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• Housing and Neighborhoods <br />Plan Elements <br />The land use plan establishes ~e four broad categories of residential use as follows: <br />Traditional Neighborhoods (R-1 and R-2). These areas correlate with established <br />single-family residential neighborhoods (University Grove, Falcon Woods, Northome, <br />Northeast and Maple Knoll) where only very limited in-fill residential development is <br />possible due to the absence of vacant land. These are neighborhood conservation areas <br />where it is the City's intent to preserve neighborhood values, encourage the continual <br />upgrading of the housing stock and maintain existing development densities of six or <br />fewer units per gross acre. At neighborhood edges, only where irreversible blight can be <br />demonstrated, it is the City's intent to consider compatible residential redevelopment at <br />higher densities. <br />Traditional Medium Density Residential (R-4). These long-established multi-family <br />buildings are generally located along Larpenteur and Snelling Avenues in close proximity <br />to areas of higher activity such as the Snelling and Larpenteur Commercial Core and to <br />the two main bus transit routes that cross the City. Densities range from 12 to 46 units per <br />gross acre. Off-street parking is limited. The City's policy for the last 20 years has been <br />to limit new medium density residential development to 12 units per gross acre. As this is <br />unlikely to meet projected needs for housing by 2030, the City will consider compatible <br />. redevelopment at higher densities, should opportunities arise, especially in the Larpenteur <br />Corridor. Where medium or lower density redevelopment is proposed for these zones, the <br />City will require that rebuilding not reduce the amount of available housing in the City. <br />Transit-Oriented/Multi-Use Residential. The new Falcon Heights Town Square at the <br />southeast Corner of Snelling and Larpenteur Avenues is an example of a kind of housing <br />that is becoming more common in the inner suburbs of the Twin Cities. Retail space may <br />occupy the ground floor, while upper floors are residential. Buildings are set forward <br />toward the street, and parking is moved underground or to the interior of the property. <br />Falcon Heights Town Square's largest building, and the closest to Snelling, is one story <br />taller than any other multi-unit building in the city. To meet projected housing needs, the <br />City intends to consider similar multi-use development, with increased height limits and <br />housing densities up to 40 [?] units per gross acre, along the Larpenteur corridor, should <br />any of the larger properties, presently zoned for business or medium density residential, <br />become available for redevelopment. <br />New Single Family Neighborhoods (P-1/R-1). Although it is unlikely that the <br />University of Minnesota will release any of its agricultural land for private development, <br />it is the City's responsibility to take that remote possibility into account in its planning. If <br />land should become available, future neighborhoods in these areas will be designed to <br />conserve public open land, to include pedestrian and bicycle paths and access to transit, <br />to provide connected street plans compatible with existing Ramsey County street names <br />and address numbering, and to provide a variety of housing types and prices, including <br />• multi-family and compact single family residential use. <br />Assembled Elements, Draft 1 FH Comp Plan 2007 Page 25 of 42 <br />