LAND
USE DEFINITIONS AND EXPLANATIONS.
The following definitions
and explanatory notes supplement, restrict, and define the meaning
and intent of the uses listed in Section 11.2, Permitted Use Table.
Accessory Building.
A subordinate building having a use customarily incident
to the main building. A building housing an accessory use is considered
an integral part of the main building when it has any part of a wall
in common with the main building, or is under an extension of the
main roof and designed as an integral part of the main building.
Accessory Use.
A use customarily incidental to the main use of the property.
Agricultural Use.
The use of a parcel of land for farming or ranching and shall
include the structures that are normally associated with agricultural
uses. However, this use shall not include commercial dairies, commercial
dog kennels, commercial hatcheries, and commercial mink, fox, rat,
or other fur-bearing animal farms, or the farming of swine or exotic
animals.
Ambulance Service.
An establishment which provides ambulatory transport of persons,
to or from a medical facility, for a fee.
Amusement Center, Indoor.
A facility providing game equipment for entertainment and
amusement as its primary source of income. Games contained in the
facility may include coin-operated machines utilizing balls, pins,
and baskets, video equipment, and pinball. Other equipment may include
skill games such as pool, billiards, bowling, shuffle board, darts,
and batting cages. Any combination of these games may be used in the
facility. Games of wagering and chance, including 8-liners, categorized
as gambling are prohibited and not included in this use.
Amusement Center, Outdoor.
An amusement enterprise offering entertainment or games of
skill to the general public for a fee or charge wherein any portion
of the activity takes place in the open.
Animal Grooming.
An establishment that offers to the general public the service
of animal grooming for domestic pets. No boarding or medical care
is provided.
Animal Pound, Shelter.
A facility used to house or contain stray, homeless, abandoned,
or unwanted animals and that is owned, operated, or maintained by
a public body, or other nonprofit organization devoted to the welfare,
protection, and humane treatment of animals.
Antique Shop.
An establishment offering for sale articles such as glass,
china, furniture, or similar furnishings and decorations which have
value and significance as a result of age, design, or sentiment.
Apartment.
A room or suite of rooms arranged, designed, or occupied
as a dwelling unit residence by a single family, individual, or group
of individuals living together as a single housekeeping unit.
Art Gallery.
An establishment offering works of art for viewing and sale
to the general public.
Arts, Crafts, and Hobby Shop.
An establishment offering for sale those items commonly associated
with hobbies, including display areas for hobbies.
Assembly Hall.
A building and associated facilities dedicated to social
or recreational activities serving the City or a neighborhood.
Assembly Plant.
A facility for the assembly of equipment including automobiles,
trucks, farm machinery, railroad cars, engines, and appliances from
components fabricated for the most part in other locations.
Athletic Field and Play Field, Commercial.
An athletic field or stadium owned and operated privately,
including a baseball field, golf course, football field, or stadium
which may be lighted for night-time play.
Athletic Field and Play Field, Public.
An athletic field or stadium owned and operated by a public
agency for the general public, including a baseball field, golf course,
football field, or stadium which may be lighted for night-time play.
Auction House.
A place where objects of art, furniture, or other goods are
offered for sale to persons who bid on the object in competition with
each other.
Auditorium.
A large building and associated facilities for gathering
an audience for speeches and performances.
Auto Auction.
An enclosure or area, including outside storage, designed
for the sale of automobiles at auction or using other sales techniques.
Auto Car Wash.
An area and/or structure with machine or hand operated facilities
used principally for the cleaning, washing, polishing, or waxing of
motor vehicles.
Auto Impound Lot/Wrecker Business.
An establishment offering the service of towing, impounding,
and temporary storage of vehicles either which have been in an accident
or are illegally parked.
Auto Paint and Body Shop.
An automotive shop with a primary purpose of repairing and
painting the outside surfaces of automobiles, trucks, and vans, and
repairing and replacing the upholstery of such vehicles.
Auto Rental (Car and Truck).
An establishment primarily engaged in the short-term rental
or extended term leasing of automobiles and trucks, not including
truck tractors or semi-trailers.
Auto Repair Garage.
An enclosed facility designed for the repair and maintenance
of automobiles, trucks, and vans with outside storage allowed but
no outside repair or maintenance conducted.
Auto Sales, New and Used.
An open area or lot used for the display or sale of automobiles,
trucks, and vans, where no repair work is done except minor reconditioning
of the cars to be displayed and sold on the premises, and no dismantling
of cars for sale or keeping of used car parts or junk on the premises.
Auto Service Station.
An establishment for the retail sales of petroleum products,
automobile accessories, auto tune-up, muffler installation incidental
to the primary use, tire installation or repair, oil change or other
lubricate services in which all services provided and all storage,
supplies, parts, equipment, and accessories are indoors, with the
exception of fuel-dispensing operations.
Auto Service Station, Light Maintenance.
A premises where gasoline and other petroleum products are
sold and/or light maintenance activities such as engine tune-ups,
lubrication, minor repairs, and carburetor cleaning are conducted.
Service stations shall include automobile inspection services, but
shall not include areas where heavy automobile maintenance activities
such as engine overhauls, automobile painting, and body fender work
are conducted.
Bakery, Retail Confectionery.
A shop offering for sale on premises those baked goods or
candies made on premises or off premises. No production for off-premise
sale is allowed.
Bakery, Wholesale Candy.
A manufacturing facility for either baked goods or candy
with the purpose of selling the products at off-site retail locations.
Boardinghouse.
A building other than a hotel, where lodging and meals for
five or more persons, not members of the principal family therein,
are served for compensation.
Bottling Works.
A facility for the bottling of products for off-site retail
sales.
Building Material Sales.
A distribution and sales center for retail and wholesale
hardware, plumbing, lumber, and other materials used in the building
trade.
Camp Ground and Related Facilities.
An area that is occupied or intended or designed for occupancy
by transients using recreational vehicles, tents, or other temporary
dwellings for dwelling, lodging, or sleeping purposes. The use may
also include cooking facilities, bath houses, and recreation areas.
This does not include a manufactured housing community.
Caretaker's Residence, Guard's Residence, Servant's Quarters.
A residence located on a premises with a main nonresidential
or residential use occupied only by an employee of the principal use,
and serviced through the same utility meters or connections as the
principal use to which it is accessory. Manufactured homes are not
permitted for this use.
Carport.
A structure built and used for the shelter and protection
of motor vehicles against the elements and consisting of a roof and
supports, open on three sides from roof to adjacent ground level.
Catering Service.
A facility where food is prepared in large quantities to
be transported to, served, and consumed at an off-site location.
Clinic.
A public or private, profit or nonprofit facility for the
reception and treatment of outpatient persons physically or mentally
ill, injured, handicapped, or otherwise in need of physical or mental
diagnosis, treatment, care, or similar service.
Collectibles Shop.
A retail establishment offering such collectible items as
sports trading cards, comic books, and stuffed animals for sale to
the general public.
Community Center.
A building dedicated to social or recreational activities,
serving the City or a neighborhood and owned and operated by the City,
or by a nonprofit organization dedicated to promoting the health,
safety, morals, or general welfare of the City.
Contractor, No Outside Storage Permitted.
A business such as an electrician, mechanic, or plumber whose
primary use provides a service by installing electrical, mechanical,
or plumbing systems; which also may have limited sales of electrical,
mechanical, or plumbing supplies or equipment as a secondary use incidental
to its primary use. No outside storage permitted.
Contractor, Outside Storage Permitted.
A business such as an electrician, mechanic, or plumber whose
primary use provides a service by installing electrical, mechanical,
or plumbing systems; which also may have limited sales of electrical,
mechanical, or plumbing supplies or equipment as a secondary use incidental
to its primary use. Outside storage permitted.
Contractor's Storage or Equipment Yard.
An area located on the same lot or separate lot as a principal
use, used for outside storage of construction equipment, including
vehicles and construction material.
Convenience Store, with or without Fuel Sales.
A premise where gasoline and/or other petroleum products
are sold as a principal use, and in connection with the principal
use, a convenience store offering for sale prepackaged food products,
household items, and other goods commonly associated with the same.
Convent, Rectory, Monastery.
The building, buildings, or premises occupied by a religious
community or association as a residence and a place of work and worship.
Copy Shop.
A small commercial printing shop which sells on-site most
of the items printed along with associated items.
Cosmetic Tattoo Establishment.
An establishment where trained personnel apply micro-injections
of pigment to the dermal layer of skin such that facial cosmetics
are applies on a permanent basis. This does not include a tattoo parlor.
Country Club.
An area containing a golf course and a clubhouse and available
only to private specific membership. Such a club may contain adjunct
facilities such as a private club (only in conformance with these
regulations and applicable state statutes), dining room, swimming
pool, tennis courts, and similar recreational or service activities.
Dairy Processing.
A commercial plant for the storage and processing of milk
and milk products.
Day Care Center, Adult.
An agency at which six or more disabled or elderly adults
not related to the proprietor, are left for care for a part of the
24 hours of the day.
Day Care Center, Child.
An agency at which six or more children, under the age of
16 and not related to the proprietor, are left for care for a part
of the 24 hours of the day.
Day Care, in the Home.
A private residence where care, protection, and supervision
are provided on a regular schedule, at least twice a week to no more
than six children, including children of the adult provider.
Department Store.
A store offering a variety of comparison and consumptive
goods at retail price to the general public.
Dwelling, Assisted Living Facility.
A facility intended to provide dwelling units for occupancy
by persons requiring the level of care and support defined by the
State of Texas as “supervised living.”
Dwelling, Guesthouse.
A residential dwelling, which may include living, sleeping,
bathing, and kitchen facilities but is secondary to the main dwelling
structure and is used solely for habitation of guests on a temporary
basis and at no compensation.
Dwelling, Industrialized Housing.
A detached residential building that is designed for the
use and occupancy of one family, that is constructed in one or more
modules or constructed using one or more modular components built
at a location other than the permanent residential site, and that
is designed to be used as a permanent residential structure when the
modules or modular components are transported to the permanent residential
site and are erected or installed on a permanent foundation system.
The term does not include any residential structure that is in excess
of three (3) stories or forty-nine (49) feet in height as measured
from the finished grade elevation at the building entrance to the
peak of the roof. The term shall not mean nor apply to (i) housing
constructed of sectional or panelized systems not utilizing modular
components; or (ii) any ready-made home which is constructed so that
the entire living area is contained in a single unit or section at
a temporary location for the purpose of selling it and moving it to
another location.
Dwelling, Manufactured Housing or Mobile Home.
Shall be defined and differentiated by the following:
A.
Mobile Home
is a structure that was constructed before June 15, 1976,
transportable in one or more sections, which, in the traveling mode,
is eight body feet or more in width or 40 body feet or more in length;
or when erected on-site, is 320 or more square feet, and which is
built on a permanent chassis and designed to be used as a dwelling
with or without a permanent foundation when connected to the required
utilities. and includes the plumbing, heating, air conditioning, and
electrical systems.
B.
HUD-Code Manufactured Home
is a structure, constructed on or after June 15, 1976, according
to the rules of the United States Department of Housing and Urban
Development, transportable in one or more sections, which, in the
traveling mode, is eight body feet or more in width or 40 body feet
or more in length; or, when erected on-site, is 320 or more square
feet, and which is built on a permanent chassis and designed to be
used as a dwelling with or without a permanent foundation when connected
to the required utilities, and includes the plumbing, heating, air
conditioning, and electrical systems.
Dwelling, Multi-Family.
A residential building containing three or more dwelling
units, with the number of families in residence not exceeding the
number of dwelling units provided.
Dwelling, Single-Family Attached.
An attached residential building, not including a mobile
home or HUD-Code manufactured home, which contains not more than one
dwelling unit per lot of record.
Dwelling, Single-Family Detached.
A detached residential building, not including a mobile home
or a HUD-Code manufactured home, which contains not more than one
dwelling unit per lot of record.
Electrical Generating Station.
A facility designed to convert electrical current from other
energy sources for consumption by dwellings and other structures.
Electrical Substation.
A facility designed to convert electrical current to a different
phase or voltage prior to consumption by dwellings and other structures.
Electrical Transmission Line.
A high-voltage line used to transmit electrical current to
or between electrical substations or long distances and customarily
associated with towers.
Electronics Manufacturing.
A facility for the production of printed circuit boards,
microchips, and other electronic parts which may be assembled on-site
into end products such as computers, televisions, radios, and communication
equipment.
Exterminating Service.
A business providing extermination services for household
pests, including insects and rodents.
Factory Outlet, Retail or Wholesale Store.
An establishment that offers goods and products to the public
that are obtained direct from the manufacturer at prices that reflect
savings due to the reduced cost of said direct distribution.
Farmer's Market.
The offering for sale of fresh agricultural products directly
to the consumer at an open air market, where the vendors are generally
individuals who have raised the vegetables or produce or have taken
the same on consignment for retail sale.
Flea Market (Swap meet).
An outdoor commercial activity, not including shopping centers,
individual retail operations, or sales conducted by a nonprofit or
charitable organization, that is open to the general public and composed
of semi-enclosed or outdoor stalls, rooms, stands, or spaces used
for the purpose of display and sale, exchange, or barter of merchandise,
which usually does not include foodstuffs. (Does not include informal
garage or yard sales)
Funeral Home, Mortuary.
A building or part thereof used for human funeral services.
Such building may contain space and facilities for cremation facilities,
embalming, and the performance of other services used in preparation
of the dead for burial; the performance of autopsies and other surgical
procedures; the storage of caskets, funeral urns, and other related
supplies; and the storage of funeral vehicles. Where a funeral home
is permitted, a funeral chapel shall also be permitted.
Garage, Private.
An enclosed two-car accessory building or portion of a main
building on the same lot and used for the storage only of private
passenger motor vehicles and recreational vehicles, owned and used
by the owners or tenants of the premises.
Garage, Public.
A building or portion thereof, except as herein defined as
a private garage or as a repair garage, used for the storage of motor
vehicles, or where any such vehicles are kept for remuneration or
hire; in which any sale of gasoline, oil, and accessories is only
incidental to the principal use. Facilities for washing may be provided.
Garage, Repair.
A building or space for the repair or maintenance of motor
vehicles, not including factory assembly of vehicles, auto wrecking
establishments, or junkyards.
Gift Shop.
A shop offering gifts, souvenirs, and associated products
for sale.
Go-Cart Track and Other Motor Vehicle Track or Facility.
A private, commercial enterprise offering outdoor go-cart
tracks to the general public for a fee or charge. A go-cart is a non-licensed
motorized low horsepower vehicle powered by either a gas or electrical
motor to be used for the purpose of entertainment, generally having
the capacity of one driver/operator. Does not include remote control
vehicles.
Golf Course, Private.
Grounds and facilities used in the playing of the game golf,
for use by private membership.
Golf Course, Public.
Grounds and facilities used in the playing of the game golf,
privately owned but open to the public for a fee and operated as a
commercial venture.
Greenhouse or Plant Nursery.
An establishment operated for commercial purposes, offering
plants grown on premises and off premises and associated products
for sale for use in connection with home gardening activities.
Grocery Store.
A retail store primarily engaged in the retail sales of all
sorts of canned goods, dry goods, fresh fruits and vegetables, and
fresh and prepared meats, fish, and poultry.
Group Home for the Disabled or Disadvantaged.
A dwelling shared by four or more disabled persons, including
resident staff, who live together as a single housekeeping unit and
in a long-term, family-like environment in which staff persons provide
care, education, and participation in community activities for the
residents with the primary goal of enabling the resident to live as
independently as possible in order to reach their maximum potential.
As used herein, the term “disabled” shall mean
having (1) a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits
one or more of the person's major life activities so that such person
is incapable of living independently; (2) a record of having such
an impairment; or (3) being regarded as having such an impairment.
However, “disabled” shall not include current illegal
useof or addiction to controlled substance, nor shall it include any
person whose residency in the home would constitute a direct threat
to the health and safety of other individuals. The term “group
home for the disabled” shall not include alcoholism or drug
treatment center[s], work release facilities for convicts or ex-convicts,
or other housing facilities serving as an alternative to incarceration.
Gymnasium.
A building or room used for physical education and sports,
which may be equipped with gymnastic or other sports related equipment
and which may have seating in which spectators may view sports activities.
Hardware Store.
An establishment offering hand tools, small building materials,
and associated convenience items for sale to the general public.
Health Club, Recreation Facility.
An indoor facility including uses such as game courts, exercise
equipment, locker rooms, Jacuzzi, and/or sauna and pro shop, gymnasiums,
private clubs (athletic, health, or recreational), reducing salons,
and weight control establishments.
Heliport.
A landing facility for rotary wing aircraft subject to regularly
scheduled use and may include fueling or servicing facilities for
such craft.
Helistop.
A landing pad for occasional and infrequent use by rotary
wing aircraft with no fueling facilities.
Hobby Studio, Private.
An accessory activity area, used by the occupants of the
premises purely for personal enjoyment, amusement, recreation, or
cultivation of artistic talents.
Home Occupation.
An occupation customarily conducted for gain or support entirely
within a dwelling by a member or members of a family while residing
therein, and which is clearly incidental and secondary to the residential
use of the premises and does not change the character thereof. See
Section 25, Home Occupations.
Hospital.
An institution specializing in giving clinical, temporary,
and emergency services of a medical or surgical nature to human patients
and injured persons, and licensed by state law to provide facilities
and services in surgery, obstetrics, and general medical practice
including related facilities such as laboratories, outpatient departments,
training facilities, central services facilities, and staff offices
that are an integral part of the facilities. Hospitals may include
supportive retail and personal service uses operated by or under the
control of the hospital primarily for the convenience of patients,
staff, and visitors.
Hotel, Motel.
A building or portion thereof in which ten or more guest
rooms are provided for occupancy for compensation by transient guests.
Junk.
The term “junk” is defined to mean, and shall
include, scrap iron, scrap tin, scrap brass, scrap copper, scrap lead,
or scrap zinc and all other scrap metals and their alloys, and bones,
rags, used cloth, used rubber, used rope, used tinfoil, used bottles,
old cotton or used machinery, used tools, used appliances, used fixtures,
used utensils, used boxes or crates, used pipe or pipe fittings, used
automobile or airplane tires, and other manufactured goods that are
so worn, deteriorated or obsolete as to make them unusable in their
existing condition, subject to being dismantled for junk.
Kennel.
A lot or premises on which four or more dogs, cats or other
domestic animals at least four months of age are housed or accepted
for boarding, trimming, grooming and/or bathing for which remuneration
is received.
Laboratory, Medical and/or Dental.
A facility with materials and scientific and technological
equipment designed for scientific experimentation, examination, evaluation,
and documentation for medical and other technologies.
Landscape Service.
A business principally engaged in the decorative and functional
alteration, planting, and maintenance of grounds. Such a business
may engage in the installation and construction of underground improvements
necessary to support or sustain the landscaped surface of the ground.
Laundry, Dry Cleaning Pickup and Receiving Station.
A retail establishment providing a drop-off and pickup point
for customers to leave wearing apparel or other material in need of
laundry and dry cleaning and pick up of items when laundered and/or
dry cleaned.
Library.
Buildings and structures open for the general public, for
which a fee may or may not be charged for the use of book and other
media collections.
Locksmith Shop.
A shop that specializes in making, selling, and repairing
keys, locks, and associated material.
Lodge, Fraternal, Sorority, and Clubs.
An association of persons meeting regularly for their mutual
benefit or for the promotion of some common purpose, supported jointly
through payment of membership dues, all members having the right to
vote on policies and business.
Machine Shop.
A shop that manufactures metal products through the use of
presses, stamps, and dyes.
Manufactured Housing Park or Subdivision.
A parcel of land not less than three acres in size developed
for rental or sale of lots for the installation for residential uses
of HUD-Code manufactured Housing.
Manufacturing Facility (Light).
A facility used for sub-assembly, or assembly of sub-assemblies
for industrial purposes, and may conduct manufacturing that does not
emit noise, odor, dust, or other hazards.
Meat Market.
A retail facility that offers meat, fish, and poultry products
for sale to the public and shall include the sale of meat and meat
products to restaurants, hotels, clubs, and other similar establishments
when such sale is conducted as part of the retail business on the
premises.
Medical, Dental Office.
Offices for one or more physicians, surgeons, or dentists
engaged in treating the sick or injured, but not including rooms for
the abiding of patients.
Mini-warehouse.
A building or group of buildings in a controlled-access and
fenced compound consisting of varying sized of individual, compartmentalized,
and controlled-access, self-contained units that are leased or owned
for the storage of business and household goods or contractor supplies.
Motor Freight Terminal.
A facility with the capability of handling a large variety
of goods involving various forms of transportation and providing multimodal
shipping capabilities, such as rail to truck and truck to air.
Museum.
An institution for the collection, display, and distribution
of objects of art or science which is sponsored by or owned and operated
by the City, a public or quasi-public agency, and which facility is
open to the general public.
Music Store.
An establishment offering music, musical instruments, and
other related items for sale to the general public. Such establishment
may offer repair services of musical instruments.
Nursing Home.
A structure used for or occupied by persons recovering from
illness or suffering from the infirmities of old age, including developments
containing convalescent or nursing facilities.
Office, Business.
An office in which chattels or goods, wares, or merchandise
are not commercially displayed, created, sold, or exchanged.
Office, Professional.
A building or portion of a building wherein services are
performed involving predominantly administrative, professional, or
clerical operations. Including but not limited to insurance broker,
public stenographers, real estate broker, stock broker, doctor, dentist,
and other persons who operate or conduct offices which do not require
the stocking of goods for wholesale or retail sales.
Optician Shop.
A shop that manufactures optical devices, especially eyeglasses.
Park.
Public or private land available for recreational, educational,
cultural, or aesthetic use.
Parking Area.
An area for the driving, parking, display, or storage of
motor vehicles.
Pawn Shop.
A shop specializing in making small loans against personal
property or buying used personal goods from individuals.
Pet Shop.
A shop offering small animals for sale, with associated goods
and services.
Pharmacy.
An establishment offering prescription and over-the-counter
pharmaceuticals and other associated products for sale to the public.
Photographic Service.
An establishment offering drop-off of film for processing
and pickup of developed photographs and related services.
Private Club.
An establishment providing social and dining facilities as well as alcoholic beverage service to an association of persons and otherwise falling within the definition of and permitted under the provisions of that portion of Title 3, Chapter
32, VTCA, Alcoholic Beverage Code, as hereafter amended and as it pertains to the operation of private clubs.
Public Safety Facility, Police and Fire.
A facility designed to provide public protection from dangers
of fire and crime, including civil defense, operational centers, police
and fire stations, and training facilities.
Public Utility.
A closely regulated enterprise with a franchise for providing
to the public a utility service deemed necessary for the public health,
safety, and welfare.
Radio, Television Studio.
A facility designed to create and broadcast original source
programming, or relay commercial programming from another source,
including taped or pre-recorded materials for any part of the radio
spectrum for commercial consumption.
Recreational Ranch or Farm.
An establishment incorporating a variety of rural uses, including
sports arenas, rodeo grounds, pavilions, animal stables, and facilities
which may be rented for private parties.
Recycling Collection Center.
A building in which used materials such as newspapers, glassware,
and metal cans are separated and processed prior to shipment to others
who will use those materials to manufacture new products.
Religious Institution.
Facilities in which persons regularly assemble for religious
worship and activities intended primarily for purposes connected with
such worship or propagating a particular form of religious belief.
Rental Store.
An establishment that provides equipment and goods for rent
by the general public to be used off-site. All storage of rental equipment
and goods shall be contained within the limits of the primary structure.
Rental Yard, Commercial and Heavy Equipment.
An establishment that provides heavy equipment for rent to
contractors or the general public to be used off-site. The storage
of rental equipment or goods may occur either within the limits of
the primary structure or may be displayed and stored outside of the
primary structure. Areas reserved for repairs and maintenance of all
equipment or goods must be within the primary structure.
Restaurant.
A business establishment whose principal business is the
selling of unpackaged food to the customer in a ready-to-consume state,
in individual servings, or in non-disposable containers, and where
the customer consumes these foods while seated at tables or counters
located within the building. Such use includes cafes, lunch rooms,
and tea rooms.
Restaurant, Drive-in/Drive-thru.
Any place or premises used for sale, dispensing, or serving
of food, refreshments, or beverages in automobiles, including those
establishments where customers may serve themselves and may eat or
drink the food, refreshments, or beverages on the premises.
Rodeo Ground/Fair Ground.
An outdoor entertainment area providing an arena for rodeo
activities, including grandstands and bleachers for the viewing public,
storage pens, and facilities for the caring and presentation of livestock,
and open area for exhibits and carnival activities.
Rooming house.
A building other than a hotel where lodging for three but
not more than 12 persons is provided for definite periods for compensation
pursuant to previous arrangement.
Salvage Yard.
An area for salvage of metals, and/or other fabricated products,
which may include a yard or building where automobiles or parts of
automobiles or machinery are stored, dismantled and/or offered for
sale in the open as whole units, as salvaged parts or as processed
metal.
School, Business College.
A facility that provides a curriculum limited to the teaching
of office and business practices and skills.
School, College or University.
An academic institution of higher learning, accredited or
recognized by the State, and offering a program or series of programs
of academic study leading to a recognized degree or advanced degree.
Including junior and senior colleges, universities, conservatories
and seminaries.
School, Commercial Instruction.
A facility that instructs and trains students in the arts,
such as of music, dance, gymnastics, or martial arts, and is primarily
operated on a commercial basis.
School, Commercial Trade.
A business organized to operate for a profit and offering
instruction and training in a trade such as welding, brick laying,
machinery operation, and similar manual trades.
School, Home.
Educational activities consisting of a defined curriculum
with the purpose of satisfying the state educational requirements
and said educational activities being conducted in the home of a student
living in the home. Said educational activities shall be considered
to be a part of the housekeeping activities of a family.
School, Home Day.
Educational activities consisting of a defined curriculum
with the purpose of satisfying the state educational requirements
and said educational activities being conducted in a home but not
necessarily the home of the student living therein. There shall be
no more than 6 unrelated students not living in the home in which
the educational activities are being conducted. The total number of
students living in the home in which the activities are being conducted
shall not exceed 12 at any given time.
School, Institution, Rehabilitation, and Training Center.
A facility that provides rehabilitation and training operated
or sponsored by chartered educational, religious, or philanthropic
organizations, but excluding uses such as trade schools, which are
operated primarily on a commercial basis.
School, Nursery.
An establishment providing for the care, supervision, and
protection of children.
School, Primary or Secondary.
A public or private facility that provides a curriculum of
elementary or secondary academic instruction, including kindergartens,
elementary schools, junior high schools, and high schools.
School, Vocational.
A secondary or higher education facility primarily teaching
usable skills that prepare students for jobs in a trade and meeting
the state requirements of a vocational facility.
Shoe Repair.
An establishment offering shoe repair service to the general
public.
Skating Rink.
An establishment that provides facilities for participant
ice or roller skating.
Stable, Commercial.
A building designed for the keeping of horses or mules used
for pleasure riding or driving, for boarding, or for hire, including
a riding track.
Stable, Private.
A building designed for the keeping of horses or mules owned
by the occupants of the premises and not kept for remuneration, hire,
or sale.
Stockyard.
An area designed to receive and transfer large quantities
of livestock, containing a number of holding pens, loading and unloading
areas, ramps, and other facilities required for the handling of large
quantities of livestock.
Stone Monument Sales.
A retail establishment offering for sale stone monuments
produced off-premises, excluding cutting of slabs.
Storage and Warehousing Establishment.
A facility that is constructed such that large quantities
of products or goods may be stored for extended periods of time. Said
facility may be equipped with loading ramps and docks that facilitate
the loading and off-loading of semi-trailer vehicles.
Storage Yard.
Facilities to store any equipment, machinery, building materials,
or commodities, including raw, semi-finished, and finished materials
outside at ground level.
Studio.
A facility for professional work or teaching of any form
of commercial or fine arts, photography, music, drama, dance, but
not including commercial gymnasium or dance hall.
Swimming Pool, Water Park, Commercial.
A swimming pool and accessory facilities, not part of the
municipal or public recreation system, and not a private swim club,
but where the facilities are available to the general public for a
fee.
Swimming Pool, Private.
A swimming pool and accessory facilities constructed for
the exclusive use of the proprietor, when located in other than the
minimum front yard.
Tattoo Parlor/Body Piercing Studio.
An establishment whose principal business activity, either
in terms of operation or as held out to the public, is the practice
of one or more of the following: (1) placing of designs, letters,
figures, symbols, or other marks upon or under the skin of any person,
using ink or other substances that result in the permanent coloration
of the skin by means of the use of needles or other instruments designed
to contact or puncture the skin; (2) creation of an opening in the
body of a person for the purpose of inserting jewelry or other decoration.
Taxidermist Studio.
A retail establishment offering for sale to the public the
products produced by a taxidermist at a separate location.
Telephone Exchange, Switching, or Relay.
A facility for the exchange, switching, relaying, or transmission
of telephone services, not including public office facilities, storage,
or repair facilities.
Textile Manufacturing.
Includes knitting, weaving, printing, and finishing of textiles
and fibers into fabric goods[.]
Tobacco Shop.
A retail establishment offering for sale to the public tobacco
products and accessories.
Utility Building and Structures.
Operations such as power substations, water tanks or reservoirs,
water or sewage treatment plants, also including supportive structures
such as pump and lift stations.
Veterinarian Office, Large Animal Practice.
The offices of a doctor of veterinary medicine with on-site
treatment of large domestic animals, which may consist of livestock
and/or other farm animals and may include outside treatment pens,
shelters, or barns.
Veterinarian Office, Small Animal Practice.
The offices of a doctor of veterinary medicine with on-site
treatment of small domestic animals, which consist primarily of household
pets and animals that are not sheltered in pens or barns (excluding
dog runs and pens).
Video/Game Rental.
A commercial establishment that provides as a service a library
of video movies and video games which may be rented on a short-term
basis and returned for reuse.
Warehousing and Freight Office and Storage.
A use engaged in storage, wholesale sales, and distribution
of manufactured products, supplies, and equipment, but excluding bulk
storage of materials that are flammable or explosive or that create
hazardous or commonly recognized offensive conditions.
Welding or Machine Shop.
A facility for the machining and welding of metals, not including
forging or structural welding.
Wind Turbine Generator:
A tower, pylon, or other structure, including all accessory
facilities, upon which any, all, or some combination of the following
are mounted:
A.
A wind vane, blade, or series of wind vanes or blades, or other
devices mounted on a rotor for the purpose of converting wind kinetic
energy into electrical energy
B.
A shaft, gear, belt, or coupling device used to connect the
rotor to a generator, alternator, or other electrical or mechanical
energy-producing device.
C.
A generator, alternator, or other device used to convert the
mechanical energy transferred by the rotation of the rotor into electrical
energy.
Wind turbine generator shall include:
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Small Wind Turbine. A wind turbine device with a maximum output of 1,500 Watts, measuring
no more than ten (10) feet in length, 100 pounds in weight and using
individual blades of no m [no more] than six (6) feet in length.
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Large Wind Turbine. A wind turbine device with a maximum output of more than 1,500 Watts,
measuring more than ten (10) feet in length, 100 pounds in weight
and using individual blades of greater than six (6) feet in length.
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Wireless Transmission or Receiving Facility.
A structure or structures supporting antennas and/or commercial
satellite antenna dishes which are transmitting or receiving any portion
of the radio spectrum including wireless communication facilities,
but excluding noncommercial antenna installations for home use of
radio or television. See Section 30, Wireless Communications Facilities.