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f. Elements attached to a facade of any building, garage or carriage house including, but
not limited to, door hardware, hinges, mailboxes, light fixtures, sign brackets, street
address signage and historic interpretive signage;
g. Replacing roofing materials or color on a flat roof that will not be visible from the
ground or from immediately adjacent taller buildings;
h. Gutters and downspouts;
i. Installation or removal of landscaping, including trees;
j. Accessibility ramps;
k. Changes to awning fabric color for an existing awning;
l. Landscape elements, including but not limited to, walks, paving, benches, outdoor
furniture, planters, pools, trellises, arbors and gazebos;
m. Installation of any elements required by other codes such as emergency lighting;
n. Modifications that are considered nonpermanent such as, but not limited to, window
films and temporary features to weatherize or stabilize a historic resource;
o. Minor modifications to an existing certificate of appropriateness that still meets the
intent of the original approval; or
p. Renewal of an expired certificate of appropriateness.
Administrative review process
If your project can be reviewed administratively, complete an application and bring it and any
supporting materials (see pages 11-12) to the Planning & Development Services Department.
Necessary supplemental materials usually include photos of the property and specifically of the
parts affected, paint samples, photos and item numbers of parts and fixtures, etc. – please refer
to the checklist on page 11. Documentation must be complete in order for staff to begin review
of an application.
Staff will review the application for conformance with the design guidelines and applicable
ordinances. A decision will be made within ten days, although staff may refer the application
to the HPC if they believe the request requires additional scrutiny.
Projects that are reviewed by the HPC
Certificates of Appropriateness for all other projects affecting the exterior appearance of a
property with H overlay zoning must be reviewed by the Historic Preservation Commission.
The commission meets monthly, and applications should be submitted two weeks before the
meeting in order to allow time for staff research and distribution to Commissioners before the
meeting.
Historic Preservation Commission members, appointed by the Round Rock City Council, are
Round Rock residents; their goal is to assist in the development of the most cost effective, high
quality, and historically appropriate project possible.