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Raleigh City Council Recap – Housing Bonds, Transit, Growth, Traffic Safety and Major Rezoning Updates
Raleigh City Council met May 5, 2026, to review housing and transportation bonds, traffic safety updates, rezoning cases, Dix Park funding, the former DMV site, and Reflecting Raleigh civic recommendations.
Raleigh City Council Recap: What Happened at the May 5, 2026 Meeting
Raleigh City Council held its regular afternoon and evening meeting on Tuesday, May 5, 2026, inside Council Chamber at 222 West Hargett Street. The meeting covered a wide range of issues shaping the city’s future, including affordable housing, transportation, neighborhood traffic safety, major development projects, parks funding, public art, and upcoming rezoning hearings.
Major Takeaways
One of the biggest items was the next step toward a potential November 2026 bond referendum. Council moved forward with the process for two proposed bonds: $101.5 million for affordable housing and $101.5 million for transportation, totaling up to $203 million. A public hearing is scheduled for May 19, 2026.
Council also considered the city’s Federal FY 2026–27 Annual Action Plan, which guides Raleigh’s use of HUD funding, including Community Development Block Grant, HOME, and Emergency Solutions Grant dollars.
Housing, Growth and Development
Several annexation and rezoning items moved through the agenda. Council reviewed annexation petitions for properties near Jones Ridge Trail, Aquarius Lane, and Strother Road, with future public hearings planned.
The Planning Commission sent multiple rezoning cases to Council, including:
- Z-43-25 on Litchford Road, which the Planning Commission recommended denying.
- Z-44-25 near Jones Ridge Trail, recommended for approval.
- TCZ-02-26 at 4601 Creedmoor Road, recommended for approval.
- Z-37-25 near Avent Ferry Road, revised to allow up to 478 residential units with a proposed five-story limit.
In the evening session, Council held public hearings on rezoning requests involving Trailwood Drive, Blue Ridge Road, and properties near West Martin Street, Commerce Place, and West Davie Street.
Transportation and Traffic Safety
Council reviewed several transportation-related items, including neighborhood speed limit reductions for La Costa Way and Marcony Way, a new all-way stop recommendation at Milburnie Road and North King Charles Road, and curbside changes near 900 West Morgan Street.
The city also reviewed updates to the Neighborhood Traffic Management Program, including future traffic calming projects and policy changes connected to Raleigh’s Vision Zero goals.
Convention Center and Downtown Projects
Council considered major contract updates tied to the Raleigh Convention Center expansion, including commissioning services from RMF Engineering and several contract amendments related to site conditions and environmental remediation.
The city also moved forward with a contract extension for Sodexo Live!, which includes a $2 million capital investment to support food and beverage service at the expanded Convention Center complex.
Parks, Public Art and Community Funding
Council accepted proposed donations into the Municipal Art Collection, including Dan Nelson’s painting “Memorial Auditorium” and Brian Walsby’s “Prayer, 2023.”
A $100,000 sponsorship from WTVD-TV was also included for the July 4th Celebration at Dix Park.
Council contingency funding requests included support for organizations such as We Plant It Forward, Trees for the Triangle, Raleigh Housing Fund, Tamarisk Community, El Centro Hispano, and Gabi’s Workforce.
Former DMV Headquarters Site Update
City staff provided an update on the redevelopment of the former DMV headquarters site on New Bern Avenue. The site is being positioned as a future transit-oriented development along Raleigh’s Bus Rapid Transit corridor. Updates included demolition, abatement, interim construction staging, temporary activations, market study findings, and future steps to gather development partner input.
Reflecting Raleigh Civic Assembly
Council also received recommendations from the Reflecting Raleigh Civic Assembly, part of the city’s process to create the next Comprehensive Plan. The recommendations focused on how Raleigh should manage growth in neighborhoods served by frequent transit. Visit this link to read or watch the Meeting
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Raleigh City Council Recap: January 6, 2026 Meeting Highlights
The City of Raleigh City Council held a full agenda meeting on January 6, 2026, covering rezonings, affordable housing investments, committee restructuring, and major project updates—including the status of the Raleigh Convention Center and the New City Hall project. Below is a clear, community-focused recap of the most important actions and discussions for Raleigh residents.
👉 Full agenda and attachments:
Key Takeaways at a Glance
North Hills rezoning public hearing led the agenda and remains open for continued discussion Councilor Harrison named Mayor Pro Tem Raleigh Convention Center expected to reopen within days following fire-related repairs New City Hall remains on schedule for March 2027 completion, on time and on budget $2.88 million authorized for Duplex Village affordable housing development Multiple rezonings approved, delayed, or scheduled for future hearings City Council committees renamed to align with the adopted Strategic Plan Upcoming district meetings and Transportation & Transit Committee discussions announced
Leadership & Governance Updates
City Council unanimously named Councilor Harrison as Mayor Pro Tem, a key leadership role responsible for stepping in when the Mayor is unavailable and helping guide Council priorities.
Council also unanimously approved renaming two standing committees to better reflect policy focus:
Growth & Natural Resources Committee → Housing and the Environment Safe, Vibrant, and Healthy Communities Committee → Community Safety and Quality of Life
Major City Projects & Infrastructure
Raleigh Convention Center Update
Following a recent fire incident, staff reported:
Re-occupancy expected within a day or two Six events cancelled or relocated 34 Q1 events moving forward with minimal disruption Over $4 million in booked revenue retained More than 28,000 hotel room nights preserved
Council unanimously granted the City Manager expanded authority to enter contracts and approve budget transfers through June 30, 2026 to support recovery efforts.
New City Hall Project
The New City Hall project remains:
On schedule On budget Targeted for final completion in March 2027
Affordable Housing: Duplex Village
Council unanimously approved:
A $2,880,000 conditional commitment from the 2020 Affordable Housing Bond Authorization to lease city-owned land to BRAD (or designated ownership entity)
The Duplex Village project will deliver 120 affordable rental units for low-income households, representing a significant investment in housing stability and equity.
Rezoning & Land Use Decisions
Approved or Continued Rezoning Items
Z-9-25 – 4500 Western Blvd (District D): Approved 5–3, with concerns raised about tree canopy preservation Z-27-25 – 721 & 725 Grove Ave (District D): Unanimously approved Z-26-25 – Leesville Rd (District E): Unanimously approved Z-34-25 – North Hills (District A): Hearing held open until January 20 Z-33-25 – Gresham Lake Rd (District A): To return as a special item on January 20, with a public hearing set for February 3
Rezoning Delays for Further Discussion
Z-11-25 – 2230 S. New Hope Rd (District C): Public hearing delayed until January 20 to allow more discussion on affordable housing conditions Z-31-25 – 516 N. Blount St (District C): Planning Commission deadline extended by 45 days
Transportation & Street Closings
Street Closing STC-04-2025 (McLean Drive ROW): Unanimously approved Transportation & Transit Committee will meet January 29, 3–5 PM to discuss citizen-initiated street closures and transportation concerns, including Six Forks Road impacts related to North Hills development
Environmental & Public Health Actions
Council unanimously:
Authorized the sale of environmental credits generated by the Bioenergy Recovery Facility using Renewable Natural Gas Directed the City Attorney to draft a resolution adopting the NC DHHS model non-smoking ordinance
District & Community Meetings to Know
District D Neighborhood Alliance (DDNA): January 17, 9:30 AM – Crowder Center (hosted by Mayor Pro Tem Harrison) District E Meeting: January 14, 6–8 PM – La Cucina Italian Restaurant (Councilor Jones) Councilor Jones Book Club: January 17, 9:30–11:30 AM – New World Café District A Meeting: Tentatively scheduled for January 29 (location TBD, Councilor Silver)
Why This Matters
From housing affordability and downtown recovery to rezoning decisions and committee restructuring, the January 6 City Council meeting set the tone for Raleigh’s policy direction in early 2026. Residents are encouraged to stay engaged, attend upcoming committee meetings, and participate in district forums to help shape decisions that impact neighborhoods citywide.
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