File #: Ord. 1067    Version: 1 Name:
Type: Ordinance Status: Passed
File created: 9/18/2024 In control: City Council
On agenda: 10/15/2024 Final action:
Title: Consideration of Approval of the Second Reading of Ordinance 1067 Text Amendments Related to Sign Regulations in the Historic-Overlay District in Chapter 34 - Land Development Code of the Northfield City Code.
Attachments: 1. 1 - Ordinance 1067 (Alt.pdf, 2. 2 - Hyperlink to 8/7/24 HPC Meeting, 3. 3 - Hyperlink to 8/15/24 PC Meeting, 4. 4 - Hyperlink to 9/30/24 HPC Meeting, 5. 5 - Hyperlink to 10/1/24 CC Meeting, 6. 6 - 10-01-24 Ord. 1067 Presentation
City Council Meeting Date: October 15, 2024

To: Members of the City Council

From: Jake Reilly, Community Development Director
Mikayla Schmidt, City Planner
Mathias Hughey, Associate City Planner

Title
Consideration of Approval of the Second Reading of Ordinance 1067 Text Amendments Related to Sign Regulations in the Historic-Overlay District in Chapter 34 - Land Development Code of the Northfield City Code.

Body
Action Requested:
The Northfield City Council approves the second reading of Ordinance 1067 (Alternative Number 1) text amendments related to sign regulations in the Historic-Overlay district in Chapter 34 - Land Development Code of the Northfield City Code.

Summary Report:
At the first reading of Ordinance 1067 on October 1, 2024, the City Council approved a version of the ordinance consistent with Alternative 1. This is the second reading of the proposed ordinance. A link to the recording of that meeting is provided. As approved at the first reading, this version contains no references to "fluorescent colors."

*Same staff report as first reading
The HPC currently reviews and approves signs in the Historic-Overlay District (H-O District) and on Heritage Preservation Sites via the Certificate of Appropriateness (COA) process. Signs in the H-O District must receive a COA before city staff can issue a Sign or a Building Permit. The HPC has engaged in internal discussions for years about the regulations in the H-O District and initiated the request to update the ordinance. The HPC intends to increase the diversity and creativity of signs and ease approvals while retaining a high level of aesthetic integrity and preserving the historic character of the H-O District.

The existing H-O sign regulations are among the most restrictive of comparable cities, and the HPC spends a significant amount of time reviewing, discussing, and approving COAs for signs. The HPC has denied COAs for signs that did not meet specific requirements of the Lan...

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