8 Glossary
—A— |
garages |
gazebos |
greenhouses |
parking lots (except parking for single-unit dwellings, duplexes and triplexes) |
spas and hot tubs |
storage sheds |
studios |
swimming pools |
tennis and other on-site sport courts |
workshops |
Also includes the indoor storage of automobiles (including their incidental restoration and repair), personal recreational vehicles and other personal property, accessory to a residential use. Does not include home satellite dish and other receiving antennas for earth-based TV and radio broadcasts; see "Communications facilities." |
—B— |
—C— |
—D— |
—E— |
—F— |
—G— |
—H— |
—I— |
bridges and major thoroughfares |
curb, gutter and sidewalk |
fences |
fire hydrants |
public utilities |
railroad crossings |
sanitary sewer facilities |
storm drainage facilities |
storm drain and sanitary sewer pump stations |
street signs |
street structural section |
street lighting |
traffic signals |
tree wells and sprinkler system |
water facilities |
Integrated centers do not include parcels that have been developed as single entities before a discretionary application(s) that would create an integrated center was deemed complete. |
—J— |
—K— |
—M— |
RDC | RDM | RCM | DCM |
|---|---|---|---|
Retailer or | Retailer or | Retailer or | Distributor or |
Retailer – Non-Storefront | Retailer – Non-Storefront | Retailer – Non-Storefront | Distributor – Transport Only |
Distributor or | Distributor or | Cultivation | Cultivation |
Distributor – Transport Only | Distributor – Transport Only | (less than 10,000 sq. ft.) | (less than 10,000 sq. ft.) |
Cultivation | Manufacturer | Manufacturer | Manufacturer |
(less than 10,000 sq. ft.) | (Level 1 Type 6) | (Level 1 Type 6) | (Level 1 Type 6) |
—N— |
—O— |
Christmas trees, pumpkins or the sale of other seasonal items in compliance with Section 16.80.110 (Christmas tree/holiday/sales facilities) |
farmers' markets |
produce stands in compliance with Section 16.80.280 (Produce stands, commercial) |
community gardens in compliance with Section 16.80.130 |
urban agriculture produce stands in compliance with Section 16.80.285 |
semi-annual sales of art/handcrafted items in conjunction with community festivals or art shows |
sidewalk or parking lot sales longer than one weekend |
retail sales from individual vehicles in temporary locations outside the public right-of-way |
Temporary outdoor retail sales are subject to a temporary activity permit in compliance with Chapter 16.164 (Temporary Activity Permits), unless otherwise identified or exempt. Does not include motorized food wagons (Section 16.80.020(B)(4)) or mobile vendors (Section 16.80.020(B)(3)). |
—P— |
—Q— |
—R— |
—S— |
—T— |
—U— |
—V— |
—W— |
—X— |
—Y— |
—Z— |
Residential Dwelling Units. Dwelling units designed for occupancy by one household. |
Single-Unit Dwelling, Detached. A dwelling unit that is designed for occupancy by one household with private yards on all sides and located on a separate lot from any other unit (except an accessory dwelling unit, where permitted). This subclassification includes individual manufactured housing units. |
Single-Unit Dwelling, Attached. A dwelling unit that is designed for occupancy by one household located on a separate lot from any other unit (except an accessory dwelling unit, where permitted), and is attached through common walls to more than one dwelling on abutting lots, such as half-plexes, townhomes and condominiums. |
Multi-Unit Dwelling. Two or more attached or detached dwelling units on a single lot. Types of multi-unit dwellings can include duplexes, tri-plexes, four-plexes, multiple detached residential units, and apartment buildings. |
Accessory Dwelling Unit. |
Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU). An attached or a detached residential dwelling unit which provides complete independent living facilities for one or more persons. It shall include permanent provisions for living, sleeping, eating, cooking, and sanitation on the same parcel as a single-unit dwelling unit is situated; further accessory dwelling units are as defined in California Government Code Section 66313(a). |
Junior Accessory Dwelling Unit (JADU). A unit that is no more than 500 square feet in size and contained entirely within a single-unit residence. A junior accessory dwelling unit may include separate sanitation facilities or may share sanitation facilities with the existing structure as prescribed by Government Code Section 66313(b). |
Caretaker Unit. A dwelling unit on the site of a nonresidential use, occupied by the business owner or employees and their immediate families employed for the purpose of on-site management, maintenance, or upkeep. Business guests/employees on temporary assignment are allowed to reside in the unit. |
Co-Living. A residential facility where living accommodations are individual secure rooms, with or without separate kitchen or bathroom facilities for each room, and rented to one or two-person households. This use classification includes extended stay hotels intended for long-term occupancy (more than 30 days) but excludes hotels and motels, and residential care facilities. |
Emergency Shelter. Housing with minimal supportive services for homeless persons that is limited to occupancy of six months or less by a homeless person. |
Employee Housing (for Farmworkers). Has the same meaning as "employee housing" as set forth in Health and Safety Code § 17008 for farmworkers. |
Family Day Care. A day care facility licensed by the State of California, located in a residential unit where the resident of the dwelling provides care and supervision for children under the age of 18 for periods of less than 24 hours a day. |
Small. A facility that provides care for eight or fewer children, including children who reside at the home and are under the age of 10 (California Health and Safety Code Section 1597.44). |
Large. A facility that provides care for seven to 14 children, including children who reside at the home and are under the age of 10 (California Health and Safety Code Section 1597.465). |
Group Residential. Shared living quarters without separate kitchen or bathroom facilities for each room or unit, offered for rent for permanent or semi-transient residents on a weekly or longer basis. This classification includes rooming and boarding houses, dormitories, fraternity and sorority housing, convents, monasteries, and other types of organizational housing operated by institutions or organizations but excludes hotels and motels and residential care facilities. |
Live-Work Space. A unit that combines a work space and residential occupancy occupied and used by a single household in structure that has been constructed for such use or converted from commercial or industrial use and structurally modified to accommodate residential occupancy and work activity in compliance with the California Building Code. The working space is reserved for and regularly used by one or more occupants of the unit. |
Low Barrier Navigation Center. A Housing First, low barrier, service-enriched shelter focused on moving people into permanent housing that provides temporary living facilities while case managers connect individuals experiencing homelessness to income, public benefits, health services, shelter, and housing (California Government Code Section 65660, et seq.). |
Mobile Home Park. A development occupied by manufactured housing units, including facilities and amenities used in common by residents who rent, lease, or own spaces for manufactured housing units through a subdivision, cooperative, condominium, or other form of resident ownership. |
Residential Care Facilities. A facility licensed by the State of California to provide living accommodations, 24-hour care for persons requiring personal services, supervision, protection, or assistance with daily tasks. Facilities may include shared living quarters, with or without a private bathroom or kitchen facilities. This classification includes both for-profit and not-for-profit institutions, but excludes supportive housing and transitional housing. |
Small. A facility that is licensed by the State of California to provide care for six or fewer persons. |
Large. A facility that is licensed by the State of California to provide care for more than six persons. |
Residential Facility, Assisted Living. A facility that provides a combination of housing and supportive services for the elderly or functionally impaired, including personalized assistance, congregate dining, recreational, and social activities. These facilities may include medical services. Examples include assisted living facilities, retirement homes, and retirement communities. These facilities typically consist of individual units or apartments, sometimes containing kitchen facilities and common amenities. The residents in these facilities require varying levels of assistance. |
Supportive Housing. Dwelling units with no limit on length of stay that are occupied by the target population, and that are linked to on-site or off-site services that assist the supportive housing resident in retaining the housing, improving their health status, and maximizing their ability to live and, where possible, work in the community (California Government Code Section 65582(h)). |
Transitional Housing. Buildings configured as rental housing developments, but operated under program requirements that require the termination of assistance and recirculating of the assisted unit to another eligible program recipient at a predetermined future point in time that shall be no less than six months from the beginning of the assistance (California Government Code Section 65582(j)). |
Campgrounds and RV Parks. An open-air facility, where recreational vehicle or camping spaces are rented, or held out for rent, for overnight stay in tents, trailers, or recreational vehicles for 30 consecutive days or less. |
Colleges and Trade Schools. Institutions of higher education primarily for adults providing curricula of a general, religious, or professional nature, granting degrees or professional certifications and including junior colleges, business and computer schools, management training, and technical and trade schools. This classification excludes instructional services such as music lessons. |
Commercial Entertainment and Recreation. Provision of participant or spectator entertainment to the public. These classifications may include incidental restaurants, snack bars, and other related food and beverage services to patrons. |
Card Rooms. Business, activity, or enterprise conducting card games, as defined in Title 5 of SMC. Does not apply to any bona fide nonprofit society club, fraternal, labor, or other organizations having adopted bylaws and duly elected directors and members having exclusive use of these facilities at no charge, and whose operation is incidental to the main purpose of the organization. Does not include bridge clubs, chess clubs, and other nongambling board games (see Indoor Entertainment and Recreation). |
Cinema/Theater. A facility for the indoor display of films, motion pictures, or dramatic, musical, or live performances. |
Indoor Entertainment and Recreation. Establishments providing predominantly participant sports, fitness, indoor amusement and entertainment services conducted within an enclosed building, including electronic amusement centers. Typical uses include bowling alleys, billiard parlors, bingo establishments, arcades, health clubs, ice and roller skating rinks, indoor racquetball courts, athletic clubs, physical fitness centers, indoor arenas, and nongambling establishments providing facilities for the participation in the game of bridge, chess, checkers, backgammon, or other board games. |
Outdoor Entertainment. Predominantly spectator uses, conducted in open or partially enclosed or screened facilities. Typical uses include amusement parks, sports stadiums and arenas, racetracks, amphitheaters, and drive-in theaters. |
Outdoor Recreation. Predominantly participant sports conducted in open or partially enclosed or screened facilities. Typical uses include driving ranges, golf courses, sports complexes, miniature golf courses, tennis clubs, outdoor batting cages, swimming pools, archery ranges, and riding stables. |
Private Entertainment Facilities. Business with one or more separate, individual facilities for viewing or participating in games or videos. Includes individual viewing booths for movies and/or individual arcade games. |
Community Assembly. A facility for public or private meetings and gatherings, including community centers, union halls, meeting halls, banquet facilities, and membership organizations. This classification includes the use of functionally-related facilities for the use of members and attendees, such as kitchens, multi-purpose rooms, classrooms, and storage. |
Cultural Institutions. A public or private institution and/or associated facility engaged in activities to promote aesthetic and educational interest among the community that are open to the public on a regular basis. This classification includes performing arts centers, event and conference spaces, spaces for display or preservation of objects of interest in the arts or sciences, libraries, museums, historical sites, aquariums, zoos, and botanical gardens. This classification does not include schools or colleges and trade schools. |
Day Care Centers. Establishments providing non-medical care for persons on a less than 24-hour basis other than family day care. This classification includes nursery schools, preschools, and day care facilities for children or adults, and any other day care facility licensed by the State of California. |
Hospitals and Clinics. State-licensed facilities providing medical, surgical, psychiatric, or emergency medical services to sick or injured persons. This classification includes facilities for inpatient or outpatient treatment, including substance-abused programs, as well as training, research, and administrative services for patients and employees. This classification excludes veterinaries and animal hospitals (see Animal Care, Sales, and Services). |
Clinic. A facility providing medical, psychiatric, or surgical service for sick or injured persons exclusively on an out-patient basis including emergency treatment, diagnostic services, administration, and surgical and related services to patients who are not lodged overnight except for testing related to sleep conditions. Services may be available without a prior appointment. This classification includes licensed facilities offering substance abuse treatment, blood banks and plasma centers, and emergency medical services offered exclusively on an out-patient basis. This classification does not include private medical and dental offices that typically require appointments and are usually smaller scale (see Offices). |
Hospitals. A facility providing medical, psychiatric, or surgical services for sick or injured persons, primarily on an inpatient basis, and including supplementary facilities for outpatient and emergency treatment, diagnostic services, training, research, administration, and services to patients, employees, or visitors. The institutions are to be licensed by the State of California to provide surgical and medical services. |
Skilled Nursing Facility. A State-licensed facility or a distinct part of a hospital that provides continuous skilled nursing and supportive care to patients whose primary need requires the availability of skilled nursing care on an extended basis. The facility provides 24-hour inpatient care and, at a minimum, includes physician, nursing, dietary, pharmaceutical services, and an activity program. |
Instructional Services. Establishments that offer specialized programs in personal growth and development such as music, martial arts, vocal, yoga, dancing, art, photography, and academic instruction. Attendance is typically limited to hourly classes rather than full-day instruction. The establishments do not grant diplomas or degrees, though instruction could provide credits for diplomas or degrees granted by other institutions. This classification also includes tutoring facilities which offer academic instruction to individuals or groups. |
Live Entertainment. Any type of music, dancing or show involving one or more persons playing musical instruments or recorded music, acting, singing, reading, speaking, dancing, modeling, wrestling, or performing in any way to entertain the customers of an establishment, including, but not limited to, auctions, raffles, or contests; karaoke singing; music played by a disc jockey; dinner theater; modeling of clothes, lingerie, and swimsuits; oil and mud wrestling; music performed by bands or soloists; poetry reading; dancing (by employees or customers); and stand-up comedy. |
Parking Lots and Structures. Surface lots and structures used primarily for the temporary parking of operable motor vehicles, including parking lots, parking structures, and park and ride lots. Does not include parking facilities that are incidental to an on-site activity. |
Parks and Recreation Facilities. Noncommercial parks, playgrounds, recreation facilities, trails, wildlife preserves, and related open spaces. This classification includes public playing fields, courts, gymnasiums, swimming pools, picnic facilities, tennis courts, golf courses, and botanical gardens, as well as related food concessions or community centers within the facilities. |
Public Safety Facilities. Facilities providing public-safety and emergency services, including police and fire protection and emergency medical services, with incidental storage, training, and maintenance facilities. |
Religious Facilities. Facilities operated by religious organizations for worship, or the promotion of religious activities and instructions; and accessory uses on the same site, including living quarters for ministers and staff, child care facilities, and temporarily up to six homeless individuals or family members. Includes churches, synagogues, mosques, temples, etc. Does not include other establishments maintained by religious organizations, including full-time educational institutions, hospitals and other potentially related operations (including a recreational camp) which are classified according to their respective activities. |
Schools. Facilities for primary or secondary education, including private and parochial schools having curricula comparable to that required in the public schools of the State of California. |
Social Service Facilities. Facilities providing a variety of supportive services for disabled and homeless individuals and other targeted groups on a less than 24-hour basis. Examples of services provided are counseling, meal programs, clothing and personal items, personal storage lockers, showers, instructional programs, television rooms, and meeting spaces. This classification is distinguished from licensed day care centers (see Day Care Centers), clinics, and emergency shelters providing 24-hour care (see Emergency Shelter). |
Vehicle, Truck, and Heavy Equipment Training. Facilities for instructing and training students in the repair, maintenance, or operation of a variety of vehicles and heavy equipment, including automobiles, motorcycles, trucks, recreational vehicles, boats, and construction equipment. |
Adult Related Establishments. Any adult bookstore, adult hotel or motel, adult motion picture arcade, adult motion picture theater, adult video store, cabaret, sexual encounter center, or any other business or establishment that offers its patrons services or entertainment characterized by an emphasis on matter depicting, describing or relating to "specified sexual activities" or "specified anatomical areas," but not including those uses or activities, the regulation of which is preempted by State law. | |
Adult Bookstore or Novelty Store. An establishment which has more than 25% of its total sales or stock in trade materials that are distinguished or characterized by their emphasis on matter depicting, describing, or relating to "specified sexual activities" or "specified anatomical areas," as defined below. | |
Adult Hotel or Motel. A hotel, motel, or other overnight lodging establishment, which provides, through closed circuit television or other media, material which is distinguished or characterized by an emphasis on matter depicting, describing, or relating to "specified sexual activities" or "specified anatomical areas," (as defined below), for observation by patrons therein. | |
Adult Motion Picture Arcade. Any place to which the public is permitted or invited wherein coin or slug-operated or electronically, electrically, or mechanically controlled still or motion picture machines, projectors, or other image-producing devices are maintained to show images to five or fewer persons per machine at any one time, and where the images so displayed are distinguished or characterized by an emphasis on depicting or describing "specified sexual activities" or "specified anatomical areas," (as defined below), for observation by patrons therein. Includes "private entertainment facilities." | |
Adult Motion Picture Theater. An enclosed or unenclosed building or structure or portion thereof used for presenting material in the form of motion picture film, video tape, slides, or other similar means, which is distinguished or characterized by an emphasis on matter depicting, describing, or relating to "specified sexual activities" or "specified anatomical areas," (as defined below), for observation by patrons therein. | |
Adult Theater. Any theater, concert hall, auditorium, or similar commercial establishment which has more than 25% of its total sales from featuring persons who appear in a state of nudity or semi-nude condition and/or from featuring live performances, which are distinguished or characterized by an emphasis upon the exposure of specified anatomical areas or by specified sexual activities. | |
Adult Video Store. An establishment having 25% or more of its total stock in trade in video tapes for sale or rental or having viewing on the premises which contains material that is distinguished or characterized by its emphasis on matter depicting, describing, or relating to "specified sexual activities" or "specified anatomical areas," as defined below, or an establishment with a segment or section of the store devoted to the sale or display of such material. | |
Cabaret. A bar, nightclub, theater, or other establishment which features live performances by topless and/or bottomless dancers, "go-go" dancers, exotic dancers, strippers, or similar entertainers, where such performances are distinguished or characterized by an emphasis on "specified sexual activities" or "specified anatomical areas," (as defined below), for observation by patrons therein. | |
Massage Parlor. An establishment where, for any form of consideration or gratuity, massage, alcohol rub, administration or fomentations, electric or magnetic treatments, or any other treatment or manipulation of the human body occurs. Does not include massage therapists ("Medical services—Health-related facilities"); masseuses under the supervision of doctors, chiropractors, physical therapists ("Medical services—Medical-related facilities"). | |
Material. Relative to adult businesses, means and includes, but is not limited to, accessories, books, devices, magazines, pamphlets, photographs, prints, drawings, paintings, motion pictures, and video tapes, or any combination thereof. | |
Model Studio. An establishment where, for any form of consideration or gratuity, figure models who display "specified anatomical areas" (as defined below) are provided to be observed, sketched, drawn, painted, sculptured, photographed, or similarly depicted by patrons paying such consideration or gratuity, except when the patrons are in attendance at art or photography classes. | |
Sexual Encounter Center. Any business, agency, or person who, for any form of consideration or gratuity, provides a place where three or more persons may congregate, assemble, or associate for the purpose of engaging in "specified sexual activities" or exposing "specified anatomical areas." | |
Specified Anatomical Areas. Means: | |
• | Less than completely and opaquely covered human genitals or pubic region, buttock, and female breast below a point immediately above the top of the areola; and |
• | Human male genitals in a discernibly turgid state, even if completely and opaquely covered. |
Specified Sexual Activities. Means: | |
• | Human genitals in a state of sexual stimulation or arousal; |
• | Acts of human masturbation, sexual intercourse, or sodomy; |
• | Fondling or other erotic touching or sexual stimulation of human genitals, pubic region, buttock, or female breasts. |
Animal Services. Services related to the boarding and care of animals. | |
Animal Shelter and Boarding. A commercial, non-profit, or governmental facility for keeping, boarding, training, breeding, or maintaining, generally overnight or in excess of 24 hours, dogs, cats, or other household pets not owned by the owner or operator of the facility. | |
Pet Training and Day Care. Facilities providing training or non-medical care on a less than 24-hour basis for dogs, cats, or other household pets not owned by the facility operator. | |
Veterinary Clinics and Animal Hospitals. Office and medical treatment facilities used by veterinarians where animals receive medical and surgical treatment, including large and small animal veterinary clinics, and animal hospitals. This classification allows 24-hour accommodation of animals receiving medical services and treatment. | |
Automobile/Vehicle Sales and Services. Retail or wholesale businesses that sell, rent, and/or repair automobiles, boats, recreational vehicles, trucks, vans, trailers, and/or motorcycles. | |
Automobile/Vehicle Rental. Establishment providing for the rental of automobiles, light-duty trucks, and motorcycles. Typical uses include car rental agencies. | |
Automobile/Vehicle Sales and Leasing. Sale or lease, retail or wholesale, of automobiles, light trucks, motorcycles, boats, campers, motor homes, and trailers, together with associated repair services and parts sales, but excluding body repair and painting. Typical uses include automobile dealers and recreational vehicle sales agencies. | |
Automobile/Vehicle Service and Repair, Minor. The service and repair of automobiles, light-duty trucks (i.e., pickup trucks, sport utility vehicles (SUVs), vans, and minivans), and motorcycles, including the incidental sale, installation, and servicing of related equipment and parts. This classification includes the replacement of small automotive parts and liquids, smog checks, tire sales and installation, ancillary detailing services, auto radio/electronics installation, auto air conditioning/heater service, and quick-service oil, tune-up shops, and brake and muffler shops. | |
Automobile/Vehicle Repair, Major. Repair of automobiles, trucks, motor homes, boats, and recreational vehicles, that may include disassembly, removal or replacement of major components such as engines, drive trains, transmissions or axles, automotive body and fender work, vehicle painting, or other operations that generate excessive noise, objectionable odors or hazardous materials, and towing services. This classification excludes vehicle dismantling or salvaging. | |
Large Vehicle and Equipment Sales, Service, and Rental. Sales, servicing, rental, fueling, and washing of large trucks, trailers, tractors, and other equipment used for construction, moving, agricultural, or landscape gardening activities. | |
Fueling Stations. Establishments primarily engaged in retailing automotive fuels or charging of electric vehicles, which may also provide related services, such as selling automotive oils, replacement parts, and accessories; and/or providing incidental food and retail services. These facilities may include "mini-marts" and/or convenience stores that sell products, merchandise, or services that are ancillary to the primary use related to the operation of motor vehicles. | |
Towing and Impound. Establishments primarily engaged in towing light or heavy motor vehicles, both local and long distance. These establishments may provide incidental services, such as vehicle storage and emergency road repair services (for automobile dismantling, see Salvage and Wrecking). | |
Vehicle Washing. Permanent, self-service, and/or attended vehicle washing establishments, including fully mechanized facilities, including detailing services. | |
Banks and Financial Services. Financial institutions providing retail banking services. This classification includes only those institutions serving walk-in customers or clients, including banks, savings and loan institutions, credit unions, and check-cashing businesses. | |
Business Support Services. Establishments providing goods and services to other businesses on a fee or contract basis, including printing and copying, blueprint services, advertising and mailing, office equipment rental and leasing, office security, custodial services, photofinishing, model building, and taxi services or delivery services with two or fewer fleet vehicles on site. | |
Commercial Kitchen. Establishments preparing and/or packaging food for off-site consumption, including catering kitchens, ghost kitchens, and incubator kitchens. This classification excludes establishments with an industrial character in terms of processes employed, waste produced, water used, and traffic generation. Also excluded are retail establishments such as bakeries and small-scale artisan or boutique food businesses. Commercial kitchens shall be considered equivalent to restaurant for land use purposes. | |
Commissary. An establishment in which food, containers, equipment, or supplies are stored or handled for use in motorized food wagons or ice cream vehicles. Includes establishments used as a base of operations for one or more motorized food wagons or push carts, where such unit or units and/or equipment are serviced, cleaned, supplied and/or maintained. | |
Commissary Kitchen. A kitchen facility that is incorporated into, and as part of, a commissary only. This type of kitchen may be used by food truck operators that are based from the commissary, and may also be used by caterers to prepare food for delivery to events or customers. | |
Drive-Through Facility. A motor vehicle drive-through facility which is a commercial building or structure or portion thereof which is designed or used to provide goods or services to the occupants of motor vehicles. This classification includes banks and other financial services, fast food establishments, drugstores, and film deposit/pick-up establishments, but excludes drive-in theaters (see Commercial Entertainment and Recreation), drive-in restaurants where orders are taken and food is served and eaten in cars parked in individual parking spaces (see Eating and Drinking Establishments), service stations, or car-wash operations (see Automobile/Vehicle Sales and Services). | |
Eating and Drinking Establishments. Businesses primarily engaged in serving prepared food and/or beverages for consumption on or off the premises. | |
Bars and Night Clubs. Businesses serving alcoholic beverages for consumption on the premises as a primary use, including on-sale service of alcohol including beer, wine, and mixed drinks. This subclassification includes establishments where alcoholic beverages are sold and consumed but are not operated and maintained as bona fide eating establishments. | |
Food and Beverage Tasting. Businesses serving samples of food or beverages as an accessory use associated with a food or beverage production facility or retail sales. | |
Restaurant. Establishments where food and beverages are served to patrons for consumption on-site or off-site, including full-service, limited-service, and take-out/delivery businesses. This subclassification includes cafes, coffee shops, delicatessens, fast-food businesses, and bakeries that have tables for on-site consumption of products, as well as establishments licensed, operated and maintained as a bona fide eating place that serve alcoholic beverages. It excludes catering services, commissary kitchens, and commercial kitchens that do not sell food or beverages for on-site consumption. | |
Food Truck Park. A permanent open-air facility that is designed to accommodate two or more operating motorized food wagons to offer food or beverages for sale to the public located on a developed lot or parcel(s). The food truck park is strictly for the sale of foods or beverages. The scale of uses that encompass the food truck park include, food truck pod, food truck hub, and food truck plaza. | |
Food Truck Pod. A permanent open-air facility that is designed to accommodate two to five operating motorized food wagons to offer food or beverages for sale to the public located on a developed lot or parcel(s). | |
Food Truck Hub. A permanent open-air facility that is designed to accommodate six to 10 operating motorized food wagons to offer food or beverages for sale to the public located on a developed lot or parcel(s). | |
Food Truck Plaza. A permanent open-air facility that is designed to accommodate 11 or more operating motorized food wagons to offer food or beverages for sale to the public located on a developed lot or parcel(s). | |
Food Truck Park/Commissary Co-Location. A land use intended to accommodate Motorized Food Wagons that offer food or beverages for sale to the public and provide the required commissary services to those motorized food wagons residing at the site. | |
Funeral Facilities and Services. Facilities providing interment services. Includes: | |
Cemeteries. Establishments engaged in subdividing property into cemetery lots and offering burial plots or air space for sale. Includes animal cemeteries, cemetery, mausoleum, cinerarium, and columbarium operations. | |
Mortuaries. Establishment where deceased are prepared for burial or cremation, and funeral services may be conducted. Does not include crematoriums. | |
Funeral Homes. Establishment where funeral services are conducted without preparation of deceased for burial or cremation. Excludes religious facilities. | |
Crematorium. Facility used for the incineration of human or animal remains, excluding activities related to funeral homes. Excludes activities related to mortuaries. | |
Smoking Lounge. A business which primarily serves tobacco or non-tobacco products (e.g., fruit, vegetables) whereby patrons, who are 18 years of age or older, share the tobacco or non-tobacco products from a hookah, water pipe, or similar device. | |
Lodging. | |
Bed and Breakfast Inns. Residential structures with one family in permanent residence with up to 10 bedrooms rented for overnight lodging for 30 days or less, where meals may be provided subject to Section 16.80.090 (Bed and breakfast inns) and applicable Health Department regulations. A bed and breakfast inn with more than 10 guest rooms is considered a hotel or motel (See Hotels and motels). | |
Hotels and Motels. An establishment providing overnight accommodations for periods of 30 consecutive days or less to transient patrons for payment. These establishments may provide additional services, such as conference and meeting rooms, restaurants, bars, or recreation facilities available to guests or to the general public. | |
Offices. Offices of firms, organizations, or public agencies providing professional, executive, management, administrative or design services, such as accounting, architectural, computer software design, engineering, graphic design, interior design, investment, insurance, and legal offices, real estate and mortgage brokers, banks and savings and loan associations with retail banking services (see Banks and Financial Institutions). This classification also includes offices where medical and dental services are provided by physicians, dentists, chiropractors, acupuncturists, optometrists, and similar medical professionals, including medical/dental laboratories within medical office buildings, but excludes clinics, independent research laboratory facilities (see Research and Development), and hospitals. | |
Personal Services. | |
General Personal Services. An establishment providing services of personal convenience to individuals as a primary use. Personal services include barber and beauty shops, permanent makeup studios, day spas, nail salons, tanning salons, electrolysis, and other cosmetic and appearance care services; pet grooming; tattoo parlors, shoe and luggage repair; photography studios; self-serve laundry; laundry and dry cleaning pick-up; repair and fitting of clothes, and similar services. | |
Body Piercing Studios. An establishment whose principal business activity is the creation of an opening in the body of a person for the purpose of inserting jewelry or other decoration. | |
Fortune, Palm, and Card Reader. An establishment providing any type of fortune telling, palm or card reading, psychic services, future telling, spirit communication, and/or any other related type of trade, donation, or compensation, retail or otherwise. | |
Massage Establishments. Facilities providing massage therapy defined as the manipulation of body muscles or tissues, except "specified anatomical areas," by hand or mechanical device for therapeutic purposes, including prevention, rehabilitation, and healing, by a skilled professional who is certified as a massage therapist from a recognized school of massage in compliance with Chapter 5.48 of the Municipal Code and is an accredited program approved by the Council for private/post secondary and vocational education from the State of California. | |
State Certified. Facilities that employ only certified massage practitioners or certified massage therapists (as defined by State law) who are duly certified in compliance with applicable qualifications of the California Business and Professions Code. | |
Noncertified. Facilities where one or more employees is not a certified massage practitioner or certified massage therapist (as defined by State law) certified in compliance with applicable qualifications of the California Business and Professions Code. | |
Repair Services. Establishments engaged in the maintenance or repair of consumer products, including office machines, household appliances, electronics, furniture, and similar items. This classification excludes repair and maintenance of motor vehicles (see Automobile/Vehicle Sales and Services) and personal apparel (see Personal Services). | |
Retail Sales. | |
Building Materials Stores. Retail establishments selling lumber and other large building materials, where the majority of storage, display, and sales occur indoors. Includes: paint, wallpaper, glass, fixtures, nursery stock, and lawn and garden supplies sold to the general public, even if contractor sales account for a major proportion of total sales. This subclassification does not include Construction and Material Yards, hardware stores less than 10,000 square feet in floor area, or plant nurseries. | |
Convenience Stores. Easy access retail stores selling a combination of alcohol, gasoline, and a range of merchandise to provide a variety of items primarily for the motoring public. | |
Garden Centers. Establishments primarily engaged in retailing nursery and garden products, such as trees, shrubs, plants, seeds, bulbs, and sod that are predominantly grown elsewhere. These establishments may sell a limited amount of a product they grow themselves. | |
General Retail. The retail sale or rental of merchandise not specifically listed under another use classification. This subclassification includes retail establishments such as grocery stores, department stores, clothing stores, furniture stores, small hardware stores (with 10,000 square feet or less of floor area), and businesses retailing the following goods: food and beverages for off-site preparation and/or consumption, household pets and pet supplies, toys, hobby materials, handcrafted items, jewelry, cameras, photographic supplies and services (including portraiture and retail photo processing), medical supplies and equipment, pharmacies, electronic equipment, sporting goods, kitchen utensils, hardware, appliances, antiques, art galleries, art supplies and services, paint and wallpaper, carpeting and floor covering, office supplies, bicycles, video rental, and new automotive parts and accessories (excluding vehicle service and installation). Retail sales may be combined with other services such as office machine, computer, electronics, and similar small-item repairs. | |
Outdoor Retail Sales. Permanent outdoor sales establishments including auction yards, flea markets, lumber and other material sales yards, and other retail uses where the business is not conducted entirely within a structure. Does not include the sale of automobiles, recreational vehicles, mobilehomes, or large vehicles and heavy equipment (see Automobile/Vehicle Sales and Leasing Large Vehicle and Equipment Sales, Service, and Rental). | |
Pawn Shop. A business that receives goods in pledge as security for a loan. | |
Artisan Manufacturing. Any establishment primarily engaged in on-site production or fabrication of goods by small scale (maximum 3,500 square feet) manufacturing or artistic endeavor, which involves the use of hand tools or small mechanical equipment, and which may include incidental instruction or direct sales for consumers. Typical uses include ceramic studios, fabric and needleworking, leather working, metalworking, glassworking, candle-making shops, woodworking, and custom jewelry manufacturers. | |
Cannabis Distribution. Shall have the same meaning as set forth in California Business and Professions Code Section 26001(r) as the same may be amended from time to time. | |
Cannabis Manufacturer. Shall have the same meaning as set forth in California Business and Professions Code Section 26001(ah) as the same may be amended from time to time. | |
Cannabis Microbusiness. A person holding a State license issued under paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of California Business and Professions Code Section 26070. A microbusiness may act (in part or whole) as a retailer, distributor, manufacturer (Level 1), and cultivator (on an area less than 10,000 square feet). A microbusiness must engage in at least three of the following commercial cannabis business activities: | |
• | Retailer or Retailer — Non-Storefront |
• | Distributor or Distributor — Transport Only |
• | Cultivation (less than 10,000 sq. ft.) |
• | Manufacturer (Level 1, Type 6) |
Cannabis Testing Laboratory. Shall have the same meaning as set forth in California Business and Professions Code Section 26001(at) as the same may be amended from time to time. | |
Contractor Shops and Yards. Establishments for specialized business activities related to building construction. This classification includes establishments for trades such as painting, carpentry, plumbing, heating, air-conditioning, roofing, landscaping, cabinet-making, and sign-making. This may include the storage of construction and grading materials or equipment on a site other than a construction site. Does not include retail or wholesale sale of materials (see Outdoor Retail Sales). | |
Food and Beverage Production. Establishments engaged in the production, processing, packaging, or manufacturing of food or beverage products for animal or human consumption and where any instruction, direct sales, or on-site consumption are incidental to the food or beverage production activity. This classification excludes the slaughtering of animals or fowl which is not allowed. | |
Artisan Food and Beverage. A small-scale food and beverage products manufacturing and distribution establishment located in facilities 3,500 square feet or less in size. Examples include coffee roasters, micro-breweries (manufacturing 15,000 barrels per year or less), craft distilleries (manufacturing 150,000 gallons per year or less), boutique wineries (5,000 cases per year or less), cheese makers, wholesale bakeries, and produce-on-premises operations which provide ingredients and equipment for customers to manufacture their own product. | |
Food and Beverage Manufacturing. Large-scale production, packaging, processing, preparation, or manufacturing of a food, beverage, or ingredient used or intended for use for animal or human digestion in a facility over 3,500 square feet. | |
Heavy Industrial. Establishments engaged in manufacturing of non-edible products from extracted or raw materials or recycled or secondary materials, or bulk storage and handling of such products and materials. Production typically involves some transformation by way of heating, chilling, combining, or through a chemical or biochemical reaction or alteration. Toxic, hazardous, or explosive materials may be produced or used in large quantities as part of the manufacturing process. These industrial activities may produce impacts on nearby properties, such as noise, gas, odor, dust, or vibration. This classification includes manufacturing for biomass energy conversion, commercial cosmetics and perfumes, electrical appliances and explosives, film and photographic processing plants, apparel and textile mills, leather and allied products manufacturing, wood and paper, glass and glass products, chemical products, medical/pharmaceutical products, plastics and rubber, nonmetallic minerals, primary and fabricated metal products, and automotive and heavy equipment. | |
Light Industrial. Establishments engaged in manufacturing of non-edible products and finished parts primarily from previously-prepared materials by means of physical assembly or reshaping. These industrial activities produce limited impacts on nearby properties, such as noise, gas, odor, or vibration. This classification includes uses where retail sales are clearly incidental to an industrial or manufacturing use, commercial laundries and dry-cleaning plants, monument works, printing and engraving, publishing, computer and electronic product manufacturing, furniture and related product manufacturing, and industrial services. | |
Petroleum Storage and Distribution. Wholesale and retail establishments engaged in the storage, and sale of gasoline, oil, butane, propane, and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) and similar products to retailers and consumers. Does not include the sale of gasoline at a fueling station (see Fueling Station). | |
Recycling Facility. A facility for receiving, temporarily storing, transferring and/or processing materials for recycling, reuse, or final disposal. This use classification does not include waste transfer facilities that operate as materials recovery, recycling, and solid waste transfer operations and are classified as public works and utilities. | |
Reverse Vending Machine. An automated mechanical device that accepts, sorts and processes recyclable materials and issues a cash refund or a redeemable credit slip. | |
Redemption Center. A facility certified by the California Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery (CalRecycle) as meeting the requirements of the California Beverage Container Recycling and Litter Reduction Act of 1986 for the collection of materials including California Redemption Value (CRV) glass, aluminum, paper and plastic containers. | |
Collection Facility. A center where the public may donate, redeem, or sell nonhazardous recyclable materials; may include permanent structures. Includes Salvation Army and Goodwill type drop-offs. Does not include the sale of materials to the public (secondhand stores/pawnshops) or State-certified redemption centers (redemption centers, above). | |
Recycling Processing Facility. A structure or enclosed space used for the collection and/or processing of recyclable materials, including scrap aluminum, paper, pulp, and nonferrous materials, for shipment, or to an end-user's specifications, by such means as baling, briquetting, cleaning, compacting, crushing, flattening, grinding, mechanical sorting, remanufacturing, and shredding. Can be the sole business on the site. Does not include hazardous or contaminated waste. | |
Research and Development. A facility for the scientific research and the design, development, and testing of electrical, electronic, magnetic, optical, pharmaceutical, chemical, and biotechnology components and products in advance of product manufacturing. This classification includes assembly of related products from parts produced off site, where the manufacturing activity is secondary to the research and development activities, in addition to involving the production of experimental products. | |
Salvage and Wrecking. Storage and dismantling of vehicles and equipment for sale of parts, as well as their collection, storage, exchange or sale of goods, including, but not limited to, any used building materials, used containers or steel drums, used tires, and similar or related articles or property. | |
Sanitary Services. Facilities for the cleaning of hazardous and biohazardous materials. Includes the cleaning of portable toilets, tankers, and containers. | |
Warehousing and Storage. Storage and distribution facilities without sales to the public on-site or direct public access except for public storage in small individual space exclusively and directly accessible to a specific tenant. | |
Indoor Warehousing and Storage. Storage within an enclosed building of commercial goods prior to their distribution and the storage of industrial equipment, products and materials including but not limited to automobiles, feed, and lumber. Also includes cold storage, freight moving and storage, and warehouses. This classification excludes the storage of hazardous chemical, mineral, and explosive materials. | |
Outdoor. Storage, warehousing, and wholesaling of goods in open lots. | |
Personal Storage Facilities (Mini-storage). Facilities offering enclosed storage with individual access for personal effects and household goods including mini-warehouses and mini-storage, and records or inventory storage for businesses. | |
Vehicle Storage. Storage of operative or inoperative vehicles. This classification includes parking tow-aways, impound yards, and storage lots for automobiles, trucks, buses and recreational vehicles, but does not include vehicle dismantling. | |
Wholesaling and Distribution. Indoor storage and sale of goods to other firms for resale; storage of goods for transfer to retail outlets of the same firm; or storage and sale of materials and supplies used in production or operation, including janitorial and restaurant supplies. Wholesalers are primarily engaged in business-to-business sales, but may sell to individual consumers through mail or internet orders. They normally operate from a warehouse or office having little or no display of merchandise, and are not designed to solicit walk-in traffic. This classification does not include wholesale sale of building materials (see Building Materials Sales and Services). | |
Airports and Heliports. Facilities for the takeoff and landing of airplanes and helicopters, including runways, helipads, related facilities, and support activities. |
Broadcasting Studio. Indoor facilities for the provision of broadcasting and other information relay services and studios that create broadcasting or media content outside of an office environment, including but not limited to radio, television or Internet broadcasting facilities, audio rehearsal or recording studios, motion picture studios, sound stages, special effects studios, and similar uses. |
Communication Facilities. Broadcasting and other communication services accomplished through electronic or telephonic mechanisms, as well as structures and equipment cabinets designed to support one or more reception/transmission systems. This subclassification includes wireless telecommunication towers and facilities, radio towers, television towers, telephone exchange/microwave relay towers, cellular telephone transmission/personal communications systems towers, and associated equipment cabinets and enclosures. |
Major. A communication facility that: (a) is a freestanding, ground-mounted facility; (b) is structure- or roof-mounted and exceeds 10 feet in height above the roof ridge line; or (c) does not qualify as "Minor" below. |
Minor. A communication facility that is: (a) within the public right-of-way and structurally integrated into or on top of a light standard, utility pole, or a metal or precast concrete monopole that is similar in design to a street light pole or street tree, or similar structure; (b) structure- or roof-mounted not exceeding 10 feet in height above the roof ridge line unless designed as a stealth facility; or (c) a co-location at lower height, structurally integrated, or freestanding stealth facility. |
Light Fleet-Based Services. Passenger transportation services, local delivery services, medical transport, and other businesses that rely on fleets of three or more vehicles with rated capacities less than 10,000 lbs. This classification includes parking, dispatching, and offices for taxicab and limousine operations, ambulance services, non-emergency medical transport, local messenger and document delivery services, home cleaning services, and similar businesses. |
Marinas. Facilities that provide a range of services related to the use of boats and other watercraft and commercial and recreational fishing. Services may include, but are not limited to, boat moorings; sales, storage, construction, repair, and maintenance of boats, boat parts, and other marine-related items; marine fueling stations and washing facilities; seafood processing, boat and watercraft charter operations; offices; bait and tackle shops; and hardware sales. |
Public Works and Utilities. Generating plants, electric substations, solar farms, solid waste collection, including transfer stations and materials recovery facilities, solid waste treatment and disposal, water or wastewater treatment plants, and similar facilities of public agencies or public utilities. This classification also includes facilities such as water reservoirs, wastewater collection or pumping facilities, water wells, stormwater detention basins, and similar utility uses. |
Transit Stations and Terminals. Facilities for passenger transportation operations, including rail stations, bus terminals, taxi stands, ferry stations, and scenic and sightseeing facilities. This classification excludes terminals serving airports or heliports (see Airports and Heliports). |
Truck Parking. Facilities for parking and storage of trucks and/or trailers on improved sites that meet all applicable City standards and requirements. |
Vehicle and Freight Terminals. Property and improvements used for freight, courier, and postal services; freight transfer truck terminals; transfer, loading, and unloading points for vehicles carrying goods and produces; or for the operations of a "common carrier trucking company," including the parking, or servicing, or repairing, or storage of trucks, truck tractors, and/or truck trailers. |
Agricultural Activities and Facilities. The production, keeping, or maintenance for sale, lease, or personal use, of plants and animals useful to man, including the following: |
Animal Production/Keeping. The keeping or raising of farm animals (including cattle, goats, horses, sheep), fowl, poultry, fish, and other animals not commonly regarded as household pets. Does not include wild animals as defined in Section 6.04.020 of the Municipal Code, which are not permitted; swine, including pot-bellied pigs, which are not permitted; or cats, dogs, and other household pets. |
Crop Production. The production of harvestable products that are planted, grown, and cultivated in the soil. |
Cannabis Cultivation. Shall have the same meaning as set forth in Business and Professions Code Section 26001(l) as the same may be amended from time to time. |
Community Garden. An otherwise undeveloped lot divided into multiple garden plots where persons not owning or residing on the property grow and harvest fruits, vegetables, fiber, nuts, seeds, flowers and culinary herbs primarily for personal consumption or use of the growers, and that is established, operated, and maintained by a group of persons, other than the City. A community garden does not include a private garden or edible landscaping on a lot developed with one or more residences and devoted to the personal use of the occupants of the residences. |
Market Garden/Urban Farm. The primary use of a site for larger-scale urban agriculture uses including production (beyond that which is strictly for home consumption), distribution and marketing of food within the cores of urban areas and at their edges. Market gardens/urban farms' purpose extends beyond home consumption and includes community supported agriculture (CSA), pick-your-own operations, family farms located in metropolitan greenbelts and related efforts such as activities offered to the public for the purpose of recreation, education or active involvement in urban agricultural operations. All activities must be related to agriculture or natural resources. Market gardens/urban farms cultivate fruits, vegetables, flowers, fiber, nuts, seeds, culinary herbs, honey, and/or eggs for sale or donation to the public. |
Mineral Extraction. The extraction of minerals, including mining, digging, dredging, drilling and pumping of water, gases, minerals or combustibles. |
Nurseries. Commercial facilities for growing flowers, trees, ornamentals, and other landscaping products. The classification includes nurseries that engage in the sale or wholesaling of products predominantly grown on site. (For establishments primarily engaged in retailing products predominantly grown elsewhere, see Garden Centers). |
Urban Agriculture. The production of food in a form and scale that is appropriate for the urban context and includes market garden; community garden; private garden; hydroponics; and urban beekeeping. |
8 Glossary
—A— |
garages |
gazebos |
greenhouses |
parking lots (except parking for single-unit dwellings, duplexes and triplexes) |
spas and hot tubs |
storage sheds |
studios |
swimming pools |
tennis and other on-site sport courts |
workshops |
Also includes the indoor storage of automobiles (including their incidental restoration and repair), personal recreational vehicles and other personal property, accessory to a residential use. Does not include home satellite dish and other receiving antennas for earth-based TV and radio broadcasts; see "Communications facilities." |
—B— |
—C— |
—D— |
—E— |
—F— |
—G— |
—H— |
—I— |
bridges and major thoroughfares |
curb, gutter and sidewalk |
fences |
fire hydrants |
public utilities |
railroad crossings |
sanitary sewer facilities |
storm drainage facilities |
storm drain and sanitary sewer pump stations |
street signs |
street structural section |
street lighting |
traffic signals |
tree wells and sprinkler system |
water facilities |
Integrated centers do not include parcels that have been developed as single entities before a discretionary application(s) that would create an integrated center was deemed complete. |
—J— |
—K— |
—M— |
RDC | RDM | RCM | DCM |
|---|---|---|---|
Retailer or | Retailer or | Retailer or | Distributor or |
Retailer – Non-Storefront | Retailer – Non-Storefront | Retailer – Non-Storefront | Distributor – Transport Only |
Distributor or | Distributor or | Cultivation | Cultivation |
Distributor – Transport Only | Distributor – Transport Only | (less than 10,000 sq. ft.) | (less than 10,000 sq. ft.) |
Cultivation | Manufacturer | Manufacturer | Manufacturer |
(less than 10,000 sq. ft.) | (Level 1 Type 6) | (Level 1 Type 6) | (Level 1 Type 6) |
—N— |
—O— |
Christmas trees, pumpkins or the sale of other seasonal items in compliance with Section 16.80.110 (Christmas tree/holiday/sales facilities) |
farmers' markets |
produce stands in compliance with Section 16.80.280 (Produce stands, commercial) |
community gardens in compliance with Section 16.80.130 |
urban agriculture produce stands in compliance with Section 16.80.285 |
semi-annual sales of art/handcrafted items in conjunction with community festivals or art shows |
sidewalk or parking lot sales longer than one weekend |
retail sales from individual vehicles in temporary locations outside the public right-of-way |
Temporary outdoor retail sales are subject to a temporary activity permit in compliance with Chapter 16.164 (Temporary Activity Permits), unless otherwise identified or exempt. Does not include motorized food wagons (Section 16.80.020(B)(4)) or mobile vendors (Section 16.80.020(B)(3)). |
—P— |
—Q— |
—R— |
—S— |
—T— |
—U— |
—V— |
—W— |
—X— |
—Y— |
—Z— |
Residential Dwelling Units. Dwelling units designed for occupancy by one household. |
Single-Unit Dwelling, Detached. A dwelling unit that is designed for occupancy by one household with private yards on all sides and located on a separate lot from any other unit (except an accessory dwelling unit, where permitted). This subclassification includes individual manufactured housing units. |
Single-Unit Dwelling, Attached. A dwelling unit that is designed for occupancy by one household located on a separate lot from any other unit (except an accessory dwelling unit, where permitted), and is attached through common walls to more than one dwelling on abutting lots, such as half-plexes, townhomes and condominiums. |
Multi-Unit Dwelling. Two or more attached or detached dwelling units on a single lot. Types of multi-unit dwellings can include duplexes, tri-plexes, four-plexes, multiple detached residential units, and apartment buildings. |
Accessory Dwelling Unit. |
Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU). An attached or a detached residential dwelling unit which provides complete independent living facilities for one or more persons. It shall include permanent provisions for living, sleeping, eating, cooking, and sanitation on the same parcel as a single-unit dwelling unit is situated; further accessory dwelling units are as defined in California Government Code Section 66313(a). |
Junior Accessory Dwelling Unit (JADU). A unit that is no more than 500 square feet in size and contained entirely within a single-unit residence. A junior accessory dwelling unit may include separate sanitation facilities or may share sanitation facilities with the existing structure as prescribed by Government Code Section 66313(b). |
Caretaker Unit. A dwelling unit on the site of a nonresidential use, occupied by the business owner or employees and their immediate families employed for the purpose of on-site management, maintenance, or upkeep. Business guests/employees on temporary assignment are allowed to reside in the unit. |
Co-Living. A residential facility where living accommodations are individual secure rooms, with or without separate kitchen or bathroom facilities for each room, and rented to one or two-person households. This use classification includes extended stay hotels intended for long-term occupancy (more than 30 days) but excludes hotels and motels, and residential care facilities. |
Emergency Shelter. Housing with minimal supportive services for homeless persons that is limited to occupancy of six months or less by a homeless person. |
Employee Housing (for Farmworkers). Has the same meaning as "employee housing" as set forth in Health and Safety Code § 17008 for farmworkers. |
Family Day Care. A day care facility licensed by the State of California, located in a residential unit where the resident of the dwelling provides care and supervision for children under the age of 18 for periods of less than 24 hours a day. |
Small. A facility that provides care for eight or fewer children, including children who reside at the home and are under the age of 10 (California Health and Safety Code Section 1597.44). |
Large. A facility that provides care for seven to 14 children, including children who reside at the home and are under the age of 10 (California Health and Safety Code Section 1597.465). |
Group Residential. Shared living quarters without separate kitchen or bathroom facilities for each room or unit, offered for rent for permanent or semi-transient residents on a weekly or longer basis. This classification includes rooming and boarding houses, dormitories, fraternity and sorority housing, convents, monasteries, and other types of organizational housing operated by institutions or organizations but excludes hotels and motels and residential care facilities. |
Live-Work Space. A unit that combines a work space and residential occupancy occupied and used by a single household in structure that has been constructed for such use or converted from commercial or industrial use and structurally modified to accommodate residential occupancy and work activity in compliance with the California Building Code. The working space is reserved for and regularly used by one or more occupants of the unit. |
Low Barrier Navigation Center. A Housing First, low barrier, service-enriched shelter focused on moving people into permanent housing that provides temporary living facilities while case managers connect individuals experiencing homelessness to income, public benefits, health services, shelter, and housing (California Government Code Section 65660, et seq.). |
Mobile Home Park. A development occupied by manufactured housing units, including facilities and amenities used in common by residents who rent, lease, or own spaces for manufactured housing units through a subdivision, cooperative, condominium, or other form of resident ownership. |
Residential Care Facilities. A facility licensed by the State of California to provide living accommodations, 24-hour care for persons requiring personal services, supervision, protection, or assistance with daily tasks. Facilities may include shared living quarters, with or without a private bathroom or kitchen facilities. This classification includes both for-profit and not-for-profit institutions, but excludes supportive housing and transitional housing. |
Small. A facility that is licensed by the State of California to provide care for six or fewer persons. |
Large. A facility that is licensed by the State of California to provide care for more than six persons. |
Residential Facility, Assisted Living. A facility that provides a combination of housing and supportive services for the elderly or functionally impaired, including personalized assistance, congregate dining, recreational, and social activities. These facilities may include medical services. Examples include assisted living facilities, retirement homes, and retirement communities. These facilities typically consist of individual units or apartments, sometimes containing kitchen facilities and common amenities. The residents in these facilities require varying levels of assistance. |
Supportive Housing. Dwelling units with no limit on length of stay that are occupied by the target population, and that are linked to on-site or off-site services that assist the supportive housing resident in retaining the housing, improving their health status, and maximizing their ability to live and, where possible, work in the community (California Government Code Section 65582(h)). |
Transitional Housing. Buildings configured as rental housing developments, but operated under program requirements that require the termination of assistance and recirculating of the assisted unit to another eligible program recipient at a predetermined future point in time that shall be no less than six months from the beginning of the assistance (California Government Code Section 65582(j)). |
Campgrounds and RV Parks. An open-air facility, where recreational vehicle or camping spaces are rented, or held out for rent, for overnight stay in tents, trailers, or recreational vehicles for 30 consecutive days or less. |
Colleges and Trade Schools. Institutions of higher education primarily for adults providing curricula of a general, religious, or professional nature, granting degrees or professional certifications and including junior colleges, business and computer schools, management training, and technical and trade schools. This classification excludes instructional services such as music lessons. |
Commercial Entertainment and Recreation. Provision of participant or spectator entertainment to the public. These classifications may include incidental restaurants, snack bars, and other related food and beverage services to patrons. |
Card Rooms. Business, activity, or enterprise conducting card games, as defined in Title 5 of SMC. Does not apply to any bona fide nonprofit society club, fraternal, labor, or other organizations having adopted bylaws and duly elected directors and members having exclusive use of these facilities at no charge, and whose operation is incidental to the main purpose of the organization. Does not include bridge clubs, chess clubs, and other nongambling board games (see Indoor Entertainment and Recreation). |
Cinema/Theater. A facility for the indoor display of films, motion pictures, or dramatic, musical, or live performances. |
Indoor Entertainment and Recreation. Establishments providing predominantly participant sports, fitness, indoor amusement and entertainment services conducted within an enclosed building, including electronic amusement centers. Typical uses include bowling alleys, billiard parlors, bingo establishments, arcades, health clubs, ice and roller skating rinks, indoor racquetball courts, athletic clubs, physical fitness centers, indoor arenas, and nongambling establishments providing facilities for the participation in the game of bridge, chess, checkers, backgammon, or other board games. |
Outdoor Entertainment. Predominantly spectator uses, conducted in open or partially enclosed or screened facilities. Typical uses include amusement parks, sports stadiums and arenas, racetracks, amphitheaters, and drive-in theaters. |
Outdoor Recreation. Predominantly participant sports conducted in open or partially enclosed or screened facilities. Typical uses include driving ranges, golf courses, sports complexes, miniature golf courses, tennis clubs, outdoor batting cages, swimming pools, archery ranges, and riding stables. |
Private Entertainment Facilities. Business with one or more separate, individual facilities for viewing or participating in games or videos. Includes individual viewing booths for movies and/or individual arcade games. |
Community Assembly. A facility for public or private meetings and gatherings, including community centers, union halls, meeting halls, banquet facilities, and membership organizations. This classification includes the use of functionally-related facilities for the use of members and attendees, such as kitchens, multi-purpose rooms, classrooms, and storage. |
Cultural Institutions. A public or private institution and/or associated facility engaged in activities to promote aesthetic and educational interest among the community that are open to the public on a regular basis. This classification includes performing arts centers, event and conference spaces, spaces for display or preservation of objects of interest in the arts or sciences, libraries, museums, historical sites, aquariums, zoos, and botanical gardens. This classification does not include schools or colleges and trade schools. |
Day Care Centers. Establishments providing non-medical care for persons on a less than 24-hour basis other than family day care. This classification includes nursery schools, preschools, and day care facilities for children or adults, and any other day care facility licensed by the State of California. |
Hospitals and Clinics. State-licensed facilities providing medical, surgical, psychiatric, or emergency medical services to sick or injured persons. This classification includes facilities for inpatient or outpatient treatment, including substance-abused programs, as well as training, research, and administrative services for patients and employees. This classification excludes veterinaries and animal hospitals (see Animal Care, Sales, and Services). |
Clinic. A facility providing medical, psychiatric, or surgical service for sick or injured persons exclusively on an out-patient basis including emergency treatment, diagnostic services, administration, and surgical and related services to patients who are not lodged overnight except for testing related to sleep conditions. Services may be available without a prior appointment. This classification includes licensed facilities offering substance abuse treatment, blood banks and plasma centers, and emergency medical services offered exclusively on an out-patient basis. This classification does not include private medical and dental offices that typically require appointments and are usually smaller scale (see Offices). |
Hospitals. A facility providing medical, psychiatric, or surgical services for sick or injured persons, primarily on an inpatient basis, and including supplementary facilities for outpatient and emergency treatment, diagnostic services, training, research, administration, and services to patients, employees, or visitors. The institutions are to be licensed by the State of California to provide surgical and medical services. |
Skilled Nursing Facility. A State-licensed facility or a distinct part of a hospital that provides continuous skilled nursing and supportive care to patients whose primary need requires the availability of skilled nursing care on an extended basis. The facility provides 24-hour inpatient care and, at a minimum, includes physician, nursing, dietary, pharmaceutical services, and an activity program. |
Instructional Services. Establishments that offer specialized programs in personal growth and development such as music, martial arts, vocal, yoga, dancing, art, photography, and academic instruction. Attendance is typically limited to hourly classes rather than full-day instruction. The establishments do not grant diplomas or degrees, though instruction could provide credits for diplomas or degrees granted by other institutions. This classification also includes tutoring facilities which offer academic instruction to individuals or groups. |
Live Entertainment. Any type of music, dancing or show involving one or more persons playing musical instruments or recorded music, acting, singing, reading, speaking, dancing, modeling, wrestling, or performing in any way to entertain the customers of an establishment, including, but not limited to, auctions, raffles, or contests; karaoke singing; music played by a disc jockey; dinner theater; modeling of clothes, lingerie, and swimsuits; oil and mud wrestling; music performed by bands or soloists; poetry reading; dancing (by employees or customers); and stand-up comedy. |
Parking Lots and Structures. Surface lots and structures used primarily for the temporary parking of operable motor vehicles, including parking lots, parking structures, and park and ride lots. Does not include parking facilities that are incidental to an on-site activity. |
Parks and Recreation Facilities. Noncommercial parks, playgrounds, recreation facilities, trails, wildlife preserves, and related open spaces. This classification includes public playing fields, courts, gymnasiums, swimming pools, picnic facilities, tennis courts, golf courses, and botanical gardens, as well as related food concessions or community centers within the facilities. |
Public Safety Facilities. Facilities providing public-safety and emergency services, including police and fire protection and emergency medical services, with incidental storage, training, and maintenance facilities. |
Religious Facilities. Facilities operated by religious organizations for worship, or the promotion of religious activities and instructions; and accessory uses on the same site, including living quarters for ministers and staff, child care facilities, and temporarily up to six homeless individuals or family members. Includes churches, synagogues, mosques, temples, etc. Does not include other establishments maintained by religious organizations, including full-time educational institutions, hospitals and other potentially related operations (including a recreational camp) which are classified according to their respective activities. |
Schools. Facilities for primary or secondary education, including private and parochial schools having curricula comparable to that required in the public schools of the State of California. |
Social Service Facilities. Facilities providing a variety of supportive services for disabled and homeless individuals and other targeted groups on a less than 24-hour basis. Examples of services provided are counseling, meal programs, clothing and personal items, personal storage lockers, showers, instructional programs, television rooms, and meeting spaces. This classification is distinguished from licensed day care centers (see Day Care Centers), clinics, and emergency shelters providing 24-hour care (see Emergency Shelter). |
Vehicle, Truck, and Heavy Equipment Training. Facilities for instructing and training students in the repair, maintenance, or operation of a variety of vehicles and heavy equipment, including automobiles, motorcycles, trucks, recreational vehicles, boats, and construction equipment. |
Adult Related Establishments. Any adult bookstore, adult hotel or motel, adult motion picture arcade, adult motion picture theater, adult video store, cabaret, sexual encounter center, or any other business or establishment that offers its patrons services or entertainment characterized by an emphasis on matter depicting, describing or relating to "specified sexual activities" or "specified anatomical areas," but not including those uses or activities, the regulation of which is preempted by State law. | |
Adult Bookstore or Novelty Store. An establishment which has more than 25% of its total sales or stock in trade materials that are distinguished or characterized by their emphasis on matter depicting, describing, or relating to "specified sexual activities" or "specified anatomical areas," as defined below. | |
Adult Hotel or Motel. A hotel, motel, or other overnight lodging establishment, which provides, through closed circuit television or other media, material which is distinguished or characterized by an emphasis on matter depicting, describing, or relating to "specified sexual activities" or "specified anatomical areas," (as defined below), for observation by patrons therein. | |
Adult Motion Picture Arcade. Any place to which the public is permitted or invited wherein coin or slug-operated or electronically, electrically, or mechanically controlled still or motion picture machines, projectors, or other image-producing devices are maintained to show images to five or fewer persons per machine at any one time, and where the images so displayed are distinguished or characterized by an emphasis on depicting or describing "specified sexual activities" or "specified anatomical areas," (as defined below), for observation by patrons therein. Includes "private entertainment facilities." | |
Adult Motion Picture Theater. An enclosed or unenclosed building or structure or portion thereof used for presenting material in the form of motion picture film, video tape, slides, or other similar means, which is distinguished or characterized by an emphasis on matter depicting, describing, or relating to "specified sexual activities" or "specified anatomical areas," (as defined below), for observation by patrons therein. | |
Adult Theater. Any theater, concert hall, auditorium, or similar commercial establishment which has more than 25% of its total sales from featuring persons who appear in a state of nudity or semi-nude condition and/or from featuring live performances, which are distinguished or characterized by an emphasis upon the exposure of specified anatomical areas or by specified sexual activities. | |
Adult Video Store. An establishment having 25% or more of its total stock in trade in video tapes for sale or rental or having viewing on the premises which contains material that is distinguished or characterized by its emphasis on matter depicting, describing, or relating to "specified sexual activities" or "specified anatomical areas," as defined below, or an establishment with a segment or section of the store devoted to the sale or display of such material. | |
Cabaret. A bar, nightclub, theater, or other establishment which features live performances by topless and/or bottomless dancers, "go-go" dancers, exotic dancers, strippers, or similar entertainers, where such performances are distinguished or characterized by an emphasis on "specified sexual activities" or "specified anatomical areas," (as defined below), for observation by patrons therein. | |
Massage Parlor. An establishment where, for any form of consideration or gratuity, massage, alcohol rub, administration or fomentations, electric or magnetic treatments, or any other treatment or manipulation of the human body occurs. Does not include massage therapists ("Medical services—Health-related facilities"); masseuses under the supervision of doctors, chiropractors, physical therapists ("Medical services—Medical-related facilities"). | |
Material. Relative to adult businesses, means and includes, but is not limited to, accessories, books, devices, magazines, pamphlets, photographs, prints, drawings, paintings, motion pictures, and video tapes, or any combination thereof. | |
Model Studio. An establishment where, for any form of consideration or gratuity, figure models who display "specified anatomical areas" (as defined below) are provided to be observed, sketched, drawn, painted, sculptured, photographed, or similarly depicted by patrons paying such consideration or gratuity, except when the patrons are in attendance at art or photography classes. | |
Sexual Encounter Center. Any business, agency, or person who, for any form of consideration or gratuity, provides a place where three or more persons may congregate, assemble, or associate for the purpose of engaging in "specified sexual activities" or exposing "specified anatomical areas." | |
Specified Anatomical Areas. Means: | |
• | Less than completely and opaquely covered human genitals or pubic region, buttock, and female breast below a point immediately above the top of the areola; and |
• | Human male genitals in a discernibly turgid state, even if completely and opaquely covered. |
Specified Sexual Activities. Means: | |
• | Human genitals in a state of sexual stimulation or arousal; |
• | Acts of human masturbation, sexual intercourse, or sodomy; |
• | Fondling or other erotic touching or sexual stimulation of human genitals, pubic region, buttock, or female breasts. |
Animal Services. Services related to the boarding and care of animals. | |
Animal Shelter and Boarding. A commercial, non-profit, or governmental facility for keeping, boarding, training, breeding, or maintaining, generally overnight or in excess of 24 hours, dogs, cats, or other household pets not owned by the owner or operator of the facility. | |
Pet Training and Day Care. Facilities providing training or non-medical care on a less than 24-hour basis for dogs, cats, or other household pets not owned by the facility operator. | |
Veterinary Clinics and Animal Hospitals. Office and medical treatment facilities used by veterinarians where animals receive medical and surgical treatment, including large and small animal veterinary clinics, and animal hospitals. This classification allows 24-hour accommodation of animals receiving medical services and treatment. | |
Automobile/Vehicle Sales and Services. Retail or wholesale businesses that sell, rent, and/or repair automobiles, boats, recreational vehicles, trucks, vans, trailers, and/or motorcycles. | |
Automobile/Vehicle Rental. Establishment providing for the rental of automobiles, light-duty trucks, and motorcycles. Typical uses include car rental agencies. | |
Automobile/Vehicle Sales and Leasing. Sale or lease, retail or wholesale, of automobiles, light trucks, motorcycles, boats, campers, motor homes, and trailers, together with associated repair services and parts sales, but excluding body repair and painting. Typical uses include automobile dealers and recreational vehicle sales agencies. | |
Automobile/Vehicle Service and Repair, Minor. The service and repair of automobiles, light-duty trucks (i.e., pickup trucks, sport utility vehicles (SUVs), vans, and minivans), and motorcycles, including the incidental sale, installation, and servicing of related equipment and parts. This classification includes the replacement of small automotive parts and liquids, smog checks, tire sales and installation, ancillary detailing services, auto radio/electronics installation, auto air conditioning/heater service, and quick-service oil, tune-up shops, and brake and muffler shops. | |
Automobile/Vehicle Repair, Major. Repair of automobiles, trucks, motor homes, boats, and recreational vehicles, that may include disassembly, removal or replacement of major components such as engines, drive trains, transmissions or axles, automotive body and fender work, vehicle painting, or other operations that generate excessive noise, objectionable odors or hazardous materials, and towing services. This classification excludes vehicle dismantling or salvaging. | |
Large Vehicle and Equipment Sales, Service, and Rental. Sales, servicing, rental, fueling, and washing of large trucks, trailers, tractors, and other equipment used for construction, moving, agricultural, or landscape gardening activities. | |
Fueling Stations. Establishments primarily engaged in retailing automotive fuels or charging of electric vehicles, which may also provide related services, such as selling automotive oils, replacement parts, and accessories; and/or providing incidental food and retail services. These facilities may include "mini-marts" and/or convenience stores that sell products, merchandise, or services that are ancillary to the primary use related to the operation of motor vehicles. | |
Towing and Impound. Establishments primarily engaged in towing light or heavy motor vehicles, both local and long distance. These establishments may provide incidental services, such as vehicle storage and emergency road repair services (for automobile dismantling, see Salvage and Wrecking). | |
Vehicle Washing. Permanent, self-service, and/or attended vehicle washing establishments, including fully mechanized facilities, including detailing services. | |
Banks and Financial Services. Financial institutions providing retail banking services. This classification includes only those institutions serving walk-in customers or clients, including banks, savings and loan institutions, credit unions, and check-cashing businesses. | |
Business Support Services. Establishments providing goods and services to other businesses on a fee or contract basis, including printing and copying, blueprint services, advertising and mailing, office equipment rental and leasing, office security, custodial services, photofinishing, model building, and taxi services or delivery services with two or fewer fleet vehicles on site. | |
Commercial Kitchen. Establishments preparing and/or packaging food for off-site consumption, including catering kitchens, ghost kitchens, and incubator kitchens. This classification excludes establishments with an industrial character in terms of processes employed, waste produced, water used, and traffic generation. Also excluded are retail establishments such as bakeries and small-scale artisan or boutique food businesses. Commercial kitchens shall be considered equivalent to restaurant for land use purposes. | |
Commissary. An establishment in which food, containers, equipment, or supplies are stored or handled for use in motorized food wagons or ice cream vehicles. Includes establishments used as a base of operations for one or more motorized food wagons or push carts, where such unit or units and/or equipment are serviced, cleaned, supplied and/or maintained. | |
Commissary Kitchen. A kitchen facility that is incorporated into, and as part of, a commissary only. This type of kitchen may be used by food truck operators that are based from the commissary, and may also be used by caterers to prepare food for delivery to events or customers. | |
Drive-Through Facility. A motor vehicle drive-through facility which is a commercial building or structure or portion thereof which is designed or used to provide goods or services to the occupants of motor vehicles. This classification includes banks and other financial services, fast food establishments, drugstores, and film deposit/pick-up establishments, but excludes drive-in theaters (see Commercial Entertainment and Recreation), drive-in restaurants where orders are taken and food is served and eaten in cars parked in individual parking spaces (see Eating and Drinking Establishments), service stations, or car-wash operations (see Automobile/Vehicle Sales and Services). | |
Eating and Drinking Establishments. Businesses primarily engaged in serving prepared food and/or beverages for consumption on or off the premises. | |
Bars and Night Clubs. Businesses serving alcoholic beverages for consumption on the premises as a primary use, including on-sale service of alcohol including beer, wine, and mixed drinks. This subclassification includes establishments where alcoholic beverages are sold and consumed but are not operated and maintained as bona fide eating establishments. | |
Food and Beverage Tasting. Businesses serving samples of food or beverages as an accessory use associated with a food or beverage production facility or retail sales. | |
Restaurant. Establishments where food and beverages are served to patrons for consumption on-site or off-site, including full-service, limited-service, and take-out/delivery businesses. This subclassification includes cafes, coffee shops, delicatessens, fast-food businesses, and bakeries that have tables for on-site consumption of products, as well as establishments licensed, operated and maintained as a bona fide eating place that serve alcoholic beverages. It excludes catering services, commissary kitchens, and commercial kitchens that do not sell food or beverages for on-site consumption. | |
Food Truck Park. A permanent open-air facility that is designed to accommodate two or more operating motorized food wagons to offer food or beverages for sale to the public located on a developed lot or parcel(s). The food truck park is strictly for the sale of foods or beverages. The scale of uses that encompass the food truck park include, food truck pod, food truck hub, and food truck plaza. | |
Food Truck Pod. A permanent open-air facility that is designed to accommodate two to five operating motorized food wagons to offer food or beverages for sale to the public located on a developed lot or parcel(s). | |
Food Truck Hub. A permanent open-air facility that is designed to accommodate six to 10 operating motorized food wagons to offer food or beverages for sale to the public located on a developed lot or parcel(s). | |
Food Truck Plaza. A permanent open-air facility that is designed to accommodate 11 or more operating motorized food wagons to offer food or beverages for sale to the public located on a developed lot or parcel(s). | |
Food Truck Park/Commissary Co-Location. A land use intended to accommodate Motorized Food Wagons that offer food or beverages for sale to the public and provide the required commissary services to those motorized food wagons residing at the site. | |
Funeral Facilities and Services. Facilities providing interment services. Includes: | |
Cemeteries. Establishments engaged in subdividing property into cemetery lots and offering burial plots or air space for sale. Includes animal cemeteries, cemetery, mausoleum, cinerarium, and columbarium operations. | |
Mortuaries. Establishment where deceased are prepared for burial or cremation, and funeral services may be conducted. Does not include crematoriums. | |
Funeral Homes. Establishment where funeral services are conducted without preparation of deceased for burial or cremation. Excludes religious facilities. | |
Crematorium. Facility used for the incineration of human or animal remains, excluding activities related to funeral homes. Excludes activities related to mortuaries. | |
Smoking Lounge. A business which primarily serves tobacco or non-tobacco products (e.g., fruit, vegetables) whereby patrons, who are 18 years of age or older, share the tobacco or non-tobacco products from a hookah, water pipe, or similar device. | |
Lodging. | |
Bed and Breakfast Inns. Residential structures with one family in permanent residence with up to 10 bedrooms rented for overnight lodging for 30 days or less, where meals may be provided subject to Section 16.80.090 (Bed and breakfast inns) and applicable Health Department regulations. A bed and breakfast inn with more than 10 guest rooms is considered a hotel or motel (See Hotels and motels). | |
Hotels and Motels. An establishment providing overnight accommodations for periods of 30 consecutive days or less to transient patrons for payment. These establishments may provide additional services, such as conference and meeting rooms, restaurants, bars, or recreation facilities available to guests or to the general public. | |
Offices. Offices of firms, organizations, or public agencies providing professional, executive, management, administrative or design services, such as accounting, architectural, computer software design, engineering, graphic design, interior design, investment, insurance, and legal offices, real estate and mortgage brokers, banks and savings and loan associations with retail banking services (see Banks and Financial Institutions). This classification also includes offices where medical and dental services are provided by physicians, dentists, chiropractors, acupuncturists, optometrists, and similar medical professionals, including medical/dental laboratories within medical office buildings, but excludes clinics, independent research laboratory facilities (see Research and Development), and hospitals. | |
Personal Services. | |
General Personal Services. An establishment providing services of personal convenience to individuals as a primary use. Personal services include barber and beauty shops, permanent makeup studios, day spas, nail salons, tanning salons, electrolysis, and other cosmetic and appearance care services; pet grooming; tattoo parlors, shoe and luggage repair; photography studios; self-serve laundry; laundry and dry cleaning pick-up; repair and fitting of clothes, and similar services. | |
Body Piercing Studios. An establishment whose principal business activity is the creation of an opening in the body of a person for the purpose of inserting jewelry or other decoration. | |
Fortune, Palm, and Card Reader. An establishment providing any type of fortune telling, palm or card reading, psychic services, future telling, spirit communication, and/or any other related type of trade, donation, or compensation, retail or otherwise. | |
Massage Establishments. Facilities providing massage therapy defined as the manipulation of body muscles or tissues, except "specified anatomical areas," by hand or mechanical device for therapeutic purposes, including prevention, rehabilitation, and healing, by a skilled professional who is certified as a massage therapist from a recognized school of massage in compliance with Chapter 5.48 of the Municipal Code and is an accredited program approved by the Council for private/post secondary and vocational education from the State of California. | |
State Certified. Facilities that employ only certified massage practitioners or certified massage therapists (as defined by State law) who are duly certified in compliance with applicable qualifications of the California Business and Professions Code. | |
Noncertified. Facilities where one or more employees is not a certified massage practitioner or certified massage therapist (as defined by State law) certified in compliance with applicable qualifications of the California Business and Professions Code. | |
Repair Services. Establishments engaged in the maintenance or repair of consumer products, including office machines, household appliances, electronics, furniture, and similar items. This classification excludes repair and maintenance of motor vehicles (see Automobile/Vehicle Sales and Services) and personal apparel (see Personal Services). | |
Retail Sales. | |
Building Materials Stores. Retail establishments selling lumber and other large building materials, where the majority of storage, display, and sales occur indoors. Includes: paint, wallpaper, glass, fixtures, nursery stock, and lawn and garden supplies sold to the general public, even if contractor sales account for a major proportion of total sales. This subclassification does not include Construction and Material Yards, hardware stores less than 10,000 square feet in floor area, or plant nurseries. | |
Convenience Stores. Easy access retail stores selling a combination of alcohol, gasoline, and a range of merchandise to provide a variety of items primarily for the motoring public. | |
Garden Centers. Establishments primarily engaged in retailing nursery and garden products, such as trees, shrubs, plants, seeds, bulbs, and sod that are predominantly grown elsewhere. These establishments may sell a limited amount of a product they grow themselves. | |
General Retail. The retail sale or rental of merchandise not specifically listed under another use classification. This subclassification includes retail establishments such as grocery stores, department stores, clothing stores, furniture stores, small hardware stores (with 10,000 square feet or less of floor area), and businesses retailing the following goods: food and beverages for off-site preparation and/or consumption, household pets and pet supplies, toys, hobby materials, handcrafted items, jewelry, cameras, photographic supplies and services (including portraiture and retail photo processing), medical supplies and equipment, pharmacies, electronic equipment, sporting goods, kitchen utensils, hardware, appliances, antiques, art galleries, art supplies and services, paint and wallpaper, carpeting and floor covering, office supplies, bicycles, video rental, and new automotive parts and accessories (excluding vehicle service and installation). Retail sales may be combined with other services such as office machine, computer, electronics, and similar small-item repairs. | |
Outdoor Retail Sales. Permanent outdoor sales establishments including auction yards, flea markets, lumber and other material sales yards, and other retail uses where the business is not conducted entirely within a structure. Does not include the sale of automobiles, recreational vehicles, mobilehomes, or large vehicles and heavy equipment (see Automobile/Vehicle Sales and Leasing Large Vehicle and Equipment Sales, Service, and Rental). | |
Pawn Shop. A business that receives goods in pledge as security for a loan. | |
Artisan Manufacturing. Any establishment primarily engaged in on-site production or fabrication of goods by small scale (maximum 3,500 square feet) manufacturing or artistic endeavor, which involves the use of hand tools or small mechanical equipment, and which may include incidental instruction or direct sales for consumers. Typical uses include ceramic studios, fabric and needleworking, leather working, metalworking, glassworking, candle-making shops, woodworking, and custom jewelry manufacturers. | |
Cannabis Distribution. Shall have the same meaning as set forth in California Business and Professions Code Section 26001(r) as the same may be amended from time to time. | |
Cannabis Manufacturer. Shall have the same meaning as set forth in California Business and Professions Code Section 26001(ah) as the same may be amended from time to time. | |
Cannabis Microbusiness. A person holding a State license issued under paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of California Business and Professions Code Section 26070. A microbusiness may act (in part or whole) as a retailer, distributor, manufacturer (Level 1), and cultivator (on an area less than 10,000 square feet). A microbusiness must engage in at least three of the following commercial cannabis business activities: | |
• | Retailer or Retailer — Non-Storefront |
• | Distributor or Distributor — Transport Only |
• | Cultivation (less than 10,000 sq. ft.) |
• | Manufacturer (Level 1, Type 6) |
Cannabis Testing Laboratory. Shall have the same meaning as set forth in California Business and Professions Code Section 26001(at) as the same may be amended from time to time. | |
Contractor Shops and Yards. Establishments for specialized business activities related to building construction. This classification includes establishments for trades such as painting, carpentry, plumbing, heating, air-conditioning, roofing, landscaping, cabinet-making, and sign-making. This may include the storage of construction and grading materials or equipment on a site other than a construction site. Does not include retail or wholesale sale of materials (see Outdoor Retail Sales). | |
Food and Beverage Production. Establishments engaged in the production, processing, packaging, or manufacturing of food or beverage products for animal or human consumption and where any instruction, direct sales, or on-site consumption are incidental to the food or beverage production activity. This classification excludes the slaughtering of animals or fowl which is not allowed. | |
Artisan Food and Beverage. A small-scale food and beverage products manufacturing and distribution establishment located in facilities 3,500 square feet or less in size. Examples include coffee roasters, micro-breweries (manufacturing 15,000 barrels per year or less), craft distilleries (manufacturing 150,000 gallons per year or less), boutique wineries (5,000 cases per year or less), cheese makers, wholesale bakeries, and produce-on-premises operations which provide ingredients and equipment for customers to manufacture their own product. | |
Food and Beverage Manufacturing. Large-scale production, packaging, processing, preparation, or manufacturing of a food, beverage, or ingredient used or intended for use for animal or human digestion in a facility over 3,500 square feet. | |
Heavy Industrial. Establishments engaged in manufacturing of non-edible products from extracted or raw materials or recycled or secondary materials, or bulk storage and handling of such products and materials. Production typically involves some transformation by way of heating, chilling, combining, or through a chemical or biochemical reaction or alteration. Toxic, hazardous, or explosive materials may be produced or used in large quantities as part of the manufacturing process. These industrial activities may produce impacts on nearby properties, such as noise, gas, odor, dust, or vibration. This classification includes manufacturing for biomass energy conversion, commercial cosmetics and perfumes, electrical appliances and explosives, film and photographic processing plants, apparel and textile mills, leather and allied products manufacturing, wood and paper, glass and glass products, chemical products, medical/pharmaceutical products, plastics and rubber, nonmetallic minerals, primary and fabricated metal products, and automotive and heavy equipment. | |
Light Industrial. Establishments engaged in manufacturing of non-edible products and finished parts primarily from previously-prepared materials by means of physical assembly or reshaping. These industrial activities produce limited impacts on nearby properties, such as noise, gas, odor, or vibration. This classification includes uses where retail sales are clearly incidental to an industrial or manufacturing use, commercial laundries and dry-cleaning plants, monument works, printing and engraving, publishing, computer and electronic product manufacturing, furniture and related product manufacturing, and industrial services. | |
Petroleum Storage and Distribution. Wholesale and retail establishments engaged in the storage, and sale of gasoline, oil, butane, propane, and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) and similar products to retailers and consumers. Does not include the sale of gasoline at a fueling station (see Fueling Station). | |
Recycling Facility. A facility for receiving, temporarily storing, transferring and/or processing materials for recycling, reuse, or final disposal. This use classification does not include waste transfer facilities that operate as materials recovery, recycling, and solid waste transfer operations and are classified as public works and utilities. | |
Reverse Vending Machine. An automated mechanical device that accepts, sorts and processes recyclable materials and issues a cash refund or a redeemable credit slip. | |
Redemption Center. A facility certified by the California Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery (CalRecycle) as meeting the requirements of the California Beverage Container Recycling and Litter Reduction Act of 1986 for the collection of materials including California Redemption Value (CRV) glass, aluminum, paper and plastic containers. | |
Collection Facility. A center where the public may donate, redeem, or sell nonhazardous recyclable materials; may include permanent structures. Includes Salvation Army and Goodwill type drop-offs. Does not include the sale of materials to the public (secondhand stores/pawnshops) or State-certified redemption centers (redemption centers, above). | |
Recycling Processing Facility. A structure or enclosed space used for the collection and/or processing of recyclable materials, including scrap aluminum, paper, pulp, and nonferrous materials, for shipment, or to an end-user's specifications, by such means as baling, briquetting, cleaning, compacting, crushing, flattening, grinding, mechanical sorting, remanufacturing, and shredding. Can be the sole business on the site. Does not include hazardous or contaminated waste. | |
Research and Development. A facility for the scientific research and the design, development, and testing of electrical, electronic, magnetic, optical, pharmaceutical, chemical, and biotechnology components and products in advance of product manufacturing. This classification includes assembly of related products from parts produced off site, where the manufacturing activity is secondary to the research and development activities, in addition to involving the production of experimental products. | |
Salvage and Wrecking. Storage and dismantling of vehicles and equipment for sale of parts, as well as their collection, storage, exchange or sale of goods, including, but not limited to, any used building materials, used containers or steel drums, used tires, and similar or related articles or property. | |
Sanitary Services. Facilities for the cleaning of hazardous and biohazardous materials. Includes the cleaning of portable toilets, tankers, and containers. | |
Warehousing and Storage. Storage and distribution facilities without sales to the public on-site or direct public access except for public storage in small individual space exclusively and directly accessible to a specific tenant. | |
Indoor Warehousing and Storage. Storage within an enclosed building of commercial goods prior to their distribution and the storage of industrial equipment, products and materials including but not limited to automobiles, feed, and lumber. Also includes cold storage, freight moving and storage, and warehouses. This classification excludes the storage of hazardous chemical, mineral, and explosive materials. | |
Outdoor. Storage, warehousing, and wholesaling of goods in open lots. | |
Personal Storage Facilities (Mini-storage). Facilities offering enclosed storage with individual access for personal effects and household goods including mini-warehouses and mini-storage, and records or inventory storage for businesses. | |
Vehicle Storage. Storage of operative or inoperative vehicles. This classification includes parking tow-aways, impound yards, and storage lots for automobiles, trucks, buses and recreational vehicles, but does not include vehicle dismantling. | |
Wholesaling and Distribution. Indoor storage and sale of goods to other firms for resale; storage of goods for transfer to retail outlets of the same firm; or storage and sale of materials and supplies used in production or operation, including janitorial and restaurant supplies. Wholesalers are primarily engaged in business-to-business sales, but may sell to individual consumers through mail or internet orders. They normally operate from a warehouse or office having little or no display of merchandise, and are not designed to solicit walk-in traffic. This classification does not include wholesale sale of building materials (see Building Materials Sales and Services). | |
Airports and Heliports. Facilities for the takeoff and landing of airplanes and helicopters, including runways, helipads, related facilities, and support activities. |
Broadcasting Studio. Indoor facilities for the provision of broadcasting and other information relay services and studios that create broadcasting or media content outside of an office environment, including but not limited to radio, television or Internet broadcasting facilities, audio rehearsal or recording studios, motion picture studios, sound stages, special effects studios, and similar uses. |
Communication Facilities. Broadcasting and other communication services accomplished through electronic or telephonic mechanisms, as well as structures and equipment cabinets designed to support one or more reception/transmission systems. This subclassification includes wireless telecommunication towers and facilities, radio towers, television towers, telephone exchange/microwave relay towers, cellular telephone transmission/personal communications systems towers, and associated equipment cabinets and enclosures. |
Major. A communication facility that: (a) is a freestanding, ground-mounted facility; (b) is structure- or roof-mounted and exceeds 10 feet in height above the roof ridge line; or (c) does not qualify as "Minor" below. |
Minor. A communication facility that is: (a) within the public right-of-way and structurally integrated into or on top of a light standard, utility pole, or a metal or precast concrete monopole that is similar in design to a street light pole or street tree, or similar structure; (b) structure- or roof-mounted not exceeding 10 feet in height above the roof ridge line unless designed as a stealth facility; or (c) a co-location at lower height, structurally integrated, or freestanding stealth facility. |
Light Fleet-Based Services. Passenger transportation services, local delivery services, medical transport, and other businesses that rely on fleets of three or more vehicles with rated capacities less than 10,000 lbs. This classification includes parking, dispatching, and offices for taxicab and limousine operations, ambulance services, non-emergency medical transport, local messenger and document delivery services, home cleaning services, and similar businesses. |
Marinas. Facilities that provide a range of services related to the use of boats and other watercraft and commercial and recreational fishing. Services may include, but are not limited to, boat moorings; sales, storage, construction, repair, and maintenance of boats, boat parts, and other marine-related items; marine fueling stations and washing facilities; seafood processing, boat and watercraft charter operations; offices; bait and tackle shops; and hardware sales. |
Public Works and Utilities. Generating plants, electric substations, solar farms, solid waste collection, including transfer stations and materials recovery facilities, solid waste treatment and disposal, water or wastewater treatment plants, and similar facilities of public agencies or public utilities. This classification also includes facilities such as water reservoirs, wastewater collection or pumping facilities, water wells, stormwater detention basins, and similar utility uses. |
Transit Stations and Terminals. Facilities for passenger transportation operations, including rail stations, bus terminals, taxi stands, ferry stations, and scenic and sightseeing facilities. This classification excludes terminals serving airports or heliports (see Airports and Heliports). |
Truck Parking. Facilities for parking and storage of trucks and/or trailers on improved sites that meet all applicable City standards and requirements. |
Vehicle and Freight Terminals. Property and improvements used for freight, courier, and postal services; freight transfer truck terminals; transfer, loading, and unloading points for vehicles carrying goods and produces; or for the operations of a "common carrier trucking company," including the parking, or servicing, or repairing, or storage of trucks, truck tractors, and/or truck trailers. |
Agricultural Activities and Facilities. The production, keeping, or maintenance for sale, lease, or personal use, of plants and animals useful to man, including the following: |
Animal Production/Keeping. The keeping or raising of farm animals (including cattle, goats, horses, sheep), fowl, poultry, fish, and other animals not commonly regarded as household pets. Does not include wild animals as defined in Section 6.04.020 of the Municipal Code, which are not permitted; swine, including pot-bellied pigs, which are not permitted; or cats, dogs, and other household pets. |
Crop Production. The production of harvestable products that are planted, grown, and cultivated in the soil. |
Cannabis Cultivation. Shall have the same meaning as set forth in Business and Professions Code Section 26001(l) as the same may be amended from time to time. |
Community Garden. An otherwise undeveloped lot divided into multiple garden plots where persons not owning or residing on the property grow and harvest fruits, vegetables, fiber, nuts, seeds, flowers and culinary herbs primarily for personal consumption or use of the growers, and that is established, operated, and maintained by a group of persons, other than the City. A community garden does not include a private garden or edible landscaping on a lot developed with one or more residences and devoted to the personal use of the occupants of the residences. |
Market Garden/Urban Farm. The primary use of a site for larger-scale urban agriculture uses including production (beyond that which is strictly for home consumption), distribution and marketing of food within the cores of urban areas and at their edges. Market gardens/urban farms' purpose extends beyond home consumption and includes community supported agriculture (CSA), pick-your-own operations, family farms located in metropolitan greenbelts and related efforts such as activities offered to the public for the purpose of recreation, education or active involvement in urban agricultural operations. All activities must be related to agriculture or natural resources. Market gardens/urban farms cultivate fruits, vegetables, flowers, fiber, nuts, seeds, culinary herbs, honey, and/or eggs for sale or donation to the public. |
Mineral Extraction. The extraction of minerals, including mining, digging, dredging, drilling and pumping of water, gases, minerals or combustibles. |
Nurseries. Commercial facilities for growing flowers, trees, ornamentals, and other landscaping products. The classification includes nurseries that engage in the sale or wholesaling of products predominantly grown on site. (For establishments primarily engaged in retailing products predominantly grown elsewhere, see Garden Centers). |
Urban Agriculture. The production of food in a form and scale that is appropriate for the urban context and includes market garden; community garden; private garden; hydroponics; and urban beekeeping. |