Great Streets St. Louis

OOPS. Your Flash player is missing or outdated.Click here to update your player so you can see this content.
Mixed-Use District
These are mixed use districts and may be designated for transit oriented development in cases where high capacity transit exists or is planned. Mixed use districts contain a mix (horizontal and vertical) of uses spanning some combination of the primary urban LAND USE categories – retail, office employment, residential and lodging. Densities may vary, but generally most of the buildings in a mixed use district would be multi-story and there would be little or no single family detached housing.  All or most residential space would be in multifamily buildings, many of which would have other uses at ground level and perhaps on other levels as well. Mixed use districts generally would not have industrial land uses or any significant amount of warehousing or storage buildings. 

Mixed-use-area-in-Redmond
Credit: CAI
Boulder,-CO-mixed-use-development
Credit: CAI

 

 

 

 

 


Design considerations can be divided into three major categories: 


    • Site Planning involves site- and building-specific issues such as DENSITY, urban scale, and floor area ratio.

    • The Choices & Guidelines section encompasses numerous design matters including parking, setbacks, lighting, and drainage, among others.

For more information about design and the relationship between the public ROADWAY and private property see the Design Tutorial.

Process considerations deal with the steps and procedures involved in the planning process.  This manual addresses nine specific process areas.