There exist at the present time, and will be established in the future, unique situations which permit street naming and premises numbering not in conformity with the provisions of this chapter. It will be the responsibility of the Building Official and the Director of the Planning Department, or their designated representatives, to review such unique situations in order to determine whether an exception to the provisions of this chapter can be made. In such cases, the following criteria of street naming and premises numbering shall be adhered to:
.010 Residential Complexes. Residential complexes made up of either single- or multiple-family residential structures, wherein one or more of those structures do not front on a dedicated public street or an officially named private street, may be assigned building numbers in accordance with the nearest and most appropriate street. The building numbers shall advance sequentially along the primary access right-of-way through the complex. The building numbers shall be consistently either odd or even, as provided for in subsection 15.08.030.040.
.020 Curving and Meandering Streets. If a curving or meandering street runs predominantly in one direction, it may have one name and one sequence of premises numbers; however, a curving or meandering street that is intersected by one or more other streets, or that changes direction forty-five degrees or more, may be assigned another name, the appropriate directional designation, and the appropriate premises numbers in accordance with the provisions of this chapter.
.030 Cul-de-Sacs. A cul-de-sac less than one hundred feet in length may have the same name and be numbered in the same numerical sequence as the street which it intersects.
.040 Closed Loop Streets. Closed loop streets less than one thousand feet in length, with only one point of intersection with another street, may have the same name and numerical sequence throughout. Premises numbering shall be in sequence, with even numbers on the outside and odd numbers on the inside; however, open-ended loop streets which intersect another street at more than one point shall not have the same name throughout. (Ord. 3216 § 2 (part); October 9, 1973: Ord. 5919 § 59; June 8, 2004.)