What's Hot

    Updates Submitted for Long-Planned Phoenix Development Area

    July 11, 2025

    Prescott Discusses Options for Highway 89 Improvements

    July 11, 2025

    Apache Junction Buys 76.5 Acres for Flood Control Project

    July 11, 2025
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    AZBEX
    NEWS TICKER
    • [July 11, 2025] - Updates Submitted for Long-Planned Phoenix Development Area
    • [July 11, 2025] - Prescott Discusses Options for Highway 89 Improvements
    • [July 11, 2025] - Apache Junction Buys 76.5 Acres for Flood Control Project
    • [July 11, 2025] - Multifamily Completions Hit 40-Year High
    • [July 11, 2025] - Arizona Projects 07-11-25
    • [July 9, 2025] - Phoenix Council Votes for Data Center Restrictions
    • [July 9, 2025] - Project Blue Developers Considering 2 Additional Tucson-Area Sites
    • [July 9, 2025] - Sundt to Build Industrial Facility in Apache Junction
    Facebook Twitter YouTube LinkedIn
    • Home
    • News
      1. View Latest
      2. Planning & Development
      3. Local News
      4. Classifieds
      5. Editorial Analysis
      6. Budgets & Funding
      7. Commercial Real Estate
      8. People on the Move
      9. Arizona Projects
      10. Legislation & Regulations
      11. Trends

      Updates Submitted for Long-Planned Phoenix Development Area

      July 11, 2025

      Prescott Discusses Options for Highway 89 Improvements

      July 11, 2025

      Apache Junction Buys 76.5 Acres for Flood Control Project

      July 11, 2025

      Sundt to Build Industrial Facility in Apache Junction

      July 9, 2025

      Phoenix Council Votes for Data Center Restrictions

      July 9, 2025

      Project Blue Developers Considering 2 Additional Tucson-Area Sites

      July 9, 2025

      Mesa P&Z Recommends Data Center Zoning Restrictions

      July 2, 2025

      Arterial Life Cycle Program Covers 20 Years of Street Development

      June 27, 2025

      Glendale Voters to Determine VAI Resort’s Fate

      May 16, 2025

      Legislation Would Effectively Strip NIMBYs of Referendum Tool

      February 11, 2025

      2025 Forecast Tries to Clarify an Uncertain Market

      February 7, 2025

      KOREPlex Buckeye Site Quietly Listed For Sale

      January 31, 2025

      Ariz. LIHTC to Sunset Under New Budget

      July 8, 2025

      State Government Shutdown Averted as Hobbs Signs Budget

      July 1, 2025

      Arterial Life Cycle Program Covers 20 Years of Street Development

      June 27, 2025

      $56M+ MAG Program will Enable $90M in Arterial Street Widening Projects

      June 24, 2025

      Commercial Real Estate 07-08-25

      July 8, 2025

      Commercial Real Estate 07-01-25

      July 1, 2025

      Commercial Real Estate 06-24-25

      June 24, 2025

      Commercial Real Estate 06-17-25

      June 17, 2025

      Industry Professionals 07-08-25

      July 8, 2025

      Industry Professionals 07-01-25

      July 1, 2025

      Industry Professionals 06-24-25

      June 24, 2025

      Industry Professionals 06-17-25

      June 17, 2025

      Arizona Projects 07-11-25

      July 11, 2025

      Arizona Projects 06-27-25

      June 27, 2025

      Arizona Projects 06-20-25

      June 20, 2025

      Arizona Projects 06-13-25

      June 13, 2025

      Ariz. LIHTC to Sunset Under New Budget

      July 8, 2025

      Tax Bill Would Make LIHTC Permanent

      July 2, 2025

      State Government Shutdown Averted as Hobbs Signs Budget

      July 1, 2025

      Hobbs, Legislators Reach Water Use Compromise

      June 24, 2025

      Multifamily Completions Hit 40-Year High

      July 11, 2025

      Construction Hiring Remains Sluggish

      July 8, 2025

      Ariz. Construction Shed 1,700 Jobs in May

      June 24, 2025

      NABH Council Partnership Wants to Expand Workforce Pipeline

      June 17, 2025

      Updates Submitted for Long-Planned Phoenix Development Area

      July 11, 2025

      Prescott Discusses Options for Highway 89 Improvements

      July 11, 2025

      Apache Junction Buys 76.5 Acres for Flood Control Project

      July 11, 2025

      Multifamily Completions Hit 40-Year High

      July 11, 2025
    • AZBEX
      • Subscribe
      • Classifieds
      • Advertising
    • DATABEX
      • Webinars
      • Monthly Snapshot
    • Events
      • 2025 Mid-Year Update
    • About Us
      • Meet the Company
      • Meet the Sales Team
      • Meet the Editorial Team
      • Meet the BEXperts
    AZBEX
    Home » Legislation & Regulations » Phoenix Delays Data Center Rezone Vote
    Economic Development

    Phoenix Delays Data Center Rezone Vote

    BEX StaffBy BEX StaffJune 20, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
    Credit: eBay
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    By Roland Murphy for AZBEX

    In our June 17 issue, we gave a detailed look at the Metro Phoenix data center market and proposals in Phoenix, Mesa and Tempe to issue new zoning restrictions on data center development. (AZBEX; June 17)

    One of the news items prompting that column was a planned Phoenix City Council vote on a proposed ordinance to update the general plan and zoning guidelines with new restrictions. We pointed out the timeline from the proposal’s first public mention to its planned vote was much shorter than usual for these types of items and that there had been pushback from economic development officials and members of Phoenix’s Village Planning Committees.

    That pushback seems to have had an effect, as Council opted for a continuance rather than a vote in its June 18 meeting.

    The discussion and possible adoption of the new regulations has been pushed to July 2, according to a June 19 news article.

    Phoenix Mayor Kate Gallego has called for elimination of Arizona’s tax incentive program for data center development, calling it outdated. She has also spoken out against data centers’ perceived negative impacts on walkability, transit, connectivity and other local development issues.

    Data centers are not an articulated use in any of Phoenix’s existing zoning categories, nor are they specifically directed in the General Plan. Proposed developments are reviewed under an informal interpretation of the existing categories under the current structure.

    When Phoenix issued its initially planned ordinance in December, it drew heavily from other cities’ requirements, including Chandler. Chandler was the first Valley city to implement zoning restrictions on data centers.

    The Phoenix ordinance would amend the features that define a data center, establish a special use permit requirement, set what districts a data center can be allowed in, impose distance requirements from other development types—particularly residential, examine noise levels, and mandate assurances of supply from utility providers.

    Economic development officials and members of the development community who deal with data centers have said the proposed changes in Phoenix and other cities would significantly harm Arizona’s continuing emergence as a leading market in the rapidly growing multi-billion-dollar data center industry.

    When the Village Planning Committees reviewed the ordinance, several changes were proposed. Five Committees expressed concerns about the noise level, the requirement for a “will serve” letter from power utilities assuring the minimum power requirements, and the time allotted for discussion and review of the proposed ordinance, according to the article.

    The planned changes set a maximum ambient noise level increase of 5%. Andrew Gasparro of the Ahwatukee Village Planning Committee noted ambient sound levels vary throughout the metro area and recommended including decibel levels as a measuring unit.

    The Village Planning Committees ultimately delivered a mixed bag of results from their discussions and votes. Seven recommended approval of the changes as written. Three approved them with modifications, and four voted to deny. Two of the four voted to deny outright, while two voted to deny with modifications.

    The original text was amended June 5 to change the “will serve” letter requirement to a requirement for an agreement between the developer and the utility company. It also removed a requirement for use of the Phoenix Green Construction Code.

    A memo from City planning staff said three stakeholder meetings had been held with representatives of various data center development interest groups.

    Having received all the new input, Council continued the planned vote. The measure will return to the agenda in two weeks.

    Ahwatukee Village Planning Committee City of Chandler City of Mesa City of Phoenix City of Tempe Data Centers Industrial Kate Gallego Phoenix City Council Phoenix Green Construction Code Phoenix Village Planning Committees Private rezoning warehouse/manufacturing zoning restrictions
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    Updates Submitted for Long-Planned Phoenix Development Area

    July 11, 2025

    Phoenix Council Votes for Data Center Restrictions

    July 9, 2025

    Project Blue Developers Considering 2 Additional Tucson-Area Sites

    July 9, 2025

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    You must be logged in to post a comment.

    Our Picks

    Updates Submitted for Long-Planned Phoenix Development Area

    July 11, 2025

    Prescott Discusses Options for Highway 89 Improvements

    July 11, 2025

    Apache Junction Buys 76.5 Acres for Flood Control Project

    July 11, 2025

    Multifamily Completions Hit 40-Year High

    July 11, 2025
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • LinkedIn
    • YouTube
    Don't Miss
    Planning & Development

    Updates Submitted for Long-Planned Phoenix Development Area

    July 11, 20250

    By Roland Murphy for AZBEX Evolving market conditions and product appetites have led IDM Companies…

    Prescott Discusses Options for Highway 89 Improvements

    July 11, 2025

    Apache Junction Buys 76.5 Acres for Flood Control Project

    July 11, 2025

    Multifamily Completions Hit 40-Year High

    July 11, 2025

    BEX serves architecture, engineering and construction firms as well as all the ancillary product and service categories that market to them. These include manufacturing representatives, public agencies and private real estate organizations, specialty subcontractors and services providers related to our industry.

    Our Picks

    Updates Submitted for Long-Planned Phoenix Development Area

    July 11, 2025

    Prescott Discusses Options for Highway 89 Improvements

    July 11, 2025

    Apache Junction Buys 76.5 Acres for Flood Control Project

    July 11, 2025
    Contact Us

    Phone: 480-709-4190
    Address: P.O. Box 12196 Tempe, AZ 85284
    Email: sales@azbex.com

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.