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30 results for “industrial parks”

  • 26-0532: A resolution approving a proposed Agreement between the City and County of Denver and Elite Industries Inc. for on-call restoration, ecological, and technical services, citywide. Approves an agreement with Elite Industries Inc. for $3,000,000.00 and for five years for on-call restoration, ecological, and technical services, citywide (PARKS-202683497). The last regularly scheduled Council meeting within the 30-day review period is on 5-18-2026. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 4-21-2026.

    Apr 13, 2026

    ·Denver, CO
    Proposal
    Source
  • BL2025-1157: An ordinance approving greenway conservation easement agreements between the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County, through the Metropolitan Board of Parks and Recreation, and Ingram Industries Inc. for greenway improvements at 4400 Harding Pike (Parcel No. 10315000700) (Proposal No. 2025M-054AG-001).

    Nov 20, 2025

    ·Nashville, TN
    Proposal
Source
  • 0677-2025: To authorize the Director of the Department of Recreation and Parks to enter into contract with Franklin County Historical Society, dba Center of Science and Industry for summer camp programming services; to authorize the expenditure of $60,000.00 from the Recreation and Parks Operating Fund. ($60,000.00)

    Mar 4, 2025

    ·Columbus, OH
    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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  • BL2024-360: An ordinance authorizing The Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County to accept new public sanitary sewer mains, sanitary sewer manholes and easements, for five properties located at Nolensville Park Road, Rocky Fork Road, Newsom Lane, and Johnson Industrial Boulevard in Williamson County, also known as the Nolensville Public Works facility project (MWS Project No. 24-SL-12 and Proposal No. 2024M-049ES-001).

    Apr 25, 2024

    ·Nashville, TN
    Proposal
    Source
  • 0696-2024: To authorize the Director of Recreation and Parks to enter into a grant agreement with the State of Ohio, Department of Development, Office of Energy and Environment (OEE) for the Blackburn Park and Alum Industrial Energy Efficiency Grant Project and accept a grant in the amount of $156,193.00; to authorize the appropriation of $156,193.00 in the Recreation and Parks Grant Fund; and to declare an emergency. ($156,193.00)

    Feb 29, 2024

    ·Columbus, OH
    Proposal
    Source
  • 3518-2023: To authorize the Director of the Recreation and Parks Department to modify an existing contract with DesignLevel, LLC to provide design services for the 1511 Alum Industrial Interior Renovations Project; to authorize the transfer of $15,000.00 within the Recreation and Parks Voted Bond Fund; to authorize the amendment of the 2023 Capital Improvements Budget; and to authorize the expenditure of $15,000.00 from the Recreation and Parks Voted Bond Fund. ($15,000.00)

    Dec 1, 2023

    ·Columbus, OH
    Proposal
    Source
  • 2563-2023: To authorize the Director of Recreation and Parks to enter into contract with Elford, Inc. for the 1511 Alum Industrial Interior Improvements Project; to authorize the transfer of $1,542,378.00 within the Recreation and Parks Voted Bond Fund, to authorize the amendment of the 2023 Capital Improvements Budget; and to authorize the expenditure of $1,542,378.00 from the Recreation and Parks Voted Bond Fund. ($1,542,378.00)

    Sep 6, 2023

    ·Columbus, OH
    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
  • 23-NONCONFORM-0006: Request: Nonconforming Rights Application for a parking area for automobiles and heavy trucks that serve the adjacent industrial use. Project Name: Nonconforming rights Location: N 32nd St (West abutting property to 101 N 32nd St Owner: West End Transportation Partners Applicant: Charles Podgursky Jurisdiction: Louisville Metro Council District: Donna Purvis - District 5 Presenter Christopher French, AICP, Planning Supervisor Case Manager: Mark Pinto, Associate Planner

    May 8, 2023

    ·Louisville, KY
    Proposal
    Source
  • 1268-2023: To grant a Variance from the provisions of Sections 3312.03(D), Administrative requirements; 3312.25, Maneuvering; 3312.29, Parking space; 3312.49(C), Minimum number of parking spaces required; and 3312.51, Loading space, of the Columbus City Codes; for the property located at 3573 AGLER RD. (43219), to permit reduced development standards for an industrial development in the L-M, Limited Manufacturing District (Council Variance #CV23-006).

    Apr 21, 2023

    ·Columbus, OH
    Proposal
    Source
  • 1125-2023: To authorize the Director of the Department of Recreation and Parks to enter into contract with Franklin County Historical Society, dba Center of Science and Industry ("COSI") for summer camp programming services; to authorize the expenditure of $70,000.00 from the Recreation and Parks Operating Fund; to waive the competitive bidding provisions of Columbus City Code Section 329.15 ; and to declare an emergency. ($70,000.00)

    Apr 5, 2023

    ·Columbus, OH
    Proposal
    Source
  • 2974-2022: To authorize the Director of Finance and Management to enter into contracts with 7 Star Industries and Phoenix Contracting, on behalf of the Recreation and Parks Department, for the purchase of cargo containers; to authorize the appropriation of $20,000.00 within the CDBG Fund 2248 in accordance with the 2020 HUD Amended Annual Action Plan; to authorize the transfer of $10,448.00 within the Recreation and Parks Voted Bond Fund; to authorize the amendment of the 2022 Capital Improvements Budget; and to authorize the expenditure of $109,407.25 from the Recreation and Parks Voted Bond Fund and CDBG Fund. ($109,407.25)

    Oct 27, 2022

    ·Columbus, OH
    Proposal
    Source
  • 1343-2022: To grant a Variance from the provisions of Sections 3312.03(D), Administrative requirements; 3312.21(B), Landscaping and screening; 3312.25, Maneuvering; 3312.27(2), Parking setback line; 3312.29, Parking space; and 3312.51(1)(2), Loading space, of the Columbus City Codes; for the property located at 3573 AGLER RD. (43219), to permit reduced development standards for an industrial development in the L-M, Limited Manufacturing District (Council Variance #CV21-112).

    May 4, 2022

    ·Columbus, OH
    Proposal
    Source
  • 0659-2022: To authorize the Director of Recreation and Parks to enter into contract with DesignLevel to provide design services for the 1511 Alum Industrial Interior Renovations Project; to authorize the transfer of $95,915.89 within the Recreation and Parks Voted Bond Fund; to authorize the amendment of the 2021 Capital Improvements Budget; to authorize the expenditure of $95,915.89 from the Recreation and Parks Voted Bond Fund. ($95,915.89)

    Feb 25, 2022

    ·Columbus, OH
    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
  • 21-1331: A bill for an ordinance changing the zoning classification for 901 Navajo Street in Lincoln Park. Approves a map amendment to rezone property from I-A, UO-2 to C-MX-8 (industrial to mixed-use 8 stories), located at 901 Navajo Street in Council District 3. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 11-9-21.

    Oct 29, 2021

    ·Denver, CO
    Proposal
    Source
  • 2336-2021: To grant a Variance from the provisions of Sections 3311.28(a), Requirements; 3312.21(A), Landscaping and screening; 3312.49, Minimum numbers of parking spaces required; 3367.15(A)(D), M-2 manufacturing district special provisions; and 3367.29 (B)(3), Storage, of the Columbus City Codes; for the property located at 3756 AGLER RD. (43219), to permit reduced development standards for an industrial development in the M-2, Manufacturing District (Council Variance #CV21-046).

    Sep 3, 2021

    ·Columbus, OH
    Proposal
    Source
  • 2021-1530: Ordinance amending the Pittsburgh Code, Title Nine, Zoning, Article I, Section 902.03 Zoning Map, by changing from P, Parks, to NDI, Neighborhood Industrial, a portion of one parcel in the Allegheny County Block and Lot System, 20th Ward. (Public Hearing held 7/20/21)

    May 21, 2021

    ·Pittsburgh, PA
    Proposal
    Source
  • Page 1 of 4 City of Shelbyville, Tennessee

    Shelbyville, IN
    Agenda

    The Municipal Planning Commission of Shelbyville, Tennessee held a regular meeting on May 22, 2025, to consider three rezoning requests and two site/subdivision planning decisions. The rezoning requests included: converting a 2.59-acre parcel from Light Industrial to General Business for potential mixed-use development, rezoning 0.33 acres from General Business to General Industrial for Cooper Steel Fabricators, and rezoning approximately 30.35 acres from General Business to Light Industrial for airport-related facilities including the MTSU Flight Academy. The Commission also reviewed a 39,342-square-foot parking lot and access drive proposal for 27 vehicles on Deery Street, and considered a major subdivision preliminary plat amendment for The Preserve at Lexington Cove to expand from 17 to 42 cottages on 7.32 acres.

    AI summary

    zoningrezoningsubdivision planningsite developmentairport facilities
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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.

    AI summary

    economic developmentemploymentpopulation statisticsindustrial parksregional planning
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  • PERTINENT FACTS ABOUT THE CITY OF ALLENTOWN GENERAL

    Allentown, PA
    Other

    The City of Allentown, Pennsylvania's third-largest city with 125,845 residents according to the 2020 U.S. Census, operates under a Home Rule Charter adopted by voters on April 23, 1996, which took effect January 1997. City government consists of an elected Mayor serving a four-year term as chief executive, a seven-member part-time City Council elected at large for staggered four-year terms, and a City Controller with a four-year term; the Council holds regular public meetings at least twice monthly. The city maintains 2,000 acres of parkland and is home to the 10,000-seat PPL Arena, home of the Lehigh Valley Phantoms hockey team. Major employers in the region include ADP, Air Products and Chemicals, PPL, and Mack Trucks, with additional industries encompassing healthcare services, apparel, and fabricated metal products. Allentown is strategically positioned within 300 miles of major eastern seaboard metropolitan areas and served by Interstate 78, U.S. Routes 22, 222, and 309, plus regional rail freight services from Norfolk Southern Railway and R.J. Corman Railroad Group.

    AI summary

    city governmentparkseconomic development
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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.

    AI summary

    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.

    AI summary

    zoningland use districtszoning ordinance
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  • 1 6678999.1 City of Syracuse Industrial Development Agency One Park Place

    Syracuse, NY
    Minutes

    On November 21, 2023, the City of Syracuse Industrial Development Agency Board held a meeting to consider a public hearing and vote on an Inducement Resolution for JMA Tech Properties, LLC's proposed $24 million warehouse and logistics center project. The project, located across from JMA's current campus, would create approximately 40 new jobs and expand the company's footprint in the city. The board approved the prior meeting minutes and received a Finance Committee report recommending positive consideration of the JMA project and other contract matters.

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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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  • 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.

    AI summary

    zoningland use districtscommercial zonesresidential zoningindustrial districts
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  • Northampton County, PA

    Easton, PA
    Other

    Northampton County Council scheduled its 2026 meeting calendar with regular meetings on the first and third Thursday of each month at 6:30 p.m. in room #3116 at 669 Washington Street, Easton, Pennsylvania, with an organizational meeting on January 5, 2026, and several rescheduled dates due to holiday conflicts. The county will hold a public hearing on April 16, 2026, at 6:30 p.m. regarding the proposed 1921 at Dixie Avenue Tax Increment Financing District, a 12.58-acre project comprising two parcels (9.81 acres and 2.77 acres) containing the former Dixie Cup Factory site and adjacent parking area in Wilson Borough, with a possible vote on the ordinance scheduled for May 7, 2026. The Northampton County Industrial Development Authority will implement the Tax Increment Financing Plan and proposes to issue bonds or notes to finance project costs.

    AI summary

    Source
  • 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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  • TOWNSHIP OF BALDWIN 10 Community Park Drive Pittsburgh, PA 15234

    Pittsburgh, PA
    Minutes

    The Baldwin Township Commissioners held a pre-agenda meeting on July 26, 2021, where they discussed speed abatement measures (estimated at $2,500-$5,000 per speed hump), truck traffic restrictions, and trash ordinance enforcement. The board opened and evaluated four road construction bids, ultimately accepting El Grande Industries' bid of $133,891.95, contingent on engineer review. Additional discussion items included potential road weight limit signage and ongoing matters related to a Consent Order and property issues.

    AI summary

    road constructionspeed enforcementtraffic managementtrash ordinancebudget allocation
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