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Bloomington Planning Commission — March 19, 2026

7 agenda itemsWatch the full meeting ↗
  • Planning Commission backs easing corner-lot setback rules citywide

    Staff proposed reducing the required setback for corner-lot side yards facing a street from 30 feet to 20 feet, and commissioners unanimously supported the change (Option 2) to bring Bloomington in line with peer cities and support infill development. The proposal now heads to a city council study session before returning to the commission in May as a draft ordinance.

    Watch @ 3:54 ↗
  • Commission favors narrower minimum lot widths for corner lots

    After lengthy debate, commissioners largely coalesced around reducing minimum corner-lot width to 70 feet for single-family lots (up from the 60-foot staff baseline discussion) and 90 feet for two-family lots — overriding staff's initial 85-foot recommendation for consistency of math across lot types. Commissioner Cookton also floated eliminating minimum lot-width and lot-area requirements entirely, arguing setbacks alone should govern development, though the majority favored a more measured approach.

    Watch @ 17:59 ↗
  • Commission leans toward keeping single-family corner lot area same as interior lots

    On lot area, commissioners split on options but a majority (including a self-identified corner-lot resident, Commissioner Summers, who cited neighborhood character) leaned toward roughly 9,100 sq ft for single-family corner lots (Option 2) rather than fully matching the 7,800 sq ft interior standard, while for two-family lots the group favored matching the interior standard of 11,700 sq ft.

    Watch @ 52:20 ↗
  • Commission supports allowing sheds, gazebos and garages closer to the street on corner lots

    Commissioners agreed to recommend allowing accessory structures (sheds, gazebos, detached garages) to be built in the side yard between a house and the street on corner lots, with a 20-foot setback, reversing the current rule that pushes such structures behind the home. Staff had recommended against this change but will incorporate the commission's direction into a future draft ordinance.

    Watch @ 1:04:46 ↗
  • City kicks off 2050 Comprehensive Plan process, considers advisory council makeup

    Staff previewed the multi-year 2050 Comprehensive Plan update, including a planned community engagement launch in May (open houses, farmers markets, Pride and Juneteenth events) and creation of a community advisory council. Commissioner Cookton pushed back on including city council members or planning commissioners on that council, arguing it should be independent so residents don't feel directed by officials.

    Watch @ 1:22:30 ↗
  • February 19 meeting minutes approved 4-0-3

    The commission approved the February 19, 2026 meeting minutes on a 4-0 vote with three members abstaining because they were absent for all or part of that meeting.

    Watch @ 1:36:27 ↗
  • Upcoming hearings: cannabis manufacturing permit, wireless tower ordinance, and Old Cedar Avenue rezoning

    Staff previewed three upcoming meetings: an April 2 hearing on a conditional use permit for cannabis manufacturing at 333 West 86th Street and a proposed city code amendment on wireless communication towers at places of assembly; and an April 23 hearing on rezoning 8030 Old Cedar Avenue South from FD-2 to B-1 to accommodate a retail tenant.

    Watch @ 1:36:58 ↗

More Meetings

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    HRA backs Adora Apartments, up to $300,000 in financial assistance approved

  • Planning CommissionJune 18, 2026

    Planning Commission approves Seagate campus expansion, 5-0 · Commission pushes back on proposed cuts to open-space and setback standards · Commissioners want deeper affordability targeting in Opportunity Housing Ordinance changes · Commission backs 150-foot odor buffer requirement for cannabis cultivation/manufacturing · Staff floats new zoning definition allowing car detailing businesses in commercial/industrial districts · Commission rejects staff proposal to lower ground-floor window transparency requirement to 25%

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  • City CouncilJune 15, 2026

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  • HRAJune 9, 2026

    City proclaims June 2026 'Homeownership Month' in Bloomington · HRA approves $500K gap-funding deal for two Outlaw Development affordable homes · HRA weighing redesign of St. Mark's site toward duplexes/triplexes under new 'missing middle' ordinance · Board tables Habitat for Humanity down-payment assistance contract amid transparency concerns · Annual 'All Things Housing' report shows rising rents, low vacancy, persistent racial homeownership gap · HOA law changes and property-management updates highlighted in administrator report · HRA to add special meeting June 23 for tax-credit housing project deadline

  • Planning CommissionJune 4, 2026

    Dance school home business approved for Mount Curve Road garage · Second cannabis facility (cultivation) approved near residential area · City presents 20-year Urban Forest Master Plan, citywide tree canopy at 35% · New planning commissioners appointed; upcoming agenda items previewed · City Council approved Gallery Apartments at 7900 Xerxes