Fredericksburg City Council denied a rezoning request to change three East Austin properties from single-family residential (R-1) to Central Business District (CBD), following a public hearing in which residents and nearby property owners raised notice and compatibility concerns.
An applicant representative (Mr. Ehler) said the request reflects the street’s evolution toward mixed commercial use and that a neighborhood-commercial classification (C-1) would provide a transition between Main Street and nearby houses. He said C-1 zoning would limit uses to neighborhood-compatible businesses such as professional offices rather than full CBD uses.
Members of the public urged denial. Mike Mahoney, a Fredericksburg resident, told council the application and related notice process "really stinks" and urged denial so applicants could refile with clear public notice. Other residents said increased tourism, short-term rentals and nearby hotels have already shifted the block away from residential use and that higher-intensity CBD zoning would threaten existing homes.
Planning staff and the Planning & Zoning Commission recommended denial of the CBD request; staff told council that roughly 25 protest letters had been received at PNC and that only a small number of protests were within the 200-foot notification buffer. Council weighed options including denying the CBD request, considering an alternate C-1 district, tabling the item or returning it to PNC. Council member (speaker 8) moved to deny the CBD rezoning request; the motion passed by voice vote and the application was denied. Staff noted the applicant could reapply for a C-1 district and that a supermajority would be required to overturn a PNC denial.