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16 ATTACHMENT 2 REDLINE
City of Pleasanton
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16 ATTACHMENT 2 REDLINE
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8/17/2007 11:27:47 AM
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CITY CLERK
CITY CLERK - TYPE
STAFF REPORTS
DOCUMENT DATE
8/21/2007
DESTRUCT DATE
15 Y
DOCUMENT NO
16 ATTACHMENT 2, REDLINE
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Draft <br />2. LAND USE ELEMENT <br />PURPOSE <br />The purpose of the Land Use Element is to provide policies and aland=use map indicating the planned <br />location, amount, and intensity of residential, commercial, and industrial lands, as well as to provide <br />guidance for the use of public and open_space lands. ~pPolicies need to be considered together <br />with the General Plan Map to understand the City's intentions for future development and <br />conservation. The General Plan Map its-de icts the policies contained throughout the 2005 <br />Pleasanton Plan 2025 (General Plan 2005-2025) in graphic form. T~ ~~ ~~~~---'~~' The Man <br />illustrates ien-a€-the City's plan for a desirable pattern of land use throughout the Planning Area. <br />SUSTAINABILITY <br />As stated in the General Plan Vision, the City of Pleasanton embraces the concept of sustainable <br />development. A sustainable city strives to draw from the environment only those resources that axe <br />necessary and that can be used or recycled perpetually, or returned to the environment in a form that <br />nature can use to generate more resources. Relating the concept of sustainability to land use includes <br />encouragin>? infill development and planning the city such that its layout would increase walking and <br />bicycle riding, and minimize vehicle-miles traveled and energy usage. In addition, the City is <br />committed to constructing new public facilities using "green-building" practices that would reduce <br />energy usage, as well as reduiring that new residential and commercial land uses do the same. The <br />concept of sustainability also relates to the economic and fiscal sustainability of the City in the long <br />term. This chapter seeks to ensure that land-use polices and the Land Use Map nroT vide support for <br />fiscal and economic sustainability. <br />EXISTING ""'^ CI ITI IDC CONDITIONS <br />Pleasanton is well on its way to achieving its goal of awell-planned and complete community at <br />General Plan buildout. The following summarizes existing community conditions. See General <br />Plan Land Uses below, for -xml-future plans for eland uses within the Planning Area. <br />Residential Neighborhoods <br />Man people relocateit3g-ir3 to Pleasanton for its attractive and <br />well-planned neighborhoods. Pleasanton currently contains many residential neighborhoods (see <br />Table 2-1 and Figure 2-1) --that offer a variety of environments and lifestyles. In general, <br />residential development is less dense at the Urban Growth Boundary. The oldest neighborhood is in <br />the Downtown ~atand features buildings dating back to the 1860s. <br />A major aspect of Pleasanton's neighborhood environment i~has been the separation between <br />residential and non-residential uses. , <br />LU element 082107 redline 2-1 <br />
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