The following provisions are intended to ensure that traditional, "strip commercial" centers are avoided.
A. Overall site layout and building orientation.
(1) All primary and pad site buildings shall be arranged and grouped so that their primary orientation, typically the facade containing the primary customer entrance, complements adjacent development and frames and/or encloses on at least two sides:
(a) The corner of an adjacent street intersection;
(b) A primary pedestrian and/or vehicle access corridor within the development site; or
(c) A public sidewalk, space or other public site amenity.
 In the development pattern above, out-buildings front directly on the street and define a clear edge. The pad sites on the corners make a strong architectural statement and provide a sense of arrival to the development center. Parking is on the interior of the block and does not dominate the street frontage. |
B. Pad sites and buildings.
(1) The number, location, and design of independent pad sites shall reinforce, rather than obscure, the identity and function of the primary development.
(2) To the maximum extent practicable, pad sites shall be clustered together to define street edges and entry points or to enclose and create usable places between buildings. The even dispersal of pad sites in a widely spaced pattern within the development, even if along the street edge(s), is discouraged.
(3) Wherever practicable, spaces between adjoining pad site buildings should be improved to provide small pockets of customer parking, pedestrian connections, small-scale site amenities, or focal points. Examples include but are not limited to:
(a) A landscaped pedestrian walkway linking customer entrances between two or more pad site buildings;
(b) A public seating or outdoor eating area;
(c) An area landscaped with a variety of plant materials emphasizing four-season colors, textures, and varieties; or
(d) Public art, fountains, or other special features.
(4) Pad site buildings shall incorporate the same materials and colors as those on the primary building(s) in the development or center. Significant departures from "off-the-shelf" standardized building design may be required to meet this standard.
(5) Pad site entrances are appropriate locations to express individual building character or identity. Customer entrances shall be emphasized through incorporation of a building recess, projection, canopy, or similar design elements.