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Council splits on Euclid Church appeal after months of debate; adaptive‑reuse appeal fails to win approval

2512475 · February 6, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

After a lengthy quasi‑judicial hearing with more than 50 public speakers, council voted 4–4 on an appeal of a CPPC denial of adaptive‑reuse for the Euclid Church; the motion to grant the appeal failed and a map‑amendment vote was not moved.

A divided city council failed to overturn a Community Planning and Preservation Commission (CPPC) decision on Feb. 5 after a marathon quasi‑judicial hearing over proposed adaptive reuse of the historic Euclid Church on Tenth Avenue North.

Derek Kilborn, manager for Urban Planning and Historic Preservation, explained the process: because the building is a locally designated landmark the CPPC heard a bundled certificate of appropriateness and an adaptive reuse proposal that included special‑exception uses (an event/meeting hall and a bed‑and‑breakfast) and a preemptive future land‑use map amendment request tied to a potential future increase in corridor FAR. CPPC approved the certificate of appropriateness for exterior changes but…

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