Orange County NC Website
Attachment 1 <br />Conditional District Rezoning Overview -- Agricultural Service <br />Existing Conditions <br />The Orange County Zoning Ordinance currently outlines a process to rezone property from <br />Agricultural Residential (AR) to Agricultural Services (AS) as a way to support the rural <br />community. Like high - density residential districts, the AS district is a floating zoning district; it is <br />defined in the ordinance, but is not applied to specific parcels until requested by a property <br />owner. A landowner may currently apply to have property rezoned from AR to AS using a <br />general rezoning process. If the rezoning application is approved, the landowner may use his or <br />her property for any of the land uses allowed in the AS District. <br />Challenge <br />The general rezoning process works effectively in many situations. Two common scenarios are <br />when a property is rezoned from a low- density residential zoning district to higher density <br />residential district or when a property is rezoned from a residential use to a commercial or <br />business use. In the second example, once the property is rezoned the parcel takes on a <br />commercial character, and all of the uses permitted in the commercial zoning district are <br />available to that parcel. , <br />Applying the general rezoning process to the Agricultural Services floating district is challenging <br />because so much of the county is zoned Agricultural Residential even though the character of <br />the county's rural communities varies substantially. Some uses may be appropriate in one area <br />but not in another. <br />New Planning Construct <br />Many of the agricultural uses outlined in the Agricultural Support Enterprises proposal are <br />commercial in character: farm machinery repair, feed mills, horse supply and tack shop, etc All <br />of these uses belong in the rural parts of the county, areas that are traditionally zoned <br />residential, Staff is recommending a new mechanism to allow some of these uses to be <br />permitted in the rural portions of the residential zoning districts (Agricultural Residential (AR), <br />Rural Residential (R 1), Rural Buffer (RB)), as well as the rural commercial zoning districts using <br />what is called Conditional District Zoning. <br />Unlike general zoning, conditional district zoning may only be used for a specific land use or <br />uses. For example, a property owner would request that his /her parcel be rezoned for a feed <br />store, and would provide a schematic site plan of what the feed store would look like and how it <br />would be designed on the site Should the request be approved, the property owner could <br />develop the feed store and use the property for that purpose, but no other use. <br />Rezonings are legislative decisions. All rezoning applications — whether general or conditional <br />district — would be reviewed by the BOCC through a public hearing process. Using the <br />conditional district approach, the Board could allow some agriculturally -based commercial <br />ventures to occur in the rural parts of the county, based on the suitability of the use to the <br />particular community. A winery might make sense in Bingham Township but not in Cedar Grove <br />Township, for example. <br />Conditional district zoning is already used in some North Carolina jurisdictions. Charlotte/ <br />Mecklenburg provides landowners with two rezoning options — conventional rezoning or <br />conditional district rezoning. The options have different application requirements and different <br />processes. The conditional district zoning process allows particular uses to be established, but <br />only in accordance with specific standards and conditions pertaining to each individual <br />development project. <br />