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
Will County Public Works Debates Future Bridge Needs as 159th Street Closure Looms
Everyday Economics: Cooling jobs, a cautious Fed, and a housing recovery that needs confidence
Fierce races to determine control of Congress
EXCLUSIVE: Superintendent group webinar details school response to ICE
11 of 37 Mexican nationals extradited to U.S. being prosecuted in Texas
Capital Imp Committee: Veterans Assistance Commission Set to Move into New Facility
Capital Imp Committee: Health Dept Elevator Repair Costs Significantly Lower Than Estimates
Legislative Committee Adopts 2026 Federal Legislative Agenda
Poll: Majority prefer Trump’s immigration policies over Biden’s
Illinois eyes smarter park funding: handicap accessibility gets priority
Nation’s first primary states to begin early voting
Vermont EV buses prove unreliable for transportation this winter