Jake,
I'll try to shed a somewhat professional light on this. I'm a planner here in Sacramento. Most cities have provisions for commercial uses in residentially zoned area, especially if the site was used for commercial in the past. If you have your 501c3 this may work to your advantage. Staff may understand the constraints of small non-profit support service and turn a blind eye. I would call the local planning office to see what provisions if any exist. Another thing to look at is this. When was the site last operating as commercial? We have a provision for non-conforming uses that if the use was abandoned for 1 year it will loose the legal non-conforming status. If this site was recently a commercial use then you may be able to just set up shop.
Hope this helps
Chris Dougherty Sacramento Bicycle Kitchen www.sacbikekitchen.org
On 11/14/07, Macho Philipovich macho@resist.ca wrote:
hey jake. the derailer bicycle collective in denver had zoning problems they weren't able to resolve, and had to move. their website is at http://www.derailerbicyclecollective.org/ if you want to get in touch with them. i think they have an archive of news pieces and correspondence between them and the city when they were going through it you could probably look at (not on the website).
then again, i think the only reason it became a problem is because one of the neighbours complained, so that may not be an issue for you.
in canada, where our shop is, i know all you have to do is pay a small fee and apply to the city for a "zoning variance" on the house, where they basically put up posters to see if anyone in the neighbourhood has a problem with it. if no one does, that particular building can is exempt from certain zoning regulations. i'm not sure if it works the same way south of the border.
good luck, macho
Jake Liefer wrote:
Hello, I operate a small bike Co-op in a small, run down town called Beaver Falls, PA. We're looking into purchasing a location and think we've found the perfect spot. It's a former business / house with a three car garage and a large glass storefront area. The only problem is that it's zoned residential even though it used to be a business many years ago. The street is pretty run down, with three of the four 'neighbors' being vacant housing, so I'm not too worried about neighbors complaining about it. I'd like to paint our logo on the garage but I'm afraid that it my draw too much attention from the zoning people. Do any of your co-ops operate in non-commercialy zoned space? Have you had any problems arise because of it? Thanks, Jake _______________________________________________ Thethinktank mailing list Thethinktank@lists.bikecollectives.org
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