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Council approves large northeast Oklahoma City PUD after debate over septic systems and environmental impacts
Summary
The council unanimously approved rezoning of a roughly 90-acre development (PUD 2063) after developer changes including larger minimum lot sizes, HOA-managed aerobic septic maintenance, and added buffer/easement; neighbors raised concerns about wildlife, cultural artifacts and proximity to a shooting range.
Oklahoma City — The City Council unanimously approved rezoning of a roughly 90-acre property to Planned Unit Development (PUD 2063) after questions from council members and public comment about septic (aerobic) wastewater systems, site density and environmental impacts. The ordinance clears a developer plan for about 86 lots and two tracks of housing, including a 55-plus community and a mix of single-family and multi-unit buildings. Developer Marcus (full name not provided in the record) told council the project’s minimum lot sizes were increased from half-acre to three-quarter-acre lots, and that the homeowners association will centralize semiannual maintenance for the site’s aerobic wastewater systems. Why it matters: Council members framed the project as part of efforts to add housing supply in…
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