Bait and sell. The seller can't make the buyer use the same plans or architect.
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Legal niceties aside, I can certainly agree that if I bought a property, I ought not to be bound by a previous owner's aspirations.
However, I likewise think that rezoning that is essentially offered based (at least in part) on a rendering and a site plan ought to also be quashable if the plan/render materially changes.
That doesn't mean that the new owner can't obtain the same zoning, merely that they ought not have it, as-of-right.
I realize the law does not currently work that way, and developers would not appreciate my suggestion.
Moreover, that in most circumstances, City's are current forbidden from actually approving development on the basis of aesthetics or renders.
But we all know that the reality, in most cases, is that planners, and city councillors and even the general public may be more inclined to sacrifice a well loved, or even protected
building..........or accept a height, density, or shadow that they might otherwise not, because a proposed building is widely deemed a beauty.
The law should acknowledge this and codify 'the trade', any rezoning should only be valid, in a time-limited way, for the proposal brought forward to achieve said zoning. It should not be transferable at will or whim to a materially different proposal.