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<br />. <br /> <br />FOSTERING A VARIETY OF USES <br /> <br />Create mixed-use districts. Create mixed-use zoning districts that allow <br />by-right, a fine-grained combination of uses, especially within downtown <br />core areas, suburban activity centers, and neighborhood centers of varying <br />scales. The Southeast Orlando Sector Plan described in Chapter 3 lays out <br />the different uses that would best fit in centers of various scales. <br /> <br />Create mixed-use neighborhoods. Create neighborhood districts that allow <br />comer stores, civic uses, and a mix of housing types in predominantly resi- <br />dential areas within walking distance of mixed-use centers or Main Streets. <br /> <br />Increase and regulate density. Create high-density districts that will gen- <br />erate a critical mass of activity and help support a mix of uses at the core. <br />Some conventional ways of measuring residential density by dwelling <br />units per acre are problematic because there are no incentives to build <br />smaller units and because mixed-use buildings aren't properly addressed. <br />A better approach, used in some conventional ordinances as well as New <br />Urbanist ones, is regulating density by a combination of limits on total <br />buildout expressed through maximum lot coverage, height, and other <br />dimensional requirements. As long as those basic parameters and building <br />type and other design requirements are met, the use mix and housing unit <br />type can vary (unless ground-floor uses are specified as discussed below). <br /> <br />Make it possible to walk to parks, s.hops, and schools. Require that a spec- <br />ified percentage of new housing units be within walking distance of public <br />schools and parks and neighborhood retail. For infill projects, allow this <br />proximity requirement to be satisfied by providing such destination uses <br />either within a new project or in an established neighborhood nearby. <br /> <br />Require ground-floor retail. Stimulate active ground-floor uses that gen- <br />erate pedestrian traffic, such as retail, restaurants, and personal service <br />businesses. Where market conditions and local support are strong, ground- <br />floor retail can be required. Where conditions are not ripe for mandated <br />retail, require buildings that can house successful ground-floor retail by <br />regulating fenestration, entries, and other features, while allowing offices <br />and other nonretail uses in the short term. Over time, track market changes <br />and adjust regulations accordingly. <br /> <br />Pennit a mix of uses on upper floors. Permit upper floors of mixed-use <br />buildings to contain a mix of dwelling units, offices, and miscellaneous com- <br />patible nonresidential uses (e.g., artist and artisan studios, dance studios, <br />gyms) that generate activity during most hours of the day in the neighborhood. <br /> <br />Allow a variety of pennitted uses. In all districts, introduce a diversity of <br />compatible uses by right. <br /> <br />. <br /> <br /> <br />For more than 50 years, residential development in the United States has <br />been characterized by uniformity-of type, design, and density. Now, New <br />Urbanist projects are recapturing a traditional form that mixes density and <br />housing type within each block and neighborhood to allow households <br />with different needs to live close together in the same neighborhood. <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />MIXING RESIDENTIAL DENSITY AND HOUSING TYPES <br /> <br />Mix housing types. Allow as of right or require a mix of housing types <br />and lot sizes within neighborhoods, emphasizing in zoning regulations <br />harmonious design and building type. Some communities specify mini- <br />mum densities in certain areas to allow a range of building types and <br />ensure that a critical mass will be created (Figures 2 and 3). <br /> <br />Chapter 1. New Urbanist Essentials 17 <br /> <br />FIGURE 2. SHOP HOUSES <br /> <br /> <br />AT-HOME BUSINESS <br />OR STUDIO <br /> <br />"Shop houses" or "live-work" <br />townhouses combine upper-story living <br />space with II flexible ground-fioor <br />space that can be used as a shop, art <br />studio, or office. The combination <br />offers an important housing alternative <br />while adding vitality to the street <br />and providing flexibility to accommodate <br />different economic uses over tillle. <br />