Skip to content
All Counties

Providence Zoning Meetings

15 meetings monitored in Providence, RI

March 5, 202644m4,850 words
10approvedcomprehensive planresidential
February 19, 20261h 38m13,208 words
15approvedmotion to approvezoningcomprehensive planresidential
February 5, 20261h 19m11,026 words
12approvedcomprehensive planresidentialcommercialmixed use
January 22, 20261h 46m10,605 words
7approvedpublic hearingzoningcomprehensive plan
PreviousPage 2 of 2

Get free Providence meeting alerts

We email you when a new council meeting is detected for Providence, RI, with the agenda. Free.

Get free Providence alerts

Frequently Asked Questions

The Providence Zoning Board of Review decides applications for variances and special use permits; its office is at 444 Westminster Street, 1st Floor. The City Plan Commission (CPC) handles land development projects and subdivisions, and the City Council adopts and amends the Zoning Ordinance text and Zoning Map. The Department of Planning and Development administers zoning from 444 Westminster Street (401.680.8400).

The Providence Zoning Ordinance sets out districts by category: residential (R-1A, R-1, R-2, R-3, R-4, and RP Residential Professional), commercial (C-1 Neighborhood, C-2 General, C-3 Heavy), the D-1 Downtown District, institutional (I-1 Healthcare, I-2 Educational), industrial (M-MU Mixed-Use Industrial, M-1 Light, M-2 General), waterfront (W-2 Mixed-Use, W-3 Port/Maritime Industrial), and open/public space (OS, PS, and CD Conservation). Special purpose and overlay districts include Capital Center (CC), Downcity (DD), the East Side I-195 (ES), Historic District (HD), and Transit-Oriented Development (TOD) overlays.

Providence's current Zoning Ordinance was adopted in November 2014 and became effective on December 24, 2014. It is codified as Chapter 27 of the Code of Ordinances and is organized into 21 Articles covering districts, dimensional and design regulations, uses, parking, landscaping, signs, administration, and enforcement. Article 12 contains the Use Matrix (Table 12-1), which shows whether each use is permitted, special, or prohibited in each district.

Under Rhode Island General Laws Section 45-24-41(c), a variance applicant must demonstrate that the hardship is due to the unique characteristics of the subject land or structure (not general area characteristics or the applicant's disability), that it did not result from the applicant's prior action or a desire for greater financial gain, that granting relief will not alter the general character of the area or impair the ordinance's intent, and that the relief is the least relief necessary. For a use variance, the land cannot yield any beneficial use if made to conform; for a dimensional variance, the hardship must amount to more than a mere inconvenience.

Yes. ZoneWire Free sends New Meeting Alerts for Providence 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.