The Rancho Cucamonga General Plan (General Plan) is the policy document that provides an overall vision, policy direction, and implementation strategy to support future development in Rancho Cucamonga. The General Plan organizes the city into districts, centers, corridors, and neighborhoods, with an overall vision for greater walkability centered around nodes of activity. The FBC implements the General Plan's vision and policy direction for key areas of the city.
The Form-Based Code, adopted as article
VIII of title
17 (Development Code), establishes place-based standards for certain areas of Rancho Cucamonga. The FBC represents an alternative to a conventional zoning code's approach to the way the built environment is regulated. The definition of a Form-Based Code is as follows:
"Form-Based Codes foster predictable built results and a high-quality public realm by using physical form (rather than separation of uses) as the organizing principle for the code. These codes are adopted into city or county law as regulations, not mere guidelines. Form-Based Codes are an alternative to conventional zoning." |
— Form-Based Codes Institute |
Unlike conventional, use-based codes, FBCs utilize the intended form and character of a neighborhood rather than use as the organizing framework of the code. FBCs address the relationship between building facades and the public realm (i.e., sidewalk, street), the form and mass of buildings in relation to one another, and the scale and types of buildings and blocks. Regulations and standards in an FBC are presented graphically in diagrams and photographs as well as supplemental text. These standards are keyed to a plan (i.e., a Regulating Plan) that functions like a zoning map, assigning an appropriate form and scale through the application of form-based zones to specific lots. While FBCs focus on an intended physical form, they also regulate use by allowing a mix of appropriate land uses chosen to ensure compatibility among different contexts and the intended physical form of the area. FBCs transform commercial corridors and centers into vibrant, mixed-use areas where residents can live, work, and play within close walking distance.
(Ord. No. 1000 § 4, 2022)