Planning Commission October 7, 2025

Planning Commission October 7, 2025


The Planning Commission approved several redevelopment and rezoning requests, including a new Valvoline oil change center at 198 Green Springs Highway, a rezoning and consolidation for Our Lady of Sorrows Church, and updates to Brookwood Village allowing Andrews Sports Medicine expansion with new parking arrangements. Commissioners also gave unanimous support to the redesigned Piggly Wiggly redevelopment at 3000 Independence Drive, praising its improved layout, added green space, and neighborhood coordination.


Agenda: https://bit.ly/48lt4fd

  • Details


    Item 251001: This was a request for a re-survey at 198 Green Springs Highway to adjust lot lines for the former PNC Bank site, now leased by Valvoline. The change adds parking space and stacking room. The Planning Commission discussed access points, landscaping, and building orientation, and Valvoline explained its clean, quiet operation and oil storage safety. The re-survey was approved.


    Item 251002: This was the final development plan for the new Valvoline Instant Oil Change at 198 Green Springs Highway. The project includes a 1,600-square-foot building, repaving, landscaping, and site cleanup. Commissioners discussed noise, electric vehicle service, and building appearance. The applicant agreed to add landscaping to soften the view from Green Springs. The plan was approved and will move to City Council.


    Item 251003: This was a rezoning request for Our Lady of Sorrows Church at 1730 Oxmoor Road to change a small C-1 parcel under its parking deck to I-2 institutional zoning, matching the rest of the church campus. The request corrects an old mapping oversight discovered during efforts to consolidate lots. The rezoning was approved and will move to City Council.


    Item 251004: This was a re-survey for Our Lady of Sorrows Church to consolidate most of its campus into one lot following the rezoning of the small C-1 parcel. The re-survey was approved, contingent upon the City Council’s rezoning approval.


    Item 251005: This was a re-survey at 801 Brookwood Village to create two lots, allowing for a sale and redevelopment of part of the former mall property for Andrews Sports Medicine expansion. The new lot supports added parking and a future 30,000-square-foot medical or office shell space. The re-survey was approved.


    Item 251006: This was an amended final development plan for 868 Brookwood Village reflecting the new lot and proposed renovations. It formalizes cross-parking arrangements with Andrews and converts parts of the former mall to parking and shell space. The amended plan was approved and will move to City Council.


    Item 251007: This was a development plan for the Piggly Wiggly redevelopment at 3000 Independence Drive. The project adds 7,500 square feet to the store, reorients the entrance toward the parking between CVS and the store, improves parking and landscaping, and coordinates green space with the city’s underpass beautification project. Truck delivery routes remain unchanged to protect nearby Courtney Drive residents. The plan was approved and will move to City Council.


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Something new is lighting up the holidays in Homewood. Homewood Holly Days will turn Central Park into a festive forest of more than 50 decorated trees, each sponsored by local businesses. The celebration begins November 28 at 6pm with a Tree Lighting Ceremony featuring Mayor Jennifer Andress, the Rotary Club of Homewood, live music, and hot cocoa. Beyond the lights, the event supports local students. Since 2016, the Homewood Rotary Club has awarded $223,000 in scholarships to Homewood High School seniors through the Bill Crawford Educational Foundation. Each tree sponsorship helps fund these scholarships and gives students the chance to reach their goals. Tree sponsors will receive a 6 to 6.5-foot tree from the Boy Scouts of America and can decorate it between November 23 and 27. The trees will stay on display through December 31, creating a bright and welcoming centerpiece for the holiday season.
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On behalf of Mayor Alex Wyatt and the outgoing City Council, I would like to thank Glen Adams for his dedicated service to the City of Homewood at a truly historic time. In September 2024, Homewood held a referendum in which our citizens elected to change our government from a Mayor-Council form of government to a Council-Manager form of government. Glen was hired as our first ever City Manager in March and went straight to work, making immediate improvements in the city and our day-to-day operations. Our city employees truly enjoyed working for Glen and responded well to his leadership and direction. As his contract expires, and we head in to the next Council term, we wish Glen the very best as he takes on his future endeavors. We are well-positioned to move into our next term and new form of government thanks to Glen’s hard work these past 8 months. Mayor-Elect Jennifer Andress
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