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Overland Park Zoning Meetings

9 meetings monitored in Overland Park, KS

June 15, 20262h 17m20,905 words
74residentialcommercialpublic hearingapprovedmotion to approve
Agenda available
June 8, 20261h 43m14,388 words
76rezoningland usezoningpublic hearingplat
Agenda available
June 1, 202642m5,885 words
20public hearingapprovedresidential
Agenda available
May 18, 20261h 20m11,261 words
70zoningpublic hearingcomprehensive planapprovedrezoning
Agenda available
May 11, 20262h 58m25,675 words
126special use permitdensityapprovedland usezoning
Agenda available
May 4, 202626m3,829 words
5approvedzoningrezoningland use
Agenda available
April 20, 202620m2,556 words
5public hearingcomprehensive planapproved
Agenda available
April 13, 20261h 59m17,402 words
132land usezoningpublic hearingapprovedmotion to approve
Agenda available
April 6, 20262h 35m22,919 words
134commercialzoningrezoningresidentialsubdivision
Agenda available

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Frequently Asked Questions

Land use in the City of Overland Park is regulated by its Unified Development Ordinance (UDO), the legal tool that controls the types of structures that may be built, where they can be located on a property, and how they may be used. The UDO makes up the land-use portion of the city's Municipal Code and is available through the city's online code viewer. Overland Park is a city (in Johnson County), so zoning decisions are made by city bodies, not the county. The city began a multi-year update of the UDO running from winter 2025 through fall 2026.

The Municipal Code (Chapter 18.150, Zoning Districts) establishes residential, office, commercial, and industrial districts. Residential districts include A (Agricultural), RE (Residential Estates), R-1/RP-1 (Single-Family Residential), R-1A/RP-1A (Small-Lot Single-Family), R-2/RP-2 (Two-Family), R-3/RP-3 (Garden Apartment), RP-4 (Planned Cluster Housing), RP-5 (Planned Apartment House), RP-6 (Planned High-Rise Apartment), and others. Office and commercial districts include C-O/CP-O (Office Building), C-1/CP-1 (Restricted Business), C-2/CP-2 (General Business), C-3/CP-3 (Commercial), and MXD (Planned Mixed Use). Industrial districts include M-1/MP-1 (Industrial Park) and M-2/MP-2 (General Industrial). Many districts have a planned ("P") counterpart.

The Planning Commission holds public hearings and makes recommendations to the Governing Body (City Council) on rezoning applications, special use permits, and preliminary development plans, and it reviews applications for final development plans and plats. The Commission meets on the second Monday of each month at 1:30 p.m. in the Council Chamber at City Hall, 8500 Santa Fe Drive, Overland Park, KS 66212. Meetings are open to the public.

A pre-application meeting is required before a rezoning application can be submitted. Applicants request the pre-application meeting through the city's ePLACE online portal, and Planning staff contact the applicant within five business days to confirm the meeting date, time, and location. After submittal, the application goes through the development review process, including a public hearing before the Planning Commission, which makes a recommendation to the Governing Body for the final decision. City staff also provide rezoning and special use permit applicants with a sign to notify the public of the proposal and the upcoming public hearing.

Variances and other relief from the zoning and subdivision regulations are handled by the Board of Zoning Appeals, which also reviews nonconforming situation permits and administrative appeals. A property owner files a variance application and the request is decided at a public hearing. The Board reviews variance requests against five criteria specified by state statute, which evaluate the uniqueness of the property, the impact on adjacent property owners, the hardship caused by the requirement, public safety and welfare, and the intent of the requirement. The Board generally meets monthly, on the second Tuesday.

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