Orange County NC Website
12 <br />Attachment A - 4 <br />The Rural Buffer is defined as being a low- density area consisting of single - family homes situated on <br />large lots having a minimum size of two (2) acres. The Rural Buffer is further defined as land which, although <br />adjacent to an Urban or Transition Area, is rural in character and which will remain rural and not require urban <br />services (public utilities and other Town services). The Rural Buffer is expected to contain low density <br />residential uses, agricultural uses exempt from zoning regulations, and low- intensity agricultural support <br />uses' and consists of the following Joint Planning Area Land Use Plan categories: Rural <br />Residential axlAgricultural; Public- Private Open Space; Resource Conservation; New Hope Creek Corridor <br />Open Space; Extractive Use; and the overlay category designated University Lake Watershed Area. <br />Rural Residential and Agricultural Areas are low- density areas consisting of single - family homes <br />situated on large lots with a minimum lot size of two acres, except when part of a cluster subdivision and then <br />adhering to a density limit of 1 unit for every 2 acres of property. Cluster subdivisions, reducing parcels to at <br />least 1 acre in area, are allowed so long as density limits for the entire subdivision are maintained. In that <br />respect, Rural Residential Areas are identical to the definition of the Rural Buffer. The area includes property <br />supporting farming operations, including forestry activities, established in accordance with the provisions of <br />the North Carolina General Statutes. <br />Public- Private Open Space Areas include major land areas owned or controlled by public and <br />private interests in the Rural Buffer. Such holdings as Duke Forest, Camp New Hope, U.S. Government <br />lands associated with Jordan Lake, the 100 -foot buffer along I -40, and Orange Water and Sewer Authority <br />lands adjacent to University Lake and the quarry site on N.C. Highway 54 provide open space through <br />research, educational, forest management, and recreational functions. <br />Resource Conservation Areas in the Rural Buffer are identical to those in the Transition Areas; i.e., <br />floodplains, wetlands along drainage tributaries, and steep slope areas (15% or greater). The areas form the <br />basis for a parks and open space system (see Strategy Map) which provided the framework within which <br />other land uses are situated. <br />New Hone Creek Corridor Onen Space Areas include some of the Resource Protection Areas and <br />a portion of the Public /Private Open Space Areas which were designated as significant and worthy of <br />protection according to the New Hope Corridor Open Space Master Plan completed in April of 1991. (See <br />Master Plan Map following Strategy Maps). The areas are part of a system of open space in Durham and <br />Orange Counties along New Hope Creek and its tributaries between Eno River State Park and U.S. Army <br />Corps of Engineers land north and south of Jordan Lake. This category is made up of critical environmental <br />areas such as steam beds, floodplains, steep slopes, and larger tracts of historic, educational, or recreational <br />value. <br />Extractive Use Areas encompass mining and quarry operations. Only one such site exists in the <br />Rural Buffer, the American Stone Company quarry on N.C. Highway 54 west of Carrboro. <br />Retail Trade Areas in the Rural Buffer include low intensity neighborhood centers which serve the <br />immediate area and generate low traffic volumes. Only one such area is designated in the Rural Buffer — <br />Blackwood station on N.C. Highway 86. <br />The amendments necessary for Agricultural Support uses are shown in italic and underlined text. <br />