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<br />existing (at that time) B-6, Office Park District could be amended with the new language <br />consistent with a mixed-use business park such as Twin Lakes. <br /> <br />1.3 A "Mixed Use Business Park District" is defined as a geographically identifiable area <br />which contains a consistent architectural mix of office, office-laboratory, office- <br />showroom-warehousing, bio-technical, biomedical, high-tech software and hardware <br />production uses with support services such as limited or specialized retail, health, fitness, <br />lodging and multifamily housing. Most of these uses can be connected by pedestrian way <br />as well as roadway. <br /> <br />1.4 A "Mixed Use Business Park District" is normally a redevelopment area, in which the <br />environmental impacts of a business park have been analyzed through an environmental <br />impact statement or similar review process. The impacts are then mitigated within the <br />requirements a Planned Unit Development as defined in Section 1008. All parcels should <br />have well-planned roads, pathways, utilities, ponding and communication systems. <br />Parcels within a "Mixed Use Business Park" should provide access to an internal parkway <br />and/or external County minor arterials as well as convenient access to the Interstate <br />Highway System. <br /> <br />1.5 A "Mixed Use Business Park District" should create a unique, safe and high-quality <br />work, housing, and recreational neighborhood environment by installing extraordinary <br />architecturally distinct buildings, parkways, transit and transportation services, site <br />planning, landscaping, parks, pedestrian pathways, and lighting. <br /> <br />1.6 As currently envisioned, in single occupant buildings, pre-existing, "non conforming" <br />uses are allowed to continue their operations within a "B-6" or any other zoning district. <br />However, if a use is removed or closed for more than one year, only permitted uses in the <br />zoning district are allowed to remain or expand. The intent of this (state) provision is to <br />protect the current uses and value of the pre-existing, nonconforming structures, but to <br />gradually see them evolve into other permitted or redeveloped uses and structures. This <br />provision allows the City's Twin Lakes Redevelopment Plan to occur with the assurance <br />that redevelopment and major reinvestment of new uses and adjacent uses will be healthy, <br />safe, attractive, and good investments in an "area' of similar uses. Re-establishing, <br />expanding, or intensifying the pre-existing nonconforming single occupant use (after it <br />has been vacant for a year) is counter-productive to the adopted Twin Lakes <br />Redevelopment Plan; it will be difficult to entice the significant private investment <br />required by the Twin Lakes Plan with no assurance that land use controls cannot prevent <br />the long term intense, non conforming uses to remain and expand. <br /> <br />1.7 In multi-tenant buildings the situation becomes more complex. Allowing the pre-existing <br />nonconforming uses inside the existing building shell (or even expand into additional <br />existing leaseable or subleased bays) is an acceptable interpretation of Roseville's Code <br />Two conditions are paramount: 1) only within the existing building shell and 2) without <br />intensifying negative environmental impacts such as exterior noise, fumes, light, and <br />truck traffic. <br /> <br />PF3359 - PF3359-RPCA(1 00202) Page 2 of9 <br />