This Chapter contains the regulations for the Public Benefit
Zone established by the City. The actual designation of each area
will be PB followed by a corresponding number (e.g., PB-1).
(Ord. 753, 6/20/2024)
The purpose of the Public Benefit Zone is to provide space for
the provision of uses that are beneficial to the public, including
affordable housing and supporting uses, such as public park, recreation,
open space, and parking.
(Ord. 753, 6/20/2024)
The following uses are permitted in the Public Benefit Zone:
(c)
Recreational facilities/sports complex non-commercial;
(e)
Residential/cluster development;
(g)
Agriculture, subject to approval of a Conditional Use Permit;
(h)
Antennas, residential, subject to approval of a Conditional
Use Permit;
(i)
Antennas, commercial, subject to approval of a Conditional Use
Permit;
(j)
Day care center, subject to approval of a Conditional Use Permit;
(k)
Utility buildings and facilities, subject to approval of a Conditional
Use Permit;
(l)
Other uses which benefit the public which the City Council may
designate from time to time.
(Ord. 753, 6/20/2024)
The following general development standards apply to PB-1:
(a)
Up to a maximum of 29% and less than 10 acres, may be developed
with residential uses ("residential area").
(b)
The maximum number of residential units that may be within the
residential area is 238 units.
(Ord. 753, 6/20/2024)
The following standards apply to residential development in
PB-1:
(a)
Development Standards Table:
Item
|
Standard
|
---|
Minimum density
|
20 du/gross acre
|
Maximum density
|
24 du/gross acre
|
Maximum building height
|
35 feet
|
Minimum setbacks
|
|
Front
|
15 feet
|
Side
|
10 feet
|
Rear
|
10 feet
|
Minimum distance between main buildings
|
10 feet
|
(b)
Residential uses shall occupy at least 50% of the total gross
floor area of a mixed-use development.
(c)
For developments in which 20% or more of the units are affordable
to lower income households (income and affordability levels set forth
in Sections 50079.5, 50093, and 50105 of the
Health and Safety Code
shall apply), owner-occupied and rental multifamily uses are considered
a use by right pursuant to subdivisions (h) and (i) of Government
Code Section 65583.2 and shall be reviewed ministerially by the Director.
(d)
An applicant for a project pursuant to this Section may apply for a density bonus, incentives or concessions, waivers or reductions in development standards, and reduced parking ratios in accordance with
Government Code Section 65915 and Section
21.20.040 of this Title.
(Ord. 753, 6/20/2024)
Residential development within the Public Benefit Zone must
implement the following design standards which are intended to provide
developers, builders, and architects with a clear standard of the
desired site design characteristics.
(a)
Site Design and Parking.
(1)
Primary building entrances (individual or shared) must include
at least two of the following building materials: stucco, brick, stone,
or wood. Entrances that do not face a public street and sidewalk (such
as within deep or large lots) must face an internal pedestrian path
that connects to a public sidewalk.
(2)
At least two different building types must be included in projects
with multiple buildings. Building types must be differentiated through
variations to building materials, color, rooflines, and the use of
architectural features such as awnings and light fixtures.
(3)
Lighting must be recessed or hooded and downward directed.
(4)
All surface level parking areas, covered and uncovered, must
be screened from public streets. Screening must be accomplished through
building placement, landscaping, a planted berm, decorative fencing
with vines, topography, or some combination of the above. Landscaping
used for screening purposes must be no less than two feet wide (from
the back of the sidewalk or street curb to the parking lot paving,
whichever is greater) and no less than 42 inches in height.
(5)
Structured parking must be designed such that all lighting is
fully shielded and automobile headlamps within the structure are not
visible from adjacent buildings, parcels, or streets. The minimum
height of screening for automobile headlights must be 42 inches in
height.
(6)
Parking areas must be separated from any building by a sidewalk
or landscaping with a minimum width of five feet.
(b)
Building Design.
(1)
Blank walls (facades without doors, windows, landscaping treatments)
must be less than 30 feet in length.
(2)
Buildings three stories and over must provide three distinctive
materials, each a minimum of 10% of the total street-facing building
facade, and a minimum of two different building colors. Distinctive
building materials must include a combination of stucco, brick, stone,
and wood.
(3)
Trim surrounds or recessed windows with a minimum depth of three
inches must be provided at all exterior windows and door openings.
(4)
Exterior front doors must be recessed a minimum of three feet
or have a covered porch with a minimum depth of six feet.
(5)
Exterior walls must include two or more of the following: windows,
trellises, arcades, roof overhangs, recessed or projected massing,
columns, balconies, wainscots, or awnings.
(6)
Exterior stairwells must not be directly visible from the street.
For safety and security, exterior stairwells must be oriented to interior
spaces, such as plazas and gathering areas, parking areas, and pedestrian
pathways and must not be separated from these areas by landscaping,
fences, or walls taller than three feet.
(c)
Massing and Articulation.
(1)
All building walls must have at least one minor massing break
every 50 lineal feet. A "minor massing break" means a variation in
setback or a building entry, recess, or structural bay or other projection.
A minor massing break that is a setback, recess, or projection must
be at least 12 inches deep and four feet wide.
(2)
Buildings over three stories tall must have at least one major
massing break every 100 lineal feet along all street frontages, adjacent
public park, publicly accessible outdoor space, or open space area.
A "major massing break" means a variation in setback or a building
entry that is at least 72 inches deep and 60 inches wide and that
extends the full height of the building.
(3)
Rooflines, whether pitched or flat, must be vertically articulated
at least every 50 feet along the street frontage. "Vertically articulated"
means one or more of the following: a parapet, a variation in cornice,
a reveal, a clerestory window or windows, or a variation in roof height
or form.
(Ord. 753, 6/20/2024)
All nonresidential improvements within the Public Benefit Zone
must be consistent with accepted public use and/or park and recreation
development standards and consistent with the objective to provide
uses that are beneficial to the public.
(Ord. 753, 6/20/2024)
See Chapter
21.60 Architecture and Landscape Review.
(Ord. 753, 6/20/2024)