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Annapolis Comprehensive Plan

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

City Dock Master Plan Meeting Thursday Night

The presentation, which is open to the public, is on Feb. 7 at 7 p.m. in the Annapolis City Council chambers.

The process to adopt a master plan for City Dock continues and the public can attend a presentation Thursday night to learn more. The Annapolis City Council formally received the proposal in December 2012 and referred the master plan to several boards and commissions so that their members can review and comment. A presentation—open to the public—for those groups will be held at 7 p.m. Thursday in the council's chambers at 160 Duke of Gloucester St. An advisory committee spent two years developing the proposal that Chris Jakubiak, an urban planner hired by the city of Annapolis, presented to the council in November 2012. To view the proposal, click here. A public hearing will be held at the Planning Commission on March 21 at 7 p.m. See more:

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

City Council Receives City Dock Master Plan

The plan marks the end of the City Dock Advisory Committee, and it will now head to city departments and council committees for review.

The master plan to revamp City Dock took the next step towards implementation when City Council formally received the proposal at its Monday night meeting. "This is a milestone tonight as we disband the City Dock Advisory Committee," said Annapolis Chief of Comprehensive Planning Virginia Burke. "What begins next is the review process and then the adoption process." The advisory committee spent two years developing the proposal that Chris Jakubiak, an urban planner hired by the city of Annapolis, presented to the council at its Nov. 26 meeting. To view the proposal, click here. Under the plan, a 25-foot wide promenade would wrap around the waterfront on City Dock with a 3-foot sea wall to prevent flooding. The public space next to Market …

Rick M

9:57 pm on Friday, December 28, 2012

Trying to force cars out of the city by reducing public parking is an attack on downtown business, pure and simple. That will double the amount of folks who will opt for the mall because the downtown parking is more of a hassle. Shoppers don't use shuttle buses.   more ›

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