Zoning and Growth Management Flashcards
Floating Zoning
Zoning district that gives conditions which must be met before that zoning district can be approved for an existing piece of land. Rather than being placed on the zoning map, the floating zone is simply written as an amendment in the zoning ordinance. Thus, the zone “floats” until a development application is approved
Overlay Zones
Zoning district which is applied over one or more previously established zoning districts, establishing additional or stricter standards and criteria. Ie. Historic district or waterfront district
Incentive Zoning
Allows a developer to develop in a way that ordinarily would not be permitted in exchange for a public benefit that would otherwise not be required. For example, a developer may provide schools, parks, open space, plazas, low-income housing, or money, in exchange for greater flexibility in required building setbacks, floor heights, lot area, parking requirements, number of dwellings, and other minimum standards.
Performance Zoning
An alternative to the traditional, conventional zoning method, performance standards regulate development by setting the desired goals to be achieved by regulation rather than regulating how those community goals are met. Instead of restricting specific uses on a property, performance requirements allow any use that meets the set standard.
Unified Development Ordinance
UDO - combines traditional zoning and subdivision regulations, along with other desired city regulations, such as design guidelines, sign regulations, and floodplain and stormwater management, into one document. Streamline and coordinate the development process of permits and approvals for development projects by removing inconsistencies and eliminating outdated policies.
Transfer of Development Rights
TDR - market tool communities can use to achieve land preservation. The preservation is accomplished by allowing one landowner to sever her development rights in exchange for compensation from another landowner who wants her development rights to increase.
Inclusionary Zoning
Requires developers to make a percentage of housing units in new residential developments affordable to low income households. The concept is the same as incentive zoning.
Tax Increment Financing
TIF - Creates a redevelopment district in which infrastructure improvements and/or project developments are financed based upon an anticipated future increase in property values. Any increase in tax revenue through increase in property value will accrue to the redevelopment authority. The TIF district is created for a set time period, usually between 5 and 30 years, and once the time period ends, the increase in revenue from the property value increase reverts to the baseline taxing structure.
Adequate Public Finance Ordinances
APFO - growth management tool communities use to help coordinate the timing and provision of public infrastructure with new development. Also known as concurrency. Allows the government to delay new development projects by prohibiting the issuance of development permits if existing government services, such as water, sewer, roads, schools, fire, police, etc., cannot support the development.
Impact Fees
Growth management tool used to help pay for the expansion of public infrastructure by requiring developers to pay their proportionate share of the costs.
Zoning Administration
Zoning is ideally administered with three components: the zoning map, the zoning text, and the comprehensive plan. Those three components should be developed in the reverse order just stated with the comprehensive plan coming first.
Comprehensive Plan
Citizen input component of zoning administration
Zoning Text
Establish the different zones applicable in
the community and the uses allowable in each zone either by right or with a conditional use
permit. Includes use table.
Euclidean Zoning
This type of regulation places the most protection and restrictions on residential land uses, less on commercial and virtually none on industrial uses. This concept places the most restrictive zoning category, single family residential, at the top of the pyramid. Each more intensive land use is on the next level down with industrial use being the base of the pyramid
Cumulative Zoning
Single Family Residential as most restrictive but each successively more intense zoning category — multifamily, commercial, and industrial — allow all the uses from the previous zones