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Planning commission defers New Florist Estate replat after neighbors say on-site reception hall operated without permit

October 02, 2025 | Houston, Harris County, Texas


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Planning commission defers New Florist Estate replat after neighbors say on-site reception hall operated without permit
The Houston Planning Commission on Thursday deferred consideration of item 99, the New Florist Estate replat, after neighbors said a reception hall on the property has operated as a commercial venue without required permits and created noise and parking problems.

Staff told the commission the plat would not violate recorded deed restrictions and recommended approval subject to standard CPC-101 form conditions, but residents urged additional review and enforcement. "This reception facility holds a maximum of 250 people," said Angela Nix, who said she represents seven neighbors. Nix told the commission she and other residents have called law enforcement repeatedly and that loud music has caused damage in her home: "The music was so loud that a mirror in my bedroom fell off the wall from the base."

Matt Tanguin, speaking for Harris County, said he reviewed available permit records and "none of them mentioned a commercial building or facility," adding that a commercial certificate of occupancy would be required to operate such a venue. Commissioner Baldwin moved to defer the item for two weeks so county staff could investigate permitting; Commissioner Colvard seconded the motion, and the commission approved the deferral.

Why it matters: neighbors said the hall has hosted frequent, sizable events on weekends and that granting the replat without clarifying the site's legal status could enable conversion to formal commercial use, including a liquor license or expanded operations. The commission's deferral gives county staff time to confirm whether required commercial permits or a certificate of occupancy exist and to supply that information to the commission.

Details: The plat as filed would create one lot and one commercial reserve in Houston's extraterritorial jurisdiction. Neighbors raised concerns about parking spillover on adjacent residential streets, potential increases in traffic, and public-safety impacts from large weekend events. Staff said written comments were received and that the applicant met notification requirements for the plat review.

Next steps: The commission set a two-week deferral; staff and Harris County will check permit records and return the item to a future hearing with any new findings.

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Scribe from Workplace AI
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