My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
7.4. SR 11-21-2016
ElkRiver
>
City Government
>
City Council
>
Council Agenda Packets
>
2011 - 2020
>
2016
>
11-21-2016
>
7.4. SR 11-21-2016
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
11/17/2016 3:19:58 PM
Creation date
11/17/2016 3:15:13 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
City Government
type
SR
date
11/21/2016
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
10
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
Elk . <br />Elk River Comprehensive Plan <br />River <br />4 <br />Future Land Use Characteristics <br />Residential <br />Rural Residential <br />Rural Residential uses are guided to be developed as residential use in areas outside of the Urban <br />Service Area that are not currently served by municipal sewer and water. The predominant land <br />use in this area is single family detached homes. Forms of detached single family units can be <br />built in "cluster subdivision". Cluster subdivisions are development patterns that place housing <br />closer together in order to preserve greater areas of undeveloped land and to minimize the <br />number of individual on-site septic systems. <br />A gross density of 0.4 units per acre (1 unit per 2.5 acres) is the target density in the Rural <br />Residential area. Increases in density should be allowed for achieving certain public objectives such <br />as preserving natural features (which are not otherwise protected by ordinance), implementing the <br />City's trail and park master plan (beyond the typical required park dedication), incorporating energy <br />saving building techniques, or a combination of the above mentioned concepts. <br />Urban Residential <br />The Urban Residential area includes land guided for residential use in areas that will be served <br />by the municipal sanitary sewer system. This Urban Residential land use will be guided by the <br />density of development and not the type of housing. Densities of this development pattern <br />would range from a low density pattern consisting mostly of single family detached homes at 2 <br />dwelling units per acre to a denser pattern of smaller lots or attached housing at a density of up <br />to 8 dwelling units per acre. <br />The intent of the Urban Residential land use is to have an average overall density of 3 to 4 <br />dwelling units per acre throughout this land use. This density would be averaged over all lands <br />designated Urban Residential and would be achieved through the use of multiple zoning districts <br />that apply alternative density restrictions in order to achieve the overall density goals. Currently, <br />the City uses R-1 b, c, d, R -2a and R -2b to facilitate the density goals throughout the community. <br />Urban Residential land uses include single family detached housing, duplexes, townhomes and <br />multiple family dwellings. Housing units may be owner or renter occupied within this land use <br />designation. Urban residential should provide connections between neighborhoods, including <br />trails and streets, while also supporting screening and buffering from more intense traffic <br />corridors and uses. <br />High Density Residential <br />The High Density Residential land use category consists of multiple family attached housing <br />oriented in a vertical fashion, more commonly referred to as apartments and condominiums. This <br />land use category may accommodate a combination of side by side townhomes and multi -story <br />buildings. The densities targeted in this category are over 8 dwelling units and up to 20 dwelling <br />units per acre. <br />High Density Residential uses are located in places with compatible adjacent land uses and <br />where the local street system will accommodate the traffic. Preferred settings include adjacent <br />to Commercial Districts, employment and service centers, civic centers, park facilities, schools, <br />transit facilities and principal roadway corridors. When located adjacent to lower density <br />neighborhoods, high density housing can be designed to transition from its most intense use (3 <br />Chapter 5: Land Use / 37 <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.