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• Large Lot Residential: One unit per ten gross acres <br />• Very Low Density Residential: One unit per one acre <br />• Low Density Residential: Between two units and four units per acre <br />• Medium Density Residential: Between three units and eight units per net acre <br />• High Density Residential: Between six units and twelve units per acre <br />• Mixed Use: Opportunity for multiple, compatible uses on a single site <br />• Commercial: Area designated for both service retail, highway, and neighborhood -oriented <br />businesses and retail establishments to develop. <br />• Business Park: Opportunity for office, office warehouse, light industrial, and light <br />manufacturing businesses. <br />• Industrial: Identified areas suitable for warehousing, manufacturing, or processing of <br />products. <br />• Public/Quasi-Public: Areas designated for institutional uses such as governmental uses, <br />religious, educational uses and cemeteries, as well as public parks, conservatories, and <br />private recreation areas. <br />• Manufactured Housing Parks <br />• Major Highway <br />• Multifamily <br />• Office <br />A more detailed definition of land uses within the City of Hugo is available in the City's 2040 <br />Comprehensive Plan. <br />2.5. Public Utilities <br />Public utility services within the City of Hugo include city sewer and water. The Metropolitan <br />Urban Service Area (MUSA) is the area in which public utilities are available. The MUSA is <br />an area agreed upon with the Metropolitan Council and the City of Hugo. Those parcels which <br />are within the MUSA consist of primarily the western side of the City of Hugo, west of Highway <br />61. The 2040 MUSA is shown on Figure 4, Appendix A. <br />2.6. Surface Waters <br />Lakes, wetlands, streams, and drainage ways dominate the landscape of the City of Hugo and <br />are shown graphically on Figure 5, Appendix A. These natural features play an extensive role in <br />the way in which the community is currently developed and will develop into the future. <br />There are twelve lakes in the City classified as DNR protected waters. Hardwood Creek and <br />Clearwater Creek are classified as DNR protected watercourses. A number of judicial and private <br />ditches also traverse the City. <br />There are three separate watershed districts in the City of Hugo as shown on Figure 6, <br />Appendix A. The majority of the City is within the RCWD except for small portions of eastern <br />Hugo that are within the Carnelian -Marine -St. Croix Watershed District and the Brown's Creek <br />Watershed District. The City of Hugo is committed to protecting these water bodies as outlined in <br />Section 5 of this Plan. <br />2.6.1. Water Quality Data <br />The City will continue to support monitoring of surface and ground waters within its <br />jurisdictional boundaries and outside these boundaries for waters to which the City <br />discharges. Data will be obtained through cooperation and coordination of various <br />agencies listed below. <br />SECTION 2 <br />