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Chicago Zoning Meetings

21 meetings monitored in Chicago, IL

February 11, 202637m2,736 words
3motion to approveapprovedzoning
Agenda available
February 10, 202654m3,670 words
2commercial
Agenda available
January 21, 20263h 5m23,857 words
18subdivisionresidentialzoningpublic hearingcommercial
Agenda available
January 14, 20263h 10m24,422 words
15deniedland usemotion to approveapproveddensity
Agenda available
January 13, 20261h 10m8,188 words
13deferredmotion to approveapprovedindustrial
Agenda available
December 29, 20251h 33m5,772 words
4motion to approvezoningcommercialapproved
Agenda available
December 20, 20254h 42m30,173 words
16commercialapproveddeferredpublic hearing
Agenda available
December 19, 20251h 56m9,731 words
9motion to approvedenieddeferredzoningcommercial
Agenda available
December 18, 20251h 15m6,411 words
5zoningcommercialapproved
Agenda available
December 16, 20251h 25m6,407 words
4zoningcommercialapproved
Agenda available
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Frequently Asked Questions

Chicago City Council, the Plan Commission, the Zoning Board of Appeals, and the Committee on Zoning are all monitored by ZoneWire for planned development applications, rezoning, special use permits, variances, and lakefront protection ordinance reviews across Chicago.

Chicago has approximately 10 zoning-related meetings per month across City Council, the Plan Commission, the Zoning Board of Appeals, and the Committee on Zoning. City Council meets monthly in full session, while the Plan Commission and Zoning Board of Appeals each meet twice per month.

Aldermanic prerogative is a longstanding Chicago tradition where City Council members have informal veto power over zoning changes within their ward. Understanding which alderman controls a project area is critical for predicting zoning outcomes in Chicago, as most rezoning and planned development applications require the local alderman's support.

The highest volume of zoning activity in Chicago occurs in the West Loop and Fulton Market for planned development applications, the 606 trail corridor in Bucktown and Wicker Park for residential infill, the South Loop for high-rise residential towers, and the lakefront zone where development must comply with lakefront protection ordinance requirements.

Key zoning terms for Chicago include planned development, special use permit, variance, TIF (Tax Increment Financing) district, lakefront protection ordinance, PD amendment, TOD (Transit-Oriented Development), and landmark designation. ZoneWire tracks all of these automatically across every Chicago governing body.