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• Suburban <br /> • Suburban Edge <br /> • Emerging Suburban Edge <br /> Urban Center communities include the largest, most centrally located and most economically <br /> diverse cities of the region. Urban centers are located in the metropolitan urban service area <br /> (MUSA) and have a minimum average net density of 20 units/acre. <br /> Urban communities are adjacent to the Urban Center communities and have seen considerable <br /> development and growth along highways. Urban areas are in the MUSA and have a minimum <br /> average net density of 10 units/acre. <br /> Suburban communities saw their primary era of development during the 1980s and early <br /> 1990s. Suburban communities also include places that were once resort destinations along <br /> Lake Minnetonka and White Bear Lake and along the St. Croix River. Suburban communities <br /> are in the MUSA and have a minimum average net density of 5 units/acre. <br /> The Suburban Edge includes communities that have experienced significant residential growth <br /> beginning in the 1990s and continuing to the 2010s. At least 40% of the land in these <br /> communities is developed, but significant amounts of land remain for future development. <br /> Suburban Edge communities are in the MUSA and have a minimum average net density of 3-5 <br /> units/acre. <br /> The Emerging Suburban Edge includes cities, townships and portions of both that are in early <br /> stages of transitioning into urbanized levels of development. in the majority of these <br /> communities, less than 40% of the land has been developed. Parts of Emerging Suburban Edge <br /> communities are in the MUSA and all have a minimum average net density of 3-5 units/acre. <br /> Rural Service Area <br /> About half of the land in the Twin Cities region is located in the Rural Service Area. This area <br /> includes a range of land uses, including cultivated farmland, vineyards, hobby farms, gravel <br /> mines, woodlands, small towns, scattered and clustered housing, open spaces, and significant <br /> expanses of the region's natural resources. Aside from the Regional Parks System, investments <br /> in regional service and infrastructure are limited in the Rural Service Area. The Rural Service <br /> Area is divided into four community designations: <br /> • Rural Center <br /> • Rural Residential <br /> • Diversified Rural <br /> • Agricultural <br /> The Rural Service Area contains some of the Regional Parks System's large park reserves, <br /> including Crow Hassan and Big Marine Park Reserves. In addition to providing passive <br /> recreation opportunities, the park reserves also preserve, maintain, and connect high quality or <br /> regionally important natural resources. The metropolitan system plans and policy pians seek to <br /> carefully integrate regional land use, housing, transportation, wastewater, water supply, surface <br /> water management, natural resources, and parks policies to achieve regional goals in each area <br /> and avoid working at cross-purposes. In this Policy Plan, the forecasts are used in the planning <br /> and capital improvement program processes to assess regional needs for wastewater treatment <br /> 8 <br />