Getting to know your UDO
City Council Holds UDO Work Session
|
City Council members last week held a special work session on a series of amendments proposed for the city’s Unified Development Ordinance.
Raleigh Public Record (https://theraleighcommons.org/raleighpublicrecord/page/73/)
City Council members last week held a special work session on a series of amendments proposed for the city’s Unified Development Ordinance.
Raleigh’s signage task force presented city council with recommendations on updating the Unified Development Ordinance to allow for more permissive sign regulations.
This week in the Development Beat, Glenwood Avenue gains a new cellphone tower as it loses the Taverna Agora Restaurant and a public hearing is scheduled for a new mixed-use development behind the Triangle Town Center
Raleigh has a number of historical churches, but the question remains – of the ones still standing today, which was built first? We look for an answer in this special edition of The Historical Record.
This week in the Development Beat, amidst progress on Tower II, we take a brief look at the history of North Hills, and learn about a new tenant for the former Fat Daddy’s restaurant on Glenwood.
Although no decisions were made last week, the City Council once again took up the issue of improving Raleigh’s special events and road race policies.
An attorney whose office is located in the Hillsborough Street Municipal Improvement District is seeking to have his property removed due to a lack of services provided.
Despite complaints from neighbors, both the Merrimon-Wynne House and the Person Street Bar were granted their requests for amplified outdoor sound last week.
Less than a week after permits were issued for a new 360-unit apartment complex, City Council voted to approve another complex of 215 units on Oberlin near Cameron Village.
The Comprehensive Planning Committee last week voted to recommend several changes to the city’s Unified Development Ordinance and Comprehensive Plan, which included adding official definitions for words like “supermarket.”