City Council to hold initial public hearing on FY24 budget Monday
The Richmond City Council meets in regular session Monday at 6 p.m. The full agenda can be found here.
The council will hold an initial public hearing on the proposed budget for fiscal year 2024. The $3 billion proposal would hold the line on current tax rates while increasing the general fund budget to nearly $949 million, a 13 percent jump from the current fiscal year budget.
Initial budget amendments from the council are due Wednesday, and final amendments would be introduced at the April 24 regular meeting, setting the stage for a second public hearing May 8. Once approved, the budget would take effect July 1, the start of the fiscal year.
Other business includes a special-use request to allow outdoor dining at Cory Weiner’s mixed-use development at 310 W. Brookland Park Blvd. A development plan that was previously granted authorized a two-story building with nine apartments, 3,200 square feet of commercial space and six on-site parking spaces. The project includes a second two-story building at 322 W. Brookland Park Blvd.
The council plans to defer to its April 10 meeting a special-use request for Flournoy Development Group’s plan to build a six-story, 260-unit apartment building at 3600 Grove Ave., the site of the former Windsor Senior Living facility.
Work underway on Chesterfield’s Spring Rock Green redevelopment
Chesterfield County held a ceremony last week to mark the start of demolition at Spring Rock Green shopping center.
The shopping center is being cleared to make way for a county-led project to build Springline at District 60, a mixed-use development that’s planned to feature more than 1,000 apartments and a sports and entertainment venue with two NHL-sized ice rinks.
The first phase of construction includes a mixed-use building of 300 apartments and 27,000 square feet of commercial space to be developed by Connecticut-based Collins Enterprises. Also included in the first construction phase is a 150,000-square-foot office building and the sports venue.
Hanover supervisors vote down proposed 176-lot subdivision
The Hanover Board of Supervisors voted last week to reject a zoning request by Rogers-Chenault to build a subdivision near the intersection of Winns Church and Greenwood roads
Rogers-Chenault had proposed 176 detached, single-family homes on 161 acres on a site in the southern part of Hanover and near the Glen Allen area of Henrico. It was a tweaked iteration of a project the developer brought before the Planning Commission in 2022.
Land donation, contract award to set up Tuckahoe Creek Park boardwalk extension
Henrico supervisors meet in regular session Tuesday at 7 p.m. Full agenda here.
Business includes two items related to the Tuckahoe Creek Park boardwalk. The board plans to accept a donation of 8 acres for the park from Lakewood Manor Baptist Retirement Community and Virginia Baptist Homes. It also plans to award a $1.19 million contract to Vanasse Hangen Brustlin for master planning, architectural and engineering services for the park’s second phase.
The contract is for engineering and consulting services for master planning, environmental research, permitting, developing construction and development plan documents, and construction administration. The master plan process is expected to begin in April and be completed in August.
The work will be phased to cover master planning for the length of Tuckahoe Creek between Broad Street and Patterson Avenue, and design and administration for construction of funded and future master plan projects, and design and administration for construction of services for future funded master plan projects. Vanasse Hangen Brustlin was selected over two other proposals received.
City Council to hold initial public hearing on FY24 budget Monday
The Richmond City Council meets in regular session Monday at 6 p.m. The full agenda can be found here.
The council will hold an initial public hearing on the proposed budget for fiscal year 2024. The $3 billion proposal would hold the line on current tax rates while increasing the general fund budget to nearly $949 million, a 13 percent jump from the current fiscal year budget.
Initial budget amendments from the council are due Wednesday, and final amendments would be introduced at the April 24 regular meeting, setting the stage for a second public hearing May 8. Once approved, the budget would take effect July 1, the start of the fiscal year.
Other business includes a special-use request to allow outdoor dining at Cory Weiner’s mixed-use development at 310 W. Brookland Park Blvd. A development plan that was previously granted authorized a two-story building with nine apartments, 3,200 square feet of commercial space and six on-site parking spaces. The project includes a second two-story building at 322 W. Brookland Park Blvd.
The council plans to defer to its April 10 meeting a special-use request for Flournoy Development Group’s plan to build a six-story, 260-unit apartment building at 3600 Grove Ave., the site of the former Windsor Senior Living facility.
Work underway on Chesterfield’s Spring Rock Green redevelopment
Chesterfield County held a ceremony last week to mark the start of demolition at Spring Rock Green shopping center.
The shopping center is being cleared to make way for a county-led project to build Springline at District 60, a mixed-use development that’s planned to feature more than 1,000 apartments and a sports and entertainment venue with two NHL-sized ice rinks.
The first phase of construction includes a mixed-use building of 300 apartments and 27,000 square feet of commercial space to be developed by Connecticut-based Collins Enterprises. Also included in the first construction phase is a 150,000-square-foot office building and the sports venue.
Hanover supervisors vote down proposed 176-lot subdivision
The Hanover Board of Supervisors voted last week to reject a zoning request by Rogers-Chenault to build a subdivision near the intersection of Winns Church and Greenwood roads
Rogers-Chenault had proposed 176 detached, single-family homes on 161 acres on a site in the southern part of Hanover and near the Glen Allen area of Henrico. It was a tweaked iteration of a project the developer brought before the Planning Commission in 2022.
Land donation, contract award to set up Tuckahoe Creek Park boardwalk extension
Henrico supervisors meet in regular session Tuesday at 7 p.m. Full agenda here.
Business includes two items related to the Tuckahoe Creek Park boardwalk. The board plans to accept a donation of 8 acres for the park from Lakewood Manor Baptist Retirement Community and Virginia Baptist Homes. It also plans to award a $1.19 million contract to Vanasse Hangen Brustlin for master planning, architectural and engineering services for the park’s second phase.
The contract is for engineering and consulting services for master planning, environmental research, permitting, developing construction and development plan documents, and construction administration. The master plan process is expected to begin in April and be completed in August.
The work will be phased to cover master planning for the length of Tuckahoe Creek between Broad Street and Patterson Avenue, and design and administration for construction of funded and future master plan projects, and design and administration for construction of services for future funded master plan projects. Vanasse Hangen Brustlin was selected over two other proposals received.