Dedication of parkland is an important tool the city can use to ensure that new residential development pays its way by requiring developers to set aside land for new parks or open space to serve residents moving into those new developments. The purpose of these land-use requirements is to increase the city’s park capacity to serve new residents at a level equal to the level of parks serving existing residents. The regulations accomplish this by requiring developers to dedicate part of their properties to serve as park or open space or to pay a fee in lieu of dedicating land so that the city can buy additional land or improve park property to serve new residents.
The city first adopted the parkland dedication requirements in 1983, and they have been revised and updated numerous times since then. On Feb. 24, 2025, City Council again revised Parkland Dedication requirements (O-2025-07) to ensure they are delivering the appropriate amount of additional parkland or fees to support parkland in the community.
Zoning is used by local governments to regulate the uses and/or development forms of land to provide property owners with an expectation of how areas will develop and change over time. Zoning varies from community to community and over the years zoning laws need to be updated. Lakewood is also in the process of updating its Zoning Ordinance.
While Lakewood’s parkland dedication ordinance impacts land use, it is not a zoning regulation. Parkland dedication is not designed to protect privately owned vacant land that is sometimes referred to as “green space” or reduce housing density.
The latest revisions accomplished the following:
For an accessibility copy of any case, contact crinfo@lakewood.org.
Appealable Cases
7767 W. Jewell Ave.(PDF, 588KB)
Non-appealable Cases
9660 W. 22nd Place(DOCX, 17KB)