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4 results for “mixed-use districts” · minutes

  • Land Use and Sustainability Committee — Minutes 4/15/2026

    Apr 15, 2026

    ·Seattle, WA
    Minutes

    The Seattle Land Use and Sustainability Committee met on April 15, 2026, with five members present, presiding over Councilmember Lin. The committee discussed two ordinances: CB 121195, which addresses interim provisions to expand transitional encampment capacity through zoning amendments, and CB 121196, a comprehensive rezoning measure affecting multiple neighborhoods (University District, Fremont, Madison/Miller, Rainier Beach, and Downtown) designed to increase housing supply, support mixed-use redevelopment, remove construction barriers for alternative building methods, and incentivize community-serving uses. The meeting lasted approximately two hours, ending at 11:35 a.m.

    AI summary

    zoninghousing supplyland usesustainabilityencampment
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  • Minutes of the Special Town Meeting December 7, 2024 1 SPECIAL TOWN MEETING –

    Dec 7, 2024

    ·Wilmington, DE
    Minutes

    On December 7, 2024, the Town of Wilmington held a Special Town Meeting where Article 1 was voted on to amend the Zoning By-law by creating a new MBTA Communities Multi-family Overlay District (MOD) covering approximately 65 acres. The overlay district is designed to allow multifamily housing and mixed-use development as-of-right in compliance with Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 40A and includes four sub-districts: Main Street Mixed Use, Burlington Avenue, Deming Way, and West Street, with underlying zoning provisions remaining in effect except where the MOD specifies otherwise.

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    zoningmultifamily housingoverlay district
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  • Supporting data is available for public review in the Planning Division,

    Mesa, AZ
    Minutes

    The Historic Preservation Board of Mesa, Arizona held a meeting on June 5, 2018 at 6:00 P.M. in the City Council Chambers to address multiple preservation matters in the Temple Historic District southeast of Main Street and Mesa Drive. The Board considered a demolition request for the noncontributing Visitor Center at 101 S. LeSueur and reviewed a proposed mixed-use redevelopment of approximately 6 acres involving rezoning of 4 acres from T5MS and T4NF to T5MSF and 2 acres from T4NF-HD and T4N-HD to T5MSF-HD across four blocks (0 block of South Mesa Drive, 400 block of East Main Street, 0 block of South Udall, and 0 block of South LeSueur). The Board also discussed preservation plans for seven contributing residential structures and one noncontributing structure on South Udall, South LeSueur, and East 1st Avenue that had received demolition denials, and addressed preservation of the Dairy Queen sign at 629 E. Main Street. Additional agenda items included staffing needs for historic preservation, the 2018-2019 Historic Preservation Student Writing and Video Contests, and the 2018 Historic Preservation Awards Program.

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    historic preservationzoningredevelopmentdemolition requesttemple historic district
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  • MEETING MINUTES Office of Economic Development

    Mesa, AZ
    Minutes

    The Economic Development Advisory Board of Mesa, Arizona met virtually on March 2, 2021 at 7:30 a.m. to discuss economic development initiatives in District 1 and surrounding areas. The board unanimously approved the February 2, 2021 meeting minutes. Councilmember Mark Freeman reported on several projects including Winter League games currently playing on the west side of District 1, the Union building nearing completion with one tenant downsized and additional tenants being sought, and mixed-use commercial and residential development being discussed on land near car dealerships. Freeman also noted neighborhood pushback regarding a fourth office building and parking garage at Waypoint (Alma School and Bass Pro Drive), where disagreements exist over building heights—with the developer entitled to construct a three-story building and three-story parking garage but neighbors preferring two-story construction. Director Jabjiniak reported that Waypoint is over 90% occupied and was sold in late 2019 at one of the highest per-square-foot prices in the region.

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