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75A - BROADWAY CORRIDOR DISTRICT
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75A - BROADWAY CORRIDOR DISTRICT
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1/3/2012 4:15:21 PM
Creation date
10/28/2009 9:49:25 AM
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City Clerk
Doc Type
Agenda Packet
Item #
75A
Date
11/2/2009
Destruction Year
2014
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Milltown Specific Plan <br />LAND USEIACTIVITIES <br />The Broadway Corridor District encompasses both sides of <br />Broadway and the west side of Sycamore Street between <br />Washington and Seventeenth Street. With the notable exception of <br />the 10 story office building in the 1600 block and the next door <br />apartment complex, this area is a mix of residential, office, and <br />institutional uses in one and two story buildings. The Broadway <br />District abuts the CiviGProfessional District to the south, and backs <br />onto the One Broadway District Center and the Community and <br />Specialty Retail District to the east. The Broadway District has a <br />strong historic character, with a number of buildings dating from the <br />tum of the century. <br />The Broadway District will continue to play its current role in the <br />Midtown area by providing lower-intensity office space mixed with <br />residential and institutional activities, such as churches and social <br />services. The urban scale and form will remain that of a large square <br />footage single family neighborhood with deep setbacks from the <br />street. Broadway itself will continue to carry heavy traffic as a <br />secondary arterial access for the downtown and Civic Center areas <br />to the south. The $roadway District will continue to serve the <br />downtown and Civic Center areas with professional offices, space for <br />semi-public service agencies such as the YWCA, and limited <br />residential uses. While very low intensity in character, the district will <br />thus house a wide variety of uses and activities. <br />SITE ATTRIBUTES <br />Between residential neighborhoods and central city commercial <br />d~trict. <br />• Significant concentration of older structures of character. <br />• Landscaped front yards and mature street trees. <br />• Small bts and primarily residentially-scaled structures. <br />DEVELOPMENT OPPORTUNITIES <br />The following development opportunities define the major projects <br />within the district. The descriptions approximate the development <br />potential of each site, and do not indicate actual permitted capaaties. <br />These will be defined by development standards and design <br />guidelines. <br />These activities and uses include the following: <br />• Professional, financial, insurance and real estate offices with <br />litfie waNc-in traffic. <br />• Institutional office uses, including public agencies and private <br />office uses. <br />• Specialty and general practice medical and dental offices. <br />Reoccupied single family structures for cottage industries, as a <br />wnditional use. <br />• Day care facilities. <br />• Congregate care and convalescent homes. <br />PHYSICAL FRAMEWORK <br />• Broadway is the major north-south arterial forming the western <br />edge of Midtown. <br />• Older structures, landscaped front yards, mature street trees <br />and small tot frontages define Broadway's unique character. (The <br />long-range land use policy is to create a landscaped open <br />space centrally located to the Midtown District). <br />Small Lot Infill. Existing vacant lots, and those with deteriorating <br />structures that are not architecturally significant provide sites for <br />small-scale office devebpment, consistent with the architectural <br />styles and scale of surrounding structures. <br />Renovation. Refurbishment of existing structures for reuse as <br />professional offices, services and institutional uses. <br />Revitalization. lJpgrading major office structures to make them <br />competitive in the local office market. <br />70 <br />Midtown Speck Pian <br />Page 3 of 6 <br />75A-11 <br />
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