So, you’ve bought the building. You have the vision. It is all becoming a reality.
Maybe it’s an old barn you want to turn into a wedding venue. Maybe it’s an abandoned industrial building you plan to convert into high end apartments. Maybe it’s a warehouse you envision as a gym, or a brewery, or a creative space. You see endless potential where other people see problems, and you are ready to bring new life to a property that’s been sitting idle.
The purchase is complete. The keys are in your hand.
Now what?
This is the point where many (if not most) redevelopment projects begin to stall. This stall is not because the idea is bad, but because the process that follows is far more complex than most people expect.
It Starts with Your Idea
Your vision for what your project could be is only the beginning. Redeveloping or revitalizing a building involves layers and layers of legal and regulatory requirements that happen behind the scenes, and the average person does not see. Zoning rules, permits, inspections, and occupancy approvals are not simple technicalities, they are what determine whether your project can legally move forward at all.
One of the biggest challenges is that these rules are not uniform. Every city, town, and municipality has its own zoning code, permitting process, and inspection requirements. What worked in one location (or what a prior owner may have done or told you worked for them) does not guarantee that your project will be approved.
Zoning Matters Most
Zoning should always be your first step. Zoning determines what uses are allowed in a given area. Commercial, residential, industrial, mixed-use. These are the general classifications that dictate whether your idea is ever permitted on paper. But zoning is not just about the neighborhood. It is also about the building itself.
A property may be in a mixed-use or commercial district, yet the building may only be approved for a specific use. Changing a building from storage units to an event space, from industrial use to gym, or from commercial to HUD apartments often requires formal approval. That process may involve variances, conditional use permits, or hearings before a zoning board. In many cases, that approval comes through a Board of Zoning Appeals, which is often called a BZA.
A BZA process typically involves a formal application, public notice and a hearing where the proposed use is reviewed by the Board of Zoning Appeals. Neighbors in the community may have the opportunity to comments, however, the board is the one that ultimately gets to decide it the variance or the conditional use will be granted. This process can be long and daunting and can affect the timeline of your project, the budget of your project, and even the feasibility of your project. It needs to be considered early, before construction begins.
Skipping a review of zoning or assuming that zoning approval exists can lead to significant delays and expensive corrections later on, particularly if a project moves forward with necessary zoning authorization.
Don’t Overlook Historic District Restrictions
Another issue that often surprises owners is historic zoning.
If a building is located in a historic district or subject to historic preservation rules, additional layers of approval may apply. Changes to the exterior of the building, the windows, doors, signage, building materials, and even paint colors can be regulated. In some cases, interior alterations may also be restricted.
Historic designation does not mean redevelopment is impossible, but it does mean the process requires careful planning and early coordination sometimes even requiring coordination with the historic conservation board of the city or community you are redeveloping in. Discovering these restrictions after plans are finalized (or after work has begun) can significantly increase costs and timelines.
You Need Permits for More Than You Think
Once zoning is confirmed and any required approvals are obtained, the next step is permitting. Permits are often where redevelopment projects quietly fall apart.
Many property owners assume permits are only required for major construction or structural changes; however, permits are required for far more than most people expect. Generally, permits are required for all new construction, major repairs, alterations to a building, additions to a building, major plumbing or electrical changes, HVAC systems, fire alarms, fire suppression systems, and structural modification. The permit process is put in place to allow inspectors to verify that work meets safety and building code standards.
Permitting also matters because it ties directly into a building’s approved use. When a building is being converted from one use to another permits help document that transition and ensure that building systems meet the standards require for the new system. When a building changes from commercial use to residential use the fire, electrical and safety requirements generally change.
Failure to obtain proper permits can lead to enforcement actions, fines, and delays. Importantly, it can prevent your building from receiving a Certificate of Occupancy. Without that certificate, your building cannot legally be occupied, even if the work is complete.
Permits are critical when cities conduct inspections or respond to complaints made about your building. If an inspector identifies work that was done without a permit it generally will make the issue much bigger than it could have been. What might have started as a limited inspection can turn into a comprehensive review of the building, increasing both your cost and risk.
Doing work without permits often feels faster at the outset, but it frequently creates larger problems down the road. Unpermitted work can delay inspections, trigger enforcement actions, or prevent a building from being legally occupied.
Inspections and Compliance
After permitted work is completed, inspections follow. Building, housing, and fire inspectors are responsible for ensuring compliance with applicable codes, safety standards and approved plans. Their role is not to manage a project, but to confirm that the building is safe and compliant.
When inspectors identify violations or noncompliant conditions, they typically expect the property owners or property managers to evaluate the building as a whole and correct similar issues wherever they exist. An inspector notes problems in one location, but that is often an indicator of a broader compliance concern, not a single, contained defect.
Treating inspections as a checklist of individual fixes can lead to repeated citations, additional inspections, and increased enforcement. Taking a comprehensive approach by understanding the code requirements and applying the consistently throughout the building, helps projects move forward more efficiently and reduces the risk of ongoing compliance issues.
The Certificate of Occupancy
All of these steps lead to one essential requirement: the Certificate of Occupancy. A Certificate of Occupancy is the City’s confirmation that a building is legally approved for its intended use and safe for people to occupy. Even if the renovations are complete, the building looks exactly like it is supposed to, and everything it perfect, the building cannot be lived in, operated out of or opened to the public without a Certificate of Occupancy.
To obtain a Certificate of Occupancy, the City will typically require that zoning is correct for the intended use, all required permits have been properly obtained, and all necessary inspections have been passed. If any of those steps were skipped or handled out of order, the Certificate of Occupancy can be delayed or denied. If any of those steps were skipped or completed out of order, securing a Certificate of Occupancy becomes significantly more difficult.
Common Mistakes We See
We regularly see property owners run into trouble because they assume that if a building can be used a certain way, it must be allowed to be used that way. Relying on what similar buildings nearby are doing or what a prior owner did is a common, and costly, mistake.
Another frequent issue is failing to distinguish between the zoning of the area and the approved use of the building itself. Even in mixed-use districts, a building may not be approved for residential or event use without additional approval.
Unpermitted construction is another major problem. Electrical, plumbing, HVAC, and fire systems are often modified without permits, creating issues when inspections occur.
Historic district restrictions are also frequently overlooked, particularly when owners are eager to move quickly. Discovering those requirements late in the process can derail an otherwise well-planned project.
Perhaps the most challenging situations arise when tenants or businesses are already occupying a building before zoning, permitting, and occupancy approvals are in place. At that point, the process has to be done in reverse, often under the pressure of inspections or enforcement action.
Working Backwards Is Always Harder
Our firm regularly helps clients navigate zoning, permitting, inspections, and Certificates of Occupancy. We can assist in coordinating with local authorities, identifying compliance issues, and helping projects move forward.
However, it is important to be candid: it is far easier, and far less expensive, to do this correctly from the beginning. When zoning and approvals are addressed early, projects tend to move more efficiently and with far less risk. When issues must be fixed after the fact, especially when a building is already occupied, the process becomes more complicated, more time-consuming, and significantly more expensive.
Redeveloping a building can be an exciting and rewarding investment. However, it can also be a legal and regulatory disaster if the proper steps are skipped or misunderstood.
Before you renovate, lease, or open your doors, make sure you understand what approvals are required, what restrictions apply, and what order the process should follow. Doing it right from the start is almost always the most efficient path forward, and it can save you time, money, and stress in the long run.


