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~, <br />The Applicant received a CL7' from the Zoning Administrator for a previous business location at 7980 <br />Atriador Valley Boulevard on February 28, 1996. Tri-Valley Martial Arts moved to the project location in <br />2001. The business was contacted by the Dublin Zoning Enforcement Division last year for illegal signs <br />and for operating a business without a CUP. The Applicant has removed the signage and submitted an <br />application for this CUP to legalize the use, as required by the Zoning Ordinance. <br />A'~IALYSIS: <br />The Tri-Valley Martial Arts studio and youth center can be categorized as both an indoor recreation <br />facility and as a community facilityldaycaze center because it shares some of the characteristics of each. <br />Both community facilities and in-door recreation facilities require a Conditional Use Permit pursuant to <br />the Zoning Ordinance. . <br />Parking Analvsis <br />City Staff reviewed the existing shared pazking condition in the shopping center (Attachment 3). The <br />existing parking lot provides approximately 500 spaces within. a 450-foot radius of the subject site (an <br />approximately 5 minute walk within the same parking area). The required pazking for the martial arts <br />studio is 61 parking spaces. With the addition of the proposed martial arts studio, the combination of uses <br />in the shopping center would require 516 spaces, according to the Zoning Ordinance's Off-Street Parking <br />and Loading Regulations. <br />The Zoning Ordinance allows reductions of required pazking for individual uses (Section 8.76.050.E} <br />under certain conditions. In Section 8.76.OSO.E, a reduction in required parking maybe made if a parking <br />study analyzes the parking demand of similar uses, demonstrating that the required standards are <br />excessive and proposing an alternative standard which would ensure that there is not a parking deficiency <br />and that overflow parking would not adversely impact adjacent uses. <br />Pursuant to Section 8.76.050.E, the City's Traffic Engineer reviewed a Parking Study (Attachment 3) <br />which analyzed the demand generated by similar uses and found that the demand is less than the parking <br />spaces required in the Zoning Ordinance. In addition, the experience of Tri-Valley Martial Arts business <br />stated that the required pazking standard was excessive in this case because so many students of the school <br />aze dropped off by their parents or transported by Tri-Valley Martial Arts in the business' 15-passenger <br />van. The Traffic Engineer found that the proposed alternative parking standard in the Parking Study was <br />appropriate because it linked parking demand to the number of students and employees. The Trafnc <br />Engineer determined that the alternative standard would ensure that there would not be a pazking <br />deficiency and that overflow parking would not impact any adjacent use because, as conditioned, the <br />martial arts studio is limited to 40 students and five employees at any one time (Condition 1). <br />In conclusion, the City's Traffic Engineer reviewed the shortage of 16 parking spaces. The City Traffic <br />Engineer determined that a reduction of 16 from the martial arts center requirement through limiting class <br />size and employees, would satisfy the p40 students and to five employeestat any one~tiine (Coed tion 1) <br />of Approval would Iunit class size to <br />Therefore, Staff recommends a pazking reduction for the martial arts studio from 61 parking spaces to ~ 5 <br />spaces. <br />Student Loading Area <br />The proposed Martial Arts Youth Center drop-off and pick-up pattern is comparable to a daycare facility. <br />Section 8.76.080.D of the Zoning Ordinance requires the provision of an adequate loading area for drop- <br />off a.-~d pick-up of students for a daycare center (for fifteen or more children). The requirement specifies <br />_-, ~;. ~-, Page? <br />