Currie Motors Expansion Gets Approval with Site Modifications
Currie Motors on Lincoln Highway received approval from the Frankfort Village Board on Monday for a major change to its site plan, allowing for the construction of seven new parking spaces and a retaining wall in its vehicle storage area.
The project, presented by applicant Lennox Hill Construction, required five modifications to the property’s Planned Unit Development (PUD) standards. The board approved an increase in the maximum allowable impervious surface coverage from 84.5% to 84.8%. They also granted several waivers and reductions related to the size, length, and landscaping of curbed islands in the parking lot.
The Plan Commission forwarded a unanimous 6-0 recommendation for approval following its June 12 public hearing, where a neighboring resident raised concerns about traffic, lights, and noise. The commission urged the dealership to be a “good neighbor.”
The Village Board’s final approval is conditioned upon final engineering review and staff approval of a landscape plan that includes additional plantings along the property’s perimeter to help screen the commercial site from nearby residential areas. Trustees congratulated Currie Motors for its continued investment and property improvements on the U.S. Route 30 corridor.
Latest News Stories
Illinois officials say Bears still may stay despite team’s Indiana statement
More than 60% of Minnesota high-risk Medicaid providers fail review
Senate sends $70B bill funding ICE, border patrol to vacant House
Chicago Bears to advance stadium project in Indiana
Greer, Carr commended for seeking fairness in EU treatment of US tech firms
Illinois quick hits: Pritzker pauses data center tax credits
U.S. adds 172k jobs in ‘strong’ May report, unemployment remains at 4.3%
Researchers put a number on how much debt U.S. can carry
Colorado governor vetoes legislation allowing ICE to be sued
Ballots processed slowly as Californians await 36-day count
WATCH: WA mayor stands by pro-ICE, anti-Antifa proclamations
U.S. House narrowly passes bill to fund USDA, FDA in 2027