Found 3 blog entries tagged as landowners.

Austin Business Journal shares, "Matt Riehs' grandfather gifted his mother 2 acres, and then his grandmother helped her build a home on it. His aunt paid for his first 4-H project there. Those acts provided Riehs — an inner-city kid — with what he now describes as a "Huckleberry Finn lifestyle," which he credits for changing his future for the better.

While he wanted to become an agricultural teacher at one point, he has spent more than a decade as a large-acreage subdivision developer. For the last three years, he has owned Bertram-based LandHomesTexas LLC, which works in conjunction with his Katy-based brokerage Vertical Integration Realty LLC, to market, buy, sell and develop land homes with large acreage on the outskirts of Austin and Houston.

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Small backyard homes are commonly called granny flats or accessory dwelling units. SPENCER BROWN

Austin Business Journal writes, "a new policy allowing up to three homes to be raised on some single-family lots is one of the most high-profile changes to Austin's land use code as it tries to combat high home prices and adopt a big-city mentality.

But experts said the program will not have a notable effect on the local housing market for the foreseeable future — plus, there's the specter of a lawsuit scaring some developers off.

The first phase of what's called the HOME Initiative launched Feb. 5. That's when homeowners and developers could start to submit applications. Landowners can either sell the new, smaller homes or they can rent them out. The impact of the change will only become measurable in the months and years to come, but the…

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Austin Business Journal reports, "a pilot program intended to improve Austin's rezoning process is set to be considered by City Council.

The six-month pilot program would extend deadlines for zoning and rezoning applications in addition to neighborhood plan applications with the intention of giving developers and landowners more time to refine their requests and avoid potentially missing a deadline that would require them to start the process from the beginning.

For example, land use cases will be extended from a 60-day consideration period to 120 days while whole neighborhood plan amendments will increase from 90 days to 120.

Jordan Feldman, a principal planner with the city, said the proposed changes would decrease the need for staff…

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