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Real Briefings

Select Committee on the Comprehensive Plan

SEA-SCP-2026-03-19 March 19, 2026 Committee Meeting City of Seattle
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The Seattle City Council's Select Committee on the Comprehensive Plan reconvened to begin Phase II implementation of the city's comprehensive plan update, focusing on centers and corridors zoning legislation. This represents the second phase of implementing the most significant growth strategy changes Seattle has seen in 30 years, following the December 2025 adoption of the comprehensive plan and initial neighborhood residential zoning updates. The Office of Planning and Community Development presented detailed legislation that would implement new zoning in 30 neighborhood centers, six expanded urban centers, and along frequent transit corridors citywide. The proposal includes rezoning to allow five and six-story development in strategic locations and updates development standards for existing lowrise and midrise zones to encourage more apartment and condominium construction. Public testimony revealed continued community tensions over density and development, with concerns about building scale, tree preservation, infrastructure capacity, and neighborhood character balanced against calls for more housing abundance and affordability. The extensive four-year public engagement process included over 9,000 comments during zoning-specific outreach, reflecting the complexity and community interest in these changes. Staff emphasized that while environmental review is complete for this proposal, any substantial amendments increasing area or intensity would likely require additional SEPA analysis. The legislation aims to address Seattle's persistent housing crisis where home costs have doubled in the last decade and over 20% of renters pay more than half their income for housing.

This was a briefing and discussion meeting with no formal votes taken. The committee received the comprehensive presentation on Phase II implementation and established the framework for future deliberations. **Key procedural decisions:** - Next meeting scheduled for April 6…

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**Centers and Corridors Implementation Strategy** The proposal would implement new zoning in three main categories: 30 newly designated neighborhood centers, six new or expanded urban centers (including newly designated Ballard regional center), and areas along frequent transit corridors. Staff explained that five and six-story zoning is necessary to make apartment and condominium development financially feasible, noting that existing four-story zones have produced only two projects with 32 total units over five years. **Development Standards Modernization** Significant updates to lowrise and midrise development standards aim to reduce regulatory complexity. Current midrise zones require design review departures for virtually every project due to complicated upper-level setback requirements. The proposal would eliminate these problematic standards while maintaining overall building size limits through f…
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**Tree Action Seattle (Sandy):** Advocated for "dense forests for dense housing" approach, proposing amendments to require meaningful tree preservation in amenity areas rather than allowing 85-100% lot coverage. Warned that current proposal would create the largest urban heat island in the Pacific Northwest stretching from Central District to Rainier Beach. **First Community Council (Colleen):** Requested five-block zoning swap along NE 45th Street, arguing the steep slopes and limited transit service make LR3 zoning inappropriate. Supported relocating density to nearby commercial areas to revitalize struggling neighborhood centers. **Ruth (Landscape Architect/Planner):** Cited Vancouver research suggesting upzoning doesn't materially affect housing prices, arguing high income and land speculation are main affordability drivers. Recommended land value capture mechanisms and scaling back extensive upzoning based on new research from London School of Economics. **Greg (Holden Neighborhood):** Expressed concerns about 50-foot t…
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**Michael Hubner, on the comprehensive plan's significance:** "The growth strategy in this major update was the most significant change to the plan on our vision for growth and development that we have seen in about 30 years." **Brennon Staley, on housing crisis impacts:** "Over the last 10 years, the cost of a detached home has more than doubled. Rents from 2011 to 2021 increased by 75%. And the outcome of that is that now more than 20% of renters pay more than half of their income for rent.…
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- **April 6, 2026:** Select Committee meeting with public hearing on Phase II legislation - **Remote public comments:** Begin 9:30 AM - **In-person public comments:** Scheduled for afternoon session - **Ongoing:** Staff available for neighborho…

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The committee formally began Phase II deliberations on comprehensive plan implementation, moving from the previous focus on neighborhood residential zones to centers and corridors. The scope of proposed rezoning was refined from October 2024 public draft based on extensive community feedback, with reductions for steep slopes, environmental constraints, changed transit service, and historic boulevards. Development standards modernization emerged as significant component beyond just rezoning, addressing l…
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