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Historic board approves multiple local designations and two demolition certificates at Jan. 9 meeting
Summary
The St. Pete Beach Historic Preservation Board voted to designate six properties as local historic resources and approved demolition certificates for two city-owned and private structures. The board also discussed a lot-split request and several storm-damage and reconstruction issues raised by property owners.
St. Pete Beach’s Historic Preservation Board approved six local historic designations and granted two demolition certificates at its Jan. 9 meeting, taking a series of largely uncontested votes that advanced preservation and cleanup decisions across the city’s beach neighborhoods.
Staff and applicants presented each nomination, and board members voted on each case after brief public comment. The items approved were local historic designations for the residences and structures listed below and certificates of appropriateness allowing demolition of two damaged buildings. All motions passed by roll call vote.
Why it matters: The designations formally recognize buildings the city says reflect Pass‑a‑Grille and St. Pete Beach architectural and community history; the demolition approvals allow removal of storm‑damaged structures so the city or owners can plan rebuilding or site cleanup.
What the board approved (case number, address, outcome): - Case 24102 — 1601–1603 Pass‑a‑Grille Way: Designation of the primary residence and secondary garage apartment as local historic…
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