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People don't work in a restaurant, a beauty shop, a dental office, a drug store? For all I know, someone is renting a little building there to do "office work".
Those are mostly retail jobs. I do see you added in a dentist office though, which does add a varied use. Insurance? Real estate? Those all diversify the strip mall. Maybe a non-profit or community organization?
That has always been the definition of mixed use. Suburb as well has a specific definition.
I don't know your strip mall by you, so I cannot tell you if it is good or bad.
Oh, it's bad, LOL! Please provide a link to a professional source for this definition.
Quote:
Originally Posted by BajanYankee
It means the integration of different uses (residential, commerical, industrial) rather than segregation. The strip mall you're referring to is probably not mixed-use if it is segregated from residential uses. The zoning code often requires these uses to be separate.
Well, hell, all of you missed the part about building condos on the vacant grocery store land!
Quote:
Originally Posted by jade408
Those are mostly retail jobs. I do see you added in a dentist office though, which does add a varied use. Insurance? Real estate? Those all diversify the strip mall. Maybe a non-profit or community organization?
If it is 100% retail it isn't mixed use.
A hairdresser isn't retail, either, nor is a shoe repair shop.
I'd ask for a link, but I really don't care what Atlantic Cities says.
Mixed-use development is development that blends residential, commercial, cultural, institutional, and where appropriate, industrial uses.
Mixed-use development:
allows for greater housing variety and density
reduces distances between housing, workplaces, retail businesses, and other destinations
encourages more compact development
strengthens neighborhood character
promotes pedestrian and bicycle friendly environments
Those are both good sources to give you a general idea of what mixed use is. I am not saying mixed use is good and single use is bad, just saying there is a distinct difference between the two.
Mixed-use isn't a black/white, it's a gradient. For example, a condo building with no ground floor is, by definition, single-use. But what you're usually looking at is the neighborhood composition. Or as your link says "mixed use is—in a broad sense—any urban, suburban or village development, or even a single building," emphasis added.
That does not describe most of the strip malls I'm familiar with.
What is mixed use then? The strip mall near me has a Walgreen's, a liquor store, a shoe repair shop, a dental office, a hairdresser, a sports bar and a pizza parlor, off the top of my head. At times it's also had an exercise studio (now the sports bar). It used to have a grocery store and will again soon. Said grocery store is going to have a meeting room for public meetings. Since someone in a thread yesterday referred to a Safeway as a community center, I think the place I'm describing is "mixed use". There are also going to be some condos built on part of the old grocery store property.
The DELO development that is being planned for your downtown is mixed use, the proposed Coal Creek Station will be mixed use, and the Safeway site you are referring to is considered to be mixed use development. The Denver metro has lots of examples of mixed use for you to learn about.
I think I know what mixed use is. I thank everyone for their links. The strip mall I was referring to is in an area that is probably 75% (at least) residential. Only on the main road (S. Boulder Rd) is it commercial. I don't see why the residential has to be right in the shopping area for it to "count".
I think I know what mixed use is. I thank everyone for their links. The strip mall I was referring to is in an area that is probably 75% (at least) residential. Only on the main road (S. Boulder Rd) is it commercial. I don't see why the residential has to be right in the shopping area for it to "count".
Well there is a difference between mixed use building and mixed use development. A mixed use development is where you have a combination of single use buildings and mixed use buildings to make up an entire development.
As for making it count, that is just the meaning for the word. Neither single use or mixed use is better or worse, it all depends on how it is being used.
Well there is a difference between mixed use building and mixed use development. A mixed use development is where you have a combination of single use buildings and mixed use buildings to make up an entire development.
As for making it count, that is just the meaning for the word. Neither single use or mixed use is better or worse, it all depends on how it is being used.
Sounds like you can't have that, by some people's definitions. If there aren't people living above stores, or within the confines of a retail area, it's not "mixed". If there aren't offices (of what kind?) it's not mixed.
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