The Oak Bluffs zoning board of appeals on Tuesday agreed to a preliminary list of conditions that will be sent to the Martha’s Vineyard Commission as it prepares to review the revised Bradley Square affordable housing project.

The suggested conditions call for the Denniston building, home of the Island’s first African-American Church, to remain where it is, and that use of a meeting room be limited to two evening meetings per week of no more than 30 people per meeting. Another suggested condition calls for no meetings to be scheduled during art strolls or other major town events.

The zoning board would like to see the two new buildings limited to two floors no higher than 28 feet above mean grade, and it would like the ground lease to include permanent affordability restrictions for all eight residential units. Another suggested condition addresses the number of parking spaces.

Bradley Square backers want to redevelop the property on Masonic avenue into a mixed-use complex including three buildings with eight apartments with affordable housing, work space for artists and a community center. The developers are the Island Affordable Housing Fund and its sister organization, the Island Housing Trust.

A plan was approved by the Martha’s Vineyard Commission as a development of regional impact (DRI) last June and the project went to the zoning board of appeals for approval at the local level. But after neighbors raised concerns about the project’s size and lack of parking, opponents and supporters of the project formed a committee to work on a revised plan.

The new plan was unveiled last week, and now Bradley Square must return to the commission, which has scheduled a hearing for Dec. 18. At that meeting, the commission will decide whether a full review of the new plan is required.