Norman residents will be asked to vote on two issues this fall after the council agreed to schedule elections to renew its franchise agreement with Oklahoma Natural Gas and a
Norman residents will be asked to vote on two issues this fall after the council agreed to schedule elections to renew its franchise agreement with Oklahoma Natural Gas and a
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Kelley Rodriguez
ThisWeek
The Reynoldsburg Board of Building and Zoning Appeals denied a conditional-use permit May 20 that would have allowed more than 100 apartments to be built alongside a 50,000-square-foot medical office building on East Main Street.
The bulk of the 14.6-acre project proposed by the Homewood Corp. – more than 10 acres – was to be dedicated to 180 two- and three-bedroom apartments east of Carlyle Drive and across the street from Glen Rest Memorial Estate.
The property falls along the Franklin/Licking county line in an area classified by the city’s comprehensive plan as the East Main Street District (EMD). The EMD is “intended to serve as a transportation corridor lined with compact, mixed-use development,” according to the 2018 plan.