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<br /> <br />Urban Reserves Technical Analysis Supplement 8 <br /> <br />could be accommodated in the future. <br /> <br />Staff and the EETAC looked at capacity assumptions for two of the land needs that are potentially most <br />significant, low density residential housing (low density utilizes more land than other housing types) <br />and industrial jobs (industrial has specific siting requirements). Capacity analysis doesn’t assign uses to <br />specific land in the study area; it simply identifies whether there is enough land with the characteristics <br />to potentially meet the need identified. <br /> <br />The following maps <br />show how and where <br />these needs could be <br />accommodated within <br />the study area. <br /> <br />Map 3 Potential <br />Industrial Capacity <br /> <br />While low density <br />residential land makes <br />up the majority of the <br />urban reserves land <br />need, industrial land <br />has certain <br />characteristics that are <br />different from <br />residential or <br />commercial land. <br /> <br />Industrial land is <br />projected to employ 13 <br />employees/acre. (This is <br />the same EPA used in <br />Envision Eugene.) There <br />is a projected need for <br />10,642 industrial <br />employees between <br />2032 – 2062, which <br />translates to a need for <br />963 acres. <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />June 24, 2019, Work Session – Item 2