The Lincoln Planning Commission unanimously recommended changes to sidewalk café regulations and related zoning chapters, approving a package staff described as creating clearer design standards, more flexible options for nonalcoholic café spaces and an administrative approval pathway when standards are met.
Paul Barnes (Planning and Development Services) framed the package as a coordinated effort tied to the downtown Project 0 Street improvements. He said staff would remove the current requirement that all sidewalk cafes have fully enclosed barriers by allowing nonalcohol cafes to have more flexible, temporary delineation. The package includes design standards addressing placement in four sidewalk zones, barrier heights and openings, materials, overhead elements, lighting/heating safety, and annual permitting and inspections.
Arvind Gopalakrishnan walked commissioners through the guidebook, explaining ADA clearances (a three‑foot clear path within cafes), permitted barrier types (movable planters, rope barriers, moveable barricades), prohibited materials (chain link, untreated lumber, unstable fencing), and special standards for historic Haymarket and West Haymarket. Commissioners asked technical questions about cross slope, pedestrian passageways and compatibility with existing PUDs; staff pointed to specific code sections and said the guidebook is meant to be public‑facing guidance with the code covering the legal requirements.
The commission closed the hearing and approved the recommended package by a 5–0 vote; portions of the package that amend chapters outside the planning commission’s purview will go to City Council for final action.