Most communities separate residential and commercial uses from industrial uses. Older neighborhoods, such as Williamsburg, developed with these uses side-by-side.
Development that combines two or more of the types of development: residential, commercial, office, industrial or institutional
Provision of a mix of complementary uses, such as residential, community and leisure uses, on a site or within a particular area.
A site that has more than one use on it, e.g. retail, residential, business, leisure etc. LOTS is a form of mixed-use development.
A property that is small commercial and residential.
A real estate development that contains two or more different uses all intended to be harmonious and complimentary. An example would include a high–rise building with retail shops on the first two floors, office space on floors three through ten, apartments on the next ten floors, and a restaurant on the top floor.
A type of development that combines residential, commercial, and/or office uses, within a commerical or office zoning district, into one development or building. For example, a mixed-use building could have several floors. On the bottom floor, the space could be dedicated to retail or offices. The remaining two or three floors could be for apartments or condominiums. A Mixed Use Combining District allows residential, commercial, retail, and office uses to be combined in a single development. Under the Smart Growth Infill Ordinance passed in the Spring of 2000, two types of Mixed Use development are now possible in those neighborhoods with adopted neighborhood plans that include these uses as part of their plans: Neighborhood Urban Center allows a variety of residential types (condos, apartments, townhouses) and commercial, office, and retail uses clustered together in a development of less than forty acres. A Neighborhood Mixed Use Building allows residential uses above ground floor commercial uses.
As distinguished from a single use plan (as set out often in zoning regulations and laws), mixed use refers to a variety of authorized uses for buildings and structures in a particular area. This could appear as, for example, a property's being utilized in more than one way, such as a street level market and upstairs apartments.
A variety of residential, commercial, and office uses typically associated with or along a transit corridor. Mixed-use development specifically calls for higher intensity uses along transit lines and to be consistent with Transit-Oriented Design Guidelines for Sacramento County.
Two different uses, usually commercial and residential in the same building.
This designation denotes land where a combination of two or more principal uses is permitted to facilitate development.
Land use involving a coordinated application of two or more different zoning types (residential, commercial and industrial); one variety mix use includes varying densities of housing.