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Houston Zoning Meetings

22 meetings monitored in Houston, TX

March 19, 20261h 37m16,081 words
158platresidentialdensitypublic hearingsubdivision
March 17, 20263h 45m31,405 words
24subdivisionresidentialcommercialsetbackapproved
February 10, 20262h 49m23,702 words
3approveddeniedsubdivision
February 5, 20261h 26m13,827 words
175commercialplatvariancepublic hearingresidential
February 3, 20264h 36m40,164 words
20land usecommercialresidentialplatsubdivision
January 27, 20262h 20m18,310 words
5residentialindustrial
January 22, 20261h 0m9,117 words
124platvariancetabledsubdivisionapproved
January 21, 20262h 24m20,778 words
19residentialcommercialzoning
January 13, 20264h 19m37,330 words
21residentialcommercialapprovedpublic hearinghistoric preservation
January 8, 20261h 38m15,328 words
176subdivisionmotion to approvecommercialplatpublic hearing
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Frequently Asked Questions

Houston City Council and the Planning Commission are tracked by ZoneWire for deed restriction enforcement, Chapter 42 development applications, special minimum lot size designations, subdivision plat approvals, and land use ordinance changes. Houston is the largest U.S. city without traditional zoning, relying instead on deed restrictions and the subdivision ordinance.

Houston City Council meets weekly, with the Planning Commission holding hearings twice per month. Despite lacking formal zoning, Houston generates substantial land use activity through deed restriction enforcement, Chapter 42 filings, and subdivision plat approvals.

Chapter 42 of the Houston Code of Ordinances governs subdivision and development standards in the absence of traditional zoning. It regulates lot sizes, building setbacks, parking, and buffering requirements. Chapter 42 amendments are the closest equivalent to rezoning in Houston and are a key signal for development changes.

Houston is the largest U.S. city without formal zoning. Instead, it relies on deed restrictions enforced by neighborhoods, the Chapter 42 subdivision ordinance, special minimum lot size designations, and buffering rules. ZoneWire tracks all of these regulatory mechanisms across Houston City Council and Planning Commission meetings.

Key land use terms for Houston include deed restriction, Chapter 42, special minimum lot size, subdivision plat, building line, buffering, prevailing lot size, and setback variance. ZoneWire tracks all of these automatically across every Houston governing body.