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Planning Commissioners have voted unanimously to recommend a rezoning for an industrial site in East Austin’s Govalle neighborhood that could lead to another tall housing development on the Colorado.

The site, located at 20 Strandtman Cove near Airport Boulevard, is currently zoned LI, or light industrial, and houses a warehouse for foundation materials. The request was to change that to Planned Development Area (PDA) zoning that would make it possible to build residential structures up to 120 feet in height.

Alice Glasco, a consultant working on behalf of the owner, said during the hearing that they intend to redevelop it into a 945-unit housing complex. Staff had supported their request with the addition of an expanded conditional overlay prohibiting a wide range of commercial uses, which Glasco said the developer was amenable to.

Representatives of the contact team for the neighborhood plan, a kind of overall planning document that covers many Austin locales, spoke mostly in opposition to the plan during the hearing.

Candace Fox, a co-chair of the contact team, said that although they had had some fruitful negotiations with the developer, the height of the proposed buildings remained a sticking point, along with a more general unease about the nature of the development. She raised the specter of DB90, the controversial zoning plan Mayor Kirk Watson described in May as an “unhappy experience.”

“Last summer was the summer of DB90 cases,” she said. “And now looking back, wow, I kind of wish this was a DB90 in a way, because we would have higher affordability in a project than any agreement that [the developer has made with us.”

The agreement negotiated between the developer and the neighborhood would see any prospective development include 10 percent units and 80 percent of the local Median Family Income, which as of 2025 is around $133,800. The deal would also include a one-time $250,000 donation from the developer to the Guadalupe Neighborhood Development Corporation and another $50,000 to the Colorado River Conservancy. All of that would be enforced through a private restrictive covenant with the neighborhood.

Glasco also said that the developer would commit to “stepping down” the height of any development from 120 feet on the northern edge of the property down to 30 feet on the southern edge, with an area of 90 feet in between.

She said that was based on what had been negotiated between the neighborhood, local activists and developer Endeavor for the former site of Borden Dairy, which Fox noted had been achieved only after activists sued the city for spot zoning. That lawsuit was settled as part of the deal.

The successful motion to recommend the request was made by commissioner Imad Ahmed. who cited the benefit of added housing supply as his primary reason for supporting the rezoning, alongside general approval of the proposal’s details.

“I think using the Borden tract as a precedent, or as something to base this zoning on, makes sense in this case,” Ahmed said.

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