Skip to content
All Counties

Long Beach Zoning Meetings

40 meetings monitored in Long Beach, CA

March 3, 202615m151 words
1subdivision
Agenda available
February 19, 20262h 51m22,464 words
229environmental reviewapprovedconditional useindustrialland use
Agenda available
February 17, 20264h 39m34,207 words
3public hearingindustrialapproved
Agenda available
February 10, 20264h 4m31,828 words
8approveddeniedindustrialpublic hearingresidential
Agenda available
February 5, 202652m8,232 words
8deferredapprovedenvironmental review
Agenda available
February 3, 20264h 3m32,840 words
17deniedpublic hearingapprovedzoningland use
Agenda available
February 3, 20262m214 words
2subdivision
Agenda available
January 27, 20261h 14m10,173 words
22motion to approveapprovedcommercialresidentialhistoric preservation
Agenda available
January 20, 20265h 44m47,843 words
27approvedpublic hearingmixed usecommercialresidential
Agenda available
January 20, 202620m160 words
1subdivision
Agenda available
PreviousPage 4 of 4

Get free Long Beach meeting alerts

We email you when a new council meeting is detected for Long Beach, CA, with the agenda. Free.

Get free Long Beach alerts

Frequently Asked Questions

Long Beach is a city with its own planning authority. The Long Beach Planning Commission, a seven-member body appointed by the Mayor and confirmed by the City Council, advises on land use and General Plan matters and serves as the public hearing authority for many development applications. It reviews requests such as conditional and administrative use permits, standards variances, local coastal development permits, site plan reviews, and subdivision requests. Zoning is administered by the Community Development Department's Planning Bureau.

The Planning Commission meets on the first and third Thursday of each month at 5 p.m. at the Long Beach City Hall Civic Chambers, 411 W. Ocean Blvd. Meetings are held in person, and members of the public may participate in person or virtually via Zoom.

The city's zoning rules are set out in Title 21 (Zoning) of the Long Beach Municipal Code, which defines each zoning district's permitted activities, facilities, and development standards. Title 21 includes residential, commercial, and industrial districts, along with Specific Plan Districts (SP) and Planned Development Districts (PD) that provide tailored regulations for particular neighborhoods. Title 22, the Transitional Zoning Code, adds newer zone types such as RMU, MU, MFR, and NI.

The city's Planning Bureau directs property owners to the Zoning and Land Use GIS Map, which shows zoning districts, General Plan land use categories, historic districts, and coastal zone boundaries. Owners with specific zoning questions can also submit an inquiry to the Planning Bureau or schedule a meeting with a planner.

Yes. All development in the coastal zone must obtain either a Local Coastal Development Permit under Long Beach Municipal Code Section 21.25.904 or a Coastal Permit Categorical Exclusion under Section 21.25.906. Some areas fall within the City of Long Beach's permit jurisdiction (with certain areas appealable to the California Coastal Commission), while others fall directly within the Coastal Commission's permit jurisdiction, as shown on the city's coastal zone map.

Yes. ZoneWire Free sends New Meeting Alerts for Long Beach 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.