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PUD-136, Mall Residential Project Planning Commission <br />23 of 34 <br />Zoning and Uses Conformance <br />City Council approved the rezoning of the site in January of 2012. The approved zoning <br />designation for the residential portion of the property is Planned Unit Development – Mixed <br />Use (PUD-MU). The approved uses for the project site include multi-family residential <br />development; thus, the project conforms with the current zoning designation. <br /> <br />Housing Site Development Standards and Design Guidelines (HSDG) <br />Density and Unit Mix <br />The 5th Cycle Housing Element and 2012 Design Standards Guidelines require a minimum <br />density of 40 units per acre for the approximately six-acre project site – this density would be <br />met by the project. <br /> <br />Under State Law, and the Pleasanton Municipal Code (PMC), the City must provide for <br />increases in residential density (known as “density bonuses”) and provide incentives or <br />concessions (generally relaxation or waivers in development standards) for housing <br />developments that provide a specified percentage of affordable units.2 Affordable units are <br />those offered for sale or rent at rates determined “affordable” to households in various income <br />categories (low-, very low-, and moderate-income), typically well below the cost of market-rate <br />units. <br /> <br />Controlling State law establishes varying amounts of density bonus and incentives or <br />concessions depending upon the percentage of affordable units and range of affordability, as <br />well as special consideration for certain types of residents (i.e. seniors, foster youth, college <br />students). The amount of density bonus is generally calculated according to the following <br />summary in Table 4. <br /> <br />As part of the application, the applicant is proposing to provide 24 percent of the proposed <br />base units (240 x 24% = 58 units total) to be restricted to low-income households, which would <br />allow for a 50 percent density bonus (240 base units and 120 density bonus units for a total of <br />360 units). The 2012 Housing Site Development Standards and Guidelines require a minimum <br />of 10 percent of the affordable units to be three-bedroom, a minimum of 35 percent of units to <br />be two-bedroom, and the remainder to be one-bedroom or studios – the project would meet <br />these requirements. <br /> <br />As noted above, the proposed 240 base units for the project conforms to the 40 units per acre <br />requirement. The 50 percent density bonus, resulting in an additional 120 units, increases the <br />project to 360 units total, which results in a project density of 60 units per acre. Per State <br />Density Bonus law, density bonus units shall not create inconsistency with underlying density. <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />2 As part of the 2012 Housing Element Update, the City was required to update the PMC to include a Density <br />Bonus Ordinance to be consistent with State Density Bonus Law. PMC Chapter 17.38 Density Bonus was <br />adopted by Ordinance 2082 in 2013. Subsequently, the state legislature has changed State Density Bonus Law <br />several times, and the City is subject to those state-wide changes even if PMC 17.38 is in conflict.