30 results for “site plan review”
30 results for “site plan review”
The Ada County Historic Preservation Council held a meeting on September 2, 2025, at the Ada County Courthouse to discuss updates on agriculture protection areas, the EXPO Idaho History Project, the Dry Creek Ranch Historic Structures, America's 250th Anniversary initiatives, and outreach to other historic groups within Ada County. The council also reviewed minutes from previous meetings and discussed implementation of Ada County's Historic Preservation Plan. The meeting agenda included discussion items related to the council's mission of identifying, evaluating, and protecting historically significant buildings, sites, and structures in Ada County.
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The Housing, Land Use, and Transportation Committee of St. Petersburg held a February 13, 2025 meeting to address affordable housing and mixed-use development in specific zoning categories (CRT-1 and CRT-2), with discussion of potential updates to Affordable Housing Site Plan Review regulations related to state changes to the Live Local Act. The committee also discussed City Council affordable housing priorities and reviewed a draft resolution, while planning future agenda items including Residential Land Development Regulation updates scheduled for March 6, 2025. The four-member committee, chaired by Richie Floyd, reviewed implementation progress through a matrix of three-year accomplishments and related housing plan documentation.
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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.
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Dallas Township Planning Commission held a meeting on April 9, 2024 at 7:00pm to review the proposed Wawa Food Market & Fueling Station development by Dallas Development Partner's, LLC at the intersection of Tunkhannock Highway (SR 309) and Upper Demunds Road (SR-1041) on a 5.9-acre lot. The project includes construction of approximately 6,049 square feet of convenience store and fueling station with 66 parking spaces, landscaping, lighting, utility services, and stormwater management facilities. The site, undeveloped for at least 50 years, would have access to Tunkhannock Highway via cross connection with Tractor Supply Co. and to Upper Demunds Road via a new three-quarter movement driveway. Engineer Thomas J. Doughton indicated the preliminary comments were standard and similar to the previous Tractor Supply project by the same engineering firm. The Planning Commission approved the March 12, 2024 meeting minutes and March 2024 Treasurer's Report by motion.
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The Doylestown Township Environmental Advisory Council met on May 8, 2023, to discuss several initiatives including climate action planning, grant opportunities, and local environmental concerns. The council reviewed a Penn State student's climate action planning presentation and identified grant opportunities, including a May 14 deadline for a DVRPC electric vehicle charging station grant requiring an 80/20 federal-local cost split, with two potential locations identified at Pooles Corner and another site. The meeting also addressed resident concerns about a land naturalization project near Longwood Circle that has created issues with field mice and standing water, and discussed updates to the Lenape Garden including signage made from natural materials and regular maintenance by master gardeners.
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On April 22, 2019, the Doylestown Township Planning Commission reviewed and approved previous meeting minutes and held a continued discussion on the Ashbridge at Furlong senior living apartment project. The applicant presented an amended site plan featuring a T-shaped building configuration with improved buffering for adjacent communities, repositioned parking (120 total spaces including primary lot with 80 spaces and secondary lot with 40 spaces), and modified access points to the rear of the building following feedback from fire and code enforcement officials. The plan also incorporated ADA accessibility requirements with eight accessible parking spaces and adjusted the building orientation to better align with existing topography and grade.
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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.
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The document contains multiple legal notices from the City of Stamford from January 2024, including notices for a Planning & Zoning Commission special meeting/public hearing scheduled for January 24, 2024, and a Parks & Recreation Commission public hearing on January 17, 2024 regarding the installation of a dog park at Scofieldtown Park. The Zoning Board unanimously approved two Coastal Site Plan Review applications on January 8, 2024: one for a generator installation at 110 Davenport Drive (Bicoastal Holdings LLC) and another for residential improvements including a swimming pool, terrace, and outdoor structures at 45 Sagamore Road (Herbert F. Gretz), both within the Coastal Area Management boundary.
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This document outlines zoning regulations for South Portland's Residential Districts AA and A. Section 27-518 requires site plan review for any residential construction exceeding 1,000 square feet of floor area within a two-year period (excluding single-family dwellings), with review focusing on impacts such as traffic, parking, stormwater runoff, and noise. Section 27-531 establishes Residential District A as a medium-density residential area limited to four dwelling units per net acre, while Section 27-532 lists permitted uses including single-family dwellings, churches, schools, and accessory solar energy systems.
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This document is an application form for Administrative Site Plan Review issued by Charter Township of Lansing, Michigan, establishing the procedures and fee structure for property development applications. The filing requirements include a $300 administrative review fee plus consultant fees based on actual township costs, with an escrow deposit of five times the review fee required if applicable. The form outlines required applicant information, property details, ownership documentation, and site specifications including parking, building area, landscaping, and open space requirements.
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The Central Planning Board of Newark, NJ prepares the City's Master Plan, reviews applications for development site plan and subdivision approval, and makes recommendations to the Municipal Council on proposed Zoning Ordinance changes. The Board reviews site plan and subdivision applications where no "d" variance is required under N.J.S.A. 40:55d, conditional use applications where all conditions are met, and applications requesting "c" variances as defined in N.J.S.A. 40:55d. The Board holds regular virtual meetings on a biweekly schedule throughout 2026, with 26 scheduled meetings beginning January 12, 2026 and concluding December 21, 2026. The Board is composed of nine members including Mayor Ras J. Baraka (Class I), Juanita Jordan (Class II), Louis Scott-Roundtree (Class III), and six Class IV members with Kalenah Witcher serving as Vice Chairperson. The Board secretary can be reached at 973-733-6333 Monday through Friday between 8:30 am and 4:30 pm for information on accessing meetings, providing public comment, and reviewing agendas and application materials.
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Ordinance 17-001 amends the Water Street Redevelopment Plan, originally adopted in March 2000, to create standards for split zoned development sites and promote development along the Route 440 Corridor. The Planning Board reviewed and recommended adoption of the amendments at its December 20, 2016 meeting. The ordinance repeals inconsistent provisions, becomes part of the Jersey City Code, and requires the City Planning Division to provide notice to the Hudson County Planning Board at least ten days prior to the public hearing and subsequently file the adopted ordinance with the county as required by state statute.
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This ordinance approves amendments to The Wilmington Flats, a large-scale redevelopment project in Wilmington originally approved in 2013 by Woodlawn Trustees, Inc. The amendments, submitted in September 2023 and recommended by the Planning Commission in November 2023, include minor layout modifications to certain blocks, a redesign of Block M from six buildings to one apartment building, and elimination of two planned parking garages. City Council is authorizing these changes to the previously approved site plan following the required review and public hearing procedures.
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The Portland PedPDX Community Advisory Committee held a meeting on February 28, 2018, to review a draft pedestrian safety existing conditions presentation prepared by Nelson Nygaard. The committee discussed data limitations and gaps in the analysis, including challenges obtaining block-level demographic data, limited pedestrian counting technologies, and incomplete information on signalized versus unsignalized crossings and vehicle speeds at crash sites. Committee members raised questions about data accuracy, bike crash correlations, impairment factors, protected left turns, and visibility/lighting, with presenters acknowledging several areas where data collection and analysis could be improved.
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The City Council of Mesa approved a site plan modification on March 18, 2019, for the expansion of an existing self-storage facility located in the 1600 block of South Alma School Road (east side) on 9.6± acres in zoning case ZON 18-00902. The project includes proposed additional storage area of 19,177 square feet and a proposed additional building area of 10,110 square feet, bringing the total proposed storage area to 111,191 square feet. The approval is conditioned upon compliance with the final site plan and landscape plan submitted, all requirements of prior case Z92-57, all City development codes and regulations, and Design Review requirements, with violations subject to penalties under Mesa Zoning Ordinance 11-79-1 to 11-79-6.
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The Madison County Planning and Zoning Commission met on August 10, 2023, to consider a Conditional Use application from Chad Phillips for The Oaks, a 15-bed assisted living facility proposed at 3265 Highway 22 in a C-1 Commercial District with PUD overlay. The application was pending concurrent review by the Mannsdale-Livingston Historic Preservation District Commission, and the Planning and Zoning Commission was advised it could approve, deny, or table the application contingent on any recommendations regarding the site plan. The applicants presented their proposal for a facility designed to serve seniors with activities of daily living support.
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The Charter Township of Bangor Planning Commission held a regular meeting on January 25, 2023, at the Bangor Township Administrative Building, with seven members present and one absent. The Commission elected Mark Norton as Chair (7–0 vote) and Bill Schubert as Vice Chair (7–0 vote), and approved the December 21, 2022 meeting minutes (7–0 vote). The Commission discussed performance guarantees and tabled a site plan approval request by Robert Nelson for property at 1000 N. Euclid until later in the meeting. The Commission reviewed a site plan approval request by Isiah Sesi for property at 3242 Patterson Road, where Sesi stated the facility would be a processing operation involving pre-packaging of ordered product for other businesses with on-site storage but no retail use and no on-site cultivation, with no objections raised by the Bay County Road Commission, Fire Department, or Bay County Drain Commission.
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This document describes the four planning and regulatory boards in Worcester, Massachusetts and their respective responsibilities. The Conservation Commission administers wetlands protection regulations and manages conservation property acquisitions. The Historical Commission preserves historic assets, reviews alterations in historic districts, and administers the Building Demolition Delay Ordinance. The Planning Board reviews site plans, parking plans, and subdivision plans while recommending zoning changes and supporting long-range planning. The Zoning Board of Appeals grants special permits and variances, and hears appeals of Building Commissioner decisions. Planning & Regulatory Services is located at City Hall Room 404, 455 Main Street, and is reachable at 508-799-1400 during business hours Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
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The Wilmington Planning Board held a meeting on July 1, 2025, to review multiple development applications and permit requests. The agenda included continued public hearings for several subdivision and stormwater management permits across various town locations (Bruning Road, Gowing Road Extension, Safford Street, Salem Street, and Eagleview Drive), with action deadlines ranging from July 20 to September 18, 2025. The meeting also addressed Form A applications for properties on Cross Street and Ballardvale Street, Board of Appeals cases, and old business regarding a site plan review endorsement for Concord Street.
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This document is an index of public meeting notices for the City of Phoenix, providing information about upcoming meetings of the City Council, boards, commissions, and committees. It explains that official notices are posted on the bulletin board at Phoenix City Hall (200 W. Washington St.) and are available online in PDF format, with contact information for staff liaisons included in each notice. The page lists several scheduled meetings in April 2026, including site plan reviews, a community budget hearing, and various board meetings, with two village planning committees noted as canceled.
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The City of Worcester Planning Board has issued a public alert about scams involving impersonation of city officials requesting wire transfers for permits, clarifying that the city only accepts checks or online payments through official channels at planning@worcesterma.gov. The board reviews site plans, parking plans, subdivision plans, and makes recommendations on zoning changes; as of July 2025, all meeting agendas, minutes, and videos are available through the OneMeeting portal (with archived materials going back to 2021), and the board has recently updated its application review policy. The Planning Board accepts various permit applications including definitive site plans, subdivisions, parking plans, and special permits, which must be submitted as digital PDFs to the official planning email address.
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