...is a good idea, if its implemented thoughtfully and in moderation.
It’s now up to the Tulsa City Council to approve a special zoning code overlay for Route 66.
If approved, the zoning code amendment would allow new signs that are at least 25 percent neon to be up to 50 percent larger than currently allowed by sign regulations. The relaxed regulations won’t apply to dynamic displays, typically LED or video boards capable of showing constant animation.
"So, if someone wants to outline a dynamic display in neon and then blow it up to the size of a Jumbotron, that’s not going to be applicable," said INCOG Land Development Planner Nathan Foster.http://publicradiotulsa.org/post/tulsa-city-council-takes-plan-encourage-route-66-neonNeon is a big part of our Route 66 identity, and while it could be Vegas-tacky it for the most part hasnt been in the past here nor does it need to be in the future.
Some of us are old enough to remember the Weather Teller on what was then the tallest building in the state; a brassy Neon/Argon beacon that was controlled by meteorologists from Lookout Mountain via a rotary phone dial on a leased line.
http://www.tulsaworld.com/blogs/news/throwbacktulsa/throwback-tulsa-weather-teller-beamed-color-coded-forecast-over-downtown/article_ebd67a9d-66ea-5706-a82e-0840748ad151.htmlThe effect has been somewhat resurrected today with LED floodlights but it has little more charm now than any other LED billboard.
While there are currently zoning regulations covering outdoor lighting and LED billboards, they have not been consistently enforced because of disagreements inspectors have with ordinance language (...at least that is the explanation I have been given explaining why filed complaints have been closed without action).
Reasonable limits on intensity, changes in intensity and residential trespass are old-school by now, to the point where we can borrow regulatory language from communities that have already test-driven them.