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Portland Zoning Meetings

16 meetings monitored in Portland, OR

June 23, 20262h 53m22,771 words
51zoningland useapproveddeferreddenied
June 16, 20262h 48m24,221 words
28approvedland useindustrialresidentialcommercial
June 2, 20263h 36m26,085 words
100zoningdensitymixed useapprovedresidential
May 6, 20263m474 words
2zoningcommercial
May 5, 20263h 9m26,101 words
8approvedenvironmental reviewland usecommercialresidential
April 28, 20261h 59m19,527 words
2approveddensity
April 7, 20263h 35m31,294 words
25deferredzoningland usedensityapproved
March 12, 20262h 4m17,774 words
119land usehistoric preservationzoningrezoningdensity
March 10, 20261h 38m14,406 words
8land usedeferreddeniedresidentialapproved
March 5, 20263h 21m29,080 words
7approvedcommercialdensityresidential
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Frequently Asked Questions

Zoning in Portland is governed by Title 33, Planning and Zoning, of the Portland City Code. The Land Use Services division administers Title 33, but it does not create or change zoning regulations. Proposed changes to the Zoning Code are developed by the Bureau of Planning and Sustainability through public legislative processes and are then adopted by the Portland City Council. The Zoning Code is intended to implement Portland's Comprehensive Plan and related land use plans.

You can look up a property's zoning through the City's PortlandMaps tool by address or intersection, search by tax numbers, consult the official Zoning Maps by quarter section, or reference the Portland Zoning Code (Title 33) directly. Every property in the City of Portland has a base zone, and some properties also carry overlay zones or fall within plan districts that add regulations.

Every property in Portland has a base zone, such as a residential, commercial, or employment and industrial zone, which sets the primary regulations for the area. Overlay zones consist of additional regulations that address specific subjects in particular areas and modify the base zone rules. Overlay zones appear as lowercase letters after the base zone designation, for example R10(d), where 'd' is the design overlay. Some properties are also within plan districts that carry further regulations.

The Portland Planning Commission is charged with guiding the City's land use planning through stewardship, development, and maintenance of the City's Comprehensive Plan and Zoning Code. It is made up of nine volunteer members who hold public hearings, take public testimony on items marked as hearings, and develop recommendations on land use and urban design regulations that they forward to City Council. Meeting minutes, documents, and videos are generally made available about seven days after each meeting.

The Portland Design Commission provides leadership and expertise on urban design and architecture and advances the purpose of the Design overlay zone. Regularly scheduled Design Commission hearings are held on the 1st and 3rd Thursday of each month. Agendas and meeting details are posted in advance on the City's website.

Yes. ZoneWire Free sends New Meeting Alerts for Portland 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.