College and Trade School, Public or Private.
Institutions of higher education providing curricula of a
general, religious or professional nature, typically granting recognized
degrees, including conference centers and academic retreats associated
with such institutions. This classification includes business and
computer schools, management training, technical and trade schools,
but excludes personal instructional services such as music lessons
(see Instructional Services).
Community Assembly.
A facility for public or private meetings including clubs
and lodges, community centers, senior centers, religious assembly
facilities, convention centers, civic and private auditoriums, union
halls, meeting halls for clubs and other membership organizations.
This classification includes functionally related facilities for the
use of members and attendees such as kitchens, multi-purpose rooms,
and storage. It does not include gymnasiums or other sports facilities
(see Indoor Sports and Recreation), residential accommodations available
to club and lodge members (see Group Residential), or facilities such
as day care centers and schools, all of which are separately defined
and regulated.
A.
Small. A Community Assembly facility
up to 2,000 gross square feet in area.
B.
Large. A Community Assembly facility
over 2,000 gross square feet in area.
Community Garden.
Use of land for and limited to the cultivation of herbs,
fruits, flowers, or vegetables, including the cultivation and tillage
of soil and the production, cultivation, growing, and harvesting of
any agricultural, floricultural, or horticultural commodity.
Cultural Institution.
Public or non-profit institutions engaged primarily in the
display or preservation of objects of interest in the arts or sciences
that are open to the public on a regular basis. This classification
includes performing arts centers for theater, dance, and events; buildings
of an educational, charitable or philanthropic nature; libraries;
museums; historical sites; aquariums; art galleries; and zoos and
botanical gardens.
Day Care Center.
Establishments providing non-medical care for persons on
a less than 24-hour basis other than Family Day Care Homes. This classification
includes licensed nursery schools, preschools, and day care facilities
for children or adults, and any other day care facility licensed by
the State of California.
Elderly and Long-Term Care.
Establishment that provides 24-hour medical, convalescent
or chronic care to individuals who, by reason of advanced age, chronic
illness or infirmity, are unable to care for themselves, and is licensed
by the California Department of Public Health. Uses include, but are
not limited to, skilled nursing facilities, rest homes and convalescent
hospitals. Does not include Senior Citizen Residential (see Dwelling,
Multiple-Unit), Residential Care Facilities (Mobile Home Park), or
Hospitals (see Hospitals and Clinics).
Emergency Shelter.
As defined in California
Health and Safety Code Section 50801(e),
housing with minimal supportive services for homeless persons that
is limited to occupancy of six months or less by a homeless person.
No individual or household may be denied emergency shelter because
of an inability to pay.
Government Offices.
Administrative, clerical, or public contact offices of a
government agency, including postal facilities, together with incidental
storage and maintenance of vehicles. This classification excludes
corporation yards, equipment service centers, and similar facilities
that primarily provide maintenance and repair services and storage
facilities for vehicles and equipment of a public agency or public
utility (see Utilities, Major).
Hospitals and Clinics.
State-licensed facilities providing medical, surgical, psychiatric,
or emergency medical services to sick or injured persons. This classification
includes facilities for inpatient or outpatient treatment, including
substance-abuse programs as well as training, research, and administrative
services for patients and employees. This classification excludes
veterinaries and animal hospitals (see Animal Care, Sales, and Services).
A.
Hospital. A facility providing
medical, psychiatric, or surgical services for sick or injured persons
primarily on an in-patient basis, and including ancillary facilities
for outpatient and emergency treatment, diagnostic services, training,
research, administration, and services to patients, employees, or
visitors.
B.
Clinic. A facility providing medical,
psychiatric, or surgical service for sick or injured persons exclusively
on an out-patient basis including emergency treatment, diagnostic
services, administration, and related services to patients who are
not lodged overnight. Services may be available without a prior appointment.
This classification includes licensed facilities offering substance
abuse treatment, dialysis centers, blood banks and plasma centers,
and emergency medical services offered exclusively on an out-patient
basis. This classification does not include private medical and dental
offices that typically require appointments and are usually smaller
scale (see Offices, Medical and Dental).
Park and Recreation Facilities, Public.
Parks, playgrounds, recreation facilities, trails, wildlife
preserves, and related open spaces, all of which are noncommercial.
This classification also includes playing fields, courts, gymnasiums,
swimming pools, picnic facilities, tennis courts, golf courses, and
botanical gardens, as well as related food concessions or community
centers within the facilities.
Public Safety Facilities.
Facilities providing public-safety and emergency services,
including police and fire protection and emergency medical services,
with incidental storage, training and maintenance facilities.
Schools, Public or Private.
Facilities for primary or secondary education, including
public schools, charter schools, and private and parochial schools
having curricula comparable to that required in the public schools
of the State of California.
Social Service Facilities.
Any noncommercial facility that provides meals, showers,
personal storage, and/or laundry facilities to families or individuals.
Specialized programs and services related to the needs of clients
may also be provided. This classification excludes Emergency Shelters
and Supportive Housing.
(Ord. 1646 § 2, 2022; Ord. 1656, 6/12/2024)
Adult-Oriented Business.
An establishment or concern that, as a regular and substantial
course of conduct, offers, sells or distributes adult-oriented merchandise,
or that offers to its patrons materials, products, merchandise, services,
entertainment or performances that have sexual arousal, sexual gratification,
and/or sexual stimulation as their dominant theme, or are characterized
by an emphasis on specified sexual activities or specified anatomical
areas and are not customarily open to the general public because they
exclude minors by virtue of their age. This classification does not
include any establishment offering professional services conducted,
operated, or supervised by medical practitioners, physical therapists,
nurses, chiropractors, psychologist, social workers, marriage and
family counselors, osteopaths, and persons holding licenses or certificates
under applicable State law or accreditation from recognized programs
when performing functions pursuant to the respective license or certificate
(see Offices, Medical and Dental).
Animal Care, Sales and Services.
Retail sales and services related to the boarding, grooming,
and care of household pets including:
A.
Kennel. Facilities
for keeping, boarding, training, breeding or maintaining for commercial
purposes, four or more dogs, cats, or other household pets not owned
by the kennel owner or operator. It excludes Pet Stores and Veterinary
Services that provide 24-hour accommodation of animals receiving medical
or grooming services.
B.
Pet Day Care. Facilities
for providing non-medical care for four or more dogs, cats, or other
household pets not owned by the pet day care owner or operator on
a less than 24-hour basis.
C.
Pet Store. Retail
sales of animals and/or services, including grooming, for animals
on a commercial basis. This classification excludes dog walking and
similar pet care services not carried out at a fixed location and
excludes pet supply stores that do not sell animals or provide on-site
animal services (see Retail, General).
D.
Veterinary Service. Medical care for small animals on a commercial basis. This classification
allows 24-hour accommodation of animals receiving medical or grooming
services but does not include kennels.
Arts and Makers Uses.
Uses intended for the creation, manufacturing, performance,
exhibition, sale, or assemblage of art and goods by artists and makers.
This classification may include the following uses; live-work residential,
studios (arts, dance, music, etc.); arts exhibition space; maker's
space; breweries or distilleries; artisan shops; media production;
clean technology; food preparation; handicraft/custom manufacturing;
manufacturing finished parts or products primarily from previously
prepared materials; printing; engraving and publishing; furniture
and related product manufacturing; college and trade school, public
or private; cultural assembly; community garden; cultural institution;
or similar uses.
Artist's Studio.
Work space for an artist or artisan including individuals
practicing one of the fine arts or performing arts, or skilled in
an applied art or craft, with incidental retail sales of items produced
on-site. Artist's studios do not produce significant odors, fumes,
noise, particulate matter emissions, or other disturbances (see Maker's
Space).
Automobile/Vehicle Sales and Services.
Retail or wholesale business that sell, rent, and/or repair
automobiles, trucks, vans, trailers, motorcycles including the following:
C.
Automobile/Vehicle Service and Repair, Major. Repair of automobiles, trucks, motorcycles, motor
homes, boats and recreational vehicles, including the sale, installation,
and servicing of related equipment and parts, generally on an overnight
basis. This classification includes the servicing and repair of engines,
body and fender, transmission, axles, wheels and brake, auto glass
services, tire sales and installation, and vehicle painting. Excludes
vehicle dismantling or salvaging and tire retreading or recapping.
D.
Automobile/Vehicle Service and Repair, Minor. The service and repair of automobiles, light-duty
trucks, boats, and motorcycles, including the sale, installation,
and servicing of related equipment and parts. This classification
includes the replacement of small automotive parts and liquids as
an accessory use to a gasoline sales station or automotive accessories
and supply store, and quick-service oil, tune-up and brake and muffler
shops, auto glass sales and replacement, stereo and alarm sales, and
tire sales where repairs are made or service provided in enclosed
bays and no vehicles are stored overnight. This classification excludes
disassembly, removal or replacement of major components such as engines,
drive trains, transmissions or axles; automotive body and fender work,
vehicle painting or other operations that generate excessive noise,
objectionable odors, or hazardous materials, and repair of heavy trucks,
limousines or construction vehicles (see Automobile/Vehicle Service
and Repair, Major). It also excludes towing services (see Towing and
Impound) and fueling stations (see Service Station).
F.
Rental Car Storage. Parking or storage of operable motor vehicles for rental car agencies,
leasing agencies, or any company or business engaged in the rental
or leasing of motor vehicles, where more than 30 percent of annual
rental transactions relating to those parked or stored motor vehicles
occurs off site.
G.
Service Station. Establishments
primarily engaged in retailing automotive fuels or retailing these
fuels in combination with activities, such as providing minor automobile/vehicle
repair services; selling automotive oils, replacement parts, and accessories;
and/or providing food services.
H.
Towing and Impound. Establishments primarily engaged in seizing and retaining vehicles,
in addition to parking associated towing vehicles.
Banks and Financial Institutions.
A.
Banks and Credit Unions. Financial institutions, including Federally-chartered banks,
savings associations, industrial loan companies, and credit unions
that provide retail banking services to individuals and businesses.
This classification includes only those institutions engaged in the
on-site circulation of money, and whose deposits are insured by the
State or Federal government and/or a State or Federal sponsored entity,
including credit unions. This classification specifically excludes
other financial services.
B.
Other Financial Services. Other financial services are business establishments that
provide customers with some form of currency in a transaction as part
of an alternative loan product. This use classification may include
check cashing, payday loans, vehicle title loans, microfinance loans,
or similar. This use classification specifically excludes banks and
credit unions.
1.
Alternative Loan Businesses. Establishments that conduct a check cashing business, and/or
engage in the business of cashing checks, warrants, drafts, money
orders, or other commercial enterprise defined herein. The term “check
cashing business” as used herein includes a retail business
owned or operated by a “check casher” as that term is
defined in California
Civil Code Section 1789.31, as amended from
time to time. This classification also includes the business of deferred
deposits, or “payday lending,” which is defined as an
establishment owned or operated by a “licensee,” as that
term is defined in California
Financial Code Section 23001(d), as
amended from time to time. Similar lending services that provide vehicle
title loans or microfinance loans shall also be included in this classification.
Microfinance institutions are characterized by their use of interest
rates that are higher than traditional banks and credit unions and
typically targeted towards low-income borrowers or borrowers with
limited or no credit history. Alternative loan businesses do not include
State or federally chartered banks, savings associations, credit unions,
or industrial loan companies (see Banks and Credit Unions). They also
do not include retail sellers engaged primarily in the business of
selling consumer goods, such as consumables to retail buyers, that
cash checks or issue money orders incidental to their main purpose
or business.
2.
Pawnbroker. Place
of business where personal property is received and for which money
is advanced, with the right of privilege granted to the person to
whom said money is advanced to reclaim such property upon repayment
of said money, together with all legal charges incident thereto. This
does not include Banks and Credit Unions.
Building Materials Sales and Services.
Retail sales or rental of building supplies or equipment.
This classification includes lumber yards, tool and equipment sales
or rental establishments, and establishments devoted principally to
taxable retail sales to individuals for their own use. This definition
does not include Construction and Material Yards and hardware stores
less than 10,000 square feet in floor area (see Retail Sales) or plant
nurseries (see Nurseries and Garden Centers).
Business Services.
Establishments that primarily provide goods and services
to other businesses on a fee or contract basis, including printing
and copying, blueprint services, advertising and mailing, equipment
rental and leasing, office security, custodial services, photo finishing,
and model building.
Commercial Cannabis Uses.
Includes the cultivation, possession, manufacture, distribution,
processing, storing, laboratory testing, packaging, labeling, transportation,
delivery, or sale of cannabis and cannabis products.
A.
Cannabis Delivery-Only Operations. A commercial cannabis use that involves the transfer
of cannabis or cannabis products from a fixed location that is not
open to the public to a customer at a fixed address specified by the
customer pursuant to the applicable state cannabis license.
C.
Cannabis Indoor Cultivation. The cultivation of cannabis for commercial purposes within
a fully enclosed, permanent, secure structure. Indoor commercial cannabis
cultivation only includes cultivation that exclusively uses artificial
lighting as licensed pursuant to State law. For the purposes of this
chapter, indoor commercial cultivation does not include cultivation
that is legally conducted pursuant to federally-regulated scientific
research (see Research and Development).
D.
Cannabis Manufacturing. Producing, preparing, propagating, blending, or compounding cannabis
or cannabis products either directly or indirectly or by extraction
methods, infusion methods, or independently by means of chemical synthesis,
or by a combination of extraction and chemical synthesis at a fixed
location that packages or repackages cannabis or cannabis products,
or labels or re-labels its container, or otherwise making or preparing
cannabis products.
E.
Cannabis Testing. Performing scientific analysis of cannabis or cannabis products
to determine its chemical profile, the presence of contaminants, or
other similar scientific or compositional information as a commercial
enterprise.
Commercial Entertainment and Recreation.
The Commercial Entertainment and Recreation use type refers
to establishments or places of business primarily engaged in the provision
of sports, entertainment, or recreation for participants or spectators.
The following are Commercial Entertainment and Recreation use types:
A.
Indoor Entertainment. Predominantly spectator uses conducted within an enclosed building.
Typical uses include movie theaters, arcades, meeting halls, video
game activities and competitions such as e-sports, and dance halls.
B.
Indoor Sports and Recreation. Predominantly participant sports conducted within an enclosed
building. Typical uses include bowling alleys, billiard parlors, ice
and roller skating rinks, indoor racquetball courts, athletic clubs,
and physical fitness centers. Excludes operations where activities
are primarily class- or appointment-based such as yoga studios and
personal trainers (see Instructional Services).
C.
Outdoor Entertainment. Predominantly spectator uses conducted open or in partially enclosed
or screened facilities. Typical uses include sports arenas, racing
facilities, and amusement parks.
D.
Outdoor Sports and Recreation. Predominantly participant sports conducted in open or partially
enclosed or screened facilities. Typical uses include driving ranges,
miniature golf courses, golf courses, swimming pools, marinas, and
tennis courts.
Crop Production, Limited.
Use of land for agricultural production, vine or tree farm,
truck garden, apiary, horticulture, vineyard, hopyard, and associated
crop preparation and harvesting activities or any other type of agriculture
determined to be substantially similar to the above. This use does
not include nurseries and greenhouses (see Nurseries and Garden Centers),
processing (see Food Preparation), or retail sales of agricultural
products from the site (see Retail Sales, General).
Eating and Drinking Establishments.
Businesses primarily engaged in serving prepared food and/or
beverages for consumption on or off the premises.
A.
Bar/Night Club/Lounge. Businesses serving beverages for consumption on the premises as
a primary use and including on-sale service of alcohol including beer,
wine, and mixed drinks.
B.
Coffee Shop/Café. Establishments that primarily serve beverages, such as coffee,
juices or sodas for consumption on or near the premises, or a specialty
snack, such as ice cream, frozen yogurt, cookies or popcorn.
D.
Restaurant, Full Service. Restaurants providing food and beverage services to patrons
who order and are served while seated and pay after eating. Takeout
service may be provided.
E.
Restaurant, Limited Service. Establishments where food and beverages may be consumed on
the premises, taken out, or delivered, but where no table service
is provided. This classification includes cafeterias, fast-food restaurants,
carryout sandwich shops, limited-service pizza parlors and delivery
shops, self-service restaurants, snack bars and takeout restaurants.
This classification also includes catering businesses or bakeries
that have a storefront retail component.
Food and Beverage Sales.
Retail sales of food and beverages for off-site preparation
and consumption. Typical uses include food markets, convenience markets,
grocery stores, liquor stores, and retail bakeries.
A.
Convenience Market. Retail establishments that sell a limited line of groceries, prepackaged
food items, tobacco, magazines, and other household goods, primarily
for off-premise consumption and typically with long or late hours
of operation and in a building that is less than 5,000 gross square
feet. This classification includes small retail stores located on
the same parcel as or operated in conjunction with a service station
but does not include specialty food shops.
B.
Grocery Store. Retail
establishments that primarily sell food, but also may sell other convenience
and household goods, and could include a delicatessen or specialty
food shop, baked goods, frozen foods, fruits, vegetables, meats, cheeses,
dairy, and prepared food, and which occupy at least 5,000 square feet
dedicated to sales, but not more than 25,000 square feet of gross
floor area.
C.
Supermarket. Retail
establishments that primarily sell food, but also may sell other convenience
and household goods, and could include a delicatessen or specialty
food shop, baked goods, frozen foods, fruits, vegetables, meats, cheeses,
dairy, and prepared food, and which occupy more than 25,000 square
feet of gross floor area, but not more than 80,000 square feet of
gross floor area.
Funeral Parlor and Mortuary.
An establishment primarily engaged in the provision of services
involving the care, preparation, or disposition of the human remains
and conducting memorial services. Typical uses include a crematory,
columbarium, mausoleum, or mortuary.
Home Occupation.
A commercial use conducted on residential property by the inhabitants of the subject residence, which is incidental and secondary to the residential use of the dwelling. See Section
20.350.023 ("Home Occupations").
Lodging.
An establishment providing overnight accommodations to transient
patrons for payment for periods of 30 consecutive calendar days or
less.
A.
Bed and Breakfast. A residential structure that is in residential use with one or more
bedrooms dedicated for rental for overnight lodging and where meals
may be provided. This use type specifically excludes Short-Term Vacation
Rental (see Short-Term Vacation Rental).
B.
Hotel and Motel. An
establishment providing overnight lodging to transient patrons. These
establishments may provide additional services, such as conference
and meeting rooms, restaurants, bars, or recreation facilities available
to guests or to the general public. This classification includes motor
lodges, motels, hostels, extended-stay hotels, and tourist courts,
but does not include rooming houses, boarding houses, private residential
clubs (see Group Residential), or Bed and Breakfast establishments
within a single-unit dwelling.
C.
Short-Term Vacation Rental. A single-unit dwelling that is rented to a transient occupant
for a period of 30 days or less. The full single-unit dwelling, or
a portion of it, can be rented to a transient occupant in a short-term
vacation rental use. This classification includes both hosted rentals
(the primary resident, or host, is present in the dwelling unit that
is being used as a short-term vacation rental) and non-hosted rentals
(the host is not present in the dwelling unit that is being used as
a short-term vacation rental).
Maintenance and Repair Services.
Establishments engaged in the maintenance or repair of office
machines, household appliances, furniture, and similar items. This
classification excludes maintenance and repair of vehicles or boats
(see Automotive/Vehicle Sales and Services) and personal apparel (see
Personal Services).
Maker’s Space.
A workspace for an artist or artisan or for a group of artists
or artisans practicing an applied art or craft. Production involves
only the use of hand tools or small mechanical equipment. Typical
uses include jewelry-making, pottery and ceramic studios with a kiln,
glassblowing, metalworking, woodworking, and other arts with some
associated impacts related to odors, fumes, noise, particulate matter
emissions, or other disturbances. May include incidental direct sale
to consumers of only those goods produced on site. For uses with no
associated impacts, see Artist’s Studio.
Mobile Vendor Services.
A self-contained truck or trailer or non-motorized push cart
that is readily movable without disassembling, and is used to sell
merchandise, prepare and serve food and beverages, or provide other
services. All food sold must be prepared on site.
Nurseries and Garden Centers.
Establishments primarily engaged in retailing nursery and
garden products—such as trees, shrubs, plants, seeds, bulbs,
and sod—that are predominantly grown elsewhere. These establishments
may sell a limited amount of a product they grow themselves. Fertilizer
and soil products are stored and sold in package form only. This classification
includes wholesale and retail nurseries offering plants for sale.
Offices.
Offices of firms or organizations providing professional,
executive, management, administrative or design services, such as
accounting, architectural, computer software design, engineering,
graphic design, interior design, investment, and legal offices, excluding
banks, and savings and loan associations (see Banks and Financial
Institutions). This classification also includes offices where medical
and dental services are provided by physicians, dentists, chiropractors,
optometrists, and similar medical professionals, including medical/dental
laboratories within medical office buildings but excluding clinics
or independent research laboratory facilities and hospitals (see Hospitals
and Clinics).
A.
Business and Professional. Offices of firms or organizations providing professional,
executive, management, or administrative services, such as accounting,
architectural, computer software design, engineering, graphic design,
interior design, legal offices and tax preparations offices.
B.
Medical and Dental. Office use providing consultation, diagnosis, therapeutic, preventive,
or corrective personal treatment services by doctors, dentists, medical
and dental laboratories, and similar practitioners of medical and
healing arts for humans licensed for such practice by the State of
California. Incidental medical and/or dental research within the office
is considered part of the office use, where it supports the on-site
patient services.
C.
Walk-In Clientele. An office business providing direct services to patrons or clients
that may or may not require appointments. This use type includes employment
agencies, insurance agent offices, real estate offices, travel agencies,
utility company offices and offices for elected officials. It does
not include banks (see Banks and Credit Unions) or check-cashing facilities
(see Other Financial Services).
Parking Services.
Surface lots and structures offering parking to the public
with or without a fee when such use is not considered accessory parking
to another activity or use.
A.
Commercial Parking. Privately owned or operated surface lots and structures offering
parking to the public with or without a fee. Commercial parking facilities
provide parking that is not considered accessory parking to a specific
use.
B.
Public Parking. City-owned
and operated surface lots and structures offering parking to the public
with or without a fee.
Personal Services.
A.
General Personal Services. Provision of recurrently needed services of a personal nature.
This classification includes barber and beauty shops, nail salons,
personal trainers, spa/wellness center, seamstresses, tailors, dry
cleaning drop-off/pick up (excluding cleaning plants, see Industry,
Limited), shoe repair shops, self-service laundries, photocopying
and photo finishing services, and travel agencies mainly intended
for the consumer.
B.
Instructional Services. An establishment that offers specialized programs in personal growth
and development such as music, martial arts, photography, vocal, fitness,
yoga, dancing, and academic tutoring. Attendance is typically limited
to hourly classes rather than full-day instruction. These establishments
do not grant diplomas or degrees, though instruction could provide
credits for diplomas or degrees granted by other institutions. Retail
sales are permitted as an accessory use.
C.
Massage Business. Any business that offers massage therapy in exchange for compensation,
whether at a fixed place of business or at a location designated by
the customer or client through outcall massage services. Also includes
businesses that offer any combination of massage therapy and bath
facilities, including, but not limited to, showers, baths, wet and
dry heat rooms, pools and hot tubs. The term “massage business”
includes a certified massage practitioner who is the sole owner, operator
and employee of a massage business operating as a sole proprietorship.
Exempted from this definition are physicians, surgeons, chiropractors,
osteopaths, nurses or any physical therapists who are duly licensed
to practice their respective professions in the State of California
and persons working directly under the supervision of or at the direction
of such licensed persons, working at the same location as the licensed
person, and administering massage services subject to review or oversight
by the licensed person.
D.
Tattoo or Body Modification Parlor. An establishment whose principal business activity
is one or more of the following: (1) using ink or other substances
that result in the permanent coloration of the skin through the use
of needles or other instruments designed to contact or puncture the
skin; or (2) creation of an opening in the body of a person for the
purpose of inserting jewelry or other decoration.
Retail Sales.
A.
General Sales. The
retail sale or rental of merchandise not specifically listed under
another use classification. This classification includes retail establishments
with 80,000 square feet or less of sales area; including department
stores, clothing stores, furniture stores, pet supply stores, small
hardware stores (with 10,000 square feet or less of floor area), and
businesses retailing the following goods: toys, hobby materials, handcrafted
items, jewelry, cameras, photographic supplies and services (including
portraiture and retail photo processing), medical supplies and equipment,
pharmacies, electronic equipment, records, sporting goods, kitchen
utensils, hardware, appliances, antiques, art galleries, art supplies
and services, paint and wallpaper, carpeting and floor covering, office
supplies, bicycles, video rental, and new automotive parts and accessories
(excluding vehicle service and installation, see Automobile/Vehicle
Service and Repair, Major and Minor). Retail sales may be combined
with other services such as office machine, computer, electronics,
and similar small-item repairs.
B.
Firearm Sales. An
establishment engaged in selling, dealing in, trading, transferring,
or storing of firearms and ammunition.
C.
Large Format Retail. Retail establishments over 80,000 square feet in size that sell
merchandise and/or bulk goods primarily for individual consumption,
including, but not limited to, department stores, home improvement
stores, membership warehouses which emphasize bulk sales to the general
public as well as to other businesses, and other big box format stores.
Large format retail uses may include a limited (5,000 square feet
or less) grocery store sales component. This use type specifically
excludes Superstores (see Superstore).
D.
Off-Price Merchandise. Retail establishments that sell a variety of overstock, off-season,
or defective goods, including “99 cent” and “dollar”
stores.
E.
Outdoor Market. Any
indoor or outdoor place, in an approved location, or for an approved
activity where new or used goods or secondhand personal property is
offered for sale or exchange to the general public by a multitude
of individual licensed vendors, usually in compartmentalized spaces.
The term swap meet is interchangeable with and applicable to: flea
markets, auctions, open air markets, farmers markets, or other similarly
named or labeled activities; but the term does not include the usual
supermarket (see Grocery Store or Supermarket) or department store
retail operations (see Retail, General Sales).
F.
Second Hand Store. A retail establishment that buys and sells used products that may
include clothing, furniture and household goods, jewelry, household
appliances, musical instruments, business machines and office equipment,
hand tools, and similar items. This use does not include bookstores,
antique stores (see Retail, General Sales), junk dealers, scrap/dismantling
yards, sale of used cars or other vehicles (see Automobile/Vehicle
Sales and Leasing), or pawn shops (see Pawnbroker).
G.
Superstore. Retail
establishments (over 80,000 square feet of sales area) that serve
as a one-stop shopping destination by offering a wide variety of goods
and merchandise, often at a discounted price. They are distinguished
by their size, and by the inclusion of grocery sales. Superstores
typically feature a full-service food and beverage retail sales area
that exceeds 5,000 square feet of the gross floor area, and could
include a delicatessen, baked goods, frozen foods, fruits, vegetables,
meats, cheeses, dairy, and prepared food. A superstore may also feature
various business centers, such as a bank, pharmacy, vision center,
pet center, photo center, and prepared food outlet(s).
Shopping Center.
Cluster of retail stores that provide off-street parking.
Shopping centers are classified as community, neighborhood and regional
centers.
A.
Community Shopping Center. A shopping center greater than or equal to 100,000 and less
than 400,000 square feet of gross floor area, capable of supporting
two or more retail or commercial businesses. May include anchor tenants
such as a discount department store and other outlets such as grocery,
clothing, or furniture stores. Larger than a neighborhood center,
but smaller than a regional center.
B.
Neighborhood Shopping Center. A shopping center generally between 30,000 and less than
100,000 square feet of gross floor area, typically anchored by a grocery
store, providing goods for day-to-day living and personal services.
May include food, pharmancy, laundry and dry cleaner, beauty parlor
and shoe repair.
C.
Regional Shopping Center. A shopping center generally totaling 400,000 square feet
or more of gross floor area, typically anchored by three or more anchor
stores and a number of retail outlets. May include full-line department
stores, supermarket, a bank and a pharmacy.
(Ord. 1646 § 2, 2022; Ord. 1649, 10/11/2023; Ord. 1656, 6/12/2024)
Abutting or Adjoining.
Having a common boundary, except that parcels having no common
boundary other than a common corner shall not be considered abutting.
Acre, Gross.
A measure of total land area of a lot or site, including
areas to be dedicated for public rights-of-way, streets, schools,
or other dedications.
Acre, Net.
A measure of land area of a lot or site remaining after dedication
of all areas for public rights-of-way, streets, schools, or other
dedications.
Active Uses.
Active uses mean commercial uses that are accessible to the
general public, that generate walk-in clientele, and that contribute
to a high level of pedestrian activity. Active commercial uses include
retail shops, restaurants, bars, theaters and the performing arts,
commercial recreation and entertainment, personal and convenience
services, hotel lobbies, banks, travel agencies, airline ticket agencies,
child care services, libraries, museums, and galleries.
Adjacent.
Directly abutting, having a boundary or property line(s)
in common or bordering directly, or contiguous to.
Alter.
When used in Chapter
20.360 (“Signs”) means any change in the weight, depth, height, area, thickness, location, or type of display of an existing sign but shall not be construed to prevent normal or periodic maintenance, upkeep, or repair of a sign or change of copy.
Alteration.
Any change, addition or modification that changes the exterior
architectural appearance or materials of a structure or object. Alteration
includes changes in exterior surfaces, changes in materials, additions,
remodels, demolitions, and relocation of buildings or structures,
but excludes ordinary maintenance and repairs. See also “Maintenance
and Repair” and “Structural Alterations” for modifications
to any of the supporting members of a structure.
Animal-Related Terms.
1.
Household Pet.
Any animal customarily permitted and kept in a dwelling and
kept only for the company or pleasure provided to the occupants of
the dwelling, such as a dog, cat, parakeet, tropical fish, hamster,
rabbit, or Vietnamese pot-bellied pig.
2.
Livestock.
Domestic animals including, but not limited to, cattle, horses,
sheep, hogs, and goats, raised for home use or for profit.
Arcade.
A covered pedestrian way along the side of a building at
the first floor with habitable space above which provides access to
retail spaces.
Architectural Element.
A component, detail and/or treatment, which alone or as part
of a pattern, embodies the style, design, or general arrangement of
the exterior of a building or structure, including, but not limited
to, the kind, color, and texture of building materials, and style
and type of windows, doors, lights, porches, and signs.
Attached Flex.
A residential or mixed-use structure containing two to five
dwelling units with an attached secondary building (garage) typically
accessed from a rear lane.
Attic.
Area located between the ceiling of the top story of a building
and the building’s roof that is not usable as habitable or commercial
space.
Auto Service Bay.
An automotive service bay is a singular automobile space,
within or underneath a structure, that provides a technician, customer,
and/or automated system adequate space to safely and efficiently service
one vehicle.
Awning.
A roof or cover that projects from the wall of a building
over a door or window, and made of canvas, aluminum, or a similar
material, which may be fixed in place or retractable for the purpose
of shielding a doorway or window from the elements.
Balcony.
A platform that projects from the wall of a building and
is enclosed by a parapet or railing.
Balloon.
A brightly colored bag made of flexible material, inflated
with air or other gas, and sealed, often to make it rise in the air.
Basement.
A non-habitable space beneath the first or ground floor of
a building the ceiling of which does not extend more than four feet
above finished grade.
Bay Window.
A window that projects from any building elevation.
Block.
Property bounded on all sides by a public right-of-way.
Block Face.
All property including building frontages on one side of
a block between two intersections that fronts upon a street or abuts
a public right-of-way.
Buildable Area.
The area of a lot or development site excluding all required
setbacks.
Building.
Any structure having a roof supported by columns or walls
and intended for the shelter, housing or enclosure of any individual,
animal, process, equipment, goods, or materials.
1.
Building, Accessory.
A detached subordinate building used only as incidental to
the main building on the same lot and does not contain living space
or sleeping quarters.
2.
Building, Main.
A building in which is conducted the principal use of the
lot on which it is situated. In the event a garage is attached to
the main building, it shall be made structurally a part of, and have
a common wall with the main building and shall comply in all respects
with the requirements of this title applicable to the main building.
Building Code.
Any ordinance of the City governing the type and method of
construction of buildings, signs and sign structures and any amendments
thereto and any substitute therefore, including, but not limited to,
the
California Building Code, other State-adopted uniform codes and
the Minimum Building Security Standards Ordinance.
Building Face.
The general outer surface of the structure or walls of a
building. Where bay windows or pillars project beyond the walls, the
outer surface of the windows or pillars shall be considered to be
the face of the building.
Building Frontage.
The lineal dimension, parallel to the ground, of a building
abutting on a public street or a parking lot accessory to that business
even though another business may also have entitlement to that parking
lot.
Building Site.
A lot or parcel of land occupied or to be occupied, by a
main building and accessory buildings together with such open spaces
as are required by the terms of this title and having its principal
frontage on a street, road, highway, or waterway.
Building Type.
A structure defined by a combination of its configuration,
placement on a lot, and function.
Build-To Area.
The linear street frontage between the minimum and maximum
setback lines along the front of a parcel and along the side street
of a corner parcel.
Canopy.
A roofed shelter projecting over a sidewalk, driveway, entry,
window, or similar area that may be supported by a building or may
be partially supported by columns, poles, or braces extending from
the ground.
Carport.
An accessible and usable covered space enclosed on not more
than two sides, designed, constructed and maintained for the parking
or storage of one or more motor vehicles.
Channel Letters.
Three dimensional individual letters or figures, with an
open back or front, illuminated or non-illuminated, that are affixed
to a building or to a freestanding sign structure.
Chief Planner.
The Chief Planner of the City of South San Francisco or designee.
City.
The City of South San Francisco.
City Council.
The City Council of the City of South San Francisco.
City Engineer.
The City Engineer of the City of South San Francisco or designee.
Commercial Vehicle.
Any vehicle currently registered as such with the State Department
of Motor Vehicles or equivalent out-of-state or federal agency and
is used primarily in the conduct of a business as opposed to private
family or individual use.
Compatible.
That which is harmonious with and will not adversely affect
surrounding buildings and/or uses.
Condition of Use.
A development standard determined to be necessary to permit
the harmonious classification of a use as listed in a district and
therefore a prerequisite to place, or for application to place, such
use as classified.
Construction.
Construction, erection, enlargement, alteration, conversion
or movement of any building, structures, or land together with any
scientific surveys associated therewith.
Conversion.
A change of a residential dwelling, including a mobile home
lot in a mobile home park, as defined in Section 18214 of the Health
and Safety Code, or a residential hotel, as defined in paragraph (1)
of subdivision (b) of Section 50519 of the
Health and Safety Code,
to a condominium, cooperative, or similar form of ownership; or a
change of a residential dwelling, including a mobile home lot in a
mobile home park, or a residential hotel to a nonresidential use.
Courtyard.
An unroofed area that is completely or partially enclosed
by walls or buildings and often shared by multiple residential units
or commercial spaces.
Courtyard Building.
A large structure composed of multiple attached or stacked
units accessed from a shared courtyard, a series of courtyards, or
a common corridor.
Deck.
A platform, either freestanding or attached to a building,
that is supported by pillars or posts. See also “Balcony.”
Demolition.
The intentional destruction and removal of 50 percent or
more of the enclosing exterior walls and 50 percent of the roof of
any structure.
Density.
1.
Density, Gross. The number of
dwelling units per gross unit of land area.
2.
Density, Net. The number of dwelling
units per acre (du/ac) of land excluding street rights-of-way, easements,
public open space, land under water, and certified wetlands and floodplains.
Setbacks for wetlands and other sensitive areas and private open space
shall not be excluded in calculating net density.
Development.
Any man-made change to improved or unimproved real estate,
including, but not limited to, the division of a parcel of land into
two or more parcels; the construction, reconstruction, conversion,
structural alteration, relocation, or enlargement of any structure;
any mining, excavation, landfill or land disturbance; and any use
or extension of the use of land.
Development Agreement.
A duly executed and legally binding contract entered into
by and among the City and a developer(s), in accordance with Title
7, Division 1, Chapter 3, Article 2.5, Section 65864 et seq., of the
California
Government Code that delineates the terms and conditions
agreed upon by two or more parties.
Development Site.
A portion of land delineated from others to accommodate no
more than one primary building type. A parcel may have multiple development
sites when each site meets the minimum width and depth required by
the form-based zone. Development sites may be described and recorded
as individual properties on a plat.
Dooryard.
A type of frontage that provides a limited amount of private
open space at the primary building entry. The dooryard area is defined
by a low wall, planter or fence that provides a buffer between the
right-of-way and the building while preserving a sense of openness
to the building entrance.
Drive-Through Facilities.
Facilities designed to enable persons to receive a service
or purchase or consume goods while remaining within a motor vehicle,
typically associated with banks, eating, and drinking establishments,
pharmacies, and other commercial uses.
Driveway.
An accessway that provides vehicular access between a street
and the parking or loading facilities located on an adjacent property.
Dwelling Unit.
Any building or portion thereof which contains living facilities,
including provisions for sleeping, eating, cooking, and sanitation,
for not more than one family. See also "Family."
Easement.
A portion of land created by grant or agreement for specific
purpose; an easement is the right, privilege or interest which one
party has in the land of another.
Eave.
The part of a roof that meets or overhangs the wall of a
building.
Effective Date.
The date on which this Zoning Ordinance is in full force
and effect from and after its adoption by the City Council. Also applies
to the date on which a permit or other approval becomes enforceable
or otherwise takes effect, rather than the date it was signed or circulated.
Electrical Code.
Any ordinance of the City regulating the alteration, repair
and the installation and use of electricity or electrical fixtures.
Emergency.
A sudden unexpected occurrence demanding immediate action
to prevent or mitigate loss or damage to life, health, property or
essential public services.
Entry.
An opening, such as a door, passage, or gate, that allows
access to a building.
Environmental Assessment.
A formal evaluation process to determine whether a proposed
project may have a significant impact on the environment.
Erect.
To build, construct, attach, hang, place, suspend or affix
to or upon any surface. Such term shall also include the painting
of wall signs.
Explosive or Hazardous Materials, Excessive Amounts.
Those materials and quantities thereof that the Fire Chief
and the Chief Building Official determine are equal to or in excess
of “exempt amounts” identified in Tables 9-A, 9-A.1, 9B
and 9F of the 1991 Uniform Building Code (including the 1993 supplement)
as those tables may be amended or readopted as subsequent building
codes or in Tables 79.202-A, 4.108-C, 80.303-A, 80-309-A, 80-312-A,
80-313-A, 80-314-A, 80.315-A and 80-402-B of the 1991 Uniform Fire
Code (including the 1993 supplement) as those tables may be amended
or readopted as subsequent Fire Codes.
Façade.
The exterior wall of a building exposed to public view or
that wall viewed by persons not within the building. The portion of
any exterior elevation of a building extending vertically from the
grade to the top of a parapet wall or eave, and horizontally across
the entire width of the building elevation.
1.
Façade, Primary. The exterior
wall of a building facing a primary street.
2.
Façade, Secondary. The
exterior wall of a building facing a secondary street or side street.
Facility.
A building, structure, or any improvement to land such as
a parking lot or sign.
Family.
One or more persons living together as a single nonprofit
housekeeping unit and sharing common living, sleeping, cooking and
eating facilities. Members of a family need not be related by blood
but are distinguished from a group occupying a hotel, club, fraternity
or sorority house.
Fence.
An artificially-constructed barrier of any material or combination
of materials erected to enclose or screen an area of land.
Feasible.
Capable of being accomplished in a successful manner within
a reasonable period of time, taking into account economic, environmental,
social and technological factors.
FEMA.
Federal Emergency Management Agency, part of the Department
of Homeland Security of the United States.
Finished Floor.
The uppermost surface of a building’s ground floor
at the completion of construction.
Fire Chief.
The Chief of the South San Francisco Fire Department or designee.
Firearm.
A gun, pistol, revolver, rifle or any device, designed or
modified to be used as a weapon, from which is expelled through a
barrel a projectile by the force of an explosion or other form of
combustion.
FIRM.
Flood Insurance Rate Map. This is an official map on which
FEMA (the Federal Emergency Management Agency) or Federal Insurance
Administration has delineated both the areas of special flood hazards
and the risk premium zones applicable to the community.
Flag.
A sign attached to a pole or a structure that has characters,
letters, illustrations, or ornamentations applied to cloth, paper,
fabric, or other lightweight material, with only such material for
a backing. Flags include banners or pennants that are suspended so
that they are actuated by wind currents.
Flashing.
A light or message that changes more than once every four
seconds.
Flex Low-Rise.
A building type that is three stores or less and is designed
for occupancy by retail, restaurant, service, and/or office uses on
the ground floor, with upper floors that support retail, service,
office, and/or residential uses. Ground floor spaces are accessed
directly from the street, and upper floor units may be accessed directly
from the street through shared or individual entries or through a
street-level lobby.
Flex Mid-Rise.
A building that is between four and eight stories and is
designed for retail, restaurant, service, and/or office uses on the
ground floor, with upper floors that support retail, office, service,
and/or residential uses. The development typically faces a single
right-of-way.
Flex High-Rise.
A building that is nine to 12 stories and is designed to
accommodate a range of uses and configurations with multiple primary
building frontages. Retail, restaurant, service, office, and residential
uses may be accommodated on all floors.
Floor Area, Gross.
The total gross horizontal area of all the floors below the roof and within the outer surface of the walls of a building or structure, including basements, mezzanines, interior balconies, and upper stories or levels in a multistory building unless otherwise stipulated. See also Section
20.040.008 (“Determining Floor Area”).
Footprint.
The horizontal area, as seen in plan view, of a building or structure, measured from the outside of exterior walls and supporting columns, and excluding eaves. See also Section
20.040.010 (“Determining Lot Coverage”).
Forecourt.
The Forecourt Frontage has a portion of the façade
close to the frontage line while the central portion is set back creating
a small courtyard space. The courtyard may be used as an entry court
or as shared garden space for apartment buildings, or as an additional
shopping or restaurant seating area within retail and service areas.
Fourplex.
A detached building that consists of four side-by-side and/or
stacked units, typically with one shared entry or individual entries
along the front.
Freeway.
A highway in respect to which the owners of abutting lands
have no right or easement of access to or from their abutting lands
or in respect to which such owners have only restricted right or easement
of access.
Frontage, Building.
The building elevation which fronts on a public street, public
or private parking lot available to the general public, or pedestrian
walkway where customer access to a building is available.
Frontage, Street.
That portion of a lot or parcel of land that borders a public
street. “Street frontage” shall be measured along the
common lot line separating the lot or parcel of land from the public
street, highway, or parkway.
Garage.
A building or portion thereof, containing accessible and
usable enclosed space designed, constructed and maintained for the
parking or storage of one or more motor vehicles.
Glare.
The effect produced by a light source within the visual field
that is sufficiently brighter than the level to which the eyes are
adapted, such as to cause annoyance, discomfort or loss of visual
performance and ability.
Grade.
The location of the ground surface.
1.
Grade, Existing.
The elevation of the ground at any point on a lot as shown
on the required survey submitted in conjunction with an application
for a building permit or grading permit.
2.
Grade, Finished.
The lowest point of elevation of the finished surface of
the ground, paving, or sidewalk within the area between the building
and the property line, or when the property line is more than five
feet from the building, between the building and a line five feet
from the building.
Greenway.
A linear space that may be defined by tree-lined streets,
which tends to have narrow dimensions that support passive use and
can serve as a green connector between destinations.
Ground Floor.
The first floor of a building other than a cellar or basement
that is closest to finished grade.
Habitation.
Regular and exclusive use of a space or structure for shelter
and other residential purposes in a manner that is private and separate
from another residence on the same lot.
Hazardous Materials.
Any material, including any substance, waste, or combination
thereof, which because of its quantity, concentration, or physical,
chemical, or infectious characteristics may cause, or significantly
contribute to, a substantial present or potential hazard to human
health, safety, property, or the environment when improperly treated,
stored, transported, disposed of, or otherwise managed.
Heat.
Thermal energy of a radioactive, conductive, or convective
nature.
Height.
The vertical distance from a point on the ground below a structure to a point directly above. See also Section
20.040.005 (“Measuring Height”).
High Rise Building.
A large and tall structure built on a large lot that typically
incorporates multi-level structured parking used to provide a vertical
mix of uses with ground-floor retail or service uses, and service
or residential uses on upper floors. This building type is a primary
component of an urban downtown.
Household.
One or more persons living together in a single dwelling
unit, with common access to, and common use of, all living and eating
areas and all areas and facilities for the preparation and storage
of food; who share living expenses, including rent or mortgage payments,
food costs and utilities; and who maintain a single mortgage, lease,
or rental agreement for all members of the household.
Illegal Use.
Any use of land or building that does not have the currently
required permits and was originally constructed and/or established
without permits required for the use at the time it was brought into
existence.
In-lieu Fees.
A cash payment required as a substitute for a dedication
and/or improvement of land by an owner or developer of property.
Intensity of Use.
The impacts a particular use or the use in combination with
other uses has on its surroundings or on its demand for services and
natural resources. Measures of intensity include, but are not limited
to, requirements for water, gas, electricity, or public services;
number of automobile trips generated by a use; parking demand; number
of employees on a site; hours of operation; the amount of noise, light
or glare generated; the number of persons attracted to the site, or,
in eating establishments, the number of seats.
Kitchen.
Any room or space within a building intended to be used for
the cooking or preparation of food.
Lane.
A public way permanently reserved primarily for secondary
vehicular service access to the rear or side of properties otherwise
abutting on a street.
Lighting Related Terms.
1.
Foot-candle.
A quantitative unit of measure for luminance. One foot-candle
is equal to the amount of light generated by one candle shining on
one square foot surface located one foot away. Equal to one lumen
uniformly distributed over an area of one square foot.
2.
Light Fixture.
The assembly that holds a lamp and may include an assembly
housing, a mounting bracket or pole socket, a lamp holder, a ballast,
a reflector or mirrors, and a refractor or lens.
a.
Light Fixture, Fully Shielded.
A light fixture or luminous tube constructed and mounted
such that all light emitted by the fixture or tube, either directly
from the lamp, tube, or a diffusing element, or indirectly by reflection
or refraction from any part of the light fixture, is projected below
the horizontal. If the lamp or tube, any reflective surface, or lens
cover (clear or prismatic) is visible when viewed from above or directly
from the side, from any angle around the fixture or tube, the fixture
or tube is not fully shielded.
Liner Building.
A two-part building consisting of an exterior occupiable
building specifically designed to mask the interior building consisting
of a parking structure, building with few windows, or parking lot,
from a frontage. Also known as a “wrap building.”
Live Entertainment.
An act such as a musical act (including karaoke); theatrical
act (including stand-up comedy); play; revue; dance; magical act;
disc jockey; or similar activity, performed live by one or more persons
for the enjoyment of others, whether or not done for compensation
and whether or not admission is charged.
Living Room.
The principal room in a dwelling unit designed for general
living purposes rather than for sleeping.
Lot.
A parcel, tract, or area of land whose boundaries have been
established by a legal instrument such as a deed or map recorded with
the County of San Mateo, and which is recognized as a separate legal
entity for purposes of transfer of title, except public easements
or rights-of-way.
1.
Lot, Abutting.
A lot having a common property line or separated by a public
path or lane, private street, or easement to the subject lot.
2.
Lot, Corner.
A lot or parcel bounded on two or more sides by street lines
that have an angle intersection that is not more than 135 degrees.
3.
Lot, Flag.
A lot so shaped that the main portion of the lot area does
not have access to a street other than by means of a corridor having
less than 20 feet of width. Also called a “panhandle”
lot.
4.
Lot, Interior.
A lot bounded on one side by a street line and on all other
sides by lot lines between adjacent lots or that is bounded by more
than one street with an intersection greater than 135 degrees.
5.
Lot, Key.
An interior lot adjoining the rear lot line of a reversed
corner lot.
6.
Lot, Reversed Corner.
A corner lot, the rear of which abuts the side of another
lot, whether across a lane or not.
7.
Lot, Through.
A lot having frontage on two parallel or approximately parallel
streets or a street and a lane.
Figure 20.621(A): Lot and Yard Types
|
Lot Area.
The area of a lot measured horizontally between bounding
lot lines.
Lot Coverage.
The portion of a lot that is covered by structures, including principal and accessory buildings, garages, carports, and roofed porches, but not including unenclosed and unroofed decks, landings, or balconies. See also Section
20.040.010 (“Determining Lot Coverage”).
Lot Depth.
The average distance from the front lot line to the rear lot line measured in the general direction of the side lines. See also Section
20.040.006 (“Measuring Lot Width and Depth”).
Lot Line.
The boundary between a lot and other property or the public
right-of-way.
Lot Line Types.
1.
Lot Line, Front.
On an interior lot, the line separating the parcel from the
street or lane. On a corner lot, the shorter lot line abutting a street
or lane. On a through lot, the lot lines abutting the street and lane
are both considered front. On a flag or panhandle lot, the interior
lot line most parallel to and nearest the street or lane from which
access is obtained.
3.
Lot Line, Rear.
The lot line that is opposite and most distant from the front
lot line. Where no lot line is within 45 degrees of being parallel
to the front lot line, a line 10 feet in length within the lot, parallel
to and at the maximum possible distance from the front lot line, will
be deemed the rear lot line for the purpose of establishing the minimum
rear yard (see Figure 20.621(B)).
5.
Lot Line, Street Side.
A side lot line of a corner lot that is adjacent to a street.
Figure 20.621(B): Rear Lot Line for Purposes of Determining
Setbacks
|
Lot Width.
The average distance between the side lot lines measured at right angles to the lot depth. See also Section
20.040.006 (“Measuring Lot Width and Depth”).
Maintenance and Repair.
The repair or replacement of nonbearing walls, fixtures,
wiring, roof or plumbing that restores the character, scope, size
or design of a structure to its previously existing, authorized, and
undamaged condition.
Major Transit Stop.
As defined in California
Public Resources Code Section 21064.3,
a site containing any of the following:
1.
An existing rail or bus rapid transit station.
2.
A ferry terminal served by either a bus or rail transit service.
3.
The intersection of two or more major bus routes with a frequency
of service interval of 15 minutes or less during the morning and afternoon
peak commute periods.
Mansard.
A wall which has a slope equal to or greater than two vertical
feet for each horizontal foot and has been designed to look like a
roof.
Manufactured Home.
A structure that is transportable in one or more sections,
is eight body feet or more in width, or 40 body feet or more in length,
in the traveling mode, or, when erected on site, is 320 or more square
feet, is built on a permanent chassis and designed to be used as a
single-family dwelling with or without a foundation when connected
to the required utilities, and includes the plumbing, heating, air
conditioning, and electrical systems contained therein. “Manufactured
home” includes any structure that meets all the requirements
of this paragraph except the size requirements and with respect to
which the manufacturer voluntarily files a certification and complies
with the standards established under the National Manufactured Housing
Construction and Safety Act of 1974 (42 U.S.C., Section 5401, and
following).
Master Sign Program.
A coordinated program of signage designed to encourage consistency
in signage for developments with multiple tenants or for developments
with a single tenant, occupant, or user proposing multiple signs.
Mezzanine.
An intermediate floor within a building interior without
complete enclosing interior walls or partitions that is not separated
from the floor or level below by a wall and has a floor area that
is no greater than one third of the total floor area of the floor
below. (See "Story.")
Micro-Unit.
Small studio apartment, up to 350 square feet, with a fully
functioning and accessibility compliant kitchen and bathroom.
Mobile Home.
As defined in Section 18008 of the
Health and Safety Code,
a structure constructed prior to June 15, 1976, is transportable in
one or more sections, is eight body feet or more in width, or 40 body
feet or more in length, in the traveling mode, or, when erected on
site, is 320 or more square feet, is built on a permanent chassis
and designed to be used as a single-family dwelling with or without
a foundation system when connected to the required utilities, and
includes the plumbing, heating, air conditioning, and electrical systems
contained therein. “Mobile home” includes any structure
that meets all the requirements of this paragraph and complies with
the state standards for mobile homes in effect at the time of construction.
“Mobile home” does not include a commercial modular, as
defined in Section 18001.8, factory-built housing, as defined in Section
19971, a manufactured home, as defined in Section 18007, a multi-family
manufactured home, as defined in Section 18008.7, or a recreational
vehicle, as defined in Section 18010.
Mobile Recycling Unit.
An automobile, truck, trailer or van, licensed by the Department
of Motor Vehicles, which is used for the collection of recyclable
materials. A mobile recycling center also means the bins, boxes or
containers transported by trucks, vans or trailers, and used for the
collection of recyclable materials.
Multiplex.
A medium- or large-sized structure consisting of side-by-side
and/or stacked dwelling units, typically with one shared entry. This
building type has the appearance of a medium- to large-size family
home and is appropriately scaled to fit in medium-density neighborhoods
and/or medium- to high-intensity corridors.
Neighborhood Green.
A civic space type for unstructured recreation that may be
spatially defined by landscaping rather than building frontages.
Neighborhood Park.
Medium- to small-sized parks providing opportunities for
neighborhood social life and recreation.
Noise Terms.
1.
Ambient Noise Level.
The composite of noise from all sources excluding an alleged
offensive noise. In this context, the ambient noise level represents
the normal or existing level of environmental noise at a given location
for a specified time of day or night.
2.
Decibel (dB).
A unit used to measure the intensity of a sound by comparing
it with a given level on a logarithmic scale.
3.
Noise.
Any sound that annoys or disturbs humans or which causes
or tends to cause an adverse psychological or physiological effect
on humans.
4.
Noise Level Reduction (NLR).
The difference in decibels of noise level from the outside
of a building to the interior of a building, generally resulting from
various construction methods and the materials used in walls, windows,
ceilings, doors, and vents of a building.
Nonconforming Use.
Any use, building or structure that is not consistent with a provision or provisions of this Ordinance but was lawfully established or constructed and in compliance with all applicable ordinances and laws prior to the effective date of the provisions which no longer complies. See Chapter
20.320 (“Nonconforming Uses, Structures, and Lots”).
Occupancy, Change In.
A discontinuance of an existing use and the substitution
therefore of a use of a different kind or class.
On-Site Loading Facilities.
A site or portion of a site devoted to the loading or unloading
of motor vehicles or trailers, including loading berths, aisles, access
drives, and landscaped areas.
On-Site.
Located on the lot that is the subject of discussion.
Open Space Types.
1.
Common Open Space.
Areas for outdoor living and recreation that are intended
for the use of residents and guests of more than one dwelling unit.
2.
Private Open Space.
Open areas for outdoor living and recreation that are adjacent
and directly accessible to a single dwelling unit, reserved for the
exclusive use of residents of the dwelling unit and their guests.
3.
Privately Owned Public Open Spaces (POPOS).
Privately owned outdoor living and/or recreation that are
created in partnership between the developer and the City, with a
stipulation that public access will be preserved in the context of
development.
4.
Usable Open Space.
Outdoor areas that provide for outdoor living and/or recreation
for the use of residents.
Opposite.
Across from or across the street from.
Owner.
A person or persons holding single or unified beneficial
title to the property including, but not limited to, the settlor of
a grantor trust, a general partner, firm or corporation.
Parapet.
A low wall along the edge of a roof or the portion of a wall
that extends above the roof line.
Parking Area.
An area of a lot, structure, or any other area, including
driveways, which is designed for and the primary purpose of which
is to provide for the temporary storage of operable motor vehicles.
1.
Accessory Parking.
An area of a lot, structure, or any other area, which is
reserved for and the primary purpose of which is to provide off-street
parking to serve a building or use that is the primary or main use
of the lot.
2.
Long-Term Parking.
An area designed for employee or parking when a vehicle is
not normally moved during the period of an employee’s work shift,
as opposed to customer or visitor parking.
Parking, Bicycle.
A covered or uncovered area equipped with a rack or racks
designed and usable for the secure, temporary storage of bicycles.
1.
Long-term.
Bicycle parking that is designed to serve employees, students,
residents, commuters, and others who generally stay at a site for
four hours or longer.
2.
Short-term.
Bicycle parking that is designed to serve shoppers, customers,
messengers, guests, and other visitors to a site who generally stay
for a period of less than four hours.
Parking Space, Off-Street.
An area, covered or uncovered, designed and usable for the
temporary storage of a vehicle, which is paved and accessible by an
automobile without permanent obstruction.
Paseo.
A pedestrian lane located and designed to reduce the required
walking distance within a neighborhood.
Peak Time.
Period of time with the greatest amount of activity and vehicles
on the site.
Permit.
Any Site Clearance, Use Permit, Temporary Use Permit, Building
Permit, license, certificate, approval, or other entitlement for development
and/or use of property as required by any public agency.
Permitted Use.
Any use allowed in a zoning district without a requirement
for approval of a Use Permit, but subject to any restrictions applicable
to that zoning district.
Person.
Any individual, firm, association, organization, partnership,
business trust, company, or corporation.
Persons with Disabilities.
Persons who have a medical, physical, or mental condition,
disorder or disability as defined in California
Government Code Section
12926, that limits one or more major life activities.
Plaza.
A space available for civic purposes and commercial activities
intended to add to the activity and vibrancy of streets and neighborhoods.
Plazas are typically formal spaces with interior green spaces and
defined edges made primarily of hardscaped materials.
Pocket Park.
A type of civic space that provides small-scale public urban
open space intended to provide recreational opportunities where space
is limited in close proximity to neighborhood residences.
Podium.
A raised platform supporting a building that often contains
parking or ground floor commercial uses but may include other land
uses.
Porch.
A private frontage where the façade is set back from
the frontage line and has a set of stairs and landing attached to
the façade. Porches may be open on two or three sides and may
be covered or uncovered.
Precise Plan.
A plan that sets forth the design, location, and arrangement
of proposed buildings, structures and other improvements, including,
but not limited to, elements such as grading, utilities, architecture,
and landscaping, within the defined area of an approved Specific Plan.
Pre-existing.
In existence prior to the effective date of this Ordinance.
Primary Unit or Primary Dwelling Unit.
The existing residential unit on a lot that is being used
for habitation and occupied by the property owner at the time of the
application for a building permit to construct an accessory dwelling
unit.
Principal Use.
A use that fulfills a primary or predominant function of
an establishment, institution, household, or other entity and occupies
at least 70 percent of the gross floor area.
Project.
Any proposal for a new or changed use or for new construction,
alteration, or enlargement of any structure, that is subject to the
provisions of this ordinance. This term also refers to any action
that qualifies as a “project” as defined by the California
Environmental Quality Act.
Public Realm.
The physical and social domain of the public that is held
in common either by their physical presence or by visual association.
This includes, but is not limited to plazas, squares, parks, thoroughfares,
public frontages, private frontages, civic buildings, and open spaces.
Qualified Applicant.
The property owner, the owner’s agent, or any person,
corporation, partnership or other legal entity that has a legal or
equitable title to land that is the subject of a development proposal
or is the holder of an option or contract to purchase such land or
otherwise has an enforceable proprietary interest in such land.
Recreational Vehicle.
Any vehicle or trailer designed, or modified for use as a
camp car, camper, motor home, trailer, trailer coach, boat, boat trailer,
snow-mobile, snowmobile trailer, camping trailer, or for any similar
purpose.
Recyclable Material.
Reusable material, including, for example, metals, glass,
plastic and paper, which are intended for reuse, remanufacture or
reconstitution for the purpose of using the altered form. Recyclable
material does not include refuse or hazardous materials. Recyclable
material may include used motor oil collected and transported in accordance
with Sections 25250.11 and 25143.2(b)(4) of the California Health
and Safety Code.
Recycling Facility Related Terms.
1.
Bulk Reverse Vending Machine. A
reverse vending machine that is larger than 50 square feet; is designed
to accept more than one container at a time; and will pay by weight
instead of by container.
2.
Heavy Processing Facility. A processing
facility that is any processing facility other than a light processing
facility and is not a permitted use in South San Francisco.
3.
Large Collection Facility. A collection
facility that may occupy an area of more than 500 square feet or be
on a separate property not appurtenant to a host use, and which may
include permanent structures.
4.
Light Processing Facility. A processing
facility that occupies an area of under 45,000 square feet of gross
collection, processing and storage area and has up to an average of
two outbound truck shipments per day. Light processing facilities
are limited to baling, briquetting, crushing, compacting, grinding,
shredding and sorting of source-separated recyclable materials and
repairing of reusable materials sufficient to qualify as a certified
processing facility. A light processing facility shall not shred,
compact or bale ferrous metals other than food and beverage containers.
5.
Processing Facility. A processing
facility is a building or enclosed space used for the collection and
processing of recyclable materials. "Processing" means the preparation
of material for efficient shipment, or to an end-user's specifications,
by such means as baling, briquetting, compacting, flattening, grinding,
crushing, mechanical sorting, shredding, cleaning and remanufacturing.
6.
Reverse Vending Machine. An automated
mechanical device that accepts at least one or more types of empty
beverage containers, including, but not limited to, aluminum cans,
glass and plastic bottles, and issues a cash refund or a redeemable
credit slip with a value not less than the container's redemption
value as determined by the state. A reverse vending machine may sort
and process containers mechanically provided that the entire process
is enclosed within the machine.
7.
Small Collection Facility. A collection
facility that may occupy an area of not more than 500 square feet
and may include a mobile unit; bulk reverse vending machines or a
grouping of reverse vending machines occupying more than 50 square
feet; kiosk type units, which may include permanent structures; and
unattended containers placed for the donation of recyclable materials.
Right-of-Way.
A strip of land acquired by reservation, dedication, forced
dedication, prescription or condemnation and intended to be occupied
or occupied by a road, railroad, electric transmission lines, oil
or gas pipeline, water line, sanitary storm sewer or other similar
use.
Rowhouse.
A single-family dwelling that shares a party wall with another
of the same type placed side-by-side with individual entries along
the front and dedicated private open space for each unit typically
located in the rear. Each unit has its own front access at the ground
floor. Also known as a "townhouse" or "townhome."
Screening.
Screening refers to a wall, fence, hedge, informal planting,
or berm, provided for the purpose of buffering a building or activity
from neighboring areas or from the street.
Setback.
The area between a property line and a building or structure which must be kept clear or open. See also Section
20.040.004 (“Measuring Distances”), and Section
20.040.012 (“Determining Setbacks (Yards)”).
Shopfront.
A type of frontage, typically for commercial and retail use,
where the façade is aligned close to the frontage line with
the building entrance at the level of the sidewalk.
Sidewalk.
A paved, surfaced, or leveled area, paralleling and usually
separated from the street, used as a pedestrian walkway.
Sign.
A structure, device, figure, display, message placard or
other contrivance, or any part thereof, situated outdoors or indoors,
which is designed, constructed, intended or used to advertise, provide
information in the nature of advertising, provide historical, cultural,
archaeological, ideological, political, religious, or social information,
or direct or attract attention to an object, person, institution,
business, product, service, message, event or location by any means,
including words, letters, figures, designs, symbols, fixtures, colors,
or illumination.
Sign Related Terms.
1.
Direct Illumination. Illumination
resulting from light emitted directly from a light bulb or light fixture,
and not light diffused through translucent signs or reflected from
other surfaces such as the ground or building face.
2.
Raceway. An enclosed conduit for
electrical wiring.
3.
Sign Area. The area included within
the outer dimensions of a sign face display area including all portions
not part of the necessary supporting structure.
4.
Sign Copy. That portion of a sign
which consists of the actual writing, pictorial representation, decoration,
emblem, or flag, or any other device, figure, logo, or similar character,
as distinguished from that portion of the sign which forms the background
of any such writing or other said elements.
5.
Sign Face. That portion of a sign
containing sign copy, which constitutes a single plane, which is intended
to be visible from a single vantage point.
6.
Sign Structure. The supports,
uprights, bracing, and/or framework of a sign.
7.
Sign Walker. A person who wears,
holds, or balances a sign.
8.
Static Display. A sign face that
does not change within a 24-hour period.
Sign Types.
1.
Sign, Animated. A sign that uses
movement or change of lighting to depict action or create a special
effect or scene.
2.
Sign, Awning. Any permanent building-mounted
sign painted or otherwise affixed permanently to the exterior surface
of an awning.
3.
Sign, Bandit. Any sign that is placed on public or private property without the consent of the property owner or as authorized in Chapter
20.360 ("Signs").
4.
Sign, Billboard. Any permanent
freestanding structure for the display of a commercial or non-commercial
message.
5.
Sign, Building-Mounted. Any sign
mounted or erected on or against any building or façade, including
all wall signs, awning and canopy signs, projecting signs, and shingle
signs.
6.
Sign, Cabinet. A permanent building-mounted
or freestanding sign with its text and/or logo symbols and artwork
on a translucent face panel that is mounted within a metal frame or
cabinet that contains the lighting fixtures which illuminate the sign
face from behind.
7.
Sign, Canopy. Any permanent building-mounted
sign of any nature which is painted, printed, stamped, sewed, or otherwise
attached to a canopy.
8.
Sign, Changeable Copy. A permanent
sign whose informational content can be changed or altered either
automatically or manually.
9.
Sign, Digital Billboard. An off-site sign utilizing digital message technology, capable of changing the static message or copy on the sign electronically. A Digital Billboard is distinct from, and shall not constitute an "Animated Sign" in the context of Chapter
20.360 ("Signs").
10.
Sign, Double-Faced. A sign designed
to be viewed from two directions.
11.
Sign, Electronic Changeable Copy. A type of "Changeable Copy Sign" whose informational content can
be changed or altered electronically.
12.
Sign, Employee-Oriented. A permanent sign that does not otherwise meet the standards of Chapter
20.360 ("Signs") for multi-building campus-like facilities in the East of 101 Area in which at least 400,000 total square feet of development is occupied by a single tenant.
13.
Sign, Feather Banner. A temporary
sign that is taller than it is wide and made of a flexible material
(typically cloth, nylon, or vinyl) and mounted to a pole.
14.
Sign, Freestanding. A sign that
is permanently supported upon the ground by poles or braces and is
not attached to any building or other structure. Examples of freestanding
signs are pole and monument signs.
15.
Sign, Fuel Pump Topper. A temporary
sign affixed to the top of an operable fuel dispensing pump used to
advertise goods offered for sale on the same parcel on which the fuel
pump is located.
16.
Sign, Government. Any sign, posting,
notice or similar signs placed, installed, or required by law by a
city, county, or a federal or state governmental agency in carrying
out its responsibility to protect the public health, safety, and welfare.
17.
Sign, High-Rise Building Identification. A wall sign located on the upper-most story of a building
of at least four stories that identifies the occupant of the building,
company logo, generic type of business, or the name of a business
or building.
18.
Sign, Identification. A permanent
sign used to identify a building or group of buildings, residential
area, shopping district, industrial district, or any area that fulfills
the definition of an identifiable area.
19.
Sign, Incidental. A sign which
provides incidental information, including security, credit card acceptance,
business hours, open/closed, directions to services and facilities,
or menus.
20.
Sign, Illuminated. A sign with
an artificial source of light incorporated internally or externally
for the purpose of illuminating the sign.
21.
Sign, Inflatable. A form of inflatable
device (e.g., shaped as an animal, blimp, or other object) that is
displayed, printed, or painted on the surface of an inflatable background,
and is primarily installed outside a building to attract attention
to or to advertise a business, a business location, a service, a product,
or an event. An inflatable sign shall not be considered a balloon.
22.
Sign, Logo. A specially designed
graphic symbol of a business establishment, company, institution,
organization, or any other legal private or public entity.
23.
Sign, Marquee. A permanent building-mounted
sign advertising an event, performance, service, seminar, conference,
or show, and displayed on a permanent roof-like structure or canopy
made of rigid materials supported by and extending from the façades
of a building.
24.
Sign, Monument. A permanent low
profile freestanding sign erected upon or supported solely by a planter,
pedestal base, or similar ground structure approximately the same
dimension as the height of the sign and which is designed to incorporate
the architectural theme and building material of the building on the
premises.
25.
Sign, Neon. A sign with tubing
that is internally illuminated by neon or other electrically charged
gas.
26.
Sign, Nonconforming. Any sign
legally established prior to the effective date of this Ordinance
which does not fully comply with the standards imposed by the individual
sections of this Code.
27.
Sign, Off-Premises. A sign which
advertises goods, products or services which are not sold, manufactured
or distributed on or from the premises or facility on which the sign
is located or advertises a business, owner, occupant or activity not
located on the premises or facility on which the sign is located.
28.
Sign, On-Premises. A sign which
advertises goods, products or services which are sold, manufactured
or distributed on or from the premises or facility on which the sign
is located or advertises a business, owner, occupant or activity located
on the premises or facility on which the sign is located. This definition
also includes on-premises traffic signs.
29.
Sign, Pan Channel Letter. A specific
type of sign letter consisting of a metal pan enclosure fabricated
in the shape of a letter, numeral, or other shape in which the metal
pan enclosure is used to house the lighting and electrical components
of the letter and can be mounted directly to a wall. The sign face
is usually made of colored plastic attached to the metal pan so that
the letters are illuminated and to seal it off from pests and harsh
weather.
30.
Sign, Permanent. A sign constructed
of durable materials and intended to exist for the duration of time
that the use or occupant is located on the premises.
31.
Sign, Pole. A permanent sign supported
wholly by a pole or poles placed in, or upon, the ground and which
are not part of a building.
32.
Sign, Portable. Any temporary
sign over six square feet in size designed to be easily transported,
including, but not limited to, signs designed to be transported by
means of wheels; signs made as A-frames or T-frames; menu and sandwich
board signs; and signs attached to or painted on vehicles parked and
visible from the public right-of-way. This definition expressly excludes
hand-held signs and signs affixed to vehicles that are less than six
square feet in size.
33.
Sign, Projecting. Any permanent
sign which is attached perpendicular to the face of a building or
other structure and projects outward from the building face.
34.
Sign, Roof. Any permanent sign
of any nature, together with all its parts and supports, which is
erected, constructed, painted upon, or maintained on or above the
roof of a building or structure, or affixed to the wall of a building
so that it projects above the eave line of a roof or parapet of any
building.
35.
Sign, Shingle. Any permanent type
of sign suspended beneath an overhead structure, covered walkway,
or canopy and visible to pedestrians from the sidewalk.
36.
Sign, Spinner. A lightweight,
durable, and colorful device designed to be affected by the movement
of air so that it spins or rotates in a manner to capture attention.
37.
Sign, Temporary. A sign that is
designed to be temporarily mounted or displayed and that is not intended
for permanent or long-term use.
38.
Sign, Traffic. A sign designed
to direct or guide pedestrian or vehicular traffic by identifying
an attraction, service, or use and providing directional information
(e.g., handicapped parking, one-way, exit, and entrance).
39.
Sign, Vehicle. Any temporary sign
on or affixed to a truck, van, automobile, trailer, or other vehicle.
40.
Sign, Wall. Any permanent sign
attached to, painted on, or erected against, and in a plane parallel
to, the exterior front, rear, or side wall of any building or other
structure; wall signs include painted wall signs and individual letter
signs.
41.
Sign, Wall Banner. Any temporary
sign and constructed of cloth, bunting, plastic, paper, or similar
nonrigid material, and securely attached to the wall or support structure
for which it is advertising. Flags are not considered temporary wall
banners.
42.
Sign, Window. Any permanent or
temporary sign painted or installed on a glass window or door or located
within 12 inches from inside the window in a manner that it can be
viewed from the exterior of a structure.
43.
Sign, Yard Type I. A small temporary
sign typically constructed of corrugated plastic and supported on
either an H-shaped wire frame or mounted so as to swing between two
pairs of support legs, used for example, for advertising by local
businesses or by election campaigns (Synonym: Lawn Sign). A type I
yard sign is not an A-frame sign.
44.
Sign, Yard Type II. A temporary
sign-mounted on a single post installed securely in the ground with
a small sign hanging from a cross-bar mounted parallel to the ground.
45.
Sign, Yard Type III. A large,
temporary typically wooden, sign-mounted on two posts installed securely
in the ground.
Site.
A lot, or group of contiguous lots, that is proposed for
development in accordance with the provisions of this Ordinance and
is in a single ownership or under unified control.
Specific Plan.
A plan for a defined area that is consistent with the General
Plan and with the provisions of the California
Government Code Section
65450 et seq.
Stacker.
Mechanical lifts or other similar means of mechanized parking
where parking spaces are not independently accessible.
State.
The State of California.
Stoop.
A frontage type where the façade is aligned close
to the frontage line with the first story elevated from the sidewalk
sufficiently to secure privacy for first-story windows and the entrance
usually as an exterior stair and landing.
Story.
That portion of a building included between the upper surface
of any floor and the upper surface of the floor next above, except
that the topmost story shall be that portion of a building included
between the upper surface of the topmost floor and the upper surface
of the roof above. A mezzanine with a floor area that exceeds one
third of the total floor area of the floor or level below constitutes
a story.
Street.
A public or private thoroughfare which affords the principal
means of access to a block and to abutting property. “Street”
includes avenue, court, circle, crescent, place, way, drive, boulevard,
highway, road, and any other thoroughfare, except an alley or lane
as defined herein.
Structural Alterations.
Any physical change to or the removal of the supporting members
of a structure or building, such as bearing walls, columns, beams,
or girders including the creation, enlargement, or removal of doors
or windows and changes to a roofline or roof shape.
Structure.
Anything constructed or erected, the use of which requires
location on the ground or attachment to something having location
on the ground.
1.
Structure, Accessory.
A detached subordinate structure used only as incidental to the main structure on the same lot. Excludes Accessory Dwelling Unit (see Section
20.620.020 (“Residential Use Classifications”).
3.
Structure, Temporary.
A structure without any foundation or footings and which
is intended to be removed when the designated time period, activity,
or use for which the temporary structure was erected has ceased.
Swimming Pool.
A pool, pond, lake, or open tank capable of containing water
to a depth greater than 1.5 feet at any point.
Tandem Parking.
An arrangement of parking spaces such that one or more spaces
must be driven across in order to access another space or spaces.
Temporary Uses.
The following terms are related to Chapter
20.340 (“Temporary Uses”).
1.
Garage Sales.
The sale or offering for sale to the general public of over
five items of personal property on a portion of a lot in a residentially
zoned district, whether inside or outside any building.
2.
Outdoor Sales, Temporary and Seasonal.
The sale or offering for sale to the general public of merchandise
outside of a permanent structure on property owned or leased by the
person, firm, or corporation. These sales are of a limited duration
and conducted on an occasional basis and are secondary or incidental
to the principal permitted use or structure existing on the property.
Terrace.
A frontage type where the main façade of the building
is at or near the frontage line with an elevated terrace providing
public circulation along the façade.
Thoroughfares.
A right-of-way for use by vehicular, pedestrian, and bicycle
traffic that provides access to lots and open spaces, and that incorporates
vehicular lanes and public frontages.
Town Square.
A type of civic space providing a public urban open space
for civic purposes, commercial activity, unstructured recreation,
and other passive uses. Squares are defined by buildings and tree-lined
streets with open shelters, paths, lawns, and trees formally arranged.
Transit Station Area.
A Transit Station Area includes any of the following:
2.
Major transit stops included in an applicable regional transportation
plan;
3.
A transit corridor with a fixed route bus service with service
intervals no longer than 15 minutes during peak commute hours.
Transparency.
The area of a frontage, usually applied to the ground floor
of a building, that must contain a minimum amount of transparent glass.
Triplex.
A detached structure that consists of three side-by-side
or stacked dwelling units within a single structure.
Unit.
See "Dwelling Unit."
Upper Floor.
A floor in a building containing habitable space that is
located above the ground floor.
Use.
The purpose for which land or the premises of a building,
structure, or facility thereon is designed, arranged, or intended,
or for which it is or may be occupied or maintained.
1.
Use, Accessory.
A use that is customarily associated with, and is incidental
and subordinate to, the primary use and located on the same lot as
the primary use and occupies not more than 30 percent of the gross
floor area.
2.
Use, Incidental.
A secondary use of a lot and/or building that is located
on the same lot but is not customarily associated with the primary
use.
3.
Use, Primary.
A primary, principal or dominant use established, or proposed
to be established, on a lot and occupies at least 70 percent of the
gross floor area of the tenant space or building.
Use Classification.
A system of classifying uses into a limited number of use types on the basis of common functional, product, or compatibility characteristics. All use types are grouped into the following categories: residential, public and semi-public, commercial, employment, and transportation, communication, and utilities. See also Chapter
20.620 (“Use Classifications”).
Use Permit.
A discretionary permit, such as a minor use or conditional use permit, which may be granted by the appropriate City of South San Francisco authority to provide for the accommodation of land uses with special site or design requirements, operating characteristics, or potential adverse effects on surroundings, which are not permitted as of right but which may be approved upon completion of a review process and, where necessary, the imposition of special conditions of approval by the permit granting authority. See Chapter
20.490 (“Use Permits”).
Variance.
A discretionary grant of permission to depart from the specific requirements of this Ordinance that is warranted when, due to special circumstances regarding the physical characteristics of the property, the strict application of standards would deprive the property of privileges available to other property in the same zoning classification. See Chapter
20.500 (“Variances”).
Vehicle.
Any vehicle, as vehicle is defined by the California Vehicle
Code, including any automobile, camper, camptrailer, trailer, trailer
coach, motorcycle, house car, boat, or similar conveyance.
Vibration.
A periodic motion of the particles of an elastic body or
medium in alternately opposite directions from the position of equilibrium.
Visible.
Capable of being seen (whether or not legible) by a person
of normal height and visual acuity walking or driving on a public
road.
Wall.
Any vertical exterior surface of building.
Woonerf.
A public or private thoroughfare which prioritizes pedestrians
and cyclists over motorists.
Yard.
An open space other than a court on a lot that is unoccupied
and unobstructed from the ground upward, except as otherwise permitted
by this Ordinance. (See Figure 20.621(A).)
1.
Yard, Front.
A yard extending across the front of a lot for the full width
of the lot between the side lot lines. The depth of a front yard shall
be a distance specified by this Ordinance for the district in which
it is located and measured inward from the front lot line.
2.
Yard, Interior Side.
A yard extending along an interior side of a lot from the
front lot line to the rear lot line, and to a depth specified by this
Ordinance for the district in which it is located and measured inward
from the interior side lot line.
3.
Rear Yard.
A yard extending across the rear of a lot for its full width
between side lot lines, and to a depth specified by this Ordinance
for the district in which it is located. If a lot has no rear lot
line, a line 10 feet in length within the lot, parallel to and at
the maximum possible distance from the front lot line, will be deemed
the rear lot line for the purpose of establishing the minimum rear
yard. (See Figure 20.621(B).)
4.
Yard, Street Side.
A yard extending along the street side of a corner lot from
the front lot line to the rear lot line, and to a depth specified
by this Ordinance for the district in which it is located and measured
inward from the street side lot line.
Zoning Administrator.
The Zoning Administrator of the City of South San Francisco,
or his or her designee.
Zoning District.
A specifically delineated area or district in the city within which regulations and requirements uniformly govern the use, placement, spacing, and size of land and buildings. See Section
20.020.001 (“Districts Established”).
(Ord. 1646 § 2, 2022; Ord. 1656, 6/12/2024)