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Albuquerque Zoning Meetings

12 meetings monitored in Albuquerque, NM

June 15, 20265h 57m48,242 words
57approveddeniedland usezoningcommercial
Agenda available
June 1, 20267h 23m63,666 words
23approveddeniedland usezoningresidential
Agenda available
May 27, 202642m5,776 words
1approved
Agenda available
May 18, 20265h 41m46,580 words
17approveddeniedzoningresidentialtabled
Agenda available
May 4, 20263h 55m33,044 words
10land usezoningresidentialapprovedcommercial
Agenda available
April 20, 20265h 2m43,102 words
42approvedresidentialland usezoningcommercial
Agenda available
April 6, 20265h 58m51,026 words
30residentialapprovedland usezoningcommercial
Agenda available
March 16, 20265h 51m49,456 words
20approvedzoningvariancesubdivisionresidential
Agenda available
March 2, 20263h 39m32,450 words
68land usezoningvarianceapprovedresidential
Agenda available
February 18, 20266h 28m56,327 words
208land usezoningdeferredvarianceapproved
Agenda available
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Frequently Asked Questions

Zoning and land use in the City of Albuquerque are governed by the Integrated Development Ordinance (IDO), which the City describes as including the zoning and subdivision regulations that govern land use and development and establish the City's system of planning. The IDO was adopted by the City Council in November 2017 (Ordinance 17-49) and took effect on May 17, 2018. It has been amended through periodic updates since then.

The Environmental Planning Commission is an appointed, nine-member volunteer board. It reviews and decides certain applications directly, including zoning map amendments to the City's Official Zoning Map and Master Development Plans, plus site plans for properties in certain zone districts. In an advisory role to the City Council, the EPC reviews and makes recommendations on annexations, text amendments to the IDO, and Comprehensive Plan amendments. EPC hearings generally take place on the third Thursday of each month, beginning at 8:40 a.m.

The Zoning Hearing Examiner (ZHE) conducts monthly quasi-judicial public hearings on special exceptions to the IDO, which include variances, conditional uses, expansions of nonconforming uses or structures, and solar rights permits. Hearings are held on the third Tuesday of each month, beginning at 9 a.m. After the hearing the examiner may approve, approve with conditions, or deny the request, and a Notice of Decision is issued. ZHE decisions may be appealed to the City Council.

The IDO organizes base zone districts into broad categories including Residential, Mixed-use, and Non-residential zones, along with Planned Development (PD) and Planned Community (PC) zones. Residential districts include zones such as R-A, R-1, R-T, and R-ML; Mixed-use districts include MX-T, MX-L, MX-M, MX-H, and MX-FB; and Non-residential districts include NR-C, NR-BP, NR-LM, NR-GM, NR-SU, and NR-PO. Each zone district has a use table specifying which uses are permitted, permitted with conditions, or allowed only after a public hearing.

Yes. Under the IDO, an accessory dwelling unit (ADU), also called a casita or in-law unit, is allowed as an accessory use in the R-A, R-1, R-T, and R-ML residential zone districts, and as caretaker units in some mixed-use and non-residential zones. You can look up the specific zoning of a property and its allowable uses using the City's Interactive IDO zoning maps.

Yes. ZoneWire Free sends New Meeting Alerts for Albuquerque at no cost, with the agenda for each meeting. ZoneWire Pro adds full transcripts, zoning and development analysis, and keyword alerts for $129 per market per month.