This сase invites examination of a decision of Respondent, the Mayor and Council of Rockville, Maryland, to designate as historically/architecturally significant and, as a result, place within Rockville’s historical district, a certain piece of improved real property. The property at issue is an 11,300 square foot parcel of land located at 115 Park Avenue, at the intersection of Fleet Street and Park Avenue, and improved with a llk story bungalow (collectively the “Property”) constructed approximately 80 years ago by one Henry Howes for J. Roger Spates and his wife, Annie E. Spates. The bungalow, now owned by the Betty Brown Casey Trust, 1 is commonly referred to in Rockville as the “Spates Bungalow.”
Because the historic designation of the Property may hinder substantially Petitioner’s ability to raze the bungalow in order to put the land to arguably a more economically rewarding use, 2 the Trust filed a petition in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County seeking judicial review of the historic *265 designation action. The Circuit Court, on 15 October 2004, opined that the decision to place the Property in the historic district was not arbitrary on the record before it, but nevertheless remanded the matter to the Mayor and Council in order to consider the economic feasibility of preserving the bungalow. According to the Circuit Court, the Mayor and Council erred in neglecting to consider this factor in the course of its deliberations on whether to designate the Property as historic. Upon appeal by the Mayor and Council, the Court of Special Appeals, although agreeing with the Circuit Court’s conclusion as to the sufficiency of evidence supporting the Mayor and Council’s decision concerning historical significance, reversed the Circuit Court’s judgment remanding the matter. The intermediate appellate court reasoned that the Mayor and Council was not required to consider economic infeasibility of preservation when deciding whether to include the Property within the historic district. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment of the intermediate appellate court.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Since the date it was platted, the land upon which the Spates Bungalow is located has been linked for most of the time to arguably significant figures in Rockville history. Prior to construction of the bungalow, the land was part of a larger tract (“The Park”) 3 owned by Judge William Veirs Bouic, Sr., a prominent political leader during a period of rapid growth in Rockville in the mid- to late-19th century. Considered instrumental in securing self-governance for Rockville in 1860, Judge Bouic served as a Town Commissioner until 1867. Previously the State’s Attorney for Montgomery County and counsel to the B & O Railroad, he was appointed to the Circuit Court for Montgomery County in 1867, and served in that capacity until 1882. By the end of Judge Bouic’s judicial career, his only son, William Veirs Bouic, Jr., also a resident of *266 “The Park,” 4 had himself become a prominent civic leader. Bouic, Jr., educated at the Rockville Academy and Columbian University in Washington, D.C., was admitted to the Bar of Maryland in 1870. During his illustrious career, Bouic, Jr., was Rockville’s first Mayor under the Town Charter of 1888, elected to the State Senate in 1897, a presidential elector, and helped form the Maryland State Bar Association. Maryland State Archives, 110 Maryland Manual 178-79 (1898).
Despite the land’s historical roots prior to construction of the bungalow, it is the bungalow itself that was the main focus of the current historic designation controversy. After the death of Bouic, Jr., his estate sold to Mr. and Mrs. J. Roger Spates two subdivided lots located within “The Park.” Constructed for the Spates family approximately in 1928, the bungalow is believed to have been the Spates family’s primary residence during Roger’s term as Rockville’s Mayor from 1926 to 1932. 5 The Spates Bungalow is one of the last two original structures remaining in what had been “The Park” subdivision. It is considered by some to be “an excellent and little-altered example of the Craftsman style of architecture” popular in the 1890’s to 1920’s. 6 J. Roger and Annie E. Spates sold *267 the Property on 5 December 1949 to Bernard and Catherine J. Poss who, in turn, sold the Property in 1954 to Mary E. Clements Offutt. Mrs. Offutt was the widow of Lee Offutt, the Mayor of Rockville from 1906-1916 and again from 1918-1920. After Mrs. Offutt’s death in 1963, the executors of her estate sold the Property to Eugene B. Casey who, in 1990, along with his wife, Betty Brown Casey, as trustees, transferred the Property to the Betty Brown Casey Trust (“Trust”). The Trust remains the current owner.
From 1980 until 1999, the Property was leased to a Montgomery County surveyor who used the bungalow primarily for *268 the purposes of storage and some office space. 7 When the surveyor, due to the bungalow’s deteriorating condition, declined to renew his lease and vacated the premises in 1999, a structural engineer was engaged to evaluate the Property. The engineer determined that rehabilitation of the bungalow would not be cost effective, and concluded that demolition of the building was appropriate. Specifically, the engineer’s report indicated that the bungalow was unusable for commercial leasing due to its extensive disrepair. The record indicates that Petitioner’s consultants estimated the costs of restoration of the house at approximately $293,086.20, that the assessed value of the restored Property would be $318,000, and that the amount expended to achieve such a result could not be recouped easily through rental incomе derived from lease of the Property. This evidence regarding the economic feasibility of restoration, based on our perusal of the record, has not been met yet with contrary evidence. 8
*269 In light of this financial picture, the Trust began the building demolition process in June 2001 by obtaining a preliminary forestry sign-off regarding the preservation of trees on the Property. A formal demolition permit application was filed with the Rockville Planning Department on 7 September 2001. The application was accepted and entered into the permit computer system on 17 September 2001. At the time of filing of the application, the Property was not designated as being within a municipal historic district. 9 Sometime in September of 2001, Petitioner contends a representative of the City staff informed it that all requirements for issuance of a demolition permit had been satisfied and that a permit would be issued shortly. 10
*270 On 2 October 2001, however, Petitioner was informed by letter that the permit application remained pending, subject to review of the Property by the Rockville Historic District Commission (“HDC”) 11 regarding the historical/architectural significance of the bungalow. According to that letter, Peerless Rockville Historic Preservation, Ltd. (“Peerless Rock-ville”), a third-party, non-profit historic preservation group, nominated the Property for historic designation due to its link to prominent historical figures in the local government, as well as its architectural appeal. The Mayor and Council of Rock-ville requested, as a result, that the HDC evaluate the Property and make a recommendation regarding its eligibility for historic designation. 12 The letter continued that “the City of Rockville’s Environmental Guidelines recommend that buildings over 50 years old be evaluated for historic significance to the City in the event of a demolition permit application.” The HDC open meeting was scheduled for 16 October 2001, at which time the HDC would hear testimony from all interested *271 parties. 13 In the event that the HDC made a recommendation in favor of designation, the matter would be transmitted to Respondent for further action.
At the 16 October 2001 meeting, the parties, in addition to representatives of Peerless Rockville, were given the opportunity to present testimony and other evidence. The record indicates that, at this meeting, Counsel for Petitioner submitted evidence, premised on an assessment completed by the property manager of Casey Management, that renovating the Property to the point that it could again be leased for storage would require extensive repair. Counsel for Petitioner requested аt the conclusion of the meeting that the record remain open for three weeks in order to allow for submission of additional information so that the HDC would be apprised fully of the situation before making its recommendation. Counsel’s request was granted, and the parties were allowed to submit additional information, including various reports by their respective experts regarding the historical and architectural significance of the Property, as well cost estimates for its restoration. It was during this time that the Trust submitted further evidence suggesting that it would not be financially feasible to restore the bungalow on the Property if it were placed in the historic district zone. After further consideration, the HDC reached a unanimous decision that the Property be designated as a single-site historic district and forwarded its formal recommendation to that effect to Respondent on 18 December 2001. The HDC, in rendering its formal recommendation that the property be designated as historically/architecturally significant, acknowledged briefly evidence of the bungalow’s disrepair. The HDC nevertheless found that “[t]he Spates Bungalow at 115 Park Avenue me [t] seven of the twelve criteria for eligibility as a single site historic district or landmark site” and forwarded the matter to the Mayor and Council. The HDC, in doing so, observed that Petitioner’s takings and economic feasibility contentions were *272 “beyond the scope of [the HDC’s] evaluation [at this point in the proceedings].”
A meeting was held on 28 January 2002 during which Respondent considered the HDC’s recommendation for historic designation. Respondent, at that time, authorized HDC staff to prepare, over the objection of Petitioner, an application for a proposed map amendment to include 115 Park Avenue within Rockville’s historic district. A Historic District Sectional Map Amendment Application was filed on 12 February 2002. 14 The matter was referred to the Rockville Planning Commission. 15 A hearing date before the Mayor and Council was set. 16 The Planning Commission held its hearing on 8 May 2002 in order to consider the proposed map amendment and recommended against re-zoning the Property from O-l to O-l HD (Historic District). 17
*273 The Mayor and Council held its hearing on 17 June 2002 to determine whether the Property should be placed in the Historic District Zone. Petitioner again objected to the designation and presented additional testimony that the costs of restoring the Spates Bungalow outweighed the added value of the bungalow to such a degree that the difference could not be recouped through rental income derived from the revitalized Property. 18
Respondent held another public meeting on 12 May 2003 and voted to leave open the rеcord through 30 May 2003 for the parties to submit additional information. Respondent directed HDC staff on 27 May 2003 to prepare a proposed Ordinance to Grant Map Amendment Application establishing the single-site historic district encompassing 115 Park Avenue. It was the Mayor and Council’s announced intent that the ordinance be introduced at its General Session meeting to be held on 9 June 2003. 19 The ordinance in fact was introduced on 9 June 2003. It was adopted unanimously by the Mayor and Council on 14 July 2003. Pertinent prefatory parts of Ordinance No. 19-03, in addition to placing emphasis on the relative historic prominence of the previous owners of the land on which the bungalow is located, recited the following procedural and explanatory reasons for adoption:
*274 WHEREAS, the subject property was evaluated for historic, architectural and cultural significance to the City of Rockville, and the Historic District Commission found that the property met the criteria for local historic designation and recommended its placement in the Historic District; and
WHEREAS, the Mayor and Council gave notice that a public hearing on said application would be held by the Mayor and Council of Rockville in the Council Chambers in Rockville on the 17th day of June, 2002, at 7:30 p.m., or as soon thereafter as it may be heard, at which parties in interest and citizens would have an opportunity to be heard, which notice was published in accordance with the requirements of Article 66B of the Annotated Code of Maryland; and
WHEREAS, on the 17th day of June, 2002, the said application came on for hearing at the time and place provided for in said advertisement; and
Hs sfc * # %
WHEREAS, ... The house known as the “Spates Bungalow” was built in 1923 and is in near original condition. The house has the hallmarks of the vernacular craftsman-inspired style of architecture: wide eaves with knee brackets, clapboard siding, exposed rater tails on the porch and dormer roofs, multi-paned windows used singly, paired and in strings of three, smaller casement windows flanking the fireplace, and a rusticated concrete block foundation where exposed. The front porch, with a stepped lintel beam framing the porch opening, the short tapered square wooden columns on brick piers, and the flanged trim with suggestions of horizontal supports separating the beam from the clapboard, contains most elements of popular craftsman style. The house embodies a distinctive character of a different time and place, and serves as a historical reminder of an early subdivision that has all but disappeared. It is one of only two structures lеft of “The Park.”
*275 Hs Hs * * * *
The house is a representative bungalow built in the 1920’s for a Mayor of Rockville. This house form became a national expression of craftsmanship, healthful and functional living and simple beauty that harmonized with suburban, urban or rural surroundings. Mr. Spates had his bungalow built by a local builder in the style of the day in his small town....
Absent from the ordinance establishing the historic district was any apparent consideration of the financial feasibility of preserving the bungalow. As a result of the designation, the Property became subject to the requirements of §§ 8.01-8.17 of Article 66B of the Maryland Code, which restricts substantially Petitioner’s ability to alter, develop, or, as in the present case, demolish the bungalow.
Petitioner filed on 7 August 2003, pursuant to § 25-100 of the Rockville City Code, 20 a Petition for Judicial Review in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. The Circuit Court issued on 15 October 2004 its memorandum opinion. The court ruled first that “[t]he [re-zoning] or altering the zoning of property is a valid legislative exercise of the police power by the Mayor and City Council” and determined, as a result, that the Mayor and City Council’s decision would be upheld if based upon “substantial” or “fairly debatable” evidence. The Circuit Court concluded summarily that the finding of historical significance was neither arbitrary nor capricious, and affirmed the findings of the Mayor and Council in that respect. In the second portion of its opinion, however, the court found legal error in “the failure of the Mayor and City Council to consider [in determining whether to designate the Property within the historic district zone] the unrefuted evidence submitted by Petitioner[ ] which established that it is not econom *276 ically feasible to renovate the building____” The court therefore remanded the matter to the Mayor and City Council for consideration of that evidence.
Petitioner noted a timely appeal to the Court of Special Appeals. Respondent noted a cross-appeal on 19 November 2004. Petitioner took issue with the Circuit Court’s conclusion that the findings of architectural and historical significance were supported by substantial evidence. Respondent challenged the decision to remand to consider the economic infeasibility of renovation. The intermediate appellate court considered the following questions in the appeal and cross-appeal:
1. When the Mayor and Council re-zoned the subject property to the 0-1HD ... zone was it exercising its “quasi-judicial” fact-finding function or a legislative function?
2. Was the Mayor and Council’s decision to re-zone the Trust’s property to the 0-1HD zone supported by substantial evidence?
3. Did the circuit court err when it remanded the case so that the Mayor and Council could consider the economic feasibility, vel non, of renovation of the Spates Bungalow?
The Court of Special Appeals filed its unreported opinion on 9 August 2006. The intermediate appellate court determined first that the Mayor and Council, when it designated the Property as within the historic district, did so as the result of a quasi-judicial process. The reasoning behind this conclusion was that, because the matter concerned the re-zoning of an individual lot, and because the Mayor and Council permitted all parties to introduce evidence in a judicial-like hearing, the action taken by Respondent fell within the “piecemeal” category of zoning actions traditionally reached after a quasi-judicial process. The next step in the Court of Special Appeals’s analysis, therefore, was to determine whether the Council’s decision to re-zone the Property was supported by “substantial evidence.” The court determined that it was supported by such evidence, thus agreeing with the Circuit Court’s conclusion in that regard. The court explained that, although the architectural and historical significance of the Property was at *277 least debatable, a rational faet-finder in the Mayor and Council’s position reasonably could conclude on the evidence before it that the Property was worthy of designation. The evidentiary sufficiency for this conclusion is not challenged before this Court.
The Court of Special Appeals’s opinion as to the third issue, however, bears the brunt of a substantial portion of the challenges by Petitioner before us. The intermediate court concluded that “the only issues essential to the council’s determination of whether a structure ‘should’ be preserved is the historic, archaeological, or architectural significance of the structure.” “Financial hardship and economic feasibility,” according to the court, “are reserved for the determination by the local historic district commission who is explicitly empowered to decide whether demolition or alteration of the structure should be allowed despite such significance.” The intermediate court therefore reversed the judgment of the Circuit Court an d restored to its original force the action of the Mayor and City Council.
The Trust filed timely with us a Petition for Writ of Certiorari to review the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals. We granted the petition on 6 December 2006,
*278 1. Whether the Mayor and City Council of Rockville were required to consider, when determining whether to designate as historiс a particular piece of property pursuant to Maryland Code (1957, 2003 Repl.Vol.), Article 66B, §§ 8.01-8.17, the economic feasibility associated with preserving that property if so designated and, if required, whether the failure to do so constituted a regulatory taking of the Property without just compensation? 22
2. Where the trigger for review of historical significance is a demolition permit application, and the subject property is not designated as historic prior to the filing of such an application, but has been on the municipality’s list of historic resources since 1986, does the withholding of issuance or final action on the permit application, pending review of the Property by the Historic District Commission and the May- or and Council, deprive the applicant of a constitutionally protected property interest without due process of law? 23
We answer both questions in the negative and therefore affirm the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals.
*279 DISCUSSION
A. Regulatory Takings and Consideration of the Economic Feasibility Associated With Identifying and Preserving Historically Designated Property
1. The Mayor and Council are Not Required to Consider Economic Feasibility at the Time of Historical Designation.
Petitioner argues first that “[Article 66B, §§ 8.05-8.10, (the statutory scheme governing historic district development permits)] do[es] not ... address situations such as the instant one, where a property owner, not located in an historical district and upon whose property no historic designation restrictions then apply, files a demolition permit application ... and is then informed that the permit will be then withheld until the property is evaluated for historical significance. In such cases, [according to Petitioner,] the issue of the underlying permit to demolish the structure must not be ignored in the designation process before the local legislature, and evidence relevant to the issue of demolition, such as economic feasibility and financial hardship, must not be precluded from consideration as was done in this case.” Before approaching the merits of this argument, we pause to examine the procedures by which a property, under normal circumstances, may be designated as worthy of historic significance for land use purposes, as well as the consequences of historic designation as it relates to the procedures an applicant must follow in obtaining a permit for construction, alteration, or demolition of improvements or structures on the property.
It is well-settled that the adoption and administration of zoning procedures are an exercise of police power delegated to specific individual political subdivisions and municipalities of the State.
Maryland Overpak Corp. v. Mayor & City Council of Baltimore,
*280 [tjracing the entire panoply of related enabling statutes in Maryland is a tad complex. The provisions empowering municipal corporations in Maryland are contained in Maryland Code (1957, 1998 Repl.Vol.), Article 23A, and with regard to home rule powers specifically, Art. 23A, § 9. Similar provisions detailing the powers for non-charter counties are found in Maryland Code (1957, 1998 Repl.Vol., 2002 Supp.), Article 25. Further complicating the matter, the authority of the counties of Montgomery and Prince George’s are controlled by Maryland Code (1957,1998 Repl. Vol., 2002 Supp.), Article 28. The land use provisions of Maryland Code (1957, 1998 RepLVol., 2002 Supp.), Article 66B pertain primarily to Art. 23A municipalities and Art. 25 non-charter counties, although certain provisions apply to Maryland Code (1957, 1998 RepLVol.), Art. 25A charter counties, as well as to Montgomery and Prince George’s Counties, Art. 66B, §§ 1.02 and 7.03, and also to the City of Baltimore, Art. 66B, §§ 2.01-2.13 and 14.02.
Rylyns,
The historic designation process in Rockville ordinarily begins with the nomination of a property for historic designation. Although nomination originates, in most cases, with the property owner or an interested governmental authority, such as the Historic District Commission, sometimes a property is nominated by a third party, e.g., Peerless Rockville. According to the City of Rockville’s “Historic District Eligibility Information” website, furthermore, it is the HDC’s policy that “[a] structure that is the subject of a demolition application and is at least 50 years of age is automatically reviewed by Historic Preservation Office staff and the Historic District Commission (HDC) for significance to the City under the Environmental Guidelines.” City of Rockville, Historic District Eligibility Information, at http://www.rockvillemd.gov/ historic/hd-criteria.html (last visited 11 May 2007). The Property (including the more-than-50-year-old Spates Bungalow) in the present case, in addition to being nominated by Peerless Rockville, was the subject of a demolition permit application.
After receipt by the City of a nomination or the filing of a demolition permit application for an apt property, HDC staff evaluates the property in order to determine if it is eligible for designation. City of Rockville, Historic District Eligibility Information, at http://www.rockvillemd.gov/historic/flowehart. html (last visited 11 May 2007). This process, at a minimum, involves a review of the Historic Buildings Inventory maintained by the City, as well as any Maryland Historic Trust documentation that may exist regarding the property. Id. An evaluation meeting is scheduled for the next HDC meeting following completion of the review, which meetings occur every third Thursday of the month, with notice sent to the commissioners, the property owner, and all neighbors within a quarter-mile radius of the property. Id. If the nomination is uncontested, the HDC makes a recommendation pertaining to eligibility for historic designation. Id. This recommendation is transmitted for the Mayor and Council’s review. If the nomination is contested, however, the HDC holds the record open *282 for submission of additional evidence and the evaluative decision carries over until another HDC meeting. After the subsequent meeting, the HDC provides a written report to the Mayor and Council. Id. 25
In the event the HDC evaluation favors designation, the process continues with an application to amend the existing zoning map. A proposed amendment to the City’s zoning map may take one of three forms: (1) a local amendment pertaining to a single parcel of land; (2) a sectional amendment covering a certain portion of the City; or (3) a comprehensive amendment, which covers the entire City. Rockville City Code § 25-116. In the event of a local amendment, the application may be initiated by any municipal agency or any person with a financial or proprietary interest in the property. Rockville City Code § 25-117. If the proposed amendment is either sectional or comprehensive, the application may be filed only by the City Planning Commission or the Mayor and Council. Id. The City Clerk, upon acceptance of the application, transmits a copy to the Planning Commission. The Commission then completes an independent analysis of the property and submits to the Mayor and Council a recommendation as to whether it should be designated as historic. This document is included in the record and is considered by the Mayor and Council in reaching its final decision concerning the application. Rockville City Code § 25-124.
Approval by the Mayor and Council is required before any map amendment application may be granted. Action must be preceded by notice and a public hearing before the Mayor and Council, where all interested persons or entities have an opportunity to present their respective positions on the matter. Rockville City Code § 25-93. 26 At the public hearing, *283 “[tjhere shall be a complete stenographic report of the testimony at the hearing, and a typewritten transcript thereof with all exhibits admitted at the hearing, together with the application, all staff and Planning Commission memoranda and recommendations in relation thereto and a list of those persons registering their appearance, shall promptly be incorporated by the Clerk in the application file and shall be considered a part of the record on the application.” Rockville City Code § 25—98(b)(3). Within 90 days of the date of the last hearing, unless the Mayor and Council adopts a resolution stating otherwise, Rockville City Code § 25-125, the Council “shall provide written notice of its decision on any application by first class mail to the applicant, the Planning Commission, and to any other person who has registered an appearance in writing prior to decision by the Council.” Rockville City Code § 25-95.
The only legislatively-declared criteria for designation of a property as historic is set forth in Article 66B, § 8.02, which states that “[f]or the purposes of this subtitle, each local jurisdiction may designate boundaries for sites, structures, or districts which are deemed to be of historic, archaeological, or architectural significance.... ” What exactly constitutes “historical ... or architectural significance” is not elucidated by the statute, but we glean from the record made before the HDC, Planning Commission, and the Mayor and Council in the present case that these governmental entities typically consider twelve characteristics of a property in reaching a decision concerning designation. 27 As to historical and cultural significance, the City considers whether a property:
*284 (1) Has character, interest, or value as part of the development, heritage or cultural characteristics of the City; (2) Has character, interest, or value as part of the development, heritage or cultural characteristics of the County; (3) Has character, interest, or value as part of the development, heritage or cultural characteristics of the State; (4) Has character, interest, or value as part of the development, heritage or cultural characteristics of the Nation; (5) Is the site of a significant historic event; (6) Is identified with a person or a group of persons who influenced society; or (7) Exemplifies the cultural, economic, social, political or historic heritage of the Country and its communities.
As to architectural and design significance, the City looks to whether a property:
(1) Embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period or method of construction; (2) Represents the work of a master; (3) Possesses high artistic values; (4) Represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction; or (5) Represents an established or familiar visual feature of the neighborhood, community or county due to its singular physical characteristic or landscape.
City of Rockville, Histone District Designation Criteria Checklist (1999), at http://www.rockvillemd.gov/historic/HDcriteria.pdf (last visited 11 May 2007); see also City of Rock-ville, Historic District Eligibility Information, at http://www. rockvillemd.gov/historic/hd-criteria.html. The economic feasibility of renovation is nowhere indicated as a required consideration for the threshold determination whether a site is worthy of historic designation. If the Mayor and Council *285 concludes that a property is historically significant, it passes an ordinance granting the zoning amendment application. The resultant historic designation acts as an overlay zoning of the property, and is placed on the top of the existing zone.
A decision to place a parcel of property within a historic district impacts directly the degree of latitude the property owner possesses in deciding how best to utilize his, her, or its land and improvements. The property becomes subject to Maryland Code (1957, 2003 Repl.Vol.), Article 66B, §§ 8.05-8.10. Pursuant to that regulatory scheme, “fbjefore a person may construct, alter, reconstruct, move, or demolish a site or structure located within [the] designated district of [the] local jurisdiction, ... the person shall file an application with the historic district commission or historic preservation commission.” Article 66B, § 8.05(a); see also Rockville City Code § 25-237 (“Applications for Historic District permits shall be submitted to the Historic District Commission. Each application shall be submitted on forms provided therefore by the Historic District Commission____”); Rockville City Code § 25-238 (“All applications for Historic District permits shall be considered and acted upon by the Historic District Commission in accordance with the provisions of State law applicable to such permits [(Article 66B, §§ 8.05-8.17)].”). When the HDC receives an application for a demolition permit, for example, it will consider and either approve or reject the application, Article 66B, § 8.05(b), pursuant to a set of “guidelines” enumerated in § 8.06.
The permissible considerations are aimed at the external features of the property, 28 Article 66B, § 8.07(a), and are governed by the following guidelines:
(a) Guidelines.—(1) A local jurisdiction shall adopt guidelines for rehabilitation and new construction design for *286 designated sites, structures, and districts that are consistent with those generally recognized by the Maryland Historical Trust. (2)(i) The guidelines adopted under this section may include: 1. Design characteristics intended to meet the needs of particular types of sites, structures, and districts; and 2. Identification of сategories of changes that are so minimal in nature that they do not affect historic, archeological, or architectural significance and require no review by a historic district commission or historic preservation commission. (ii) A historic district commission or historic preservation commission shall use the guidelines in the commission’s review of applications.
(b) Review of application.—In reviewing applications, a commission shall consider: (1) The historic, archeological, or architectural significance of the site or structure and its relationship to the historic, archeological, or architectural significance of the surrounding area; (2) The relationship of the exterior architectural features of the structure to the remainder of the structure and to the surrounding area; (3) The general compatibility of exterior design, scale, proportion, arrangement, texture, and materials proposed to be used; and (k) Any other factors, including aesthetics, which the historic district commission or historic preservation commission considers pertinent.
Article 66B, § 8.06 (emphasis added). Unless the HDC is persuaded that the proposed action “will not materially impair the historic, archeological, or architectural significance of the site or structure,” it must reject the permit application. Article 66B, § 8.09(a)(2).
In the case of a historic demolition permit application, the HDC, in conjunction with the applicant, is obligated expressly to attempt to formulate an economically feasible plan for preservation of the property. Article 66B, § 8.09(a)(1). If no economically feasible plan initially is agreed upon, the HDC has 90 days from that date to “negotiate with the owner and other parties to find a means of preserving the site or structure.” Article 66B, § 8.09(b). In the event that no alternative can be negotiated by the parties, the HDC
*287 may approve proposed construction, reconstruction, alteration, moving, or demolition, despite the fact that the changes [apply to a historically designated property], if: (1) The site or structure is a deterrent to a major improvement program which will be of substantial benefit to the local jurisdiction; or (2) The retention of the site or structure would: (i) Cause undue financial hardship to the owner; or (ii) Not be in the best interests of a majority of persons in the community.
Article 66B, § 8.10 (emphasis added).
If, on the other hand, a property not designated for protection as a historic property is the subject of a demolition permit, the procedure is different. Proposed activities with regard to improvements or structures on properties not subject to Article 66B, tit. 8 are governed by the basic building code, found at Chapter 5, Article V of the Rockville City Code. 29 In terms of technical standards, the City adopted, with some modifications, the Building Officials and Code Administrators International, Inc., (BOCA) National Building Code, 1996 Edition. Rockville City Code § 5-86. Under this regulatory scheme, a permit application must be submitted to the Rockville Community Planning and Development Services Department, Inspection Services Division, by the owner or lessee of the structure, BOCA § 107.2, for any number of property development activities, including, but not limited to, construction, addition, alteration, or demolition of structures located in the property. BOCA § 107.1. No work may be completed without a permit. Id.
Section 108.0 of the Building Code governs generally the issuance of permits. Upon application, the Inspection Services Division examines all applications for permits “within a reasonable time after filing.” BOCA § 108.1. “If the applica *288 tion or the construction documents do not conform to the requirements of all pertinent laws, the code official shall reject such application in writing, stating the reasons therefor. If the code official is satisfied that the proposed work conforms to the requirements of this code and all laws and ordinances applicable thereto, the code official shall issue a permit therefor as soon as practicable.” Id. (emphasis added). In other words, the technical and procedural requirements by which a demolition permit is issued are less restrictive and more straightforward than if the property is designated properly as historic.
Returning to consideration of whether the Mayor and Council of Rockville were required to consider economic feasibility when determining whether to designate as historic the Property, we look first to the plain language of the statutory scheme. Our goal in construing any regulatory scheme is to “extract and effectuate the actual intent of the Legislature in enacting the statute.”
Reier v. State Dep’t of Assessments and Taxation,
Applying these principles to Article 66B, § 8.02, we observe that the statute is silent as to whether the local legislative body, in designating properties as historic areas, must consider the economic feasibility of preservation of a property and any financial hardship to the landowner. By the same token, the absence from the statute of such criteria may portend that the Mayor and Council is not precluded under the statutory scheme from considering economic feasibility and financial hardship at this juncture; however, the issue *289 here is whether the local legislature is required by the language of Article 66B to consider the economic impact of preservation at the time of determining whether a site is historically or architecturally significant to be protected. We conclude that it is not.
The singular consideration indicated expressly by the General Assembly in Article 66B, § 8.02, by which the local legislative body must consider amendments to the historic area zone is whether a subject property has “historic, archeological, or architectural significance.” As indicated supra, this determination of significance appears to be guided, at least in Rockville, by twelve enumerated criteria deemed characteristic of a property suitable for designation. Noticeably absent from the checklist is the economic impact of preservation should the property be included in the historic district. It is only after the property is designated historic and a development permit application is maintained by the landowner that the statutory scheme contemplates economic feasibility and financial hardship as required factors in determining whether a permit should be issued and on what conditions. The plain language of the governing statutory scheme indicates that, rather than the local legislative body charged with deciding finally the question of historic designation, it is the HDC in the first instance that is delegated the task of reviewing, approving, or rejecting any requests to alter, add to, or demolish the exterior of buildings on historic properties, Article 66B, § 8.05(b), and that more appropriately considers, among the other factors, the economic feasibility and financial hardship of retention, restoration, or renovation. Article 66B, §§ 8.06(b), 8.09, and 8.10. It is in those statutes governing the HDC’s decision to grant or deny the underlying historic area development permit, and solely in those statutes, that the financial implications of preservation, notwithstanding the site’s historic significance, are mandated by the legislative scheme for consideration. Article 66B, §§ 8.09, 8.10. Petitioner’s demand that the Mayor and Council’s historic designation decision here should be vacated for failure to consider economic feasibility because the Property, at the time of the filing and substantial completion of the review of the permit *290 application for other than historic designation, is not compelling. The statutes make no distinction in terms of how and in what order, relative to the processing of a qualifying permit application, a property may be nominated for historic designation.
“[W]hen the statutory language is plain and unambiguous, a court may neither add nor delete language so as to ‘reflect an intent not evidenced in that language.’ ”
Design Kitchen & Baths v. Lagos,
*291 By deferring in the first instance to the HDC’s later consideration of economic feasibility and withholding until that body weighs-in final action on the demolition permit, pending evaluation of the historic significance of the Property, Respondent followed the City’s established procedures pertaining to the review of proposed development-related activities. The May- or and Council, on 26 July 1999 adopted, in Resolution No. 11-99, certain “Environmental Guidelines for the Protection and Enhancement of the City’s Natural Resources.” Resolution No. 11-99 (26 July 1999) reads as follows:
WHEREAS, the preservation of the City’s natural resources is important to the health, well-being and quality of life for the residents and workers in, and visitors to, the City of Rockville; and
WHEREAS, development activity with the City has, and will continue to have, an impact on the City’s natural resources; and
WHEREAS, in September 1997 the Mayor and Council appointed an Environmental Guidelines Task Force to consider and develop a comprehensive and cohesive method for the protection and enhancement of the City’s existing natural resources during and after the development process; and
WHEREAS, the Task Force drafted and submitted to the Mayor and Council Draft Environmental Guidelines (“Environmental Guidelines for the Protection and Enhancement of the City’s Natural Resources, Final Draft Report to the Mayor and Council of Rockville, October 1998”) designed to insure that adequate consideration is given the impact of development activity on the City’s natural resources in an effort to avoid, minimize, and/or mitigate the impact on those resources; and
*292 WHEREAS, the Draft Environmental Guidelines were thereafter referred to the Planning Commission for evaluation and recommendation after receiving public input; and
WHEREAS, the Planning Commission held an open house on January 7, 1999 and a public hearing on the Draft Guidelines on January 20, 1999, and, following a worksession held on April 28, 1999, did unanimously recommend that the Mayor and Council adopt the Drafter Environmental Guidelines with certain changes; and
WHEREAS, the Mayor and Council concurs in the recommendation of the Planning Commission and finds such Environmental Guidelines to be 'in the public interest and to further the City’s goal of protecting its natural resources.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, BY MAYOR AND COUNCIL OF ROCKVILLE, MARYLAND that the attached document entitled “Environmental Guidelines for the Protection and Enhancement of the City’s Natural Resources, Final Draft Report to the Mayor and Council of Rockville, October 1998” is hereby adopted.
(emphasis added).
The purposes of the environmental guidelines, as adopted by Resolution 11-99, are to “establish a comprehensive and cohesive method to protect the city’s existing natural resources during and after the development process,” as well as to “provid[e] for the identification of existing natural resources and presenting various environmental management strategies and criteria to govern development within the City of Rock-ville.” City Of Rockville, Environmental Guidelines Task Force, Environmental Guidelines for the Protection and Enhancement of the City’s Natural Resources 5 (1999) (emphasis added) (hereinafter “Environmental Guidelines”). To that end, the guidelines are intended to set forth the City’s internal policies 31 to be executed by City Staff, the Planning *293 Commission, the HDC, and in some instances, the Mayor and Council, as early as possible in the formal review process of proposed land development. Id. at 7.
Under the adopted guidelines, it is the responsibility of an applicant to submit, prior to City staff review or approval of a proposed development project, a Natural Resources Inventory (NRI). With the stated purpose of ensuring environmentally sensitive design during the earliest phases of the development, particularly those stages of development which occur prior to permit application or approval, the NRI constitutes “a complete analysis of existing natural, cultural, historic, and archaeоlogical resources and [which] contain[s] specific information covering the development site and the first 100 feet of adjoining land or the width of the adjacent lot....” Id. at 9. In addition to the completion by the applicant of an NRI, a pre-submission meeting should occur between City Preservation staff and the applicant during which time the participants are supposed to determine the existence of resources on the site which possess cultural, historic, or archeological/architectural significance. Id. at 25. “As a general guide, [according to the guidelines,] any structure older than 50 years of age or possessing architectural significance, or a site associated with a person or even of importance to local, state, or national history or development, should be examined to determine significance.” Id. Included in the given examples are dwellings and outbuildings. If the pre-submission meeting results in the discovery of a potentially significant resource, the structure should be included in the NRI map, id. at 25, and “should be referred to the HDC and the MHT [Maryland Historic Trust] for a recommendation as to their cultural and historic significance to the area. The final determination of the site’s legal designation as a historic district is made by the Mayor and Council through the Local Map Amendment process, which includes a public hearing.” Id. at 40.
*294 Examining the procedures employed by the HDC and May- or and Council in the present case, it was neither improper nor unauthorized for the City to follow the adopted guidelines when it withheld issuance of the demolition permit, pending review of the historical significance of the Property. Assuming, arguendo, that we were to accept Petitioner’s argument that the guidelines merely are “discretionary” and lack binding force of law, 32 we do not accept the conclusion that it was *295 arbitrary, capricious, or otherwise improper for the City to administer its own adopted guidelines by utilizing the pendency of the demolition permit application as a trigger to consider the historic or architectural significance of the Property. The stated purpose of the guidelines are to prevent the premature destruction of natural resources without considering first their significance to the surrounding community. That the guidelines may not be mandatory does not mean that it was “unwarranted, unfair to the property owner, and contrary to the authority of the HDC” for it to apply the guidelines. It is the HDC’s stated policy, presumably in light of the aforementioned environmental guidelines, that “[a] structure that is the subject of a demolition application and is at least 50 years of age is automatically reviewеd by Historic Preservation Office staff and the Historic District Commission (HDC) for significance to the City under the Environmental Guidelines.” City of Rockville, Historic District Eligibility Information, at http://www.rockvillemd.gov/historic/hdcriteria.html. 33 The historic designation proceedings employed by the City in the present case were not imposed arbitrarily on Petitioner. Rather, Respondent followed those procedures outlined in the Environmental Guidelines. It was not improper for the City to determine historical and architectural significance as a precursor to a final decision whether to grant or reject a permit application to demolish a structure over 50 *296 years old, regardless of the means by which the City becomes aware of the building’s age. 34 , 35
*297
That the Mayor and Council was not required to consider the economic feasibility of preservation of the Spates Bungalow at the stage of the process when it determined the Property worthy of historic designation is all the more reasonable when one considers the purposes underlying historic area zoning. In addition to “enhancing] the quality of life by preserving the character and desirable aesthetic features of a city ...,”
Penn Cent. Transp. Co. v. City of New York,
2. Broadview Apartments Co. is Distinguishable From the Present Case.
In support of the proposition that it was improper for the Mayor and Council to decline to consider economic feasibility during the historic designation process,
37
Petitioner draws an analogy to
Broadview Apartments Co. v. Commission for Historical and Architectural Preservation,
Under the City of Baltimore’s historic zoning regulations at issue in
Broadview,
the Commission for Historical and Architectural Preservation (CHAP) was created for the purposes of administering the Baltimore City Code’s historic zoning provisions. Those provisions, similar to the historic zoning regulations in Rockville, were aimed at preserving “area[s] in Baltimore City wherein there are located structures which have historical, cultural, educational and/or architectural value, the preservation of which is deemed to be for the educational, cultural, economic and general welfare of the inhabitants of Baltimore City.” Baltimore City Code, Article 1, § 40(a). One of the CHAP’s primary duties under the Code was to compile a proposed “Landmark List,” subject to approval by the City Council, of structures both within and outside current historic zones, Baltimore City Code, Article 1, § 40(k), which had “historical, cultural, educational and/or architectural value ...” as defined by Baltimore City Code, Article 1, § 40(a).
Broadview Apartments Co.,
In
Broadview,
forty-two structures, including the particular apartments at issue there, tentatively were approved on 17 December 1976 for designation on the Landmark List.
Broadview Apartments Co.,
It was not until two years later, and after a petition for writ of mandamus was filed to compel issuance of the permit, that the City conducted a hearing on the demolition permit application.
Broadview Apartments Co.,
After the Baltimore City Court upheld on 15 July 1980 the CHAP’s decision to deny the permit to demolish the structure,
Broadview Apartments Co.,
1. [The] CHAP’s decision denying the permit was arbitrary, capricious, and not supported by substantial evidence;
2. The preservation law does not provide objective standards for its criteria to guide [the] CHAP in its decision making and therefore is unconstitutionally vague; and
*302 3. Denial of the demolition permit constitutes an unconstitutional “taking” under the 5th and 14th Amendments.
Broadview Apartments Co.,
The Court of Special Appeals began its analysis by confirming that “[although every restriction imposed by government upon a landowner’s use of his property will not be considered a taking, where the restrictions deprive the landowner of all reasonable, beneficial uses of the property, compensation must be paid.”
Broadview Apartments Co.,
Petitioner’s argument in the present case, advanced in its reply brief, that “the Property herein was never listed in an Historic Resources Inventory and the Trust was never given notice that the Property was being surveyed for such designation, whereas the
Broadview
site had already been ‘tentatively’ approved for inclusion on the landmark list and the owner never pressed the issue of financial hardship until two years after formal designation^]
[Broadview Apartments Co.,
The procedural postures of
Broadview
and the present case are somewhat similar in a sense. The process by which the property in
Broadview
became designated for historic zoning
*304
protection began with its inclusion as a proposed historic and architectural preservation district on a “Landmark list” under Article 1, §§ 40(j) and (k) of the Baltimore City Code.
Broadview Apartments Co.,
Although the Property here was not recommended formally for designation until after the permit application was filed, the record indicates that the Property was listed as a historical resource as early as 1986. Specifically, a “Maryland Inventory of Historic Properties Form,” created originally for the Maryland Historical Trust in 1985 by Peerless Rockville, suggests an architectural significance basis for possible designation of the Property. Although updated in 2001, after the present controversy arose, the substance of the original inventory form mirrors closely the more contemporaneous evaluations of the historic and architectural significance of the Property.
Also the record refers to a study completed in 1999 by an architectural historian employed by the State Highway Administration (SHA) addressing the impact on the area of the Property by a proposed intersection improvement at Maryland Routes 28 and 355. In that study, Kelly Steele, the SHA’s architectural historian, completed a “Maryland Historical Trust [National Registerj-Eligibility Review Form.” Although *305 the box concerning eligibility for historic designation was checked “No,” the textual analysis nonetheless revealed an arguable basis for eligibility. Specifically, despite Ms. Steele’s assessment that the Property was not associated sufficiently with historically significant events, trends, or persons to render it eligible for designation, she submitted that it otherwise was eligible because “it embodies distinctive characteristics of a type of architecture.” According to Ms. Steele, the Spates Bungalow was “an excellent example of the Craftsman style,” and stood “as a rare and outstanding representative of Craftsman architecture in Rockville, Maryland.” The import of these conflicting observations suggests at least that the Property’s possible historical and/or architectural significance was considered long prior to its formal nomination for designation. In that respect, the “procedural trajectories” of the facts in Broadview and the present case are similar enough that we conclude that the Court of Special Appeals’s tacit approval of the historical designation procedure there is confirmatory of that employed here.
S. The Mayor and Council’s Refusal to Consider Economic Infeasibility at This Juncture Did Not Work a Taking of the Property Without Just Compensation.
Petitioner contends next that, because “consideration of financial hardship [wa]s intricately tied to the decision of whether certain structures should be preserved[,]” by placing the Property in Rockville’s Historic District Zone without considering during the designation process the economic infeasibility and the resultant financial hardship to the Trust of rehabilitating the Property, the Mayor and Council’s decision effected a regulatory taking of the Property without due process of law or just compensation. In other words, the Trust argues that “the placement of the Property within the City’s Historic District Zone has rendered the Property economically inviable.” We find that Petitioner misinterprets the procedures and the property interests at stake in this case in the posture in which it reaches us.
*306
It is well-settled that zoning regulations are a valid exercise of a government’s police power so long as the limitations imposed are in the public interest and are related substantially to the health, safety, or general welfare of the community.
See, e.g., County Comm’rs of Queen Anne’s County v. Miles,
*307
“This Court has repeatedly stated that the preservation of architecturally or historically significant areas is a valid exercise of the governmental power.”
Belman v. State,
Essential to the successful assertion of any regulatory takings claim is a final and authoritative determination of the permitted and prohibited uses of a particular piece of property.
MacDonald, Sommer & Frates v. Yolo County,
Although not on point here, we find instructive nonetheless the Court’s reasoning in
Maryland Reclamation Associates, Inc.
In that case,
Maryland Reclamation Associates, Inc.,
a Maryland corporation, contracted to purchase a tract of land in Harford County for the purposes of establishing a rubble landfill.
Maryland Reclamation Assocs., Inc.,
The corporation presented before this Court four arguments, two of which were grounded on the due process clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment and Article 24 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights.
Maryland Reclamation Assocs., Inc.,
In
Williamson Planning Comm’n,
the case upon which we relied principally in
Maryland Reclamation,
a developer, the respondent’s predecessor in interest, obtained approval of a preliminary plan to subdivide a large tract of land in Williamson County, Tennessee.
Williamson Planning Comm’n,
In concluding that respondent’s claim was not ripe for judicial review, the Court began its analysis by stating that “a claim that the application of government regulations effects a taking of a property interest is not ripe until the government entity charged with implementing the regulations has reached a final decision regarding the application of the regulations to the property at issue.”
Williamson Planning Comm’n,
In light of those principles of law, the Court concluded that [rjesort to the procedure for obtaining variances would result in a conclusive determination by the Commission whether it would allow respondent to develop the subdivision in the manner respondent proposed. The Commission’s refusal to approve the preliminary plat does not determine that issue; it prevents respondent from developing its subdivision without obtaining the necessary variances, but leaves open the possibility that respondent may develop the subdivision according to its plat after obtaining the variances. In short, the Commission’s denial of approval does not conclusively determine whether respondent will be denied all reasonable beneficial use of its property, and therefore is not a final, renewable decision.
Williamson Planning Comm’n,
*314
Just as the parties’ claims were not ripe for judicial review in
Williamson Planning Comm’n and Maryland Reclamation Associates, Inc.,
we conclude that Petitioner’s regulatory takings claim in the prеsent case likewise is premature. Whether Petitioner may maintain a regulatory takings claim depends on final action on the demolition permit application, during which deliberation process the factor of undue financial hardship of preservation must be confronted squarely by the HDC and Respondent. Determining that the Property should be deemed historic does not terminate the proceedings between the parties to such a decree that all that remains to be done is to enforce by execution the disposition of the controversy.
See, e.g., Grimberg v. Martin,
As the intermediate appellate court noted, Petitioner equates historic designation of the Property with denial of the demolition permit when, in actuality, the former does not lead necessarily to the latter. To the contrary, once the Property was designated as historic, the HDC still must review the permit application under the regulatory scheme set forth in Article 66B, §§ 8.01-8.17, at which time there will be ample opportunity for all interested parties to have adjudicated fully the issues concerning the economic feasibility of preserving the Spates Bungalow. As we have stated
supra,
whether a regulation has such an economic impact on a property that it interferes with all reasonable investment-backed expectations depends in large part on whether that regulation works a regulatory taking of the property.
Williamson Planning Comm’n,
Petitioner nonetheless maintains that “[t]his matter is ripe for judicial review because the City, by withholding the Trust’s demolition permit for over five years or improperly terminating the demolition review permit process, may be viewed to have made a final decision with respect thereto and the Trust’s proposed use of the Property.” To the contrary, no dispositive action has been taken in terms of the demolition permit application. The permit review process was never resolved finally. Rather than press that process to a conclusion in parallel proceedings to the instant litigation or via a petition for writ of mandamus, Petitioner apparently opted to litigate the dispute piece-meal, crossing its metaphorical fingers that success in a one-front war would obviate the need to go before the HDC again. We do not assume that the five year delay in acting on the permit application equates to “a final decision with respect thereto.” See supra, note 39. As stated earlier, historical designation does not automatically *317 equate to a denial of the demolition permit sought. The HDC, in the wake of Respondent’s historic designation decision, still must determine the fate of the demolition permit by considering the various relevant factors enumerated above, which include the economic feasibility of restoration.
If Petitioner was as convinced, as it so adamantly contended in the proceedings below, that it was entitled legally to the demolition permit,
46
it should have petitioned the Circuit Court in a separate action, as did the property owner in
Broadview,
Jp. Respondent’s Failure to Consider Economic Feasibility At This Juncture Was Not A Deprivation of Property Without Due Process of Law.
Petitioner argues finally that the Mayor and City Council’s failure to consider the economic impact was a denial of due process because the historic designation proceedings “contravened the rule requiring a pre-deprivation hearing, absent any exigent circumstances.” Petitioner finds support in
Pitsenberger,
“Because the power to regulate land use necessarily places the local government in the position of potentially circumscribing a citizen’s rights or expectations as to the desired use for a given piece of real property, our appellate courts repeatedly have identified the source of those powers and set forth the minimum procedures necessary to insure that these powers are exercised in an appropriate manner.”
Rylyns,
The record in the present case indicates clearly that notice was given and hearings were conducted with respect to the adoption of Ordinance No. 19-03. It is equally clear that Petitioner, or its representative(s), was present at all of *320 the pertinent hearings and participated, meaningfully in the decision-making process. At the initial HDC evaluation hearing conducted on 16 October 2001, Petitioner, along with other interested parties, was given an opportunity to present evidence in opposition to designation. Petitioner’s counsel’s request was granted to keep open the record for submission of additional evidence. Petitioner took advantage of this additional time to submit, in addition to cost estimates of renovation, a report by its expert, Daniel Koski-Karell, Ph.D., concerning what he perceived to be the Property’s lack of historical significance. At the 28 January 2002 meeting of the Mayor and Council, convened for the purpose of considering the HDC’s recommendation for historic designation, Petitioner was again present and participated in the meeting. Counsel for Petitioner spoke also at the Planning Commission’s 8 May 2002 hearing regarding the proposed map amendment. She spoke in opposition to the designation, as did Dr. Koski-Karrell. At the 17 June 2002 Mayor and Council meeting, Petitioner again was present, through representatives, and had the opportunity to object and present evidence in opposition to the proposed designation. Thus, a series of full and fair hearings was given on the issue of the historical/architectural significance of the Property, which was the purpose of the proceedings. Respondent issued a written opinion in which it entirely apprised Petitioner of the facts relied upon in designating the Property.
In order for the historic designation proceedings to bear the flaw of a violation of due process, it must be concluded that Petitioners were not given the opportunity to be heard “at a meaningful time and in a meaningful manner.”
Pitsenberger,
B. Petitioner’s Additional Contentions That It Was Denied Procedural Due Process Are Not Properly Preserved For Appeal.
Petitioner posits an additional alternative contention that the City’s withholding of the demolition permit, pending consideration for historic designation, denied the Trust’s constitutionally protected rights to procedural due process guaranteed by Article 24 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights. Specifically, Petitioner argues that: (1) the City Code provides no safeguards in terms of how long a demolition permit application may be delayed pending review of historical/architectural significance of implicated structure; (2) the HDC review process provides no statutory guidance for timeliness for making a recommendation to the Mayor and Council; and (3) Section 25-123 of the City Code sets no time-frame for when the City Clerk must set a hearing before the Mayor and Council concerning the zoning map amendment application. Petitioner argues, in other words, that the lack of time limitations governing the review process creates a situation where City officials have unfettered discretion in reviewing the Property, which conceivably could delay indefinitely a final decision on the permit application.
An appellate court, under normal circumstances, will not render an opinion on a question posed in a case unless it appears clearly in the record that the issue framed in the question was raised in or decided by the trial court. Md. Rule *322 8-131(a). In the context of appellate review before this Court, furthermore, the Maryland Rules provide for additional limitations:
Unless otherwise provided by the order granting the writ of certiorari, in reviewing a decision rendered by the Court of Spеcial Appeals or by a circuit court acting in an appellate capacity, the Court of Appeals ordinarily will consider only an issue that has been raised in the petition for certiorari or any cross-petition and that has been preserved for review by the Court of Appeals. Whenever an issue raised in a petition for certiorari or a cross-petitioner involves, either expressly or implicitly, the assertion that the trial court committed error, the Court of Appeals may consider whether the error was harmless or non-prejudicial even though the matter of harm or prejudice was not raised in the petition or cross-petition.
Maryland Rule 8—131(b) (emphasis added).
It is well-settled that the term “ordinarily” in Rule 8-131 implies that this Court has some discretion, although infrequently invoked, to address and decide questions notwithstanding a failure to raise the issues in the petition for writ of certiorari or in the proceedings below.
See, e.g., Purnell v. State,
This Court has held that “questions, including Constitutional issues, that could have been but were not presented to the administrative agency may not ordinarily be raised for the first time in any action for judicial review.”
Bd. of Physician Quality Assurance v. Levitsky,
The only instances Petitioner points to where it purportedly referred to procedural due process violations, prior to the petition for wit of certiorari, briefing, and oral argument before this Court, occurred in a 24 January 2002 letter to the Mayor and Council regarding the authorization of the HDC staff to file the zoning map amendment application. There, Petitioner argued that
by withholding the demolition permit, requiring an HDC review of the historic significance of the Property and proceeding to consider the filing of а zoning map amendment to place the Property in the Historic District Zone, the City had created “... a presumption of historical value [of the Property] that has caused the property owner, whose property rights are in jeopardy, to bear the burden of proving that the site is not historic ... contrary to due process.”
*324
Aside from the fact that this particular issue regarding the allocation of burdens of proof was not raised again or decided before the circuit court or intermediate appellate court, the original due process argument relied upon does not involve the same subject matter as the alternative argument raised here concerning the lack of statutory time limitations. While the lack of time limitations may be related loosely to the issues of procedural due process, we find too attenuated the link between the absence of time limitations and the theory that the failure to consider economic feasibility is a violation of due process.
See Crown Oil & Wax Co.,
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS AFFIRMED; COSTS TO BE PAID BY PETITIONER.
Notes
. The Petitioner in this case is Betty Brown Casey, acting in her capacity as Trustee.
. Due to urban renewal of downtown Rockville occurring in the early 1970’s and the Property’s close proximity to major roads, government buildings, and other office buildings, 115 Park Avenue is well-positioned for redevelopment.
. “The Park” was platted originally in 1888, and consisted of a subdivision of 25 lots located immediately adjacent to the Agricultural Society Fair Grounds in Rockville.
. Bouic, Jr., constructed a home commonly referred to as "Boucilla” on a sizeable lot located west of Park Avenue.
. This fact was disputed at the relevant administrative proceedings. Even though Petitioner argued that "no evidence was presented ... that Mr. Spates actually even lived in” the Spates Bungalow, as the intermediate appellate court noted, Petitioner’s architectural history and preservation expert, Daniel Koski-Karell, Ph.D., posited that Spates resided at 115 Park Avenue during his term as Mayor. Dr. Koski-Karell, in his research regarding the Property, discovered that the electrical panel within the house bears a 1929 time-stamp. This lead him to believe that the house actually was constructed in 1929. Pinpointing the exact year of construction, however, is not material to the disposition of the issues before this Court because it was the architectural style of the house that was responsible principally for the bungalow being designated as historic. Moreover, at this juncture, the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the historic significance of the Property is not at issue.
. This fact likewise was in dispute. While experts for Respondent posited that the residential structure’s unique Craftsman style gave the *267 house its historical significance, Dr. Koski-Karell was of the opinion that "[t]he dwelling at 115 Park is a derivation from a Sears House Bungalow design, which is itself a derivation from the Craftsman Style. The stylistic linkage between 115 Park and the Craftsman architectural style is twice-removed and may be fairly characterized as attenuated and tenuous.” According to the Maryland Historical Trust forms completed by the State Highway Administration ("SHA”) regarding 115 Park Avenue, the Craftsman style was the dominant style for many modestly-sized homes during the time period between 1905 and the mid-1920’s. Originating in southern California in the early 20th century, Craftsman bungalows were “characterized by low pitched, gabled roofs with wide overhangs; exposed roof rafters; decorative beams and braced under the gables; and porches supported by tapered square columns that extend to ground level.” According to the record, experts that submitted testimony in favor of designating the Property as historic believed that the Spates Bungalow's "wide eave overhangs, triangular knee braces at the gables, an inset porch with tapered square columns resting on solid square piers that extend to the ground, and a gabled dormer” were indicative of various decorative features common to the Craftsman style.
We reiterate, however, that this background information on the Property is included here merely to illustrate the character of the record before us. The Court of Special Appeals determined, as we will discuss infra, that Respondent's decision regarding the historical significance of the Spates Bungalow was reached in a quasi-judicial proceeding supported by substantial evidence. The sufficiency of the evidence supporting that conclusion is not at issue here. Rather, the challenge here is based on the theory that Respondents failed to consider an additional factor, the economic infeasibility of preserving the Property, in determining whether to place the Property within the historic district zone. Subjecting redevelopment of the Property (and particularly the bungalow) to a host of additional governmental protections and considerations not pertaining to property not so designated is a consequence of Respondent's action.
. The Property, prior to its historic dеsignation, was located in an "O-l Office Building” zone. "The purpose of the O-l Zone is to provide office space for private, quasi-public and public uses and complementary service uses and to provide a transition between general commercial and residential uses.” Rockville City Code § 25-272(i). Land located within an O-l Zone permissibly may be used for the purposes of multifamily residential units; certain institutional uses such as education, child care, churches and other places of worship; commercial office space; industrial uses; medical and dental services; and retail and commercial services. For a complete list of the permissible uses of land within the various zones established in Rockville, see the "Table of Uses” codified in Rockville City Code § 25-296. Multi-family dwellings units may be constructed subject to a maximum density of sixty units per acre, "except that the Planning Commission may approve the development of up to one hundred (100) units per acre in accordance with the optional method procedures ...” as set forth in Rockville City Code § 25-326(b)-(d). Rockville City Code § 25-326(a). Other special development standards for residential uses exist throughout the code. See, e.g., Rockville City Code § 25-328 (providing for reduction of the minimum lot area per dwelling unit pursuant to the Moderately Priced Housing Ordinance). While retail and commercial services uses are permitted in the O-l zone, the services may not occupy more than 25% of the gross square footage of the structure, and "shall not be visible from any public right-of-way except a major highway.” Rockville City Code § 25-318.
. As we will describe infra, however, it does not appear that Respondent had any meaningful reasons for adducing contrary evidence, if *269 such existed, at this point. The City, from the onset of the historic designation process, was of the opinion that economic feasibility would not play a role in the present controversy until, if at all, the Property was designated as historic and consideration of the permit application to raze the bungalow pursued to a conclusion. Subsequent indications to this Court, as well as the courts below, suggest that Respondent would take issue with the methodology used in arriving at Petitioner’s cost estimates, namely the failure of those estimates to take into consideration the application of Rockville’s "smart codes” that might reduce appreciably the cost of restoration.
. The record indicates that the Property was identified as a "historical resource” as early as 1986. Nonetheless, it had not been designated formally as a historic site.
. The record is unclear exaсtly who informed Petitioner that the permit was ready to be issued. Wanda Shiers, a representative of the Trust who was responsible for filing the demolition permit application and pursuing the permit's issuance, posited at the 17 June 2002 hearing before Respondent that she began meeting with City staff in July 2001 regarding the Trust’s desire to raze the bungalow, and was given a checklist of agencies and public utilities that had to sign off on the project before the demolition permit application could be filed formally. Petitioner’s counsel declaimed at the 16 October 2001 Historic District Commission meeting that, after the proper utilities signed off on the project and the permit application was filed, an unnamed individual from the City Planning Department informed Ms. Shiers and Casey Management, another representative of the Trust, that no plans were necessary because it was only a demolition permit application and that the permit would issue after the Forestry Department reviewed the Property. Ms. Shiers's recollection of the correspondence between *270 representatives of the Trust and the City is consistent with Counsel for Petitioner’s statements.
. The Rockville Historic District Commission (“HDC") is a five-member entity created by Rockville City Code § 25-71 under the authority of Maryland Code (1957, 2003 Repl.Vol.), Article 66B, § 8.03(a). The primary functions of the HDC are to review permit applications for sites located within the historic district commission, Rockville City Code §§ 25-237, 25-238, as well as to assist the City in identifying sites for cultural and historical designation. City of Rockville, Environmental Guidelines for the Protection and Enhancement of the City’s Natural Resources 24—25 (adopted by Mayor and Council of the City of Rock-ville, July 1999).
. The stated purpose of the Maryland Historic Area Zoning Act is "to preserve sites, structures, and districts of historical, archeological, or architectural significance and their appurtenances and environmental settings." Md.Code (1957, 2003 Repl.Vol.), Article 66B, § 8.01(b)(1). It is under this Act that Respondents, the Mayor and City Council of Rockville, are delegated the authority to designate zoning boundaries for the purposes of identifying as historic specific pieces of property. Article 66B, § 8.02 ("[E]ach local jurisdiction may designate boundaries for sites, structures, or districts which are deemed to be of historic, archeological, or architectural significance, by following the procedures of the local jurisdiction for establishing or changing areas and classifications of zoning.").
. Public notice of the hearing was sent by mail on 9 October 2001 to all surrounding property owners and interested persons.
. Section 25-117 of the Rockville City Code requires that an application for a sectional or comprehensive map amendment (as opposed to a local zoning map amendment) be submitted only by the Planning Commission or by the Council.
. The Planning Commission is charged, inter alia, with the task of reviewing and making recommendations to the Mayor and Council regarding all applications for map and text amendments filed with the Ci1y Clerk. According to § 25-124 of the Rockville City Code, a copy of any map amendment application shall be sent to the Planning Commission. The Commission may submit a recommendation for review by the Mayor and Council.
. Pursuant to § 25-123 of the Rockville Code, "[u]pon acceptance for filing of any [map amendment] application ..., the City Clerk shall set the application for a hearing by the Council at a specified date, time and place, and cause public notice thereof to be given in accordance with the requirements of State law." Under the City Code, "[n]o application [for a zoning amendment] ... may be granted unless a public hearing shall have been held thereto in accordance with the requirements of State law,” at which all parties in interest and citizens have an opportunity to be heard. Rockville City Code § 25-93.
. The historic designation "act[s] as an overlay for a specific parcel or assemblage of properties, [and] is placed on top of the underlying zone or zones, in the present case a Euclidian zone.”
Maryland Overpak Corp. v. Mayor & City Council of Baltimore,
. McShea & Company, Inc., a commercial real estate company, opined that the maximum feasible $12 per square foot monthly rent derived from the restored building would be insufficient to recoup the extensive costs of renovation.
. A General Session is an open meeting conducted by Respondent to which all residents are invited to attend. The ultimate goal of such a meeting is to invite citizen participation in the decision-making process and to open lines of communication between the citizens and the municipal government by allowing citizens to present their issues directly to the Mayor and Council. Rockville City Government, Frequently Asked Questions: Council-Manager Form of Government, at http://www.rockvillemd.gov/FAQ/formofgov.htm (last visited 25 April 2007).
. Section 25-100 of the Rockville City Code provides that ''[a]ny person aggrieved by a decision of the Council on any application for an amendment to the zoning map or by any decision by the Council adopting or amending the [Master] Plan may appeal suсh decision to the Circuit Court for the County in accordance with the Maryland Rules....”
. The questions framed in this opinion are reworded from their original form in the Petition in order to express our understanding of the issues actually before us. The questions presented in the Petition for Writ of Certiorari were:
1. Whether Article 66B § 8.01 et seq., of the Maryland Annotated Code precludes the Rockville Mayor and Council from considering economic feasibility and financial hardship when reviewing properties for historic designation and whether such an analysis is appropriate where the trigger for the review is a demolition permit application?
2. Whether the process followed by the City of Rockville in withholding Petitioners’ demolition permit, pending historic review of the Property by the [HDC] and consideration of the map amendment to place the property in the historic district by the Mayor and Council, violated Petitioners’ procedural due process rights?
. Petitioner’s brief, to our reading, is somewhat unclear in this regard. Petitioner’s brief is divided into two portions. The first addresses whether the initial withholding of the permit, pending review by the HDC and Respondent of historical significance, violated Petitioner’s right to procedural due process. The second major heading addresses whether the Mayor and Council was required to consider financial hardship and economic feasibility when reviewing the Properties for historic designation. Although the portions of the brief pertaining primarily to economic feasibility do not refer in so many words to a regulatory takings thesis (Petitioner tackles that issue in the former section of its brief), Petitioner makes specific allusion to impairment of the economic viability of the Property as a result of historic designation.
. As already indicated, the somewhat circular nature of the reasoning in Petitioner’s brief sheds little light on the substance of its argument beyond the "obvious shortcomings” alleged by Petitioner with regard to the action of the Mayor and Council and the analyses of the Circuit Court and Court of Special Appeals.
. The stated purpose of any ordinance or resolution, adopted pursuant to the authority delegated by Article 66B, establishing a historic district or otherwise amending an existing district to include a certain piece of property is to:
(1) Safeguard the heritage of the local jurisdiction by preserving sites, structures, or districts which reflect elements of cultural, social, economic, political, archeological, or architectural history; (2) Stabilize and improve the property values of those sites, structures, or districts; (3) Foster civic beauty; (4) Strеngthen the local economy; and Promote the preservation and appreciation of those sites, structures, and districts for the education and welfare of the residents of each local jurisdiction.”
Article 66B, § 8.01(c).
. In the present case, the HDC evaluated the Property at the 16 October 2001 HDC meeting, kept the record open at the request of Petitioner, and rendered on 18 December 2001 its final written recommendation to the Mayor and Council that the Property was eligible for designation.
. Upon filing of an application with the City Clerk, the City Clerk sets the application for hearing with the Mayor and Council. Rockville City *283 Code, § 25-123. Written notice of the hearing must be sent at least 15 days before the date of hearing to the owners of the target property as well as to all owners either within the area of or immediately adjacent to the property, depending on the type of amendment proposed. Rock-ville City Code, § 25-122.
. The HDC’s recommendation, for example, alluded to the fact that the Property satisfied seven of the twelve criteria for eligibility for historic designation. Ordinance No. 19-03 granting the map amendment application, furthermore, stated that "WHEREAS, the subject *284 property was evaluated for historic, architectural and cultural significance to the City of Rockville, and the Historic District Commission found that the property met the criteria for local historic designation and recommended its placement in the Historic District .... ” (emphasis added). The ordinance included the following language: "The house embodies a distinctive character of a different time and place, and serves as a historical reminder of early subdivision that has all but disappeared.” This language follows closely the language used in the checklist recounted above.
. The term “external features” refers generally to the “appearance, color, texture or materials, and architectural design of the exterior” of buildings located on the historically significant property.
Faulkner v. Town of Chestertown,
. The stated purpose and intent of the basic building code "is to govern the design, construction, alteration, repair, addition, removal, demolition, use, location, occupancy and maintenance of all buildings and structures and their service equipment as herein denied, except as some of such matters may be described in public, local or general laws of the State, zoning and other ordinances or regulations having legal precedence.” Rockville City Code § 5-67.
. Specifically, the HDC is composed of five members, each of whom is supposed to possess "a demonstrated special interest, specific knowl *291 edge, or professional or academic training in such fields as history, architecture, architectural history, planning, archaeology, anthropology, curation, conservation, landscape architecture, historic preservation, urban design, or related disciplines.” Article 66B, § 8.03(2)(i) and (ii).
. “These environmental guidelines are intended to set forth certain City policies and planning objectives, and to identify, for developers and *293 citizens alike, environmental development standards and guides.” Environmental Guidelines, supra, at 7.
. Petitioner argues that it was legal error for the Mayor and Council and the HDC to apply the guidelines to the demolition permit application because the "Environmental Guidelines” are goal-oriented "discretionary” guidelines, rather than binding law. Because the environmental guidelines were adopted by resolution, rather than ordinance, something more informal in terms of its binding nature is implied.
See Inlet Assoc. v. Assateague House Condo. Assoc.,
. Even were we to view the HDC's policy as self-serving and published on its website solely as a consequence of the present litigation, the Environmental Guidelines, created and adopted by the City of Rockville years prior to the filing of the permit application to demolish the Spates Bungalow, provide specifically for a review of historic significance prior to permit approval for development activities.
. We reject Petitioner’s argument that the Environmental Guidelines were intended to apply only to larger development projects, and not to relatively small sites such as 115 Park Avenue. Petitioner relies on the following language from the guidelines: "[These environmental guidelines] are intended ... to be administered in concert with other planning goals. Examples of other factors that shall be taken into consideration are: infrastructure requirements; open space objectives for public parks and forest conservation; and prior commitments to landowners, neighborhoods and individual citizens, among others. Particular flexibility may be necessary where the Guidelines are applied to small lots and/or re-development proposals." Environmental Guidelines, supra, at 7 (emphasis added).
Indeed, "[tjhese Guidelines allow for flexibility to best achieve environmental and other planning objectives on a site-by-site basis.” Id. “When flexibility in a particular application of the Environmental Guidelines is requested, ¡however,] the developer will be expected to include a mitigating or offsetting component within the overall development proposal. In other words, give and take will be expected.” Id. (emphasis added). The guidelines do not indicate, as Petitioner argues, that the "Environmental Guidelines requirements were not applicable to this property as they are intended to apply to sites with larger planned development.” Nowhere in the guidelines is it stated that they were not intended to apply to small development sites. The guidelines merely indicate that they should be applied in a flexible manner when a smaller site is involved.
. Nor did the City’s referral to the HDC and Mayor and Council constitute a failure to follow its own ordinances and regulations.
See United States ex rel. Accardi v. Shaughnessy,
. For a more general discussion regarding the potential uses of zoning ordinances in order to "enhance the quality of life by preserving the character and desirable aesthetic features of a city,” see, for example,
New Orleans v. Dukes,
. Petitioners also argued before the Historic District Commission (by letter dated 16 October 2001) and again before the Mayor and Council (by letter dated 24 January 2002) that, in light of
Broadview Apartments Co. v. Commission for Historical and Architectural Preservation,
. Under the statutory scheme, the HCD could issue a permit only upon the CHAP approval, which came in the form of either a Certificate of Appropriateness or a Notice to Proceed.
Broadview Apartments Co.,
. Although consideration of the demolition permit application by the HDC was not stayed formally by the Mayor and Council or the Circuit Court while Petitioner pursued judicial review of the historical designation decision, the procedural progression of the case produced a like result through implied acquiescence. The 2 October 2001 letter sent from Respondent to Petitioner stated expressly that the permit review process was going to be paused pending an evaluation of the historic/architectural significance of the Property by the HDC and Respondent. The Property was placed in the historic zone on 14 July 2003, and Petitioner sought promptly thereafter, on 7 August 2003, judicial review of the designation. The series of appeals leading up to the present case before this Court ensued in close succession. Specifically, the Circuit Court rendered its memorandum opinion on 15 October 2004. Cross-appeals were noted on 19 November 2004 with the Court of Special Appeals. The intermediate appellate court filed its opinion on 9 August 2006, and Petitioner sought a writ of certiorari from this Court shortly thereafter. By virtue of filing a petition for judicial review immediately following the designation of the Property as within the historic district, Petitioner, in effect, elected to defer pursuing a final decision on the permit application, where economic feasibility and hardship clearly would be in play, in favor of litigating the historic designation decision-making process fully, i.e., approaching the dispute in seriatim, rather than proceeding concurrently, before having possibly to proceed before the HDC.
. Maryland Reclamation Associates, Inc., consummated the sale under the assumption that the property would be able to be used as a rubble landfill based on its inclusion in the waste management plan. Also important at closing was the approval of the first phase of a three phase permit process necessary to operate a landfill.
Maryland Reclamation Assocs., Inc. v. Harford County,
. By the time of settlement, the Phase I permit was approved, and the reports and studies necessary for Phase II and III apрroval were submitted to the reviewing governmental authorities.
. When asked at oral argument whether it was mounting a takings argument, Maryland Reclamation insisted that it was not. Despite this, however, "[b]oth in the circuit court and in its brief in this Court, [the petitioner] relied upon principles and cases relating to the question of whether particular governmental regulation of a landowner’s use of his property had gone so far as to constitute a 'taking' of the properly without just compensation in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment and the Just Compensation Clause of the Fifth Amendment and/or Article III, § 40, of the Constitution of Maryland.”
Maryland Reclamation Assocs., Inc.,
. Pragmatists and skeptics may deem this assumption "pollyannish;” but it is the only objective one that may be drawn from this record.
. Maryland Code (1957, 2003 Repl.Vol.), Article 66B, § 8.15, provides that "[a]ny person aggrieved by a decision of a historic district commission or historic preservation commission may appeal the decision in the manner provided for an appeal from the decision of the zoning board or commission of the local jurisdiction.” Rockville City Code provides furthermore that "[a]ny person aggrieved by an decision of the [Historic District] Commission may appeal the same to the Circuit Court for [Montgomery County]. Such appeal shall be taken according to the Maryland Rules as set forth in Chapter 1100, Subtitle B.” Rockville City Code § 25-75. This includes any decision related to the issuance or denial of a permit application for the demolition of the structure located within the municipal boundaries of the City of Rockville.
. Paul T. Glasgow, Rockville City Attorney, was of the opinion that the bifurcated procedure employed by the City in this case was proper. In response to Petitioner’s argument made at one of the initial hearings regarding historical designation of 115 Park Avenue that, under Maryland law, the City was required to consider economic feasibility of restoring the property at that point in time, he replied:
Well, at this point, ..., the issue is really not joined, so to speak. The case that was referred to here was the situation where there was a pending permit before the agency. Here we’re not at that step.... We’re at the point now of de signati[ng] this as a historic designation. After that, then depending upon what the property owner wants to do, they will have to come in for a permit. At that time, depending upon what they’re asking for and what the commission determines, then the question would be аppropriate, you know, is there an issue of economic unfeasibility or is there no economic possibility of saving the structure? Then that would be the time when that is right—when they actually come in for a permit seeking demolition. At this stage, though, that issue does not come up.
*316 He continued:
At this point in time, it’s just a question of whether or not this particular property has such a historic significance that it should be considered and placed in—or architectural significance or archeological significance that it should be in the historic district. If, as the Mayor said, you determine that it is of such significance, then it is put in the district.
At that point, on a case-by-case basis, then they would address the question of feasibility of renovation and whether or not an economically feasible plan could be developed to preserve the structure or what have you. So that right now that is not an issue under Maryland law where you are right now. That could become an issue before the Historic District Commission when a permit is presented for some sort of demolition or for altering the structure in some way.
. While Petitioner in its brief attempted to argue that it was not insisting on a property right in the permit itself, it made reference repeatedly that “the designation process in this case was triggered only after the Trust (1) filed an application for a demolition permit; (2) had been notified by the City that all requirements for the demolition permit had been satisfied; (3) was advised that the City would sign the permit; and (4) was told it could pick up the permit.” Petitioner also argued in its brief to this Court that "[s]ubsection 108.1 [of the BOCA], ‘Action on Application,’ requires that permits be examined 'within a reasonable time after filing’ and that if the reviewer ‘is satisfied’ that the ‘proposed work conforms’ to code requirements and ‘applicable’ laws and ordinances, the Development Services Department 'shall issue’ the permit ‘as soon as practicable.’ ”
. There, Broadview sought in a separate cause of action a writ of mandamus on the grounds that, because of the two year delay between the date of application for a demolition permit and the eventual hearing on the permit application, the Commissioner of Housing and Community Development was “without authority to withhold the requested permit.”
Broadview,
. It should also be noted that, even if the Court of Special Appeals's opinion in Broadview may be read to stand for the proposition that failure to consider economic feasibility may amount to a taking, we note that the takings claim in Broadview was ripe because there was a final disposition by the CHAP and the HCD on the merits of the demolition permit application.
