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committed and protected acres on residential land is 6,941 acres which equates to about 31% of <br />all residentially designated land in the UGB as follows in Table 1 and shown on Figure 3: <br />Table 1. Committed & Protected Residential Land, <br />Eugene 2012 <br />Plan Designation <br />Acres <br />Committed & Protected <br />6,941 <br />High Density Residential <br />681 <br />High Density Residential Mixed Use <br />56 <br />Low Density Residential <br />6,007 <br />Medium Density Residential <br />585 <br />Medium Density Residential Mixed Use <br />20 <br />Vacant Land <br />• The acres of all vacant residential land are as follows in Table 2 and as shown on Figures 4 and 5: <br />Table 2. Vacant Residential Land, Eugene 2012" <br />Plan Designation 12 Acres of Vacant <br />land <br />High Density Res Mixed Use 1 <br />High Density Residential 43 <br />Low Density Residential 1351 <br />Medium Density Residential 206 <br />Medium Density Res Mixed Use 1 <br />• As explained in the HNA (Part II of this Study), there are three methods used to estimate <br />residential development capacity of vacant land. Two of the methods utilize the number of acres <br />in the land supply and one utilizes the number of lots in the supply.13 Table 3 shows the vacant <br />acres and lots for residential land, based on the size, slope and elevation factors that are used <br />to, later, determine the residential capacity assumed for the land. <br />11 The acres by plan designation reflected in the 2012 land supply are the plan designations as of 2012 and do not <br />reflect any changes to plan designations that occurred after the land model was run (e.g., as a result of a measure <br />to increase residential development discussed in Part V of this Residential Land Supply Study). <br />12 Due to geospatial processing imprecision where the plan designation layer intersects with the UGB boundary, <br />the land supply acres indicate that there are some acres of land in plan designations that are actually not within <br />Eugene's UGB (Agriculture, Forest Land, Rural Residential, Sand and Gravel). These geospatial processing "slivers" <br />of plan designations are not actually within Eugene's UGB and are therefore excluded from capacity reporting. <br />13 See Part II, the Housing Needs Analysis, section 4.1.1 for more information about these three housing capacity <br />methods. <br />Residential Land Supply Study I Final Part I — Page 7 <br />