Posts Tagged ‘Downtown Mill Valley’
The 2025ā26 Enjoy Mill Valley Guide Has Arrived Just in Time to Celebrate Mill Valley’s 125th anniversary on September 1!
The 2025ā26 Enjoy Mill Valley Guide has arrived just in time to celebrate Mill Valley’s 125th anniversary on September 1! Itās packed with local history, āthen & nowā photos, a 1900ā2025 timeline, and endless inspiration for things to see and do. Inside, youāll find feature stories, a complete Chamber member directory, and a calendar full of member events. It reached 25,000 Marin Magazine subscribers in Augustāpick up your copies at the Chamber office or at our next After Hours. The guide’s arrival comes right on the heels of an amazing, blockbuster series of events that comes with Mill Valley’s celebration of the 125th Anniversary of the 94941!! Join us Labor Day Weekend as we celebrate Mill Valley’s 125th! Additional details about the events below, including specific times and locations, are coming soon.
Read MoreRichmond Bridge Bike Path Saga Continues, With CalTrans’ & Bay Area Toll Authority Seeking to Convert Bike Path to Part-Time to Limit Path Access From 2pm Thur. to 11pm Sun. ā a Hearing is Set for This Thursday
Richmond Bridge Bike Path Saga Continues, With CalTrans’ & Bay Area Toll Authority Seeking to Convert Bike Path to Part-Time to Limit Path Access From 2pm Thur. to 11pm Sun. ā a Hearing is Set for This Thursday.
Read MoreMill Valley Cultural Association Hosts the Second Annual Charlie Deal Day: Sunday, Sept. 28th ā Sponsorship Materials Are Available to Support this Wonderful Event
Mill Valley Cultural Association Hosts the Second Annual Charlie Deal Day: Sunday, Sept. 28th ā Sponsorship Materials Are Available to Support this Wonderful Event. “He was very much one of the great characters that Mill Valley has ever known,” Bajor said. “You had Bill Graham living up on top of the hill and on the other side of things, you had Charlie Deal riding his bicycle down Miller Avenue.”
Read MoreMill Valley Supports Neurodiverse Artists in āArtists Without Boundariesā Exhibit
Artists Without Boundaries will be featured at the Mill Valley Community Center in its DEI Exhibition Space. Artists Without Boundaries, is a visual arts installation honoring the creativity and perspective of neurodiverse artists. Opening on August 5, the exhibit features vibrant works from students at The Helix School alongside pieces from several talented local artists. The show features a rich array of mediumsāfrom expressive paintings, photography, and digital art to mixed media. Presented by local non-profit PAASS (Project Awareness and Special Sports), Artists Without Boundaries is deeply rooted in the organizationās mission to foster opportunity and understanding through sports and the arts, the exhibit gives neurodiverse artists a platform to share their unique perspectives.
Read MoreThe First Step to Leadership: Tapping Into Local Committees and Commissions
Please join us for an engaging conversation about the vital role local committees and commissions play in shaping community leadership. Notable elected and appointed officials from Marin County will share their own journeys into public service, including how serving on commissions helped pave the way, and highlight the essential work these groups do to address local needs.
Read MoreTwo Neat, an Unabashed, Unadulterated Mill Valley Institution, Is Setting Sail at the End of August, So Get Your Laughs on Before They’re Gone!! Hours Are 12-5pm!
Two Neat, brilliant Bob Bijou’s witty, charming, always LOL card, gifts, toys and much more shop is shutting down the business at the end of of August. Like many businesses who’ve lasted through many eras, it is largely a sad day. But Bob and his witty co-horts are focused on landing this plane with all the joy and fart jokes Two Neat calls for. From bacon-scented air freshener to inarguably the best collection of greeting cards in Marin, Bijou’s Two Neat shop at 111 Throckmorton Ave. has been an institution in Mill Valley for 39 years ā with a little something for everyone.
Read MoreMarin IJ: Mill Valley Aims to Loosen Business Permit Requirements
Brian Foster, a commercial real estate broker, told the officials they were āon the right path.ā He urged them to be open-minded about filling vacancies. āYou want to have a staff that has some agency ⦠where they can look at a use and go, all right, youāre going from a real estate office to a lighting store. Itās pretty benign,ā he said. āAnd if you can check some boxes we can make it work.ā The commissioners instructed city staff to revise their proposed changes based on their suggestions and present them to the City Council for feedback. Once the council weighs in, the process of formally revising the city code would return to the Planning Commission and council for final approval. City officials hope to amend the cityās commercial codes and parking ordinances by this fall.
Read MoreMarin IJ: Mill Valley Speeds Green Building Code Update
The council directed Cusimano and city planners to move forward. āMill Valley has had a history ⦠of going above and beyond when it comes to climate action,ā said Vice Mayor Max Perrey. āI was just so impressed with our climate action plan and our community members that contributed to such a significant and thoughtful report,ā said Councilmember Caroline Joachim. āWe have the opportunity to really take advantage of this time and make the most of it before that six-year moratorium hits.ā AB 306 has some exemptions that city staff believe Mill Valley could qualify for, Cusimano said. āBut we want to leave no stone unturned and we donāt want to be sitting here a year from now regretting or assuming something thatās not the case,ā he said.
Read MoreCouncilmembers, Planning Commissioners, Staff and Residents Dove Deeply Into a Major Possible Reconsideration of Up Dated Parking Regulations ā MV Will Eliminate Parking Requirements for New Businesses Downtown
Councilmember Joachim mentioned possible underutilized parking lots, particularly the private lot adjacent to the Depot Plaza. “Requires a willing property owner,” she noted. “We do have these private lots that are underutilized.Ā The discussion concluded until later in the fall, but teased the possibility of dealing with formula businesses by identifying businesses above the 5,000 foot threshold, which applies to the larger buildings that are part of the downtown core area ā not Miller, not Safeway. You could apply for a conditional use permit to have no parking if you are doing a non-expansion renovation or change of use to a building that was more than 5000 sq feet.
Read MoreClear Skies Ahead: County of Marin Allocates $2.2M for Strawberry Undergrounding Project ā Bike Lanes Like in the Future!
The project involves building underground conduits for use by PG&E, AT&T and Comcast. It includes drilling horizontally under Highway 101. Construction will begin in early August and run though late October. Street parking will be limited during the project. The undergrounding will be followed by another phase that involves creating bike lanes, Moulton-Peters said.
āThereās been some initial work by the county looking at a bike path,ā she said. āIt will potentially open up right of way space that could be used as a bike lane. That could be helpful for adults and older students who want to ride from Strawberry over the pedestrian overcrossing into Mill Valley to go to the middle school.ā
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