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without any discretionary review); and for other types of projects, to the extent the City may <br />have discretion to approve or deny an application, such approval or denial may only be based <br />on conformance to objective, uniformly verifiable standards. <br />As mentioned in the Executive Summary section of this report, the City is undertaking the effort <br />to modify existing subjective standards into those that are objective, starting with the 2012 <br />Housing DG, which are anticipated to ultimately include sites that are rezoned as part of the <br />current (6th Cycle) Housing Element update. Additionally, having applied these existing <br />Housing DG to a number of projects since adoption of the document, there are areas where <br />staff and the consultants suggest guidance could be improved or augmented to ensure that the <br />document is comprehensive. Because additional sites for 6th Cycle Housing Element have not <br />yet been selected, and because they may warrant some site-specific considerations to be <br />reflected in the updated Housing DG, staff recommends waiting to adopt the comprehensive <br />set of revised guidelines until the list of 6th Cycle sites is finalized. <br />As noted, it is also a key goal of this effort to ensure an appropriate set of objective standards <br />are in place for smaller-scale multifamily residential development, since similar requirements of <br />state law limit (or are expected to further limit) the City's discretionary review authority. Thus, in <br />the near future, staff will be bringing forward to the Commission objective design standards for <br />other types of residential development, such as two-, three-, and four-plexes. Although staff <br />believes it would be advisable to develop and adopt a comprehensive set of standards for <br />smaller-scale projects, along with the above-mentioned larger multifamily project standards, it <br />may make sense to accelerate some selected standards, such as those applicable to projects <br />developed under SB 9 if it is passed into law. <br />Design Training <br />The Planning Commission participated in a design training led by VMWP in January 2019 that <br />focused on critical issues and best practices for project review, including site planning, design <br />concepts and architectural design considerations for both larger-scale and smaller-scale infill <br />projects. As part of the exercise, VMWP provided a critique of recent projects in Pleasanton. <br />This critique generally found that most projects had met the goal and intent of the 2012 <br />Housing DG and were generally well-designed and livable projects, a point of view with which <br />the Commission concurred. <br />However, VWMP did note a few areas of possible improvement in some projects, such as <br />paying more attention to transitions/interface between commercial and residential portions of <br />mixed-use projects, upholding the hierarchy of streets and thoroughfares that was <br />compromised in some instances, and recognizing tradeoffs in site planning, vehicular parking, <br />and range of unit types and densities. <br />Self-Guided Tour <br />As noted above, the Planning Commission and members of the public were invited to <br />participate in a self-guided tour of recently constructed projects of varying size and density, <br />with the goal of determining key area of interest and concern for the development of the <br />objective design standards. The tour also provided an opportunity for in-person observations of <br />the projects and provide both general feedback and respond to specific questions about each <br />site. <br />P20-0989, Objective Design Standards Planning Commission <br />3 of 14