My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
Ordinance No. 20585
COE
>
City of Eugene
>
Ordinances
>
2017 No. 20572 - 20587
>
Ordinance No. 20585 w/Exhibits
>
Ordinance No. 20585
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
11/15/2017 9:05:08 AM
Creation date
11/15/2017 8:57:17 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Council Ordinances
CMO_Document_Number
20585
Document_Title
Ordinance Establishing the Sufficiency of the Urban Growth Boundary for Residential Land
Adopted_Date
7/17/2017
Approved Date
7/24/2017
Signer
Piercy
Jump to thumbnail
< previous set
next set >
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
319
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
5 CONCLUSIONS <br />As shown in Table 68 below, the key findings from this Housing Needs <br />Analysis are: <br />• Eugene has surplus of 10 Low Density Residential Acres <br />• Eugene has a surplus of 124 Medium Density Residential Acres <br />• Eugene has a deficit of 53 High Density Residential Acres <br />Table 68. Summary of all land deficit or surplus, Housing Needs Analysis <br />Conclusion <br />Employment in Residential Plan Designations TBD <br />Total High Density Residential -53 <br />Note: For TBD estimates, see the Residential Land Supply conclusion in Part III of this Study <br />These figures are not the final determinations of the City's residential land <br />supply or deficit. In the following Part III of the Residential Land Supply <br />Study, the City analyzes the impacts of public and semi-public uses on <br />residential land. In the Economic Opportunities Analysis section of the <br />City's Envision Eugene Employment Land Supply Study, the City <br />analyzes the impacts of employment uses on residential land. After <br />consideration of these impacts on the capacity of Eugene's residential <br />land, the City's 20 -year residential land needs are determined and <br />indicated in the conclusion of Part III of the Envision Eugene Residential <br />Land Supply Study: "Public and Semi -Public Uses on Residential Land <br />(2012-2032)." <br />Part 11 — Eugene Housing Needs Analysis ECONorthwest Page 149 <br />Land sufficiency <br />Plan Designation / Use <br />(deficit) <br />(gross acres) <br />Low Density Residential <br />New Housing <br />16 <br />Group Quarters <br />-6 <br />Public and Semi -Public Uses <br />TBD <br />Employment in Residential Plan Designations <br />TBD <br />Total Low Density Residential <br />10 <br />Medium Density Residential <br />New Housing <br />130 <br />Group Quarters <br />-6 <br />Public and Semi -Public Uses <br />TBD <br />Employment in Residential Plan Designations <br />TBD <br />Total Medium Density Residential <br />124 <br />High Density Residential <br />New Housing <br />-47 <br />Group Quarters <br />-6 <br />Public and Semi -Public Uses <br />TBD <br />Employment in Residential Plan Designations TBD <br />Total High Density Residential -53 <br />Note: For TBD estimates, see the Residential Land Supply conclusion in Part III of this Study <br />These figures are not the final determinations of the City's residential land <br />supply or deficit. In the following Part III of the Residential Land Supply <br />Study, the City analyzes the impacts of public and semi-public uses on <br />residential land. In the Economic Opportunities Analysis section of the <br />City's Envision Eugene Employment Land Supply Study, the City <br />analyzes the impacts of employment uses on residential land. After <br />consideration of these impacts on the capacity of Eugene's residential <br />land, the City's 20 -year residential land needs are determined and <br />indicated in the conclusion of Part III of the Envision Eugene Residential <br />Land Supply Study: "Public and Semi -Public Uses on Residential Land <br />(2012-2032)." <br />Part 11 — Eugene Housing Needs Analysis ECONorthwest Page 149 <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.