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Standards | 6 <br />Small Buildings <br />Small buildings are defined as having eight or <br />fewer units per building. These may be either <br />townhouse or apartment buildings and tend to <br />fit the scale of traditional single-family homes <br />developments well as a buffer between higher <br />density or incompatible uses. <br />Medium Buildings <br />Medium buildings are defined as having nine <br />to eighteen units per building. These may be <br />either type of multi-family housing and are more <br />compatible as stand alone housing developments <br />or as a buffer between traditional single-family <br />housing an high density or commercial uses. <br />Medium buildings that are townhouses are <br />allowed to exceed the maximum of eight units per <br />building if they utilized stacked units but maintain <br />the same design features of a townhouse. This <br />means private exterior entrances on the ground <br />floor, private attached garages, and no common <br />shared areas for access. <br /> <br />Large Buildings <br />Large buildings are defined as having nineteen or <br />more units per building. This would only include <br />apartments not townhouses and is the more <br />common apartment style multi-family housing <br />found in cities. <br />Medium Building Examples- Jack Pines Place and Oneka Fields <br />Small Building Example- Rottlund Homes in Victor Gardens <br />Large Building Example - Rosemary Apartments