Central Area Design Guidelines and Design Review Board Commissioned

- Ensuring that development responds to local topography, particularly through the use of terraces, stoops, or stepped facades or landscaping to adjust to transitions. Much of 23rd Avenue and streets east or west of it are hilly.
- Encouraging the use of various urban design strategies to transition the scale of new development appropriately through massing, articulation, building entrances, facade modulation, and interior portals.
- Preserving structures through adaptive reuse and rehabilitation, using high ceilings and transoms for ground floor uses, and taking cues from local development.
- Employing materials and textures with very bold and vibrant colors that create a strong connection to the local pattern.
- Developing open spaces that are located in such a way that they are accessible and visible to the public.
- Guidance on history and heritage, such as reserving blanks wall for murals and art as well as providing culturally-appropriate amenities (e.g., basketball hoops and chess boards), apply to Influence Areas.
- Guidance on Character Areas are broken out by the three nodes on 23rd Avenue (Union Street, Cherry Street, and Jackson Street) and encourage developments to generally respond to unique community assets through design.
- Guidance on developing active and visual elements through street furniture, facades, landscaping, and lighting apply near Cultural Placemakers to emphasize those community assets.
Committing to Energy Efficiency Programs

Ride-Hailing Work Plan
The Seattle City Council separately approved a work plan to look into how citywide ride-hailing policies should be reformed. This would affect drivers, consumers, and companies in the taxicab, for-hire, and app-based ride-hailing arena. The work plan directs city officials to work with operators to gather data on their services in the city so that the city council has sufficient information to review possible policy changes. Specifically, the city council wants data on:- How many hours that drivers work;
- Trip information such as number of trips, distances that passengers travel, and distances to pickup passengers;
- How much is paid in fares for service; and
- How much drivers were paid last year.
City Council Passes Central Area Rezones