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Landmark Commission roundup: approvals, denials and new initiations at March 3 meeting

2477713 · March 3, 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

The Dallas Landmark Commission approved multiple certificates of appropriateness with conditions, denied some applications and initiated two designation studies — including Dallas City Hall — in a meeting that also included lengthy neighborhood design reviews and a denial of rooftop solar panels on a Tenth Street house.

At its March 3 meeting the Dallas Landmark Commission handled a broad slate of preservation matters: it approved several new construction and alteration requests with conditions, denied a few items, and reinitiated a number of designation studies. The commission also voted to launch the landmark designation process for Dallas City Hall and reinitiate consideration of the Rayworth Williams House for inclusion in the Junius Heights Historic District.

The meeting covered a mix of routine approvals and substantive design debates:

- Approved with conditions: multiple predesignation and new‑construction certificates in Queen City and other neighborhoods. Staff and task force conditions typically required wood siding and trim to match historic profiles, masonry or cast‑stone column caps, exposed rafter tail expression or fascia boards, and brush‑finished concrete for…

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