The big picture
At an April 15 meeting, Sugar Land City Council approved the first reading of two ordinances to change the land use plan and rezone 30 acres of land—located east of Hwy. 6 near Constellation Field—from commercial use to a neighborhood activity center.
Neighborhood activity centers allow for mixed-use developments and can create walkable areas that bring offices, shops, restaurants and residential together, Redevelopment Planning Manager Ruth Lohmer said. The land use changes aim to allow development of middle housing, which includes cottages, townhomes and small-lot homes for more affordable options.
Why it matters
City officials want to add housing options for empty nesters, young families and small households, with the percentage of families with children dropping eight points from 42% in 2010 to 34% in 2022, Lohmer said.
“Our population is declining, and in the end it’s hurting our local businesses, our schools and just our overall quality of life,” she said. “The solution is we need more housing. We need more people in our community, and we need options that will meet market demands.”
Additionally, with only 4% of land undeveloped in Sugar Land, more compact housing can provide more homes and more value per acre as the city reaches build-out, Lohmer said.What they’re saying
Although the ordinances were ultimately approved 5-1—with council member William Ferguson being the dissenting vote—resident Kathy Cortes Richter said she and other residents were not in support of changing the land to residential rather than commercial.
“We, as residents, need to speak up and defend the little land that is around us,” she said during the public hearing. “We want other things; ... we want restaurants, we want stores and we want things we can walk to.”
Mayor Joe Zimmerman, who chaired the Planning and Zoning Commission in 2000 when the development plan was established, said this area still hasn’t seen any development.
“We’ve had pockets of land that have been waiting for the market to come to us for decades and that hasn’t happened,” he said. “This is a way for us to put the land back out there with a restriction that allows some flexibility to see if that’s a market we can participate in.”
Looking ahead
The ordinances are set to come back to City Council for second reading at its May 6 meeting, city officials said.
If passed, future developers will still need to get development and site plan approval from City Council, Lohmer said.