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San Jose Zoning Meetings

46 meetings monitored in San Jose, CA

March 17, 20266h 38m60,968 words
85motion to approvezoningspecial use permitapprovedland use
Agenda available
March 11, 20262h 19m19,893 words
154public hearingland useconditional usespecial use permitdeferred
March 10, 20264h 0m36,145 words
9approveddeferredland usedensity
Agenda available
March 6, 202632m4,656 words
59public hearingland useenvironmental reviewdeferredresidential
March 3, 20262h 2m17,408 words
4industrialapprovedsetback
Agenda available
February 25, 20261h 38m11,938 words
22zoningdensityapprovedresidentialindustrial
February 25, 202618m1,833 words
16public hearingland useconditional usemotion to approveapproved
February 25, 20267m1,152 words
10public hearingenvironmental reviewspecial use permitsubdivision
February 24, 20264h 23m38,710 words
68public hearingresidentialdeferredapproveddensity
Agenda available
February 23, 20261h 48m16,254 words
30residentialapprovedzoningdensitycommercial
Agenda available
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Frequently Asked Questions

San Jose City Council, Planning Commission, and the Historic Landmarks Commission are monitored by ZoneWire for rezoning, urban village plan amendments, planned development permits, CEQA reviews, conditional use permits, and site development permits across San Jose.

San Jose has approximately 8 zoning-related meetings per month across City Council, the Planning Commission, and the Historic Landmarks Commission. City Council meets biweekly, while the Planning Commission meets twice per month.

An urban village plan in San Jose is a neighborhood-level land use plan that designates specific areas for higher-density mixed-use development. Urban village plan amendments are a key signal for major development, particularly around the Diridon Station area where the Google downtown project is planned.

The highest volume of zoning activity in San Jose occurs around the Diridon Station area for the Google downtown village project, the North San Jose employment area for office and residential density, and the urban villages along Santa Clara Street and Stevens Creek Boulevard for mixed-use infill development.

Key zoning terms for San Jose include urban village plan, planned development permit, CEQA (California Environmental Quality Act), rezoning, conditional use permit, site development permit, general plan amendment, and PD (Planned Development) zoning. ZoneWire tracks all of these automatically across every San Jose governing body.