On Oct. 26 the Planning Commission adopted objective design standards for storefront security gates intended to reduce storefronts’ visual disruption while allowing modern opaque roll‑down gates in commercial corridors. Staff and the city architect presented standards that conceal coil hoods behind a sloped awning, prohibit motorized chain or motor boxes where feasible, require visible viewing windows for less‑permeable gates and forbid concealment of architectural transom windows or significant ornamentation.
Commission discussion focused on whether to require sloped awnings (staff argued sloped or rounded awnings better conceal coil boxes and are consistent with many historic storefronts) and to clarify the transom‑window rule (commission amended the text to split it into two sentences to avoid ambiguity: the coil must not cover an existing transom window, and if a transom is already covered it should not remain covered by new work). The commission also confirmed a mural/art requirement for fully opaque gates used by cannabis retail.
Outcome: The motion to adopt the standards with the amended transom language passed 5–1 (President Tanner opposed). Commissioners asked staff to refine handbook guidance and to ensure the standards do not conceal important architectural details.
Why it matters: The rules balance storefront security needs against street‑level activation and historic building fabric; the standards are intended to make modern roll‑down gates less visually obtrusive and easier for the public to navigate.
Next step: Staff will finalize the ordinance text and update planning guidance to support permit review and consistency across commercial corridors.
Vote: Adopt standards with amended transom requirement; passed 5–1 (Braun, Diamond, Imperial, Coppell, Moore: aye; President Tanner: no).