19.96.020   Definitions of Specialized Terms and Phrases.
   Build-to-line: A line parallel to a property line where a primary structure façade is required to be located.
   Façade: The exterior wall of a building that is set along a Frontage Line (see Frontage Line).
   Frontage Line: Those lot lines that coincide with the edge of a public frontage.
   Mixed-Use Building: A building type that allows for commercial or retail on the ground floor and residential on upper floors.
   Mixed-Use Building: A building type that allows for commercial or retail on the ground floor and residential on upper floors.
   Streetscreen or streetwall: a freestanding wall built along the frontage line, or coplanar with the facade for the purpose of masking a parking lot from street.
   Studio - Art, Dance, Martial Arts, Music, etc.: Small scale facilities, typically accommodating no more than two groups of students at a time, in no more than two instructional spaces. (Larger facilities are included under the definition of "Schools - Specialized Education and Training.") Examples of these facilities include: individual and group instruction and training in the arts; production rehearsal; photography, and the processing of photographs produced only by users of the studio facilities; martial arts training studios; gymnastics instruction, and aerobics and gymnastics studios with no other fitness facilities or equipment. Also includes production studios for individual musicians, painters, sculptors, photographers, and other artists.
   Townhouse: A building with two or more two- or three-story dwellings having multiple common vertical walls on one or more of the units.
   Traditional Neighborhood Development: A compact, mixed-use neighborhood in which residential, commercial and civil buildings are within close proximity to each other.
   Transect: A range of population and building densities from more rural to more urban physical conditions.
(Ord. 2358 §22)