Richmond’s Zoning Code Refresh: Developers Know, Do You?

by | Sep 2, 2025 | COMMUNITY, RICHMOND NEWS, RICHMOND POLITICS, SMART LIVING

Most Richmonders haven’t heard about it, but the City of Richmond is rewriting the rules that will determine what can be built, and where, for decades to come. It’s called the Zoning Code Refresh, and right now, it’s quietly moving through the public comment stage.

If that sounds boring, it isn’t. Zoning controls whether your neighborhood sees single-family homes or 10-story apartment towers, local businesses or national chains, open space or luxury condos. It’s one of the most powerful tools a city has to shape itself, and Richmond hasn’t done a full overhaul in decades.

The city has released draft zoning maps and opened an interactive website where residents can click on parcels and leave comments until September 28th.

Richmond-Zoning-Code-Refresh-2025_RVA-Magazine-2025
Comment on the interactive map HERE

Developers Are Showing Up, Residents Aren’t

Right now, the comment threads on Richmond’s zoning map are dominated by developers, real estate groups, and their allies. Many are pushing hard for taller, denser development, especially in historic neighborhoods like Church Hill, where proposals for 6-to-13 story buildings are circulating just outside of the officially protected blocks.

“Developers are obviously very aware of zoning changes, but there has been very little communication to residents about the opportunity to speak up,” one Richmond resident told RVA Mag. “I just wish more people knew this was happening.”

A sampling of public comments shows how the debate is playing out:

  • Joseph Carlisle (July 24, 2025): “Nine Mile Road… should support taller, denser development. RX-4 or ideally RX-6 to take full advantage of pedestrian infrastructure investments.”
  • Brandon Powell (Aug 14, 2025): “N 25th Street should be zoned MX-6 to align with Jefferson Street. Extending MX-6 to Broad would better connect mixed-use areas.”
  • John Wilson (July 10, 2025): “Extend MX-3 along south side of Q Street… infill development should extend the mixed-use character to connect the block between 29th and 30th to the main corridor along 25th Street.”

But others raise concerns about infrastructure, environment, and scale:

  • Joe Sokohl (July 10, 2025): “Where are the plans for increased services and safety? Until sewage, water, fire, and sanitation are coupled with this push to increase density, we’re not being honest.”
  • Alejandro Andrade (Aug 14, 2025): “We should have the median of Monument Ave better utilized… In Ghent in Norfolk, they have a similar Avenue with a walkway and benches in the middle.”
  • Leah Wilson (July 15, 2025): “Vacant land within 300′ of a highway should be zoned as industrial or open space, and then trees should be planted to shield the neighborhood.”

The Church Hill Flashpoint

Church Hill has always been one of Richmond’s most visible battlegrounds when it comes to preservation and growth. Protected historic blocks ensure some parts of the neighborhood will stay frozen in time, but the edges, just outside those districts, are in play.

That’s where developers are lobbying for mid-rise and high-rise buildings, arguing that Richmond needs more housing. On the other side, residents counter that infrastructure, water, sewer, fire protection, schools, can’t keep up, and that oversized projects could erase the character that makes the neighborhood livable in the first place.

It’s a classic Richmond fight: development versus preservation, growth versus identity.

Why This Matters for the Whole City

Even if you don’t live in Church Hill, this zoning refresh affects you. Every neighborhood from Southside to Northside, the Fan to Shockoe, Manchester to Brookland Park will see changes.

  • Height & Density: Will your block stay two or three stories tall, or will taller buildings be allowed?
  • Uses: Will new zoning bring more corner stores, breweries, or multifamily housing?
  • Transit-Oriented Development: Along Broad Street and other corridors, will BRT and transit nodes spark walkable, mixed-use hubs, or just more parking decks?
  • Equity & Displacement: Zoning decisions impact affordability, gentrification, and whether longtime residents get pushed out as development accelerates.

Richmond’s last few decades have been shaped by big development battles like Navy Hill, the fight over Shockoe Bottom, and the transformation of Manchester. Each time, a small group of insiders had a head start. The zoning refresh is bigger than all of those, because it rewrites the ground rules citywide.

Zoning Code Alphabet Soup: A Cheat Sheet

For those not fluent in zoning shorthand, here’s a quick breakdown of the codes you’ll see on the map:

Residential

  • R-C: Manufactured home parks, small single-family detached homes, duplexes, accessory dwelling units.
  • RD-A, RD-B, RD-C: Detached single-family homes, duplexes, accessory dwellings units.
  • RA-A,: Attached or detached single-family homes, duplexes, accessory dwellings units, small-scale commercial (up to 1,500 SF).
  • RA-B: Attached or detached single-family homes, duplexes,accessory dwellings units, small-scale multifamily (up to 6 units in a building), small-scale commercial (up to 1,500 SF).
  • RA-C: Attached or detached single-family homes, duplexes, accessory dwellings units,small-scale multifamily (up to 12 units in a building), small-scale commercial (up to 1,500 SF).

Residential Mixed (RX)

Primarily housing but allows ground floor commercial

  • RX-4: Up to 4 stories.
  • RX-6: Up to 6 stories.

Mixed-Use (MX)

Blends housing, and commercial uses. Number = max height.

  • MX-3: Up to 3 stories.
  • MX-6: Up to 6 stories.
  • MX-8: Up to 8 stories.
  • MX-13: Up to 13 stories.
  • MX-U: Unlimited height.

INDUSTRIAL MIXED-USE (IX)

Allows residential, commercial, light industrial or mixed-use buildings.

  • IX-6: Up to 6 stories.
  • IX-8: Up to 8 stories.

Commercial & Industrial

  •  CG: General commercial, auto-oriented uses, and residential.
  • IL, IH: Light and heavy industrial.

INSTITUTIONAL & OPEN SPACE

  • OS: Open Space (parks, trails, buffers).
  • CEM: Cemeteries.
  • INS: Institutional (schools, government, libraries, places of worship)

How to Get Involved

The good news: you don’t need to attend a marathon City Council meeting or wade through legal code to make your voice heard.

  • Check the map: The city’s interactive map lets you see what’s proposed for your block.
    Interactive Zoning Map
  • Leave a comment: Click a parcel, hit the “+” in the comment panel, and speak your piece.
  • Learn more: The city’s official page explains the process and timeline.
    Richmond Code Refresh Home

The Bigger Picture

Richmond is growing. Developers see profit, the city sees tax revenue, and residents see both opportunity and risk. There’s no question that zoning needs to be updated for the 21st century. The real question is whose voices shape the outcome.

If only developers weigh in, they’ll get what they want. If residents join the conversation, the city will have to balance growth with preservation, equity, and livability.

This is a once-in-a-generation rewrite of Richmond’s DNA. Don’t let it happen without you.


Support RVA Magazine. Support Independent Media in Richmond.

At a time when media ownership is increasingly concentrated among corporations and the wealthy, RVA Magazine has remained one of Richmond’s few independent voices. Since 2005, the magazine has provided grassroots coverage of the city’s artists, musicians, and communities, documenting the culture that defines Richmond beyond the headlines.

But we can’t do this without you. A small donation, even as little as $2, one-time or recurring, helps us continue to produce honest, local coverage free from outside interference. Every dollar makes a difference. Your support keeps us going and keeps RVA’s creative spirit alive. Thank you for standing with independent media. DONATE HERE.

We’ve got merch HERE
Subscribe to the Substack HERE
And Reddit HERE

RVA Staff

RVA Staff

Since 2005, the dedicated team at RVA Magazine, known as RVA Staff, has been delivering the cultural news that matters in Richmond, VA. This talented group of professionals is committed to keeping you informed about the events and happenings in the city.




more in community

Mayo Island is Finally Whole

The acquisition of the island's last privately owned parcel clears a major hurdle for Richmond's plans to create a public park along the James River. The long-running effort to transform Mayo Island into a public park took a major step forward this week after the...

Field Trip Bikes and the Long Ride of Richmond’s Cycling Culture

I recently bought my first bicycle in more than a decade. Like most people, I started my search online, comparing models, reading reviews, and trying to figure out what kind of rider I actually wanted to be. Eventually I visited several local bike shops before...

Before Richmond Was an Arts City, There Was Best Products

Imagine pulling into a suburban shopping center to buy a toaster and finding a department store that appeared to be falling apart with corners breaking away, walls peeling open like a giant cardboard box, or facades seemingly collapsing under their own weight. For...

A Witchy Guide to the Longest Day of the Year

It's sizzling outside, but the breeze is refreshing, the birds are chirping, and summer is in full swing. The summer solstice, aka Midsummer or Litha, is the longest day of the year, and this year it falls on June 21, with the sun setting at 8:27 p.m. It's a time to...

This New Club is All About Getting Tipsy for History

Did you know that at one point Pepsi was the 6th largest navel power in the world, or that there is supposedly a box of dicks in the Vatican Museum? These were just some of the surprising history stories I heard at the first meeting of the RVA Tipsy History Club,...

Where to Watch the World Cup in Richmond

We looked into getting World Cup tickets. Apparently, FIFA believes everyone has a trust fund. For those of us who do not, Richmond has the next best thing. Over the next month, bars, breweries, restaurants, and soccer pubs across the city will fill up with people...

New Menu | Richmond Grew Up. So Did Harry’s

Editor's Note: RVA Magazine is partnering with Harry's at The Hof on coverage related to their 10th anniversary celebration and new menu. We stopped by to see what was new, eat some good food, enjoy a few cocktails and report back. Richmond, we blew up our own spot....

The Fight Over Who Gets to Sell Weed

A recent report by Radio IQ suggests Virginia lawmakers are once again inching toward a legal recreational marijuana market, this time through the state budget process. Following Governor Abigail Spanberger's veto, Senate Democrats have threatened to fold retail...