unnecessary and excessive noise. The chapter includes detailed definitions of key terms such as ambient noise, decibel measurements, impulsive sound, and distinctions between commercial, industrial, and residential uses for purposes of noise regulation.

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  • 6/11/2016 Fresno, CA Code of Ordinances

    Jun 11, 2016

    ·Fresno, CA
    Other

    The City of Fresno Code of Ordinances, Article 1, establishes noise regulations ("Noise Ordinance of the City of Fresno") with ambient noise level limits varying by district and time of day, measured in decibels. Residential areas are limited to 50 decibels from 10 pm to 7 am, 55 decibels from 7 pm to 10 pm, and 60 decibels from 7 am to 7 pm; commercial areas are limited to 60 decibels from 10 pm to 7 am and 65 decibels from 7 am to 10 pm; and industrial areas have a 70-decibel limit at any time. The ordinance provides technical definitions including ambient noise (averaged over 15 minutes excluding the offending noise), decibel, emergency work, frequency, hertz, and microbar. These regulations were originally enacted as Ordinance 1076 and repealed and added by Ordinance 72-163 in 1972.

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  • San Diego County Zoning Ordinance

    San Diego, CA
    Proposal

    Ordinance No. 10095, adopted by the San Diego County Board of Supervisors on December 8, 2010, amended the county's Zoning Ordinance to update and clarify various sections covering applicability, definitions, civic and commercial use regulations, animals, temporary uses, accessory uses, and procedures. The Board determined the amendments were necessary for public health, safety, convenience, and welfare, and reorganized the ordinance into two main parts: Basic Provisions (covering general provisions, definitions, and use classifications for residential, civic, commercial, industrial, agricultural, and extractive uses) and Use Regulations (detailing specific regulations for each zoning district). The ordinance restructured the Table of Contents to provide clearer organization of the numerous zoning districts and use types throughout the county.

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    zoningland use regulationscounty ordinance
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  • Official Zoning Map of the Township of Harris

    Harrisburg, PA
    Other

    This is the Official Zoning Map of Harris Township in Centre County, Pennsylvania, adopted in 2016 as Ordinance 16-05, which supersedes the previous zoning map from 1978. The map designates various zoning districts including agricultural, residential (single, two, and multi-family), commercial, industrial, and cultural zones, along with overlay districts for ridge protection and corridor management. The map was prepared by the Centre Regional Planning Agency and identifies key municipal features, road networks, and the Regional Growth Boundary for the township.

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    zoningland useagricultural districtresidential districtcommercial district
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  • Greater Hazleton 86,432 Luzerne County 317,343

    Hazleton, PA
    Other

    This document presents a community profile and statistical overview of Greater Hazleton, Pennsylvania, including demographic and economic data. Key figures show Greater Hazleton has a population of 86,432 within Luzerne County's 317,343 residents, with a 20-mile commute radius encompassing 343,000 workers and 693,450 people. The profile highlights the region's accessibility to major markets, employment trends showing growth in management and service sectors while production jobs declined from 28.0% to 17.7% between 2010-2017, and details on four business and industrial parks totaling significant acreage for commercial development.

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    economic developmentemploymentpopulation statisticsindustrial parksregional planning
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  • HAZLE TOWNSHIP LUZERNE COUNTY PENNSYLVANIA 2003 ZONING ORDINANCE

    Hazleton, PA
    Other

    Hazle Township's 2003 Zoning Ordinance, as amended through October 2016, establishes comprehensive land use regulations for the township in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania. The ordinance defines nine zoning districts (R-1 and R-2 residential, B-1 and B-2 commercial, I-1 and I-2 industrial, M-1 mining, C-1 conservation, and BP business park), along with a healthcare overlay district, and includes regulations for accessory structures, setbacks, special exceptions, and planned residential developments. The document serves as the primary tool for managing growth and development while addressing community development objectives through dimensional requirements, use restrictions, and procedural standards for development applications.

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    zoningland useresidential districtscommercial industrialdevelopment regulations
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  • ZONING ORDINANCE THE TOWNSHIP OF SOUTH ANNVILLE LEBANON COUNTY,PA

    Lebanon, PA
    Proposal

    This is a zoning ordinance document for South Annville Township in Lebanon County, Pennsylvania, establishing comprehensive land use regulations through Chapter 27. The ordinance defines eleven zoning districts including Agricultural, Rural Residential, Low/Medium Density Residential, General and Highway Commercial, Industrial, and Floodplain districts, with detailed requirements for permitted uses, lot dimensions, building heights, parking, and yard setbacks for each district. The document serves as the regulatory framework governing land development, building compliance, and district boundary interpretation within the township.

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    zoningland use districtszoning ordinance
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  • 27-1 CHAPTER 27 ZONING PART 1 SHORT TITLE

    Ambler, PA
    Proposal

    This document is a table of contents and organizational outline for Chapter 27 of a zoning ordinance, dated May 18, 2011. It establishes the framework for the jurisdiction's zoning code, defining 15 parts covering short title and legislative intent, definitions, zoning districts (including residential, commercial, office, and industrial zones), and general provisions such as open space preservation, fencing, accessory uses, and design standards. The ordinance creates multiple residential district classifications (R-1, R-1-A, R-2, R-3, and mixed-use residential), as well as specialized districts for garden apartments, elderly housing, commercial, and office uses, each with specified use regulations, dimensional requirements, and parking standards.

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  • Ordinance 13757

    Des Moines, IA
    Proposal

    Ordinance 13757 amends the Des Moines Municipal Code to establish noise regulations by repealing and re-enacting Sections 16-139, 16-140, and 16-144. The ordinance prohibits noise disturbances and sets maximum permissible sound levels based on zoning category and time of day, ranging from 50-75 decibels (dBA) depending on whether the receiving land use is residential, commercial, industrial, or a noise-sensitive area. The regulations include exemptions for emergency signaling devices, amplified sound, motorized vehicles, construction, and certain domestic power tools operating between 7:00 A.M. and 10:00 P.M.

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    noise regulationszoningmunicipal code
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  • Phoenix Zoning Ordinance (complete, 10/17)

    Phoenix, AZ
    Other

    The Phoenix Zoning Ordinance Chapter 6, Supplement No. 35, establishes zoning district classifications for the City of Phoenix, including residential, commercial, industrial, and mixed-use categories. Residential districts range from suburban ranch/farm (S-1, S-2) through single-family estates (RE-43, RE-24, RE-35, R1-14 through R1-6) to multifamily residence districts (R-2 through R-5, R-4A, R-I). Commercial districts include restricted office (R-O, C-O), intermediate (C-2), general (C-3), and special commercial (B3), plus Commerce Park and parking districts (P-1, P-2). The ordinance also defines industrial districts (A-1 light, A-2), specialized zones (Resort RH, High-Rise H-R and H-R1, Mid-Rise, Urban Residential UR, Golf Course GC, and Airport Noise Impact Overlay), and planned development frameworks (Planned Area Development, Planned Community, Planned Shopping Center, Regional Shopping Center). The document reflects a March 23, 2011 amendment consolidating the Planning Department with the Development Services Department, effective April 22, 2011.

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    zoningland use districtscommercial zonesresidential zoningindustrial districts
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  • Tucson, AZ Code of Ordinances

    Tucson, AZ
    Other

    Tucson's Code of Ordinances establishes noise control standards for residential, commercial, and industrial properties, with maximum permissible sound levels ranging from 62-85 dB(A) depending on property use and time of day. The ordinance prohibits specific activities that produce plainly audible noise beyond property lines, including continuous music or amplified sound exceeding 15 minutes, loud vehicle loading/unloading, disruptive animal sounds, and raucous vocalizations. Construction activities are restricted during evening and nighttime hours (8:00 p.m. through sunrise on weekdays and all day Sunday), with limited exceptions for residential work during daytime hours.

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    noise controlconstruction restrictionszoning regulationspublic nuisance
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  • title 42 zoning and property restrictions

    Tulsa, OK
    Other

    Title 42 of the Tulsa Revised Ordinances is the Zoning Code of the City of Tulsa, adopted October 4, 2014, comprising 18 chapters and four appendices governing zoning districts and land use restrictions. The code establishes purposes including promotion of public health, safety, and welfare; prevention of overcrowding and population concentration; and conservation of property values through appropriate land use allocation. The ordinance creates multiple zoning districts including Agriculture, Residential General, Parking, Office, Commercial, Mixed-Use Institutional, Corridor, Scientific Research and Development, and Industrial, each with distinct provisions. The code also regulates signs, landscape requirements, historic preservation, parking, enforcement, and board of adjustment procedures, with detailed use unit summaries and zoning matrices provided in appendices.

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  • COLUMBIA TOWNSfflP ZONING ORDINANCE Adopted 1982 Major revision 2007

    Columbia, SC
    Proposal

    Columbia Township's Zoning Ordinance, originally adopted in 1982 with major revisions in 2007 and subsequent amendments through 2020, establishes land use regulations across six zoning districts: Residential (R1), Residential-Resort (R2), Residential-Old Plats (RO), Agricultural (A), Commercial (C), and Industrial (I), along with a Residential Mobile Home district. The ordinance provides detailed dimensional standards, permitted uses, special use permit requirements, and regulations for non-conforming properties, flood hazard areas, and lot configurations. The document was developed based on the 2002 Master Plan with 2014 amendments based on the 2009 Master Plan Update, guided by the Columbia Township Planning Commission, Board of Trustees, and Zoning Board of Appeals.

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    zoningland use regulationszoning districts
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  • Noise Control Ordinance of the City of Newark

    Newark, NJ
    Proposal

    The Noise Control Ordinance of the City of Newark, codified in Chapter 20, establishes definitions and regulatory framework for noise control within the city. The ordinance replaced a prior 1966 noise control ordinance (R.O. 1966 § 17:31) through Ordinance 6 S+FH, 62586. Key definitions establish measurement standards using A-weighted sound levels in decibels (dBA) as measured by sound level meters, with reference pressure of twenty micropascals. The ordinance defines regulated categories including commercial operations, construction, demolition, emergency work, hospital quiet zones (within 500 feet of hospital boundaries), industrial areas, and mobile sources, with specific inclusions and exclusions noted for each category.

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  • Penn Township Zoning Ordinance - eCode360

    Lansford, PA
    Proposal

    Penn Township's Board of Supervisors presented a comprehensive Zoning Ordinance for public hearing on January 10, 2022, establishing updated Chapter 27 regulations for Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. The ordinance creates multiple zoning districts including Conservation, Agricultural, Suburban Residential, Village, Medium Density Residential, Mixed Use, Commercial, Limited Commercial, Quarry, Industrial, Commercial Light Industrial, and overlay districts for airport safety and natural resources. The document outlines detailed provisions covering district regulations, use permissions, setbacks, parking requirements, landscaping, signage, and performance standards to guide future development in Penn Township.

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    zoningland usedevelopment regulations
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  • I HAZLE TOWNSHIP LUZERNE COUNTY PENNSYLVANIA 2003 ZONING ORDINANCE 2003-1-6-1

    Hazleton, PA
    Other

    This is the table of contents and initial pages of Hazle Township's 2003 Zoning Ordinance (as amended and adopted August 13, 2018) in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania. The ordinance establishes comprehensive zoning regulations covering general provisions, definitions, general regulations for structures and land use, zoning district classifications (including residential, commercial, industrial, conservation, and overlay districts), special exceptions procedures, planned residential development standards, and supplemental use regulations. The document serves as the township's primary land use control instrument, organizing zoning requirements across multiple articles addressing topics such as setbacks, accessory structures, height limitations, and district-specific development standards.

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    zoningland useresidential districtscommercial districtsindustrial districts
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  • OAKLAND Oakland, California, Planning Code Page 1 OAKLAND PLANNING CODE 1997

    Oakland, CA
    Other

    This document is the Oakland Planning Code of 1997, a codification of Oakland, California's general planning ordinances organized into Title 17 covering planning regulations. The code has been supplemented through Ordinances passed up to June 9, 2020, and includes 935 total pages (as indicated by the page count). The code comprises multiple chapters establishing zoning regulations and land use classifications, including chapters governing the City Planning Commission, Landmarks Preservation Advisory Board, open space zones (OS), residential zones (RH, RD, RM, RU, R-80), commercial zones (CN, CC, CR, C-40, C-45, CBD, HBX), industrial zones (M-20, M-30, M-40, CIX, IG, IO), and specialized zones such as medical center (S-1) and civic center (S-2) commercial zones. The document serves as the primary regulatory framework defining permitted uses, development standards, and zoning designations for properties within Oakland.

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