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San Antonio Board of Adjustment approves several variances, denies mobile food‑court proposal

Board of Adjustment (City of San Antonio) · February 23, 2026

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Summary

At its Feb. 3 meeting the Board of Adjustment approved a string of zoning variances and special exceptions for short‑term rentals, carports and a major redevelopment while rejecting a request to site a mobile food court within 200 feet of a residence. Several appeals and continuances were set for March hearings.

The San Antonio Board of Adjustment on Feb. 3 approved multiple zoning variances and special exceptions — including renewed allowances for short‑term rentals and variances tied to a 44‑unit development — but rejected a request to allow a mobile food court within the 200‑foot separation from a residence.

Chair Orian opened the hearing by confirming a quorum and reviewing procedures before staff introduced each case. Planning staff repeatedly told the board that permits and property‑specific constraints drove many petitions; applicants and neighborhood representatives offered local context and either support or opposition.

Why it matters: the board’s decisions determine whether individual property owners may operate outside standard rules on short‑term‑rental density, setback and clear‑vision requirements, and design standards in Neighborhood Conservation Districts. Those rulings affect neighborhood character, traffic and public‑safety questions and will shape development patterns on the fringes of intensive corridors.

Notable outcomes - 626 Delmar St., Unit 202 (Type‑2 short‑term rental): the board granted a special exception to allow an additional Type‑2 permit after the applicant said the rental stream helps cover bills; commissioners found the facts warranted unnecessary‑hardship findings and the motion passed unanimously. - 8201 Meadow Post (appeal of permit revocation): the owner/manager said missing HOT (hotel occupancy tax) filings predated his control; the board continued the appeal to March 23 to allow filings and payments to be resolved. - 424 8th St. and 326 Lexington Ave. (multiple STR renewals): staff recounted prior approvals and administrative renewal errors; the board approved special exceptions or renewals where applicants demonstrated payment of taxes or a history of operation. - 137 University Ave. (Mint Development): the board granted variances from Neighborhood Conservation District (NCD‑5) glazing, driveway/curb‑cut width and garage standards for a 22‑duplex (44‑unit) project after the developer said lot shape, an NCD boundary that covers only part of the site and multifamily requirements made strict compliance impractical. Ricardo Turriatez, Mint Development, said the team reduced an earlier 100‑unit plan to a smaller, more neighborhood‑scaled project and worked with the Beacon Hill/uptown stakeholders on alternatives. - Mobile food court at North New Braunfels & Dawson: staff recommended denial and neighborhood groups opposed the removal of the 200‑foot separation requirement. Applicant Kendall Veil said he would work with neighbors, but the board voted 7–3 against eliminating the separation, effectively denying the mobile food‑court designation at that location. - Carport/front‑setback and clear‑vision cases: the board approved a set of front‑setback and clear‑vision variances in cases where owners argued short driveways or existing slab conditions produced unusual hardship — including a measured, limited approval for 143 Globe Ave. (senior homeowner) and a conditioned approval at 7106 Cloverfield Lane. - Front‑yard fence at 519 N. San Marcos: resident Deborah Wilson asked for a taller fence citing industrial adjacency, rail noise and loitering; after questioning the board amended the request to allow a predominantly open 6‑ft front treatment with solid side portions where warranted and approved it unanimously.

Voices from the meeting "It's just time for me," said applicant Rob McClellan about converting a long‑standing rental into a short‑term unit to help pay bills. "I also brought a neighbor if anybody wants to talk to him," he added as he described outreach to the neighborhood association.

On the larger redevelopment, Mint Development's Ricardo Turriatez told the board the team had cut the proposal substantially from an earlier, larger plan and that "we're trying to make it work with the NCD while providing parking and walkable connections." The board majority agreed that the multifamily constraints and a split NCD boundary justified the variances.

What the board said about the mobile food‑court request: several commissioners cited traffic, restroom and neighborhood impacts and gave weight to the Historic Neighborhood Review Committee's objections. A voicemail from that committee urged denial, noting prior unresolved concerns.

Next steps Several continuances were set for March hearings so applicants can resolve tax or filing issues; the Mint Development team will proceed under the variances granted and coordinate final plan review with staff. The director reminded commissioners about an April 1 change to public‑comment voicemail procedures and about required financial disclosures.

Votes at a glance - 626 Delmar St. (Type‑2 STR special exception): approved (unanimous) - 424 8th St. (3 additional Type‑2 STRs): approved (motion passed; results on record) - 137 University Ave. (Mint Development NCD variances): approved (10–0) - Mobile food court, 602/606 N. New Braunfels & 1513 Dawson St.: denied (motion failed 7–3) - 9310 Magnolia Grove (fence & clear‑vision): fence and clear‑vision variances approved (10–0) - 143 Globe Ave. (front setback & clear vision): front‑setback and clear‑vision variances approved; side‑panel enclosure left for separate action - 7106 Cloverfield Ln. (side‑setback for carport): approved with depth/placement conditions - 519 N. San Marcos (front fence): approved as a predominantly open 6‑ft front treatment (unanimous)

The board adjourned at 5:41 p.m.; the director encouraged members to file required financial disclosures by April 1 and announced voicemail changes for public comment.