Nicole Devon, the city's planning manager, gave the council a chronological review of the Duany downtown plan, its adoption in April 2003, and the municipal actions taken to implement it, including comprehensive-plan amendments, a downtown smart code and public-infrastructure investments.
Devon said the city replaced utilities, restored original downtown brickwork and encouraged private redevelopment through a combination of architectural standards and financial incentives administered in partnership with the Community Redevelopment Agency. "That plan was adopted in April 2003," Devon said, tracing key projects from sidewalks and streetscape to riverfront activations and the basin work that removed surface parking.
Council members pressed on bonus-density mechanics and accountability. Devon described how bonus density evolved into a mix of public-benefit criteria and financial contributions; staff said bonus payments go into a community fund used for downtown projects but are not tied to a single named program. Council members raised that the Riverwalk requirement applies to newer waterfront development but that older residential developments sometimes leave gaps that will require future work-arounds or construction over submerged land.
Tony Palermo, assistant director of community development, and other staff highlighted an estimated 2,000-plus new residential units added downtown over the last two decades and noted incentives played a major role in attracting development. Council directed staff to provide more detail on how community-fund dollars are allocated and to continue work on filling riverwalk gaps where possible.