Business district regulations are intended to govern the locations
and uses of a full range of business and commercial establishments
needed to serve the citizens of Mendota and its trade area. The regulations
of the various business districts are designed to provide for groupings
of business and commercial establishments that are compatible in scope
of service and method of operations.
Unless otherwise provided in the regulations of this chapter,
the following provisions shall apply to all business districts:
A.
Dwelling units. Dwelling units and lodging rooms are not permitted
on the ground-floor level in any business district except in a permitted
hotel, motel, or as a nonconforming use existing on the effective
date of this chapter.
B.
Enclosure of operations. All business, servicing, or processing shall
be conducted within completely enclosed buildings except:
C.
Performance standards. All activities shall conform with the performance
standards established for the M Manufacturing District, provided that
performance standards shall in every case be applied at the boundaries
of the lot on which any such activities take place.[1]
D.
Parking limitations. Parking of trucks, when accessory to the conduct
of a permitted use, shall be limited to vehicles having not over 1 1/2
tons' capacity, except for pickup or delivery services during normal
business hours.
E.
Scope of operations. All business establishments shall be retail
trade or service establishments dealing directly with consumers, and
all goods produced on the premises shall be sold on the premises where
produced except for specific uses in the B-2 General Retail District
where wholesale sales or processing and fabricating are permitted.[2]
The B-1 Local Business District regulations are intended to
provide areas and govern uses therein for a range of shopper and personal
service types of establishments in order to serve the general shopping
needs of a consumer population that is located in one or more of the
neighborhoods adjoining and in the vicinity of the shopping district.
A.
Permitted uses. The following uses are permitted in the B-1 District:[1]
(1)
Alphabetical list.
Art and school supply stores
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Bakeries, retail sales, where not more than 30% of the floor
area may be devoted to processing of goods
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Barber shops and beauty parlors
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Book and stationery stores
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Camera and photographic supply stores
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Candy and ice cream stores
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Clothes pressing establishments
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Drugstores
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Dry-cleaning and laundry-receiving stations, including self-service
coin-operated equipment
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Dwelling units and lodging rooms, provided they are above the
first floor
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Food stores, meat and fish markets, and delicatessens
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Gift shops
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Hardware stores
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Hobby shops for retailing of items to be assembled or used away
from the premises
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Launderettes, including automatic self-service dry-cleaning
equipment
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Liquor stores, package
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Newsstands
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Office supply stores
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Offices, professional, business, institutional and public
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Paint and wall paper stores
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Temporary buildings for construction purposes, for a period
not to exceed the duration of such construction
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Toy shops
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Variety stores
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B.
Conditional uses. The following conditional uses are permitted in
the B-1 District:[2]
(1)
Other business uses similar to permitted uses listed above.
(2)
Planned developments under single ownership or control and having
a gross area of at least 10 acres.
(3)
Public utility and governmental services uses. Lot areas and lot
widths for the following uses shall be as recommended by the Plan
Commission and approved by the City Council and may be lesser or greater
in area or width than herein required in the district regulations.
(a)
Electric distribution centers.
(b)
Gas regulator stations.
(c)
Police and fire stations.
(d)
Radio and television towers and antennas.
(e)
Railroad rights-of-way and passenger stations.
(f)
Telephone exchange buildings, microwave relay towers, and telephone
transmission equipment buildings.
(g)
Water filtration plants, pumping stations, reservoirs, towers,
and sanitary and storm sewer lift stations, public or community.
(4)
Radio and television service and repair shops.
(5)
Accessory uses to the above conditional uses.
C.
Ground floor area. The maximum ground floor area of each business
establishment shall be 5,000 square feet measured from the exterior
faces of the exterior walls.
D.
Floor area ratio: not to exceed 1.0.
The General Retail District regulations are designed to accommodate
prime retail trade activities located primarily within the core of
the City's business area. Regulations provide for a wide variety of
related shopper-type business establishments along with personal service
and other complementary uses.
A.
Permitted uses. The following uses are permitted in the B-2 District:
[Amended by Ord. No. 01-07-13[1]]
(1)
As in the B-1 District.
(2)
Alphabetical
list.
Antique shops
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Automobile accessory stores
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Banks and other financial institutions, including drive-in facilities
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Bicycle sales, rental, repair stores
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Carpet and rug stores
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China and glassware stores
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Clothing stores
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Clubs or lodges, when located above the ground floor
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Coin and philatelic stores
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Currency exchanges
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Department stores
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Drugstores, including drugstores with one- or two-lane drive-through
facility
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Dry goods stores
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Flower and gift shops
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Fraternal, philanthropic, and eleemosynary institutions, when
located above the ground floor
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Frozen food stores, including locker rental in conjunction therewith
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Furniture stores, including upholstering when conducted as part
of the retail operations and secondary to the principal use
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Furrier shops, including the incidental storage and conditional
sale of furs
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Garden supply stores with no outdoor storage or display of merchandise
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Grocery stores, supermarkets, meat and fish markets and delicatessens
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Haberdasheries
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Hardware stores, retail and wholesale
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Hobby shops
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Hotels and motels
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Household appliance stores, including radio and television sales
with incidental repair facilities
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Interior decorating shops, including upholstery and making of
draperies, slip covers, and other similar articles when conducted
as part of the retail operations and secondary to the principal use
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Jewelry stores
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Laboratories, medical, dental or optical, when located above
the first story or as accessory to a principal use occupying the first
story
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Leather goods and luggage stores
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Libraries, public and private
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Liquor stores, package
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Loan offices
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Locksmith shops
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Magazine and news stores
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Medical and dental clinics
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Millinery shops
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Music stores
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Newspaper offices, including printing
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Newsstands
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Office supply stores
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Offices, professional or business
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Paint and wallpaper stores
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Pawn shops
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Photography studios, including developing and printing of photographs
when conducted on the premises as part of the retail business
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Picture framing
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Post offices
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Radio and television broadcasting studios
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Restaurants, which may include accessory cocktail lounges
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Schools, music, dance or business
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Shoe and hat repair stores
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Shoe stores
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Sporting goods stores
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Tailor shops
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Telegraph offices
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Theaters
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Tobacco shops
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Toy stores
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Travel bureaus and ticket offices
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Vending machines
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Wearing apparel shops
|
B.
Conditional uses. The following conditional uses are permitted in
the B-2 District:
[Amended by Ord. No. 04-06-15A]
(1)
Any conditional use permitted in the B-1 District.
(2)
Amusement establishments, bowling alleys, pool halls, dance halls,
gymnasiums, swimming pools and skating rinks.
(3)
Cocktail lounges or taverns.
(4)
Bus depot and cab stands having off-street loading and parking facilities.
(5)
Public or private cultural institutions, and utility and governmental
service establishments.
(6)
Restricted production and repair, limited to the following: needlework;
clothing, such as custom manufacturing and alterations; jewelry from
precious metals; watches, dentures, and optical lenses.
(7)
Other uses similar to permitted uses in this district.
(8)
Microdistillery
and/or microbrewery, provided the following stipulations are followed:
[Added by Ord. No. 04-18-16A]
(a)
In any thirty-day period no more than 500 gallons shall be distilled
and/or brewed and received.
(b)
All building codes currently adopted by the City of Mendota are implemented
and abided by.
(c)
All federal, state and local licenses, permits and codes are adhered
to.
(d)
Tasting room and retail sales will be allowed.
C.
Floor area ratio: not to exceed 2.0; except where 10% or more of
the lot area is reserved and maintained as public open area (paved
for pedestrian use or landscaped), the floor area may be increased
by 0.1 for each 1% of lot area (in excess of 10%) reserved as public
open area.
D.
Building height: no height limitations.
The B-3 Service Business District is intended to accommodate
a wide range of specialized commercial and business uses, including
highway-oriented service and commercial-recreation types of establishments
to serve a trade area embracing the City and intercommunity traffic
through the City.
A.
Permitted uses. The following uses are permitted in the B-3 District:
[Amended by Ord. No. 04-17-00A; Ord. No. 04-06-09; Ord. No. 04-06-15A]
(1)
Alphabetical list.
All uses as permitted in the B-2 District
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Amusement establishments: bowling alleys, billiard parlors,
gymnasiums, swimming pools, skating rinks, and miniature, pitch and
putt, par-3 or standard courses, golf driving ranges, swimming pools
and clubs and recreation centers containing one or more of the above
use.
| |
Animal hospitals
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Auction rooms
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Automobile and truck sales establishments
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Automobile service stations
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Bakeries, including sale of bakery products to restaurants,
clubs, hotels, institutions and similar establishments
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Battery and tire sales and service establishments
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Blueprinting and photocopy establishments
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Boat sales, rentals, storage, and repair, including sales and
service of marine motors, boat parts and accessories and boat fuels
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Building material sales with outdoor storage, when the area
for outside storage is completely surrounded by a uniformly painted
solid fence or wall eight feet in height, and no storage shall project
higher than the height of the fence or wall
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Catering establishments
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Clothing and costume rental shops
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Club or lodges, private, fraternal, or religious
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Contractors' offices and shops
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Drive-in establishments, except theaters
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Dry-cleaning and laundry establishments, provided that not more
than 2,500 square feet of floor area shall be devoted to dry-cleaning,
pressing, or laundering processes other than self-service coin-operated
facilities
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Employment agencies
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Exterminating shops
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Feed, fertilizer and seed stores
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Fraternal, philanthropic, and eleemosynary institutions
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Fruit and vegetable stands
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Fuel and ice retail sales establishments with no outside storage
and liquid fuels are stored in underground tanks
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Garages, public, including painting, body and fender work and
motor rebuilding
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Greenhouses, garden centers, and nurseries, retail and wholesale
sales
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Highway maintenance shops and yards
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Hospitals
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Laboratories, medical, dental, optical
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Linen, towel, or diaper service establishments
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Live bait stores
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Machine, sheet metal, or welding shops, provided a building
for such a use shall contain not more than 5,000 square feet of floor
area, and operations are within the enclosed building, and glare from
welding operations is not visible from outside the building
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Machinery and equipment sales establishments, construction and
agriculture
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Mail order houses, order and service centers
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Meat markets, including sale of meats to restaurants, clubs,
hotels, institutions, and similar establishments
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Meeting halls, convention or exhibition halls
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Mobile homes and trailer sales establishments
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Model homes or garage display and sales
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Monument sales
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Motels or hotels
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Motorcycle sales
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Newspaper distribution agencies, for home delivery and retail
trade
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Offices, general or professional
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Packing and crating establishments.
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Parcel delivery stations
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Pet service, domestic
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Pet shops
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Plumbing, electrical or heating, fixtures and equipment, sales,
service and repair establishments
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Printing, publishing or lithography establishments, maximum
gross floor area of 6,000 square feet
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Public utility and governmental service uses
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Religious institutions, churches, chapels, temples, synagogues,
convents, monasteries and theological schools
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Research laboratories
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Rest homes, nursing homes, sanitariums, and institutions for
children and the aged
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Restaurants, including entertainment, dancing, and serving of
alcoholic beverages
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Schools, commercial or trade, including those teaching music,
dance, business, commercial, or technical subjects when operations
do not involve danger of fire and explosion, or objectionable noise,
vibration, smoke, dust, odor, glare, heat, or other similar influences
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Self-service stores, coin-operated vending machines
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Sheet metal shops
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Taverns
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Taxidermists
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Temporary buildings for construction purposes for a period not
to exceed the duration of construction.
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Training centers, engineering or sales
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Wholesale and warehouse establishments, except for the sales
or storage of flammable liquids, materials or gases, except those
that are in the original sealed containers
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B.
Conditional uses. The following conditional uses are permitted in
the B-3 District:
[Added by Ord. No. 04-06-09[1]]
(1)
Other uses similar to the above permitted uses.
(2)
Automobile laundries.
(3)
Garages, public, including painting, body and fender work and motor
rebuilding.
(4)
Helipads, public or private, provided the area dedicated to said
helipad is at least one acre in size.
(5)
Open sales lots.
(6)
Radio and television towers, receiving or transmitting.
(7)
Single-family dwellings when designed as an integral part of a building,
the principal use of which is a permitted or conditional use, and
when occupied by the proprietor of such use.
(8)
Theaters, outdoor, provided that vehicular entrance and exit driveways
intersect with a secondary or primary thoroughfare and traffic signal
lights or other means of traffic control are provided. Reservoir parking
spaces for temporary parking of automobiles of patrons awaiting entrance
shall be provided on the lot, in the amount of not less than the number
of parking spaces equivalent to 10% of the vehicular capacity of the
theater. No building or structure shall be located nearer than 100
feet to a residence district boundary line. Artificial illumination
shall be arranged in such manner that direct rays of light shall not
beam upon adjoining properties and streets.
(9)
Accessory uses customarily incidental to the above conditional uses,
including but not limited to signs, off-street parking and off-street
loading.
C.
Plan of operation. All uses in this district shall be designed to encourage safe and efficient traffic flow and physical compatibility with uses existing on adjoining properties. The Building Inspector shall review building and site development plans for conformance to these objectives. Because of the unique traffic-generative nature of some of the permitted uses in Subsection A above, prior to the issuance of a zoning certificate, the Building Inspector may forward copies of all plans to the Plan Commission for review. Following its review, the Plan Commission shall by written report advise the Building Inspector that 1) the proposed development scheme is in accord with foregoing standards and objectives of the B Districts, or 2) the proposed development scheme is not in accord with the foregoing standards and objectives of the B Districts and that design changes, to be specified, must be made in the application prior to the issuance of a zoning certificate. The Plan Commission may also require such additional plans or details from the applicant as may be necessary to adequately review the proposed development.[2]
D.
Lot area and lot width: except as may herein otherwise be required
for a specific permitted or conditional use, not less than 15,000
square feet in area and 100 feet in depth.
E.
Floor area ratio: not to exceed 1.0.