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Hugo Downtown Framework Plan <br />Final Plan & Design Guidelines <br />General Land Use <br />• Downtown development should be appropriate for a traditional downtown area: mixed - <br />use buildings combining retail, commercial, and residential uses, and encouragement of <br />multi -story buildings in the downtown. <br />• Neighborhood retail, service, and commercial buildings and uses which support <br />downtown residential neighborhoods such as drug stores, banks, and specialty markets <br />or small grocers are encouraged. <br />• Destination retail, restaurant and entertainment uses, particularly mixed with compatible, <br />complementary, or other synergistic uses, are highly encouraged. <br />• New auto -dominated commercial development such as fast food, auto service, or similar <br />high traffic drive -through facilities and large, single -use developments are discouraged in <br />the downtown CBD. <br />• Uses appropriate to the downtown area such as banks, coffee shops and pharmacies <br />which enhance their business by providing drive -through services may be permitted <br />provided they are designed to minimize impact on local downtown traffic circulation and <br />pedestrian access. <br />• Parking lots should only be allowed as an accessory use, except for municipal or public <br />district parking; larger parking areas should be broken up into smaller areas to reduce the <br />overall area of paving and promote a friendlier pedestrian environment. <br />• New residential development should provide for the full range of life -cycle housing, <br />offering choices of housing types (single -level flats, condominiums or lofts, single -level <br />and multi -story townhouses, and single-family attached or detached), styles and prices, at <br />a density appropriate to the downtown area. <br />• New residential development should be sensitive to existing residential neighborhoods <br />and incorporate well -designed transitions from multi -family to existing single-family <br />residential areas. <br />• Traditional neighborhood design (TND) based on a traditional street grid is a desirable <br />option for downtown, medium -density areas. Single-family homes (detached or attached) <br />or row townhomes should line the street with front porches and stoops, front yards, <br />sidewalks and boulevards with regularly spaced trees and street lights. <br />Garage access at rear of house <br />.TND example with traditional street grid and <br />porches facing the street <br />Sidewalks and boulevards on both sides of the <br />street with regularly spaced street trees <br />Page 10 of 23 <br />