Philadelphia City Council Pushing for More Control Over Zoning Variances

A cause abandoned by the Philadelphia City in 2019 is on the table again.

2 minute read

February 1, 2021, 5:00 AM PST

By James Brasuell @CasualBrasuell


Philadelphia Construction

Fernando Garcia Esteban / Shutterstock

Philadelphia City Council Darrell Clarke is pushing for a resolution that would create a new Zoning Code Review Commission that would launch a process of overhauling the city's zoning code and give the City Council more control of real estate development in the city, reports Taylor Allen.

The City Council approved a resolution creating a Zoning Code Review Commission in 2019, according to Allen, but the commission never formed and the City Council must now revisit the issue.

"Two years later, amid a pandemic that has sent the city’s economy into a tailspin and its budget into a hole, Clarke wants to get the commission formed with the goal of ultimately remaking the code that dictates city construction and development," writes Allen.

Allen offers more details about the task facing the commission, if it finally takes shape: "Councilmembers and their appointees would lead the proposed commission in a comprehensive review of the code, last reworked in 2012. The commission would hold public hearings and submit a report recommending code changes to City Council and the mayor."

Allen also reports that the process of creating a new zoning code for the city seems to take issue with the high-rate of variance approvals granted by the city's Zoning Board of Adjustments. "While the 2012 zoning code revision was intended to reduce the influence of the ZBA board and the number of variances approved, Clarke and others argue not much changed on that front. In 2017, the ZBA approved 92% of zoning variance cases heard, according to a 2018 City Planning Commission Report," reports Allen.

If the commission does form to draft a new zoning code, the changes are unlikely to pursue the kind of reforms underway in cities around the country to remove exclusionary zoning that prioritizes single-family housing in residential neighborhoods in most of the country. Instead, precedent indicates that new powers of neighborhood preservation are the desired outcome. The 2019 version of the resolution was attached to a bill that prohibited zoning variances for multi-family housing in "Single Family Zoning Districts."

Thursday, January 28, 2021 in WHYY

portrait of professional woman

I love the variety of courses, many practical, and all richly illustrated. They have inspired many ideas that I've applied in practice, and in my own teaching. Mary G., Urban Planner

I love the variety of courses, many practical, and all richly illustrated. They have inspired many ideas that I've applied in practice, and in my own teaching.

Mary G., Urban Planner

Cover CM Credits, Earn Certificates, Push Your Career Forward

Aerial view of town of Wailuku in Maui, Hawaii with mountains in background against cloudy sunset sky.

Maui's Vacation Rental Debate Turns Ugly

Verbal attacks, misinformation campaigns and fistfights plague a high-stakes debate to convert thousands of vacation rentals into long-term housing.

July 1, 2025 - Honolulu Civil Beat

Logo for Planetizen Federal Action Tracker with black and white image of U.S. Capitol with water ripple overlay.

Planetizen Federal Action Tracker

A weekly monitor of how Trump’s orders and actions are impacting planners and planning in America.

July 2, 2025 - Diana Ionescu

White and purple sign for Slow Street in San Francisco, California with people crossing crosswalk.

San Francisco Suspends Traffic Calming Amidst Record Deaths

Citing “a challenging fiscal landscape,” the city will cease the program on the heels of 42 traffic deaths, including 24 pedestrians.

July 1, 2025 - KQED

Google street view image of strip mall in suburban Duncanville, Texas.

Adaptive Reuse Will Create Housing in a Suburban Texas Strip Mall

A developer is reimagining a strip mall property as a mixed-use complex with housing and retail.

July 6 - Parking Reform Network

Blue tarps covering tents set up by unhoused people along chain link fence on concrete sidewalk.

Study: Anti-Homelessness Laws Don’t Work

Research shows that punitive measures that criminalized unhoused people don’t help reduce homelessness.

July 6 - Next City

Aerial tram moving along cable in hilly area in Medellin, Colombia.

In U.S., Urban Gondolas Face Uphill Battle

Cities in Latin America and Europe have embraced aerial transitways — AKA gondolas — as sustainable, convenient urban transport, especially in tricky geographies. American cities have yet to catch up.

July 6 - InTransition Magazine