The purpose of this Chapter is to define use classifications listed in Chapter
17.22 (Allowed Land Uses and Requirements) and throughout this Title. Use classifications are land uses that have been grouped into general categories on the basis of common function, product, or compatibility characteristics. This chapter should be used as a reference. Additional definitions for specialized terms used in the Zoning Code can be found in Article
VI (Glossary).
(Ord. 1501 § 1, 2011)
The following list represents the complete list of allowed uses and corresponding definitions as used in Table 17.22.020-1 (Allowed Uses and Required Entitlements for Manteca's Base Zoning Districts) and throughout this Title. Individual use classifications describe one or more uses having similar characteristics, but do not list every use or activity that may appropriately be within the classification. Additional definitions are found in Article
VI (Glossary). Allowed uses are organized into the following seven use categories as follows:
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Residential Uses
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Agriculture and Animal-Related Uses
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Recreation, Resource Preservation, Open Space, Education, and
Public Assembly Uses
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Utility, Transportation, Public Facility, and Communication
Uses
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Retail, Service, and Office Uses
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Automobile and Vehicle Uses
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Industrial, Manufacturing, and Processing Uses
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A. Residential
Uses
1. Adult
Day Care Home. A facility, as defined under
Health and Safety Code
Section 1507.7, that provides nonmedical care and supervision for
adult health care for six or fewer adults, including organized day
program of therapeutic, social, and skilled nursing health activities
and services to elderly persons or adults with disabilities with functional
impairments, either physical or mental, for the purpose of restoring
or maintaining optimal capacity for self-care. Programs offered are
on a less than 24-hour basis.
2. Caretaker
Housing. A residence that is accessory to a site with a nonresidential
primary use and that is needed for security, 24-hour care or supervision,
or monitoring of facilities, equipment, or other conditions on the
site.
3. Dwelling,
Multi-Family. A building designed and intended for occupancy by three
or more house-holds living independently of each other, each in a
separate dwelling unit, which may be owned individually or by a single
landlord (e.g., apartment, apartment house, townhouse, condominium).
4. Dwelling,
Second Unit. An attached or detached dwelling unit which provides
complete independent living facilities for one or more persons, with
permanent provisions for living, sleeping, eating, cooking, and sanitation
sited on the same parcel as the primary dwelling unit. This definition
includes granny flats.
5. Dwelling,
Single-Family. A building designed exclusively for occupancy by one
household on a single lot. This classification includes factory-built,
modular housing units constructed in compliance with the City-adopted
Building Code and mobile homes/manufactured housing on permanent foundations
(defined in California
Health and Safety Code Section 18007) and model
homes for the first sale of homes within the subdivision.
6. Dwelling,
Two-Family. An attached building (e.g., duplex) designed for occupancy
by two households living independently of each other, where both dwellings
are located on a single lot. For the purposes of this Title, this
definition also includes halfplexes (two attached units, each with
a separate lot). Does not include second dwelling units (see Dwelling,
Second Unit).
7. Dwelling,
Three- and Four-Family. An attached building (e.g., triplex) designed
for occupancy by three or four households living independently of
each other, where each dwelling is located on a single lot. Does not
include second dwelling units (see Dwelling, Second Unit).
8. Emergency
Shelter. 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 (
Health and Safety Code Section 50801).
9. Employee
Housing. Property used temporarily or seasonally for the residential
use of unrelated persons/families employed to perform agricultural
or industrial labor either on- or off-site of agricultural activities.
The accommodations may consist of any living quarters, dwelling, boardinghouse,
tent, bunkhouse, mobile home, manufactured home, recreational vehicle,
travel trailer, or other housing accommodations maintained in one
or more buildings, or on one or more sites, and the premises upon
which they are situated, including areas set aside for parking of
mobile homes or camping of employees by the employer. Employee housing
may also involve permanent residency if the housing accommodation
is a mobile home, manufactured home, travel trailer, or recreational
vehicle. Specifically, there are two types of employee housing as
follows:
a. Employee Housing, Large. Employee housing that serves more than six
employees and consists of no more than 36 beds in group quarters or
12 units or spaces designed for use by a single family or household.
b. Employee Housing, Small. Employee housing that serves six or fewer
employees.
10. Family Day Care Home. Facility that provides nonmedical care and
supervision of minor children for periods of less than 24 hours for
an individual child. These facilities include the following, all of
which are required to be licensed by the state:
a. Family Day Care Home, Large. A single-family residence that provides
day care for 7 to 14 children, inclusive, including children under
the age of 10 years who reside at the home.
b. Family Day Care Home, Small. A single-family residence that provides
day care for eight or fewer children, including children under the
age of 10 years who reside at the home.
11. Group Residential. Shared living quarters without separate kitchen
and/or bathroom facilities for each room or unit. This classification
includes residential hotels, dormitories, fraternities, sororities,
convents, rectories, and private residential clubs but does not include
living quarters shared exclusively by a family. This category includes
boardinghouses, which are defined as a building other than a hotel
or restaurant where meals or lodging or both meals and lodging are
provided for compensation for four or more persons.
12. Home Occupation. The conduct of a business within a dwelling unit
or residential site, employing occupants of the dwelling, with the
business activity being subordinate to the residential use of the
property. Examples include, but are not limited to, accountants and
financial advisors, architects, artists, attorneys, offices for construction
businesses (no equipment or material storage), and real estate sales.
13. Live-Work Facility. A structure or portion of a structure:
a. That combines a commercial or manufacturing activity allowed in the
zone with a residential living space for the owner of the commercial
or manufacturing business, or the owner's employee, and that person's
household;
b. Where the resident owner or employee of the business is responsible
for the commercial or manufacturing activity performed; and
c. Where the commercial or manufacturing activity conducted takes place
subject to a valid business license associated with the premises.
14. Mobile Home Park. Consistent with definitions of state law (Welfare
and Institution Code Section 18214), a mobile home park is any site
that is planned and improved to accommodate two or more mobile homes
used for residential purposes, or on which two or more mobile home
lots are rented, leased, or held out for rent or lease, or were formerly
held out for rent or lease and later converted to a subdivision, cooperative,
condominium, or other form of resident ownership, to accommodate mobile
homes used for residential purposes.
15. Residential Care Facilities. Consistent with the definitions of state
law, residential care facilities provide 24-hour nonmedical care for
more than six persons 18 years of age or older, or emancipated minors,
with chronic, life-threatening illness in need of personal services,
protection, supervision, assistance, guidance, or training essential
for sustaining the activities of daily living or for the protection
of the individual. This classification includes, but is not limited
to, rest homes, residential care facilities for the elderly, adult
residential facilities, wards of the juvenile court, and other facilities
licensed by the State of California. Convalescent homes, nursing homes,
and similar facilities providing medical care are included under the
definition of Medical Services, Extended Care.
16. Residential Care Home. Consistent with the definitions of state law
(
Health and Safety Code Section 1502), a residential care home is
a home that provides 24-hour nonmedical care for six or fewer persons
18 years of age or older, or emancipated minors, with chronic, life-threatening
illness in need of personal services, protection, supervision, assistance,
guidance, or training essential for sustaining the activities of daily
living, or for the protection of the individual. This classification
includes rest homes, residential care facilities for the elderly,
adult residential facilities, wards of the juvenile court, and other
facilities licensed by the State of California. Convalescent homes,
nursing homes, and similar facilities providing medical care are included
under the definition of Medical Services, Extended Care.
17. Single-Room Occupancy (SRO) Facilities. Multi-unit housing for very
low-income persons that typically consists of a single room and shared
bath and also may include a shared common kitchen and common activity
area. SROs may be restricted to seniors or be available to persons
of all ages. Subsidized versions may be supervised by a government
housing agency.
18. Supportive Housing. Housing with no limit on length of stay, that
is occupied by the target population, and that is linked to on-site
or off-site service that assists the supportive housing resident in
retaining the housing, improving his or her health status, and maximizing
his or her ability to live and, when possible, work in the community
(
Government Code Section 65582(f)). Supportive housing units must
be considered residential uses subject only to those requirements
and restrictions that apply to other residential uses of the same
type in the same zone.
19. Transitional Housing. Buildings configured as rental housing developments,
but operating under program requirements that require the termination
of assistance and recirculating of the assisted unit to another eligible
program recipient at some predetermined future point in time that
shall be no less than six months from the beginning of the assistance
(
Government Code Section 65582(h)). Transitional housing units must
be considered residential uses subject only to those requirements
and restrictions that apply to other residential uses of the same
type in the same zone.
B. Agriculture
and Animal-Related Uses
1. Animal
Keeping. Care and maintenance of animals on private property. The
listing below provides a distinction between various types of animals
related to allowed use provisions in this Article. This classification
is distinct from Animal Sales and Grooming and Equestrian Facility,
Commercial. Also see Kennel, Commercial, which provides for the boarding
of animals (e.g., doggy day-care).
a. Domestic Pets. Small animals (no larger than the largest breed of
dogs) customarily kept as pets within a dwelling unit. This classification
includes dogs, cats, fish, and birds (excluding large tropical birds
and poultry). Includes a kennel where the animals are owned or kept
by the owner or occupant for personal, noncommercial purposes, including
hunting, tracking, exhibiting at shows, exhibitions, field trials
or other competitions, or for enhancing or perpetuating a given breed,
other than dogs or cats used in conjunction with an agricultural operation
on the lot or premises.
b. Exotic Animals. Wild animals not customarily confined or cultivated
by man for domestic or commercial purposes, but kept as a pet or for
display, including potbelly pigs, snakes, reptiles, and large tropical
birds (including peacocks).
c. Insects. Small arthropod animals confined or cultivated by man for
domestic or commercial purposes including but not limited to flies,
crickets, mosquitoes, beetles, butterflies, and bees.
d. Livestock Animals. Domesticated animals that may be kept or raised
in pens, barns, houses, and pastures whether for commercial or private
use. Livestock includes, but is not limited to, cattle, sheep, swine,
goats, equine, and fowl. This definition includes horses and equestrian
facilities for individual homeowners.
e. Poultry. Domesticated birds (fowl) customarily kept for eggs or meat.
This classification includes chickens, roosters, ducks, geese, turkeys,
guinea fowl, and Cornish game hens.
2. Animal
Sales and Grooming. Retail sales of domestic and exotic animals and
bathing and trimming services, excludes kenneling of animals. See
Kennel, Commercial.
3. Crop
Production. Raising and harvesting of plants, tree crops, row crops,
or field crops on an agricultural or commercial basis, including packing
and processing. Includes horticulture establishments engaged in the
cultivation of flowers, fruits, vegetables, or ornamental trees and
shrubs for wholesale and incidental retail sales. This classification
includes agricultural buildings accessory to such uses and roadside
stands for display/sale of agricultural products grown on the premises.
Excludes uses for which other garden, nursery, or landscape merchandise
are stored and sold on the site.
4. Equestrian
Facility, Commercial. Commercial horse, donkey, and mule facilities
including horse ranches, boarding stables, riding schools and academies,
horse exhibition facilities (for shows or other competitive events),
pack stations, and barns, stables, corrals, and paddocks accessory
and incidental to these uses.
5. Kennel,
Commercial. Facilities that provide boarding of animals as the primary
use of the facility. May also include daytime boarding and activity
for animals (e.g., doggy day care) and ancillary grooming facilities.
Also see Animal Sales and Grooming.
6. Veterinary
Facility. Veterinary facility that is primarily enclosed, containing
only enough cage arrangements as necessary to provide services for
domestic and exotic animals requiring acute medical or surgical care
with accessory outdoor use that provides long-term medical care. Grooming
and boarding of animals is allowed only if accessory to the facility
use.
C. Recreation,
Resource Preservation, Open Space, Education, and Public Assembly
Uses
1. Assembly
Uses. Include any of the following uses:
a. Meeting facilities for organizations including facilities for business
associations, civic, social, and fraternal organizations, labor unions
and similar organizations, political organizations, professional membership
organizations, and other membership organizations;
b. Community centers and other multipurpose meeting and recreational
facilities that include one or more meeting or multipurpose facilities,
kitchens, and outdoor barbecue facilities available for use by various
groups for meetings, parties, receptions, dances, etc.
2. Cemetery/Mausoleum.
Land used for the burial of the dead and dedicated for cemetery purposes,
including crematories, columbariums, and mausoleums. Also see Mortuaries
and Funeral Homes.
3. Church/Place
of Worship. A building wherein persons regularly assemble for religious
worship and which is maintained and controlled by a religious body
organized to sustain public worship, together with all accessory buildings
and uses customarily associated with such primary purpose, including
living quarters for ministers and staff, but excluding other establishments
maintained by religious organizations such as educational institutions
and day care, which are separately regulated. Includes synagogue,
temple, mosque, or other such place for worship and religious activities.
4. Community
Garden. A site used for growing plants for food, fiber, herbs, or
flowers, which is shared and maintained by city residents.
5. Golf
Course/Clubhouse. Golf courses and accessory facilities and uses including
clubhouses with bar and restaurant, locker and shower facilities,
driving ranges, "pro shops" for on-site sales of golfing equipment,
and golf cart storage and sales facilities.
6. Indoor
Amusement/Entertainment Facility. Establishment providing indoor amusement
and entertainment services for a fee or admission charge, including
dance halls and ballrooms and electronic game arcades, as primary
uses. Four or more electronic games or coin-operated amusements in
any establishment, or premises where 50 percent or more of the floor
area is occupied by amusement devices, are considered an amusement
device arcade as described above; three or less machines are not considered
a land use separate from the primary use of the site.
7. Indoor
Fitness and Sports Facilities. Predominantly participant sports and
health activities conducted entirely within an enclosed building.
Typical uses include bowling alleys, billiard parlors, ice/roller
skating rinks, indoor racquetball courts, indoor climbing facilities,
soccer areas, athletic clubs, and health clubs. This use does not
include special studios not a part of an athletic or health club (e.g.,
karate studio, dance studio, etc.).
8. Libraries
and Museums. Public or quasi-public facilities including aquariums,
arboretums, art exhibitions, botanical gardens, historic sites and
exhibits, libraries, museums, and planetariums, which are generally
noncommercial in nature.
9. Outdoor
Commercial Recreation. Facility for various outdoor participant sports
and types of recreation where a fee is charged for use (e.g., amphitheaters,
amusement and theme parks, golf driving ranges, health and athletic
club with outdoor facilities, miniature golf courses, skateboard parks,
stadiums and coliseums, swim and tennis clubs, water slides, zoos).
10. Outdoor Community Recreation. Facility for various outdoor participant
sports and types of recreation provided by the community and typically
located in public parks and open space areas.
11. Park and Public Plaza. Public parks include playgrounds and athletic
fields/courts and public plazas and outdoor gathering places for community
use. If privately owned and restricted to the public (e.g., require
payment of fee), the same facilities are included under the definition
of Outdoor Commercial Recreation.
12. Recreational Vehicle Park. A site where one or more lots are used,
or are intended to be used, by campers with recreational vehicles
or tents. Recreational vehicle parks may include public restrooms,
water, sewer, and electric hookups to each lot and are intended as
a higher-density, more intensively developed use than campgrounds.
May include accessory retail uses where they are clearly incidental
and intended to serve RV park patrons only.
13. Resource Protection and Restoration. Activities and management of
an area to preserve, re-create, and enhance natural resource values
such as fish and wildlife habitat, rare and endangered plants, vernal
pools, erosion control, and floodwater conveyance.
14. Resource-Related Recreation. Facility related to passive recreation
in open space areas including bicycle and pedestrian trails, picnic
areas, parking areas, and interpretive centers.
15. School. A facility that provides for the education and/or training
of individuals or groups as further defined as follows:
a. Academic-Private. Any privately-owned elementary schools, middle
schools, junior high schools, secondary schools, high schools, colleges,
universities, and any other privately-owned school providing academic
instruction for students from kindergarten through 12th grade and
higher not defined as Equipment/Machinery/Vehicle Training or Specialized
Education and Training/Studios.
b. Equipment/Machinery/Vehicle Training. Facilities and programs for
training students in the repair and maintenance of various equipment,
machinery, and vehicles which tend to have a more industrial nature
to them. Examples include, but are not limited to, maintenance of
business equipment and consumer products (e.g., computers and other
electronic equipment, appliance repair, re-upholstery and furniture
repair), trade schools (e.g., metal work/welding), and vehicle repair
and maintenance (e.g., repair, alteration, restoration, towing, painting,
cleaning, or finishing of automobiles, motorcycles, trucks, recreational
vehicles, boats, and other vehicles).
c. Specialized Education and Training/Studios. Specialty schools for
instructing and training students in a variety of specialized programs,
including, but not limited to, the following:
i. Computers and electronics training schools;
iii.
Driver educational schools;
vi. Professional, vocational, and trade schools of a non-industrial nature
(e.g., culinary, cosmetology, arts and media, accounting and finance,
health and dental including nursing, legal, psychology, and technology);
and
vii.
Studio-style facilities including, but not limited to, dance/ballet,
art, photography, yoga, martial arts (e.g., karate, kung fu, judo,
tae kwon do, jujitsu), and fitness studios other than indoor fitness
and sports facilities.
16. Theater/Auditorium. Indoor facility for public assembly and group
entertainment, other than sporting events (e.g., civic theaters, facilities
for "live" theater and concerts, exhibition and convention halls,
motion picture theaters, auditoriums). Does not include outdoor theaters,
concert and similar entertainment facilities, and indoor and outdoor
facilities for sporting events; see Outdoor Commercial Recreation.
D. Utility,
Transportation, Public Facility, and Communication Uses
1. Airport.
A facility where aircraft such as airplanes can take off and land.
An airport minimally consists of one runway but other common components
are hangars and terminal buildings.
2. Ambulance
Service. Emergency medical care and transportation, including incidental
storage and maintenance of vehicles.
3. Broadcasting
and Recording Studio. Commercial and public communications uses including
radio and television broadcasting and receiving stations and studios,
with facilities entirely within buildings. Does not include transmission
and receiving apparatus such as antennas and towers, which are under
the definition of Wireless Telecommunication Facility.
4. Fuel
Storage and Distribution. A large-scale facility where fuel (such
as propane and gasoline) is stored and distributed without retail
sales.
5. Heliport.
A designated, marked area on the ground or the top of a structure
where helicopters may land at any time.
6. Park-and-Ride
Facility. A designated area where a vehicle may be left in order for
the driver to carpool with other commuters or to ride public transit.
7. Parking
Facility. A parking lot or parking structure used for parking motor
vehicles where the facility is the primary use of the site. Parking
structures and lots that are developed in conjunction with another
primary use of the site to satisfy the on-site parking requirements
for the development are not included in this definition.
8. Public
Safety Facility. Facility operated by public agencies including fire
stations, other fire prevention and firefighting facilities, and police
and sheriff substations and headquarters, including interim incarceration
facilities.
9. Transit
Facility. Maintenance and service centers for the vehicles operated
in a mass transportation system. Includes buses, taxis, railways,
monorail, etc.
10. Utility Facility and Infrastructure. Includes the following:
a. Fixed-base structures and facilities serving as junction points for
transferring utility services from one transmission voltage to another
or to local distribution and service voltages. These uses include
any of the following facilities that are not exempted from land use
entitlements by
Government Code Section 53091: electrical substations
and switching stations, natural gas regulating and distribution facilities,
public water system wells, treatment plants and storage, telephone
switching facilities, wastewater treatment plants, settling ponds
and disposal fields. These uses do not include office or customer
service centers (classified in Offices) or equipment and material
storage yards.
b. Pipelines for potable water, reclaimed water, natural gas, and sewage
collection and disposal, and facilities for the transmission of electrical
energy for sale, including transmission lines for a public utility
company. Also includes telephone, telegraph, cable television, and
other communications transmission facilities utilizing direct physical
conduits.
11. Wireless Telecommunication Facility. Facility designed and/or used
for the purpose of transmitting, receiving, or relaying voice and/or
data signals from various wireless communication devices, including
transmission tower, antenna, and/or other facility designed or used
for that purpose. Telecommunication facilities are divided into two
types as follows:
a. Wireless Telecommunication Facility – Major. A communication
facility that is a freestanding ground-mounted facility, is a structure
or roof-mounted facility that is more than 10 feet above the structure
roof line, and is not specifically identified as a minor facility
below. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
i. Telecommunication towers (cellular towers);
ii. Satellite earth station (SES) antennas that are more than 2 meters
in diameter; and
iii.
Parabolic antennas, direct broadcast satellite (DBS) antennas,
and multi-point distribution service (MDS) antennas that are more
than 1 meter in diameter.
b. Wireless Telecommunication Facility—Minor. Any wireless communication
facility that is either (1) operated exclusively as part of a public
safety network, or (2) specifically exempt from local regulation by
state or federal law or rule [e.g., by permit of the California Public
Utilities Commission (CPUC) or the rules and regulations of the Federal
Communication Commission (FCC)]. Examples include, but are not limited
to, the following:
i. Amateur radio transmission facilities which comply with the standards of Chapter
17.88 (Wireless Telecommunication Facilities);
ii. Satellite earth station (SES) antennas that are 2 meters in diameter
or less;
iii.
Parabolic antennas, direct broadcast satellite (DBS) antennas,
and multi-point distribution service (MDS) antennas that are 1 meter
in diameter or less;
iv. Television broadcast service (TVBS) antennas; and
v. Collocation on an existing major telecommunication structure, so
long as the collocation facility satisfies all requirements set forth
in Section 65850.6 of the California
Government Code.
E. Retail,
Service, and Office Uses
1. Adult
Day Health Care Center. A facility, as defined under Health and Safety
Code Section 1507.7, that provides nonmedical care and supervision
for adult health care for more than six adults, including organized
day program of therapeutic, social, and skilled nursing health activities
and services to elderly persons or adults with disabilities with functional
impairments, either physical or mental, for the purpose of restoring
or maintaining optimal capacity for self-care. Programs offered are
on a less than 24-hour basis.
2. Adult-Oriented
Business. Those businesses defined as follows:
a. Adult Bookstore or Adult Video Store. A commercial establishment
which has as a significant or substantial portion of its stock-in-trade
or derives a significant or substantial portion of its revenues or
devotes a significant or substantial portion of its interior business
or advertising to the sale, rental for any form of consideration,
of any one or more of the following:
i. Books, magazines, periodicals or other printed matter or photographs,
films, motion pictures, videocassette tapes, slides, tapes, records,
or other forms of visual or audio representations which are characterized
by an emphasis upon the depiction or description of specified sexual
activities or specified anatomical areas;
ii. Instruments, devices, or paraphernalia which are designed for use
or marketed primarily for stimulation of human genital organs or for
sadomasochistic use or abuse of themselves or others.
b. Adult Cabaret. A nightclub, theater, concert hall, auditorium, bar,
or other similar establishment which regularly features live or media
presentations of performances by topless or bottomless dancers, go-go
dancers, exotic dancers, strippers, or similar entertainers where
such performances are distinguished or characterized by an emphasis
on specified sexual activities or specified anatomical areas.
c. Adult Motel. A motel, hotel or similar commercial establishment which:
i. Offers public accommodations, for any form of consideration, which
provides patrons with closed-circuit television transmissions, films,
motion pictures, videocassettes, slides, or other photographic reproductions
which are characterized by the depiction or description of specified
sexual activities or specified anatomical areas and which advertises
the availability of this sexually oriented type of material by means
of a sign visible from the public right-of-way, or by means of any
off-premises advertising including, but not limited to, newspapers,
magazines, pamphlets or leaflets, radio, or television;
ii. Offers a sleeping room for rent for a period of time less than 10
hours; or
iii.
Allows a tenant or occupant to subrent the sleeping room for
a time period of less than 10 hours.
d. Adult Newsrack. Any coin-operated machine or device which dispenses
material substantially devoted to the depiction of specified sexual
activities or specified anatomical areas.
e. Adult Theater. An enclosed or unenclosed building, to which the public
is permitted or invited, used for presenting any form of audio or
visual material, and in which a substantial portion of the total presentation
time is devoted to the showing of material which is distinguished
or characterized by an emphasis on depiction or description of specified
sexual activities or specified anatomical areas.
f. Adult Viewing Area. An area in any adult book and/or novelty store,
cabaret, theater, motion picture arcade or other adult entertainment
business, where a patron or customer would ordinarily be positioned
for the purpose of viewing or watching a performance, picture show
or film.
g. Bathhouse. An establishment or business which provides the services
of baths of all kinds, including all forms and methods of hydrotherapy
during which specified anatomical areas are displayed or specified
sexual activity occurs.
3. Alcoholic
Beverage Sales. The retail sale of beverages containing alcohol for
off-site consumption subject to regulation by the California Department
of Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC) as an off-sale establishment.
4. Bar.
Any establishment devoted to the sale or serving of alcoholic beverages
for consumption on the premises in which the serving of food, if any,
is incidental to the consumption of alcoholic beverages. A restaurant
or bona fide public eating place as defined in Business and Professions
Codes Section 23038 that serves alcoholic beverages is not a bar.
Nightclub is defined separately in this title.
5. Bed
and Breakfast Inn. A residential structure with one family in permanent
residence with up to five bedrooms rented for overnight lodging, where
meals may be provided subject to applicable Health Department regulations.
A bed and breakfast inn with more than five guest rooms is considered
a hotel or motel and is included under the definition of Hotel and
Motel.
6. Brew
Pub. Any establishment that produces ales, beers, meads, hard ciders,
and/or similar beverages to service on-site as part of a restaurant.
May include off-site sales of beverages brewed by the brew pub facility.
7. Building
Materials Store/Yard. A retail establishment selling lumber and other
large building materials, where most display and sales occur indoors.
Includes stores selling to the general public, even if contractor
sales account for a major proportion of total sales. Includes incidental
retail ready-mix concrete operations, except where excluded by a specific
Zoning District. Establishments primarily selling electrical, plumbing,
heating, and air conditioning equipment and supplies are classified
in Wholesaling and Distribution. Hardware stores are listed in the
definition of Retail, General, even if they sell some building materials.
Also see Home Improvement Supplies for smaller specialty stores.
8. Business
Support Services. Establishments, primarily within buildings, providing
other businesses with services such as maintenance, repair and service,
testing, rental, etc. Support services include, but are not limited
to:
a. Equipment repair services (except vehicle repair, see Vehicle Services);
b. Commercial art and design (production);
c. Computer-related services (rental, repair);
d. Copying, printing, publishing, and blueprinting services;
e. Equipment rental businesses within buildings (rental yards are Storage,
Yards);
f. Film processing laboratories;
g. Heavy equipment repair services where repair occurs on the client
site;
i. Mail advertising services (reproduction and shipping);
j. Mailbox services and other "heavy service" business services;
k. Outdoor advertising services; and
l. Photocopying and photofinishing.
9. Child
Day Care Center. A commercial or nonprofit facility that provides
nonmedical care and supervision of minor children for periods of less
than 24 hours for an individual child. The facility is operated outside
of a home and is typically able to accommodate 15 or more children.
Such facilities include, but are not limited to, infant centers, preschools,
sick child centers, day care centers, and school-age child-care centers.
These may be operated in conjunction with a school or church facility,
or as an independent land use. Also includes employer -sponsored child-care
centers.
10. Convenience Store. An easy access retail store of 5,000 square feet
or less in gross floor area, which carries a range of merchandise
oriented to convenience and travelers' shopping needs. These stores
may be part of a service station or an independent facility. Also
see Neighborhood Market and Grocery Store/Supermarket for larger stores
or stores oriented toward the daily shopping needs of residents.
11. Drive-In/Drive-Through Use. A use where a customer is permitted or
encouraged, either by the design of physical facilities or by the
service and/or packaging procedures offered, to be served while remaining
seated within an automobile, including, but not limited to, drive-through
food, financial services, and automatic car washes.
12. Equipment Sales and Rental. Service establishments with outdoor storage/rental
yards, which may offer a wide variety of materials and equipment for
rental (e.g., construction equipment).
13. Grocery Store/Supermarket. A retail business where the majority of
the floor area open to the public is occupied by food products packaged
for preparation and consumption away from the site of the store. These
full-service businesses do not typically have limited hours of operation.
See separate but related listing for Convenience Store.
14. Home Improvement Supplies. Establishments (retail or wholesale) that
sell kitchen, bath, furnishings, carpeting, and other home-oriented
supplies. Other retail uses are permitted if accessory to the primary
use. These uses may include an expansive showroom. This category does
not include the sale of lumber and does not permit the outdoor display
of merchandise. This use classification is a subcategory of the larger
building materials stores and yards use classification and may be
combined with or separate from such uses.
15. Hotel and Motel. Facility with guest rooms or suites, provided without
kitchen facilities, rented to the general public for transient lodging
(less than 30 days). Hotels provide access to most guest rooms from
an interior walkway and typically include a variety of services in
addition to lodging, for example, restaurants, meeting facilities,
personal services, etc. Motels provide access to most guest rooms
from an exterior walkway. Also includes accessory guest facilities
such as swimming pools, tennis courts, indoor athletic facilities,
accessory retail use, etc.
16. Liquor Store. Any retail establishment whose main use is devoted
to and the primary purpose for which the establishment exists is alcoholic
beverage sales (see Section 17.24.020.E.3) for off-premises consumption,
and the incidental sale of other items such as magazines, newspapers,
lottery tickets and packaged snack foods. Does not include a grocery
store/supermarket or neighborhood market which may offer alcoholic
beverage sales along with the offering of groceries including such
items as: food items prepared on-site, fruit, vegetables, dairy, meat,
seafood and staple foods; or a convenience market that sells items
and services primarily for convenience and travelers' need such as:
diesel, gasoline, compressed gases (air and CNG), coolants (water
and antifreeze), packaged and prepared food, and other miscellaneous
convenience and travel items that may also offer alcoholic beverage
sales.
17. Maintenance and Repair of Small Equipment. Establishments providing
on-site repair and accessory sales of supplies for appliances, office
machines, home electronic/mechanical equipment, bicycles, tools, or
garden equipment, conducted entirely within an enclosed building.
Does not include maintenance and repair of vehicles.
18. Massage Therapy. Establishment where customers can receive a massage.
19. Medical Services. Facilities that provide medical services as further
defined as follows:
a. Extended Care. Residential facilities providing nursing and health
related care as a primary use with inpatient beds, such as board and
care homes, convalescent and rest homes, extended care facilities,
and skilled nursing facilities. Long-term personal care facilities
that do not include medical treatment are included under residential
care home and residential care facilities.
b. General. Facility primarily engaged in providing outpatient medical,
mental health, surgical, and other personal health services, but which
are separate from hospitals, including medical and dental laboratories,
medical, dental and psychiatric offices, outpatient care facilities,
and other allied health services. Counseling services by other than
medical doctors or psychiatrists are included under Offices, Business
and Professional.
c. Hospital. Hospitals and similar facilities engaged primarily in providing
diagnostic services and extensive medical treatment (with overnight
stay capabilities), including surgical and other hospital services.
These establishments have an organized medical staff, inpatient beds,
and equipment and facilities to provide complete health care. May
include on-site accessory clinics and laboratories.
20. Mortuaries and Funeral Homes. Funeral homes and parlors, where the
deceased are prepared for burial or cremation and funeral services
may be conducted.
21. Neighborhood Market. A pedestrian-oriented grocery/specialty market
store offering food products packaged for preparation and consumption
away from the site of the store and oriented to the daily shopping
needs of surrounding residential areas. Neighborhood markets are less
than 15,000 square feet in size and operate less than 18 hours per
day. Neighborhood markets may include deli or beverage tasting facilities
that are ancillary to the market/grocery portion of the use. For larger
stores, see Grocery Store/Supermarket.
22. Nightclub. Any establishment devoted to the sale or serving of alcoholic
beverages for consumption on the premises in which the serving of
food, if any, is incidental to the consumption of alcoholic beverages,
and where floor space could be used for dancing and/or live entertainment.
Bar is defined separately in this title.
23. Offices, Business and Professional. This use listing includes offices
of administrative businesses providing direct services to consumers
(e.g., insurance companies, utility companies, management consulting),
banks and financial institutions, government agency and service facilities
(e.g., post office, civic center), professional offices (e.g., accounting,
attorneys, employment, public relations), and offices engaged in the
production of intellectual property (e.g., advertising, architectural,
computer programming, photography studios). This use does not include
medical offices (see Medical Services, General), temporary offices,
or offices that are incidental and accessory to another business or
sales activity that is the primary use.
24. Personal Services. Establishments providing nonmedical services as
a primary use, including, but not limited to, barber and beauty shops,
clothing rental, dry cleaning pickup stores with limited equipment,
home electronics and small appliance repair, laundromats (self-service
laundries), shoe repair shops, and tailors. These uses may also include
accessory retail sales of products related to the services provided,
spas and hot tubs for rent, and tanning salons.
25. Restaurant. A retail business selling food and beverages prepared
and/or served on the site, for on- or off-premises consumption. Includes
eating establishments where customers are served from a walk-up ordering
counter for either on- or off-premises consumption and establishments
where most customers are served food at tables for on-premises consumption,
but may include providing food for take-out. Also includes coffee
houses and accessory cafeterias as part of office and industrial uses.
26. Retail, General. Stores and shops selling multiple lines of merchandise.
These stores and lines of merchandise include, but are not limited
to, art galleries, bakeries (all production in support of on-site
sales), clothing and accessories, collectibles, department stores,
drug and discount stores, dry goods, fabrics and sewing supplies,
florists and houseplant stores, furniture, general stores, gift shops,
hardware, hobby materials, musical instruments, parts and accessories,
newsstands, pet supplies, specialty shops, sporting goods and equipment,
stationery, and variety stores.
27. Tasting Room. Facility allowing beer/wine tasting with on-site and
off-site retail sales directly to the public. The tasting room facility
must be directly affiliated with a minimum of one brewery/winery (as
defined by the Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC)). The tasting room
may be operated within a brew pub as an accessory to a separate on-site
use, such as a restaurant, or as a stand-alone retail use.
28. Tobacco Related Uses. A commercial establishment whose primary activity
consists of a lounge or eating area where patrons smoke tobacco or
non-tobacco related products, including, but not limited to hookah,
cigar, cigarette, or other smoking device.
29. Tobacco Shop. Any retail establishment whose main use is devoted
to and the primary purpose for which the establishment exists is the
retail sale of tobacco and smoking equipment, including, but not limited
to, cigarettes, e-cigarettes, roll-your-own supplies, smokeless tobacco
such as dipping tobacco and chewing tobacco, cigars, pipe tobacco
and vaping supplies intended to be consumed off the store's premises.
30. Cannabis Retailer: A licensed premises that engages in the sale and
distribution of cannabis and cannabis products to a consumer. A cannabis
retailer's premises may be closed to the public and the retailer may
conduct sales exclusively through delivery.
F. Automobile
and Vehicle Uses
1. Auto
and Vehicle Rental. Retail establishments renting automobiles, trucks,
vans, and large farm equipment (e.g., combines, tractors). This use
listing includes the rental of recreation vehicles, motorcycles, and
boats. May also include repair shops (for rental vehicles only) and
the sales of parts and accessories, incidental to vehicle rental activities.
2. Auto
and Vehicle Sales. Retail establishments selling automobiles, trucks,
vans, and large farm equipment (e.g., combines, tractors). This use
listing includes the sales of recreation vehicles, motorcycles, and
boats. May also include repair shops and the sales of parts and accessories,
incidental to vehicle dealerships. It does not include the sale of
auto parts/accessories separate from a vehicle dealership (see Auto
Parts Sales), bicycle and moped sales (see Retail, General), tire
recapping establishments (see Vehicle Services – Major), businesses
dealing exclusively in used parts (see Recycling Facility –
Scrap and Dismantling), or fueling station, all of which are separately
defined.
3. Auto
and Vehicle Storage. Facilities for the storage of operative and inoperative
vehicles for limited periods of time. Includes, but is not limited
to, storage of parking tow-aways, impound yards, and storage lots
for automobiles, trucks, buses, and recreation vehicles. Does not
include retail sales (see Auto and Vehicle Sales).
4. Auto
Parts Sales. Stores that sell new automobile parts, tires, and accessories.
May also include minor parts installation (see Vehicle Services).
Does not include tire recapping establishments, which are found under
Vehicle Services – Major, or businesses dealing exclusively
in used parts, which are included under Auto and Vehicle Sales.
5. Auto
Vehicle Dismantling. Establishment for the dismantling of automobile
vehicles, including the dismantling or wrecking of automobiles or
other motor vehicles, and/or the storage or keeping for sale of parts
and equipment resulting from such dismantling or wrecking. Retail
sales are included under the definition of Auto and Vehicle Sales.
6. Car
Washing and Detailing. Permanent, drive-through, self-service, and/or
attended car washing establishments, including fully mechanized facilities.
May include detailing services. Temporary car washes (e.g., fundraising
activities generally conducted at a service station or other automotive-related
business, where volunteers wash vehicles by hand, and the duration
of the event is limited to one day) are not part of this use classification.
7. Fueling
Station. A retail business selling gasoline, diesel, or other motor
vehicle fuels. Vehicle services which are incidental to fuel services
are included under Vehicle Services – Minor.
8. Vehicle
Services – Major. The repair, alteration, restoration, towing,
painting, cleaning (e.g., self-service and attended car washes), or
finishing of automobiles, trucks, recreational vehicles, boats, and
other vehicles as a primary use, including the incidental wholesale
and retail sale of vehicle parts as an accessory use. This use includes
major repair and body work-repair facilities dealing with entire vehicles;
such establishments typically provide towing, collision repair, other
body-work, and painting services and may also include tire recapping
establishments.
9. Vehicle
Services – Minor. Minor facilities specialize in limited aspects
of repair and maintenance (e.g., muffler and radiator shops, quick-lube,
smog check). Does not include repair shops that are part of a vehicle
dealership on the same site (see Auto and Vehicle Sales) or automobile
dismantling yards, which are included under Recycling Facility –
Scrap and Dismantling.
G. Industrial,
Manufacturing, and Processing Uses
1. Agricultural
Products Processing. The act of changing an agricultural crop after
harvest from its natural state to the initial stage of processing
in order to prepare it for market and for further processing at an
off-site location. Examples of this processing include nut hulling
and shelling, bean cleaning, corn shelling and sorting, grape sorting
and crushing, primary processing of fruits to juice and initial storage
of the juice, without fermentation, cleaning and packing of fruits.
More comprehensive processing facilities (e.g., raw milk processed
to cheese) are considered food and beverage manufacturing and, as
such, are included under the definition of Manufacturing, Minor.
2. Freight
Yard/Truck Terminal. Transportation establishments furnishing services
incidental to air, motor freight, and rail transportation including
freight forwarding services, freight terminal facilities, joint terminal
and service facilities, packing, crating, inspection, and weighing
services, postal service bulk mailing distribution centers, transportation
arrangement services, truck repair, truck terminals, and trucking
facilities including transfer and storage.
3. Manufacturing,
Major. Manufacturing, fabrication, processing, and assembly of materials
in a raw form. Uses in this category typically create greater than
usual amounts of smoke, gas, odor, dust, sound, or other objectionable
influences that might be obnoxious to persons conducting business
on-site or on an adjacent site. Uses include, but are not limited
to, batch plants, rendering plants, aggregate processing facilities,
and plastics and rubber products manufacturing. Also see Manufacturing,
Minor and Manufacturing, Small-Scale.
4. Manufacturing,
Minor. Manufacturing, fabrication, processing, and assembly of materials
from parts that are already in processed form and that, in their maintenance,
assembly, manufacture, or plant operation, do not create excessive
amounts of smoke, gas, odor, dust, sound, or other objectionable influences
that might be obnoxious to persons conducting business on-site or
on an adjacent site. Uses include, but are not limited to, furniture
manufacturing and cabinet shops, laundry and dry cleaning plants,
metal products fabrication, and food and beverage manufacturing. Also
see Manufacturing, Major and Manufacturing, Small-Scale.
5. Manufacturing,
Small-Scale. Establishments manufacturing and/or assembling small
products primarily by hand, including, but not limited to, jewelry,
pottery and other ceramics, as well as small glass and metal art and
craft products. Also see Manufacturing, Major and Manufacturing, Minor.
6. Recycling
Facility – Collection. A recycling facility used for the acceptance
by donation, redemption, or purchase of recyclable materials from
the public that does not occupy more than 500 square feet. This classification
may include mobile units, kiosk-type units that may include permanent
structures, and unattended containers placed for the donation of recyclable
materials. Also includes so-called "reverse vending machines," an
automated mechanical device that accepts one or more types of empty
beverage containers including, but not limited to, aluminum cans,
glass bottles, and plastic bottles, and issues a cash refund or a
redeemable credit slip with value of not less than the container's
redemption value as determined by the state.
7. Recycling
Facility – Processing. A recycling facility located in a building
or enclosed space and used for the 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. Collection of recycling materials as
the sole activity is included in the definition of Recycling Facility
– Collection.
8. Recycling
Facility – Scrap and Dismantling. Uses engaged in the assembling,
breaking up, sorting, temporary storage, and distribution of recyclable
or reusable scrap and waste materials. This use does not include landfills
or other terminal waste disposal sites. Also see Auto Vehicle Dismantling
for related use for automobiles. Collection of recycling materials
as the sole activity is included in the definition of Recycling Facility
– Collection.
9. Recycling
Redemption Center. A facility, use, or structure for the collection
of recyclable goods, including, but not limited to, beverage containers
and newspapers.
10. Research and Development. Indoor facilities for scientific research,
and the design, development, and testing of electrical, electronic,
magnetic, optical, and mechanical components in advance of product
manufacturing, that are not associated with a manufacturing facility
on the same site. Includes, but is not limited to, chemical and biotechnology
research and development. Does not include computer software companies
(see Offices, Business and Professional), soils and other materials
testing laboratories (see Business Support Services), or medical laboratories
(see Medical Services, General).
11. Storage, Personal Storage Facility. A structure or group of structures
containing generally small, individual, compartmentalized stalls or
lockers rented as individual storage spaces and characterized by low
parking demand.
12. Storage, Warehouse. Facility for the storage of furniture, household
goods, or other commercial goods of any nature. Includes cold storage.
Does not include warehouse, storage, or mini-storage facilities offered
for rent or lease to the general public (see Storage, Personal Storage
Facility) or warehouse facilities in which the primary purpose of
storage is for wholesaling and distribution (see Wholesaling and Distribution).
13. Storage, Yards. The storage of various materials outside of a structure
other than fencing, either as an accessory or principal use.
14. Wholesaling and Distribution. Establishments engaged in selling merchandise
to retailers; to industrial, commercial, institutional, farm, or professional
business users; or to other wholesalers; or acting as agents or brokers
in buying merchandise for or selling merchandise to such persons or
companies. Includes such establishments as agents, merchandise or
commodity brokers, and commission merchants, assemblers, buyers and
associations engaged in the cooperative marketing of farm products,
merchant wholesalers, and stores primarily selling electrical, plumbing,
heating, and air conditioning supplies and equipment.
(Ord. 1501 § 1, 2011; Ord. 1546 § 3, 2014; Ord. 1558 § 2, 2015; Ord. 1571 § 2, 2015; Ord. O2017-2 § 2; Ord. O2018-5 § 1; Ord. O2018-20 § 1; Ord.
O2018-24 §1; Ord. O2021-15 § 1; Ord. O2021-16 § 6)