Civil Municipal - December 2025

leaders want to preserve as new neighborhoods come online. Daugherty and Carroll are also preparing a formal push around conservation and land trusts, giving local landowners options to protect agricultural and rural tracts for future generations while finding reasonable economic pathways to do so. While City Center’s tenant roster is not yet public— leases are controlled by the private development team—the wider market is already responding. A small business complex recently opened with five Momentum isn’t limited to that single site. Within a quarter mile of the project, additional condominium developments are queued up, and across town the residential pipeline is robust: approximately 3,200 housing units—a mix of single-family homes and multifamily—are approved across about nineteen active developments. That scale of activity underscores both Fairview’s draw and its planning challenges. The city is finishing a comprehensive code rewrite in the next two to three months to lock in design standards, open space expectations, and the “feel” 106 CIVIL AND MUNICIPAL VOLUME 06, ISSUE 12

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