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AMENDING YOUR ZONING ORDINANCE TO BRING IT INTO CONFORMANCE <br />A. Definitions <br />Zoning ordinances should be amended to include the definition of <br />manufactured homes (Minnesota Statutes, Section 327.3): <br />"A structure, transportable in one or more sections, which <br />in the traveling mode is eight body feet or more in width or <br />40 body feet or more in length or, when erected on site, <br />is 320 or more square feet, and which is built on a permanent <br />chassis and designed to be used as a dwelling with or without <br />permanent foundation when connected to the required utilities, <br />and included the plumbing, heating, air conditioning and <br />electrical systems contained therein, except that the term <br />included any structure which meets all the requirements, and <br />with respect to which the manufacturer voluntarily files a <br />certification required by the secretary and complies with <br />the standards established under this chapter." <br />B. Permitted Uses <br />The 1982 law requires that manufactured homes that are HUD certified <br />must be treated like other single family dwellings. Anywhere your <br />ordinance allows single family homes, manufactured homes should also <br />be listed as a permitted use. Manufactured homes cannot be considered <br />by special use permit or conditional use permit unless all single <br />family dwellings are placed in that category. The law clearly pro- <br />hibits cities and counties from forcing HUD certified manufactured <br />housing into mobile home (manufactured home) parks or special <br />districts. <br />C. District Requirements <br />?.' WidthVSquare Footage <br />Manufactured housing can be regulated by the zoning code standards <br />applied to all single family dwellings, i.e. setbacks, height. <br />With the amendments in the 1982 legislation cities estaiAish minimum <br />width and square footage requirements, again, communities must <br />apply these standards equally to both stick built homes and manu- <br />factured homes. As a reminder the creation of new standards in <br />regard to width and square footage might result in a portion of <br />your existing housing stock becoming non - conforming if they do not <br />meet those standards. Also, increased width and square footage <br />requirements might prohibit the construction of stick built <br />"affordable" homes. Rather than developing a set of arbitrary <br />standards it is suggested that cities examine current stick built <br />building dimensions in each residential zoning district and <br />develop standards based on established practice. Thus, assuring <br />communities of consistent development standards and compatibility <br />of new structures to existing 1 dwellings. <br />C 41 e f � W i 744 J er. et // Jet' ) r <br />1 ) 2 4 1 1 c 4c. /cc( /7/0rG i /c. r fr/1-1c5/7 _ 1 <br />1 9 <br />