Arcfluence - The Architecture and Design Podcast

Columbus' Zoning and Entitlement Process

54 min · 20 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Columbus' Zoning and Entitlement Process

Descripción

Omar ElhagMusa, Executive Vice President at Spring Garden Lending, joins the Arcfluence Podcast to discuss Columbus’s first zoning rewrite in seventy years—Zone In Phase 1. He serves on the City’s Zoning Advisory Committee and brings a background spanning lending, policy, and small-scale residential investment. The conversation focuses on how the new code actually functions: corridor-based upzoning tied to bus rapid transit, the removal of parking minimums, and the constraints created by Columbus’s predominantly R-1 zoning. It also covers single-stair construction, the impact of entitlement risk on project feasibility, and the role of by-right development in reducing pre-development uncertainty. The episode closes on small-scale density—particularly duplexes—and the interdependence between transit and land use. Omar’s perspective reflects the overlap between financing, policy, and design, and how those systems shape what ultimately gets built. Podcast for entertainment purposes only. Not financial advice.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Arcfluence - The Architecture and Design Podcast!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

60 episodios

episode Central Ohio, Block by Block artwork

Central Ohio, Block by Block

Central Ohio reads as a single metro on a map. On the ground it doesn’t behave like one. German Village and Dublin are fifteen miles apart and may as well be different states for how buyers think about them. Grandview is its own city. So is Bexley. So is Upper Arlington. Worthington was founded by New Englanders and still feels like Vermont. Powell has two distinct halves separated by a few minutes’ drive. Short North used to be downtown and now insists it’s its own neighborhood. For this episode we asked Isabelle Trepkoski - Columbus native, agent with Styer Real Estate Professionals, and someone who’s lived in a meaningful share of these neighborhoods herself - to walk through them with us, one at a time. What follows is what you actually need to know.

1 de jun de 20261 h 6 min
episode The Studio Ahead artwork

The Studio Ahead

Seventy episodes in, the hosts step out of the host seats. Danny Porter from behind the scenes dives in with Nick Karakaian and Paul Fatkins about how Arcfluence was built, where new technologies fit in a working architecture practice, what the next stretch of the firm looks like, and the studio they're about to move into. Conversations along the way: why podcasts work in 2026, what Bill Griffith and Brunelleschi can still teach an architect, Nick's frame of designing around himself in real time, Paul's twenty-year vantage on the change in the tools and what they actually give you (time), Danny's frame of AI as a cartographer rather than an oracle, the complementary strengths that make the team work, and the question Danny puts to both founders at the close: what would you tell a twenty-year-old considering this field in 2026? Hear more at arcfluence.com/podcast.

17 de may de 202642 min
episode Thirty Years of Building in Columbus with Kathy Binner artwork

Thirty Years of Building in Columbus with Kathy Binner

In this episode of The Arcfluence Podcast, Nick and Paul sit down with Kathy Binner, founder of Kathy Binner International Academy, to trace three decades of building in Columbus - from salon ownership and commercial real estate to education, authorship, mentorship, and community leadership. Kathy shares how buying her first building forced her to learn the realities of change-of-use, life-safety requirements, and the discipline behind commercial ownership. The conversation also explores her transition from operator to educator, her work with Happy House Hunters and now the Central Ohio Investor Network (COIN), the creation of the Stephanie Milo Jenkins Initiative, and the philosophy that has guided her career: treat the work in front of you like your name is already on the door. This is a conversation about entrepreneurship as posture, real estate as education, and the quiet, long-term work of helping shape a city from inside its rooms.

4 de may de 202641 min
episode Columbus' Zoning and Entitlement Process artwork

Columbus' Zoning and Entitlement Process

Omar ElhagMusa, Executive Vice President at Spring Garden Lending, joins the Arcfluence Podcast to discuss Columbus’s first zoning rewrite in seventy years—Zone In Phase 1. He serves on the City’s Zoning Advisory Committee and brings a background spanning lending, policy, and small-scale residential investment. The conversation focuses on how the new code actually functions: corridor-based upzoning tied to bus rapid transit, the removal of parking minimums, and the constraints created by Columbus’s predominantly R-1 zoning. It also covers single-stair construction, the impact of entitlement risk on project feasibility, and the role of by-right development in reducing pre-development uncertainty. The episode closes on small-scale density—particularly duplexes—and the interdependence between transit and land use. Omar’s perspective reflects the overlap between financing, policy, and design, and how those systems shape what ultimately gets built. Podcast for entertainment purposes only. Not financial advice.

20 de abr de 202654 min
episode Passive House Comes to Central Ohio artwork

Passive House Comes to Central Ohio

Steven Rhodes is a mechanical engineer and Certified Passive House Consultant (Phius CPHC) who built Central Ohio's first certified passive house in Clintonville. In this episode, he breaks down what passive house certification actually means in practical terms - envelope performance, air quality, energy independence, and the real numbers behind it. Steven walks through what his family pays to heat and cool their home ($41/month), how the Phius Revive program is making passive house retrofits accessible to existing homeowners, and why Ohio's building code is about to change in ways that push the entire industry toward higher-performance construction. If you design, build, invest in, or own a home in Ohio, the code changes Steven describes will affect you.

6 de abr de 202657 min