The City Council on Sept. 9 voted down a request to amend PD‑223 to allow the entire 2,500‑square‑foot unit at 1090 E. Sandy Lake Road to be used for warehousing incoming donations for Goodwill Dallas, with no retail sales on site.
The request, submitted by the property owner and Goodwill representatives, proposed a donor-only drop‑off with drive‑through donation lanes and internal storage, after which Goodwill trucks would collect items for processing at other facilities. Planning staff and the Planning & Zoning Commission both advised against the change, saying the site is designated commercial in the comprehensive plan and that the proposed use resembles light industrial warehousing more than neighborhood-serving retail.
Why it matters: The property sits near a major entry corridor and adjacent retail businesses; council members expressed concern that converting the unit to a warehouse-distribution role could invite outside storage, illegal dumping, visual blight and set a zoning precedent at a key intersection.
What happened in the hearing: Staff explained the commercial zoning originally allows up to 20% warehousing of floor area; the applicant sought 100% warehousing of the unit. The applicant’s representative, who said Goodwill Dallas is expanding a network of express donation sites, described an on‑site valet drop‑off, staffed operations and existing plans to open similar, retail‑front donation sites elsewhere. The applicant said Goodwill would maintain the property and that indoor storage containers and cameras would be used.
Council concerns and vote: Councilmembers repeatedly said the proposed use did not fit the city’s commercial land‑use goals for the corridor, and several cited the risk of outside storage or accumulation of donated items in the parking area. Councilmember Walker said the request was “too much of a square peg in a round hole” for a retail center. A motion to approve the PD amendment failed; the council denied the zoning change and the zoning remains unchanged.
Ending: The owner and applicant said they would continue to market the space and noted vacancy presents its own challenges; the council’s denial preserves the current commercial zoning and the city’s retail-oriented vision for the site.