Government

McKinney City Council Approves Bonds, Annexation, Airport Measures at March Meeting

McKinney council approved a $434,237 demolition contract for the old City Hall site and annexed 37 acres near County Roads 161 and 124 for apartments.

Marcus Williams2 min read
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McKinney City Council Approves Bonds, Annexation, Airport Measures at March Meeting
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The McKinney City Council signed off on a $434,237 contract to tear down two city-owned buildings on North Tennessee Street while simultaneously annexing nearly 40 acres on the city's outskirts for future apartment development, among a broader package of actions taken at its March 17 meeting.

The demolition contract, awarded to RNDI Companies Inc., covers asbestos removal and the demolition of the old City Hall building and the Development Services building at 221 N. Tennessee St. The $434,237 figure represents the full contract value, though the funding source and the projected demolition timeline were not detailed in available records.

On the growth side, the council agreed to annex and rezone about 37 acres of vacant land near County Roads 161 and 124 for a multifamily residential development. City staff projected the property would have a minimal financial impact on McKinney due to its size and location. The developer's name, the proposed number of units, and the specific rezoning classification were not included in publicly available meeting summaries.

The March 17 session also produced votes on bond-related actions and measures connected to the city's airport and related services. Neither category was described in detail in available reporting, leaving open questions about bond amounts, purposes, and the specific airport contracts or agreements the council addressed.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

McKinney has been among the fastest-growing cities in North Texas for more than a decade, and the council's single-session sweep of demolition, annexation, financing, and airport business reflects the administrative volume that growth generates. The asbestos abatement work at 221 N. Tennessee St. in particular signals movement on a long-standing question of what becomes of the city's former civic core as municipal operations have shifted elsewhere.

Vote tallies, full agenda documentation, contract bid records, and details on the bond and airport items remain outstanding and should be available through the McKinney city clerk's office.

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