Title 23 COASTAL ZONE LAND USE
Chapter 23.04 SITE DESIGN STANDARDS
23.04.108 Front setbacks.
All structures with a height greater than three feet shall be set back a
minimum of twenty-five feet from the nearest point on the front property line,
except where this section establishes other requirements or where otherwise
provided by Sections 23.04.310 (Sign design standards) or 23.04.190 (Fencing and
screening). The front setback is established parallel or concentric to the front
property line. Front setback landscaping and fencing standards are in Sections
23.04.180 et seq. and 23.04.190, respectively.
(1) Residential Uses. All
residential uses except for second-story dwellings over a commercial or office
use are to have a minimum front setback of twenty-five feet, except as
follows:
(A) Shallow Lots. The front setback is to be a minimum of twenty
feet for any legally created lot with an average depth less than ninety
feet.
(B) Sloping Lot Adjustment. In any case where the elevation of the
natural grade on a lot at a point fifty feet from the centerline of the adjacent
street right-of- way is seven feet above or below the elevation of the
centerline, required parking (including a private garage) may be located, at the
discretion of the applicant, as close as five feet to the street property line,
pursuant to Section 23.01.044; provided, that portions of the dwelling other
than the garage are to be established at the setback otherwise
required.
(C) Variable Setback Block. Where a residential block is partially
developed with single-family dwellings having less than the required front
setbacks, and no uniform front setback is established by a planning area
standard, the front setback may be adjusted (Section 23.01.044) at the option of
the applicant, as follows:
(i) Prerequisites For Adjustment. Adjustment may
be granted only when twenty-five percent of the lots on the block with the same
frontage are developed, and the entire block is within a single land use
category.
(ii) Allowed Adjustment. The normally required minimum front
setback is to be reduced to the average of the front setbacks of the existing
dwellings (which include attached garages but not detached garages), to a
minimum of ten feet.
(D) Planned Development or Cluster Division. Where a
new residential land division is proposed as a planned development, condominium
or cluster division (Section 23.04.036), front setbacks may be determined
through development plan approval; provided, that in no case shall setbacks be
allowed that are less than the minimum required by the Uniform Building
Code.
(E) Where a lot is located in an area which incorporates detached
sidewalks with fixed parkways between the curb and sidewalk, or meandering
sidewalks which vary the separation between the curb and sidewalk, where the
parkway between the curb and sidewalk is landscaped and includes one or more
street tree per fifty feet of frontage and turf or low maintenance plants, front
setbacks may be a minimum of fifteen feet (for all portions of the residence
except the garage). The garage shall have a minimum front setback of twenty-five
feet.

(2) Commercial
and Office Categories. No front setbacks are required within a central business
district; a ten- foot front setback is required in commercial and office
categories elsewhere. Ground-floor residential uses in commercial and office
categories are subject to the setback requirements of subsection (1) of this
section.
(3) Industrial Category. A minimum twenty-five foot front setback
is required except on interior and flag lots, where the front setback shall be
the same as that required for side setbacks by Section
23.04.110(4).
(4) Recreation Category. A minimum ten-foot front setback is
required; provided, that residential uses are subject to the setback
requirements of subsection (1) of this section.
(5) Double Frontage
Lots.
(A) Selecting the Setback Location. Where double frontage setback
locations are not specified by subdivision requirements or other applicable
regulations, the applicant may, except as otherwise provided in this section,
select the front setback street unless fifty percent of the lots on a double
frontage block are developed with the same front yard orientation. In that case
all remaining lots are to orient their front setbacks with the
majority.
(B) Double Frontage Setback Requirements. A full front setback is
to be provided adjacent to one frontage, and a setback of one-half the required
front setback depth adjacent to the other frontage; except that where the site
of a proposed multiple-residence project includes an entire block the project
shall be designed to provide required front setbacks on the two longest street
frontages.
(6) Flag Lots and Easement Access. The front setback for a lot
with no street frontage other than a fee ownership access strip or an access
easement extending from a public street to the buildable area of the lot is to
be measured from the point where the access strip or easement meets the bulk of
the lot, to establish a building line parallel to the lot line nearest to the
public street. (Ord. 2881 § 14, 1999; Ord. 2649 § 7, 1993; Ord. 2570
§ 9, 1992; Ord. 2383 § 25, 1988; Ord. 2344 § 1 (Exh. A) (part),
1988)
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