Albuquerque property owner Augustine Grace wants to convert two of his adjacent residential properties near the University area into a new coffee shop but after pushback from a neighborhood association, the future of the project is in the hands of City Council.
At their meeting Monday, city councilors will hear from Grace about his proposal to transform the houses near the Bricklight District into a cafรฉ and community gathering space. Councilors will also hear from members of the University Heights Neighborhood Association (UHNA) about why they think Graceโs proposal is out of line.
Grace owns the houses โ 201 and 203 Harvard Drive on the corner of Silver Avenue โ and rents them out to tenants monthly. He said he plans to create the โworldโs greatest coffee shopโ using the houses so โit fits within the residential look.โ
Since the properties are in a residential zone, Grace sought to change them to a mixed-use zone through the cityโs Environmental Planning Commission (EPC).
โWe’re trying to transform a corner so that we could transform the neighborhood because right now, the neighborhood is dying,โ Grace said. โThis neighborhood, the [University of New Mexico] area, is literally being dismantled as a safe, livable neighborhood every single month and we’re trying to change that.โ
The EPC approved the request to change the zone, but the UHNA appealed the decision, arguing Graceโs plan goes against the neighborhoodโs history.
Don Hancock, UHNAโs secretary, said the change would set an โincredibly dangerous precedentโ for the neighborhood.
โIt would be the first time in more than 45 years that the residential area of the neighborhood has gotten changed to be commercial, or, in this case, mixed-use,โ Hancock said. โIf you can pick out two properties, residential properties, in the neighborhood and change them to mixed-use or commercial, why can’t you do that with literally hundreds of similar properties in the neighborhood?โ
Hancock said the zone change would ignore the University Metropolitan Redevelopment Area Plan the council approved in 2022. Specifically where the plan states โthe lower density residential character of neighborhoods south of Silver should be preserved.โ
โMaintaining and strengthening the residential nature of the neighborhood is essential for reinvigorating this less-than-optimum commercial environment in the area,โ Hancock said.
However, Grace said there are already other businesses all around the area.
โIt’s not like we’re doing something new,โ he said.
He also said his property is not fully residential because of a public parking lot behind the houses, which makes up โtwo-thirdsโ of it. He plans to turn part of the parking lot into a landscaped sitting area and add a second story to the houses.

But, he added, if the council sides with the neighborhood association, Grace wonโt pursue any sort of appeal in court.
โIf the neighborhood association doesn’t want something new and beautiful, well, they can have old and ugly,โ Grace said.
Councilors were told a land use hearing officer agreed that the planning commission erred and the hearing officer recommended the council deny the zone change request.
Council President Dan Lewis during an Aug. 5 meeting called for a public hearing because he said the appeal deserved more explanation and discussion from both parties before the council votes.
If the council grants the appeal, Grace said โI am not going to waste my time.โ
He said he would consider contributing something else to the community, such as a low-density multifamily home.
HOW TO PARTICIPATE
WHEN: 5 p.m. Sept. 16
WHERE: Vincent E. Griego Chambers in the Albuquerque Government Center, 1 Civic Plaza NW
VIRTUAL: GOV-TV or on the cityโs YouTube channel


