30 results for “historic districts”
30 results for “historic districts”
The Toledo City Historic District Commission held a meeting on June 23, 2025, to consider a demolition request for a structure at 928 N Huron Street, an 1877-built two-family dwelling in the Vistula neighborhood that has suffered severe neglect. The case, which was deferred from a May 19 hearing, was evaluated against Toledo Municipal Code requirements for demolition certificates of appropriateness in historic districts. The property owner, Westminster Row Partnership, sought demolition approval through contractor Vistula Management Company, with staff noting the surrounding neighborhood remains stable despite the subject building's deteriorated condition.
AI summary
On June 9, 2025, the Coatesville City Council held a regular meeting where they approved the May 27 meeting minutes and accounts payables by unanimous vote (6-0). Dr. Lisa Doan-Harley, chair of the Historical Commission, presented information about the Town Talks and Village Walks program—a Chester County initiative in its 31st year—announcing that Coatesville's first tour would take place on June 26, 2025, featuring the city's historic district with emphasis on Main Street, Lincoln Highway, and Art Deco architecture dating from the interwar period (1925-1941).
AI summary
The Tulsa Metropolitan Area Planning Commission held Meeting No. 2930 on February 5, 2025, with nine members present. The commission approved minutes from the prior meeting (January 22, 2025) by a 9–0 vote. The commission reviewed PUD-530-3, a minor amendment request by A-Max Sign Company to modify signage standards at the southwest corner of East 19th Street South and South Lewis Avenue in City Council District 4, which would increase allowable identification signs from one to two and raise the maximum height of ground signs from 10 feet to 28 feet to accommodate YWCA letters on an existing clock tower structure. The proposed amendment would align PUD-530 standards more closely with underlying OL zoning requirements and would require additional approval from the Tulsa Preservation Commission due to the site's location within a historic preservation overlay.
AI summary