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Brazoria County Zoning Meetings

11 meetings monitored in Brazoria County, TX

June 23, 202631m3,633 words
1motion to approve
Agenda available
June 9, 20263m454 words
1industrial
Agenda available
May 26, 202638m5,014 words
10approvedmotion to approvepublic hearing
Agenda available
May 12, 20261h 1m7,878 words
12motion to approveannexationapprovedpublic hearingsubdivision
Agenda available
April 28, 202645m6,360 words
9approvedsubdivisionmotion to approve
Agenda available
April 14, 202658m7,178 words
15approvedmotion to approveresidentialsubdivisionindustrial
Agenda available
March 24, 20262h 5m16,761 words
9motion to approveapprovedresidential
Agenda available
March 10, 20261h 12m10,983 words
20motion to approvepublic hearingapprovedcommercialzoning
Agenda available
March 10, 20264m250 words
1industrial
Agenda available
February 24, 20261h 5m8,941 words
13approvedmotion to approvepublic hearing
Agenda available
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Frequently Asked Questions

No. Brazoria County does not regulate land use or have any zoning ordinances in the unincorporated areas of the County. Zoning is handled by each city or village within the County, so for zoning within a municipality you must follow that city's zoning regulations and contact the city's zoning department.

Instead of zoning, the County regulates the subdivision (platting) of land. Brazoria County regulates all land subdivision within its jurisdiction under authority given in the Texas Local Government Code, Chapter 232 (Section 232.102). The County's Engineering Department handles platting, small subdivisions, and reconfiguration of existing tracts, and applicants coordinate through the Engineering Department's Development division.

Yes, for many projects. A building permit is required for any new or relocated structure of more than 200 square feet, for a manufactured home, or for an addition that is more than 50% of the present valuation of the existing structure. Permits are administered through the County's Floodplain office, which first determines whether the property lies in a FEMA-designated flood hazard area based on its legal description.

In May 2005 the Commissioners' Court set the required finished-floor elevation at 2 feet above the FEMA base flood elevation, citing the large amount of development in the County and the need to comply with the Countywide Drainage Criteria for new subdivisions. If a property is not located in a designated flood hazard area, the recommended requirement is 24 inches above existing grade.

For a proposed development, the County holds a pre-development meeting and assesses which departments will participate, which can include Engineering, Floodplain, Fire Marshal, Environmental Health, Groundwater, Permits, Addressing, and Right-of-Way (ROW). Developments must also adhere to the County's official Thoroughfare Plan; where a planned or existing thoroughfare runs through a proposed subdivision, the applicant must dedicate right-of-way of at least 120 feet and build the thoroughfare to its planned capacity.

Yes. ZoneWire Free sends New Meeting Alerts for Brazoria County 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.