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TRANSIT ZONING CODE :Definitions, cont'd <br /> Light Manufacturing. The manufacture or assembly of products from previously Paseo: a public place or path designed for walking; promenade. <br /> <br /> treated material where no impact is created to the adjacent uses and no hazardous <br /> materials are used in the production of such products. The maximum number of Pedestrian First: The practice of addressing the needs of people, once out of their <br /> employees shall be 10. Examples of light manufacturing include: automobiles, through a series of interdependent urban design and streetscape <br /> principles (e.g., wide sidewalks, street trees and shade, on-street parking, outdoor <br /> athletic equipment dining, inviting storefronts, the feeling of being in an 'outdoor room', short cross- <br /> bakeries walk distances, interconnected and short blocks). <br /> camera, photo equipment <br /> clothing Pedestrian Shed: An area defined by the average distance that may be traversed at <br /> electronics an easy pace from its edge to its center in approximately 5 minutes. This distance <br /> musical instruments is used to determine the size of a neighborhood. This dimension averages one <br /> optical goods quarter of a mile or approximately 1,400 feet for generally flat terrain. <br /> woodworking (limited) <br /> Personal Services: Establishments providing non-medical services to individuals <br /> Lined Block: See'Building Types' as a primary use. Examples ofthese uses include: <br /> Live/Work: See 'Building Types' barber, nail salons and beauty shops <br /> clothing rental <br /> dry cleaning pick-up stores with limited equipment <br /> Lot Width: The frontage of a parcel which is used to identify the parcel for street home electronics and small appliance repair <br /> address purposes. <br /> locksmiths <br /> pet grooming with no boarding <br /> Media production: An establishment dedicated to the production of visual shoe repair shops <br /> and audio mass media, including television, films, videos, video games, tailors <br /> mobile devices, Internet and digital interactive media, but excludes magazines, These uses may also include accessory retail sales of products related to the ser- <br /> newspapers,and periodicals. vices provided. <br /> Mixed-Use Building: A structure lawfully containing residential and non-residential personal Services -Restricted: Personal services that may tend to have a blighting <br /> uses. and/or deteriorating effect upon surrounding areas and which may need to be dis- <br /> persed to minimize their adverse impacts. Examples ofthese uses include: <br /> Multi-Family Building.Aresidentialstructurelawfullycontainingtwoormoredwell- laundromats(self-service laundries). Laundromats shall comply with the Bevel- <br /> ing units. opment and performance standards set forth in Section 41-199. <br /> massage (licensed, therapeutic) as defined on Section 41-1751.1 of the SAMC <br /> Net Developable Area: The private area defined by blocks which is not to remain pawnshops <br /> for public uses such as Plazas, Greens, Squares, Thoroughfares or Streetscapes. <br /> Planter: The layer of the streetscape which accommodates street trees. Planters <br /> Office: These do not include medical offices (see Clinic, Urgent Care," and "Doctor, may be continuous or individual according to the Thoroughfare and location within <br /> dentist, chiropractor, etc. office.") the neighborhood. <br /> 1. Service. Establishments providing direct services to consumers. Examples podium: A continuous raised platform supporting a building, or a large block of <br /> ofthese uses include employment agencies, insurance agent offices, real estate two or three stories beneath amulti-layer block of a smaller area. <br /> offices, travel agencies, utility company offices, elected official satellite offices, <br /> etc. This use does not include "Bank, Financial Services," which is separately porch: see'Frontage Types' <br /> defined. <br /> Private Frontage: The privately held layer between the frontage line and the prin- <br /> t. Administrative. Office-type facilities characterized by high employee densi- cipal building facade. The structures and landscaping within are held to specific <br /> ties, and occupied by businesses engaged in information processing, and other standards. The variables of Private Frontage are the depth of the setback and the <br /> computer-dependent or telecommunications-based activities. Examples of combination ofarchitectural elements such as fences, stoops, porches and galler- <br /> these uses include: ies. These elements influence social behavior in the public realm. The Frontage <br /> airline, lodging chain, and rental car company reservation centers, not layer may overlap the public streetscape in the case of awnings, Galleries and <br /> including retail travel agencies Arcades. <br /> computer software and hardware design and development <br /> consumer credit reporting Research and Development: Aquasi-industrial facility where creative work is <br /> data processing services undertaken on a systematic basis in order to increase the stock of knowledge gen- <br /> health management organization (HMO) offices where no medical services erally in the fields of medicine, scientific instruments, safety- critical mechanism or <br /> are provided high technology. These facilities may include pilot plant operations as an ancillary <br /> insurance claim processing use, which shall not exceed 25 percent of the floor area. A facility providing full <br /> mail order and electronic commerce transaction processing scale production shall be deemed a manufacturing use. <br /> telecommunications facility design and management <br /> telemarketing Rowhouse: See'Building Types' <br /> 3. Professional. Office-type facilities occupied by businesses that provide Setback: The area ofa lot measured from a lot line to a building facade or elevation <br /> professional services, or are engaged in the production of intellectual property. that must be maintained clear of permanent structures excepting galleries, fences, <br /> Examples ofthese uses include: garden walls, arcades, porches, stoops, balconies, bay windows, and terraces which <br /> accounting, auditing and bookkeeping services are permitted to encroach into the setback subject to the standards established in <br /> advertising agencies Division 3 of this Article. <br /> attorneys <br /> business associations, chambers of commerce Shared Parking (Park-Once Poliry): An accounting for parking spaces that are avail- <br /> commercial art and design services able to more than one function. The requirement is based on a range of parking- <br /> construction contractors (office facilities only) demand found in mature, mixed-use centers. The Shared Parking ratio varies <br /> counseling services according to multiple functions in close proximity unlikely to require the spaces <br /> court reporting services at the same time. This approach to parking uses the following types of parking <br /> detective agencies and similar services in combination to achieve a balanced and distributed supply of parking: off-street <br /> design services including architecture, engineering, landscape architec (surface lots and garages), on-street (parallel and diagonal). <br /> ture, urban planning <br /> educational, scientific and research organizations Shopfront: see'Fro ntage Types' <br /> financial management and investment counseling <br /> literary and talent agencies Stacked Dwellings: See'Building Types' <br /> management and public relations services <br /> media postproduction services <br /> Stoop: see'Fro ntage Types' <br /> news services <br /> photographers and photography studios Story: A habitable level within a building from finished floor to finished ceiling: <br /> political campaign headquarters Attics and basements, as defined by the California Building Code (CBC) are not <br /> psychologists considered a story for the purposes of determining building height and are sub- <br /> secretarial, stenographic, word processing, and temporary clerical ject to the applicable requirements of this code and the CBC, except for when the <br /> employee services finished floor level directly above a basement or cellar is more than six feet above <br /> security and commodity brokers grade, such basement or cellar shall be considered a story. <br /> writers and artists offices <br /> 7:3 TRANSIT ZONING CODE <br /> SPECIFIC DEVELOPMENT 84 <br /> City of Santa Ana, California <br /> <br />