Urbana City Council postponed final action on a proposed planned unit development for 413–419 West Main Street after lengthy public comment and council discussion on June 8, 2026.
The proposed project would replace two existing multifamily buildings with a new four‑story building of 32 units. Dozens of residents, housing advocates and neighborhood members spoke during the meeting’s public comment period, sharply divided on the project’s merits. Opponents said the building was out of scale with adjacent single‑family blocks, risked displacing current residents and ran counter to the city’s recently adopted comprehensive plan. Supporters argued the development adds badly needed housing near transit and downtown, helping address a low local vacancy rate and long‑term affordability problems.
Council members pressed for more detail on several technical and design points. Staff said the applicant obtained a Boneyard Creekway permit that dedicates a 20‑foot easement from the edge of the creek into the property and triggers a developer contribution to a special improvement fund; staff estimated that contribution could be up to $10,000 under the current permit calculation. Council discussed whether that level of developer funding is adequate, noting construction of the shared‑use path the easement would support would cost on the order of hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars.
Several councilors also questioned the project’s massing and transition to adjacent homes, and whether the PUD’s advantages—flexibility from zoning rules—were matched by sufficient public amenities. The council’s debate touched repeatedly on two competing views: that market‑rate infill near downtown can help relieve housing‑market pressure over time, and that market‑rate developments alone have not reliably lowered rents for low‑income residents.
Council member Chris Evans moved to delay final action; the motion passed unanimously on roll call. The council set a special meeting for July 6, 2026, to take up the PUD again. The deferral directs staff and the developer to provide further data and proposed conditions addressing tree preservation, creekway funding and more detailed design responses to neighborhood concerns.
Next steps: The council will reconvene the PUD discussion on July 6. If city council ultimately approves the PUD, the record shows the project will carry the Boneyard Creekway dedication and the improvement fund contribution described in the permit. If the council denies or asks for a redesign, the developer may revise plans and return to the plan commission and council under the city’s PUD process.