Acquire a petition signed by 75% of the abutting property owners on the particular street.See a sample petition.
Send a letter requesting the street name change along with the petition to: Planning and Development Department
P.O. Box 1562
Houston, Texas 77251-1562
Attention: Ms. Marlene Gafrick
The Planning and Development Department will:
Verify that the proposed name complies with the City’s street name standards.
Prepare a map indicating the boundary of the name change.
Mail notice to abutting property owners and public agencies of the proposed name change, and allow 30 days for comments.
Ask the Legal Department to prepare an ordinance for City Council to consider.
City Council votes on the proposed ordinance. If approved, the name change will be effective 90 days after passage of the ordinance.
The City Secretary’s Office will:
Notify property owners and other service providers of name change (Post Office, Police and Fire Departments, Reliant Energy, Reliant Entex, Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. and Greater Harris County 911.)
Ask the Traffic Management and Maintenance Division of the Department of Public Works and Engineering to put up new street signs.
Street Naming Standards
The proposed street name must not be a duplicate name of any existing street name in the City or its extraterritorial jurisdiction. For duplicate street name information, call 713-837-7771 or 713-837-7779.
Existing street names must be used in those instances where a new street is a direct extension of an existing street or logical extension.
Street name suffixes must be assigned as follows:
Court, Circle or Loop are reserved for cul-de-sac or loop streets;
Boulevard, Speedway, Parkway and Expressway are reserved for major thoroughfares or divided streets with at least 2 lanes of traffic in each direction.
Highway and Freeway shall be reserved for designated highways or freeways under the jurisdiction of the Texas Department of Transportation.
Street name prefixes such as North, South, East, and West may be used to clarify the general location of the street. However, such prefixes must be consistent with the existing and established street naming and address numbering system of the general area in which the street is located.
Alphabetical and numerical street names must not be designated except where such street is a direct extension of an existing street and is not a duplicate street name.
The City does not name streets after living people. In addition, the City only allows the use of proper names for national figures, i.e., Martin Luther King Blvd. and Sgt. Macario Garcia Drive.
Major thoroughfares are reserved for national figures.
Information About Name Changes For Private Streets
Citizens who request the name change should:
Check with Development Services to see if the proposed name change complies with the City’s street name standards.
Private Street must comply with (Chap. 41) requirements
Requires a petition signed by 51% of the abutting property owners on the particular street.
Sends a letter requesting the street name change along with the petition to:
The Planning and Development Department,
P.O. Box 1562,
Houston, Texas 77251-1562
Attention:Marlene Gafrick, Director
The Planning and Development Department will:
Verify that the proposed name complies with the City’s street name standards.
Prepare a map indicating the boundary of the name change.
Mail notice to abutting property owners and public agencies of the proposed name change and allow a 30 day time period for comments.
Ask the Legal Department to prepare an ordinance for City Council to consider.City Council votes on the proposed ordinance. If approved, the name change will be effective 90 days after passage of the ordinance.
City Secretary’s Office
Notifies property owners and other service providers of name change (Post Office, Police and Fire Departments, Reliant Energy, Reliant Entex, Southwestern Bell Telephone Co., and Greater Harris County 911.)
The owners of the private street are then notified to begin their changes to the street signs.
For more information about naming private streets:
Development codes and recommend action on the plats to the City’s Planning Commission. Plats are submitted to the city every two weeks for consideration by the Commission the following week.
The Department checks development and subdivision plats for the proper subdivision of land and for adequate street or right-of-way, building lines and for compliance with Chapter 42, the City’s land development ordinance.
Houston Planning Commission
Approval by Planning Commission is often the first step required in the development process. The Planning Commission is a 25-member board appointed by the Mayor and approved by City Council tasked with responsibility for reviewing and approving subdivision plats and variances in the City and the ETJ. The Commission also reviews development site plan variances within the city limits.
The Commission meets every other Thursday at 2:30 p.m. in City Hall annex chambers, 900 Bagby unless otherwise posted. The agenda is posted three days in advance on the Department’s web site. Items on the agenda posted as consent are typically considered all in one grouping. Items considered separately include replats requiring a public hearing and variances.
Members of the public can sign up to speak on any agenda item at the meeting. Speakers are allowed 3 minutes, and speakers can only speak once on an item. If the item is deferred, speakers must choose at which meeting to speak.
A plat provides for the subdivision of land that can be legally defined (i.e. Lot 29, block 19 of the Happy Trails subdivision). Subdivision plats are required to show the how land will be subdivided. The plat must reflect adequate streets and right-of-way for the project. The plat is checked to assure it abides by all development rules as established by Chapter 42, the City’s land development ordinance. By law, the Commission is required to approve plats that meet the requirements of Chapter 42.
Undeveloped land must be platted before development occurs. If land is platted, it can be replatted to further subdivide the existing subdivision plat or change the use of the property (i.e. from single-family to multi-family). Typically, a replat will make changes to the layout of lots, reserves, building setback lines and easements.
Plats must be considered and either approved or disapproved within 30 days or state law mandates that the plat will automatically be approved if no action is taken. Plats can be usually be deferred twice but action must be taken within the 30 days. Residents who were notified of a public hearing or variance will not receive a second notice if the item is deferred at Planning Commission. The item will automatically come up at the next Planning Commission meeting in two weeks.
The Commission’s authority on platting does not extend to land use and therefore cannot disapprove a plat because of the intended use of the property. Other issues applicable to land development such as adequate water, sewer and drainage are handled by other agencies and not part of the Commission’s authority regarding plat approval.
A plat must be prepared by a licensed surveyor, land planner and/or engineer and a licensed surveyor or engineer must sign the plat. If the property is located within Fort Bend County, a licensed engineer must sign the plat in addition to a licensed surveyor.
A public hearing for the replat is required if there were ever or if there are currently single-family restrictions on the property. Public hearings are held before Planning Commission during the meeting. Residents within 200 feet of the property replat and within the original subdivision boundary will be mailed letters of notification and a sign will be posted announcing the public hearing date. If there are no variances requested, Planning Commission must approve the replat if it meets all the rules according to Chapter 42 and does not violate state law.
Planning Commission does have discretionary authority if a plat requires a variance or special exception. Residents in the city limits that are within 250 feet of the proposed development will be notified of certain variances and have a chance to offer input on how the variance will affect their neighborhood or property. A variance is a deviation from the strict compliance of the rules and regulations of Chapter 42. The applicant must document a reasonable hardship for the variance. This usually means that applying the rules of Chapter 42 would make the land undevelopable without the variance.
Single family designation under Chapter 42 can include more than one housing structure. Examples include a duplex or a house with a garage apartment under 900 square feet. If an area is deed restricted, the restrictions must restrict number of structures and type of structures on a lot to prohibit this type of development. Planning Commission cannot approve a plat that will conflict with deed restrictions.
Many plats may be platted as an unrestricted reserve which can be any commercial or non-residential application (i.e. retail center, apartment, office building). A restricted reserve is for non single-family residential purposes but designates the use for the property. An owner can sell off pieces of a reserve but cannot sell of pieces of a singe family plat.
The City reviews plats in the ETJ which is the area extending approximately five miles beyond Houston’s corporate limits into the unincorporated areas of Harris, Fort Bend, Liberty, Montgomery and Waller counties. These areas however are not subject to the City’s permitting and building inspection regulations.
Site plans are required for all buildings constructed in the city limits. Site plans are also required if a building is remodeled and the remodeling changes the footprint of the structure. The site plan must include parking, landscaping, building lines, and setbacks. The site plan will show how the structure(s) sits on the lot and how the public accesses the property (i.e. driveway connections). The site plan is reviewed when the owner/builder applies for a building permit.
Permitting
All construction within the city limits must be permitted. This is handled by the Department of Public Works and Engineering’s Planning and Development Services Division. This is where city staff reviews the details (blueprints) of the actual construction project. The application must adhere to the City’s building code and energy code. For more information about this process, contact Public Works at 713-535-7500 or log onto the Public Works and Engineering web site at http://www.publicworks.cityofhouston.gov/planning/index.htm. It is during the permitting process that applications are reviewed for water and wastewater capacity, drainage and infrastructure.
A Class I plat is only for residential and either amends a previous plat or:
Creates no more than four (4) lots, each fronting on an existing street;
Does not require or propose the creation of any new street;
Does not require or propose the dedication of any easement for public water, wastewater collection or storm sewer lines; and
Is not a replat.
There is a one time submittal process for class I plats. Class I plats are not very common.
Class II Plats
A Class II plat/replat is a subdivision plat that:
Does not require or propose the creation of any new street;
Does not require or propose the dedication of any easement for public water, wastewater collection or storm sewer lines; and
Can be a replat but does not requires notification of adjacent property owners
There is a one time submittal process. A variance or a special exception may be sought with a Class II plat/replat. All variance or special exception applications within the city limits of Houston require notification of adjacent property owners.
Class III Plats
A Class III plat/replat is required for subdivisions that require or propose the creation of any new street or the dedication of any easement for public water, wastewater collection or storm sewer lines. A class III plat is also required for a vacating plat.
A Class III plat requires two submittals: a preliminary and a final.
A variance or a special exception may be sought with a Class III preliminary plat/replat, and all variance or special exception applications within the city limits require that adjacent property owners are notified. Objections from adjacent property owners should be raised during the preliminary platting process.
A preliminary plat application can be filed on land that is being considered for purchase. In many cases, final purchase may depend on the outcome of the plat submittal.
For information on land development or to ask specific information on a plat, contact:
Planning and Development Department:
713-837-7701 (ask for Planner of the Day)