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Multi‐Family Residential Regulations  Page 24 of 30  <br />  <br />  <br />Section 7: Building Design Standards <br />7.2 Building Orientation and Entrances <br />(a) Buildings shall be oriented towards Pedestrian Priority Frontages, where the lot has <br />frontage along Pedestrian Priority Frontages. If a building has no frontage along a <br />Pedestrian Priority Frontage, then it shall front a Pedestrian-Friendly Frontage. All <br />other buildings may be oriented towards General Streets or Civic Spaces. <br />(b) Primary entrances to buildings shall be located on the street along which the building <br />is oriented (See Figure 7-1). At intersections, corner buildings may have their primary <br />entrances oriented at an angle to the intersection. Building entrances shall be <br />provided for all separate ground floor commercial use tenant spaces that are located <br />along a Pedestrian Priority or Pedestrian-Friendly frontage. <br />(c) All primary entrances shall be oriented to the public sidewalk for ease of pedestrian <br />access. Secondary and service entrances may be located from parking areas or <br />alleys. Entrances may be placed on the corner of the building in order to serve both <br />the sidewalk and the parking lot, if necessary. <br />(d) Primary Entrance Design: Primary building entrances along Pedestrian Priority <br />Frontage and Pedestrian-Friendly Frontages shall consist of at least two (2) of <br />following design elements so that the main entrance is architecturally prominent and <br />clearly visible from that street (see Figures 7-2): <br />i. Architectural details such as arches, friezes, awnings, canopies, arcades, tile <br />work, murals, or moldings; or <br />ii. Integral planters or wing walls that incorporate landscape or seating <br />elements; or <br />iii. Prominent three-dimensional, vertical features such as belfries, chimneys, clock <br />towers, domes, spires, steeples, towers, or turrets. <br />iv. <br />7.3 Façade Composition <br />(a) Commercial Use and Mixed-Use Buildings: <br />(i) Facades greater than 60’ in length along all Pedestrian Priority Frontage, <br />Pedestrian-Friendly Frontages and Civic/Open Spaces shall meet the <br />following façade articulation standards: <br />1. Include facade modulation such that a portion of the facade steps back <br />or extends forward with a depth of at least 24 inches (see Figure 7-3). <br />2. The distance from the inside edge of a building projection to the <br />nearest inside edge of an adjacent projection shall not be less than 20 <br />feet and not greater than 60 feet (see Figure 7-3). <br />(ii) All other facades shall be articulated by at least one discernable <br />architectural element every 20 feet. Such architectural elements include, but <br />are not limited to (See Figures 7-4): <br />1. Changes in material, color, and/or texture either horizontally or <br />vertically at intervals not less than 20 feet and not more than 60 feet; <br />or <br />2. The construction of building entrances, bay windows, display windows, <br />storefronts, arcades, façade relief, panels, balconies, cornices, bases, <br />pilasters or columns.