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Fort Worth Zoning Meetings

20 meetings monitored in Fort Worth, TX

June 16, 20261h 50m19,087 words
30commercialindustrialresidentialapproved
Agenda available
June 9, 20263h 51m31,392 words
71land useapprovedpublic hearingzoningmotion to approve
Agenda available
June 2, 20264m472 words
Agenda available
May 19, 20261h 16m11,216 words
14residentialdeferredapprovedcommercialsubdivision
Agenda available
May 12, 202658m7,294 words
1zoning
Agenda available
May 12, 20262h 9m17,444 words
79public hearingzoningrezoningindustrialdensity
Agenda available
May 5, 20261h 20m12,427 words
50densityresidentialzoningcomprehensive planland use
Agenda available
April 28, 20262h 20m17,580 words
15approvedmotion to approvezoningrezoningland use
Agenda available
April 28, 20261h 17m12,054 words
9residentialzoningcommercialdensityindustrial
Agenda available
April 7, 20261h 40m16,742 words
8residentialcommercial
Agenda available
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Frequently Asked Questions

Zoning in the City of Fort Worth is administered by the city's Development Services Department. The regulations are contained in the Zoning Ordinance, which is adopted as Appendix A of the Fort Worth City Code. Zoning and subdivision regulations are the city's primary tools for implementing the land use component of the Comprehensive Plan, the city's official guide for decisions about growth and development.

The Zoning Commission is an advisory board to the City Council on zoning matters within the City of Fort Worth. It holds a public hearing on zoning cases, at which applicants present their requests and community members can provide feedback, on the second Wednesday of the month. The Commission's decisions are recommendations only; the City Council makes the final decision on all zoning cases.

Fort Worth's Zoning Ordinance uses several groups of districts. Residential districts include one-family detached (A-2.5A, A-43, A-21, A-10, A-7.5, A-5) and restricted one-family (AR), two-family (B), zero-lot-line/cluster (R1) and townhouse (R2), and multifamily districts (CR low density, C medium density, D high density, and UR urban residential). Commercial districts range from neighborhood commercial (ER, E) through general and intensive commercial (FR, F, G) to Central Business (H). Industrial districts are Light (I), Medium (J), and Heavy (K). There are also special districts such as Agricultural (AG), Community Facilities (CF), Manufactured Housing (MH), and Planned Development (PD), plus overlay districts.

Yes. Fort Worth has form-based mixed-use districts intended for designated growth centers and urban villages with pedestrian-oriented development. These include Low Intensity Mixed-Use (MU-1), with a maximum height of three to five stories with an available height bonus, and High Intensity Mixed-Use (MU-2), with a maximum height of five to ten stories, plus named form-based districts such as Near Southside (NS), Panther Island (PI), Camp Bowie (CB), Trinity Lakes (TL), and Berry University (BU). Development in these districts is subject to review by the Urban Design Commission.

The Zoning Board of Adjustment hears and decides appeals of the Zoning Ordinance and requests for variances. To qualify for a variance, the property must have unique circumstances such as area, shape, or slope that were not created by the property owner; the request cannot be based merely on financial hardship or convenience; and the circumstance cannot be due to general conditions of the zoning district. Applications are filed through the Development Services Department.

Yes. ZoneWire Free sends New Meeting Alerts for Fort Worth 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.