Condominium projects and community housing projects may require that individuals, with vested owner-ship in their respective units, reside and work in close proximity to one another. Condominium projects and community housing projects also require that such owners be bound together in an association which is responsible for the maintenance, management, and possible reconstruction of improvements within the common area of the project. This mix of individual and common ownership is different from conventional and familiar patterns of residential, commercial and industrial ownership in the city. The unique status of condominium projects and community housing projects tends to magnify the effects associated with higher urban densities to the point where they may lead to conditions of mismanagement, neglect and blight that impact upon the public health, safety, welfare, and economic prosperity of the condominium project or community housing project as well as the larger community. To ensure that such problems are avoided in both the short and long terms, it is the express intent of the city to treat condominiums and community housing projects differently from apartments and other like structures. Pursuant to such intent and in order to provide guidance in the consideration of proposed condominium projects and community housing projects, the purposes of this chapter are as follows:
(a) To ensure that future condominium projects and community housing projects will have an overall positive effect on the city’s residential, commercial and industrial real property;
(b) To ensure that adequate provision is made for maintenance and management of condominium projects and community housing projects for the health, safety and welfare of purchasers and owners thereof;
(c) To ensure that governmental entities have the right to enter into the general and limited common areas of the project to protect the public health, safety and welfare and to preserve the public peace.
(Ord. 861 § 9.03(b), 1981; Ord. 887 § 2, 1982; Ord. 993 § 10, 1985)