Or. Admin. Code § 660-012-0045 - Implementation of the Transportation System Plan
(1) Each local
government shall amend its land use regulations to implement the TSP.
(a) The following transportation facilities,
services and improvements need not be subject to land use regulations except as
necessary to implement the TSP and, under ordinary circumstances do not have a
significant impact on land use:
(A) Operation,
maintenance, and repair of existing transportation facilities identified in the
TSP, such as road, bicycle, pedestrian, port, airport, and rail facilities, and
major regional pipelines and terminals;
(B) Dedication of right-of-way, authorization
of construction, and the construction of facilities and improvements, where the
improvements are consistent with clear and objective dimensional
standards;
(C) Uses permitted
outright under ORS 215.213(1)(j)-(m)
and 215.283(1)(h)-(k),
consistent with the provisions of OAR
660-012-0065; and
(D) Changes in the frequency of transit,
rail, and airport services.
(b) To the extent, if any, that a
transportation facility, service or improvement concerns the application of a
comprehensive plan provision or land use regulation, it may be allowed without
further land use review if it is permitted outright or if it is subject to
standards that do not require interpretation or the exercise of factual,
policy, or legal judgment;
(c) In
the event that a transportation facility, service, or improvement is determined
to have a significant impact on land use or to concern the application of a
comprehensive plan or land use regulation and to be subject to standards that
require interpretation or the exercise of factual, policy, or legal judgment,
the local government shall provide a review and approval process that is
consistent with OAR 660-012-0050. To facilitate
implementation of the TSP, each local government shall amend its land use
regulations to provide for consolidated review of land use decisions required
to permit a transportation project.
(2) Local governments shall adopt land use or
subdivision ordinance regulations, consistent with applicable federal and state
requirements, to protect transportation facilities, corridors, and sites for
their identified functions. Such regulations shall include:
(a) Access control measures, for example,
driveway and public road spacing, median control, and signal spacing standards,
that are consistent with the functional classification of roads and consistent
with limiting development on rural lands to rural uses and densities;
(b) Standards to protect future operation of
roads, transitways, and major transit corridors;
(c) Measures to protect public use airports
by controlling land uses within airport noise corridors and imaginary surfaces,
and by limiting physical hazards to air navigation;
(d) A process for coordinated review of
future land use decisions affecting transportation facilities, corridors, or
sites;
(e) A process to apply
conditions to development proposals in order to minimize impacts and protect
transportation facilities, corridors, or sites;
(f) Regulations to provide notice to public
agencies providing transportation facilities and services, MPOs, and ODOT of:
(A) Land use applications that require public
hearings;
(B) Subdivision and
partition applications;
(C) Other
applications that affect private access to roads; and
(D) Other applications within airport noise
corridors and imaginary surfaces that affect airport operations; and
(g) Regulations ensuring that
amendments to land use designations, densities, and design standards are
consistent with the functions, capacities, and performance standards of
facilities identified in the TSP.
(3) Local governments shall adopt land use or
subdivision regulations for urban areas and rural communities as set forth
below. The purposes of this section are to provide for safe and convenient
pedestrian, bicycle and vehicular circulation consistent with access management
standards and the function of affected streets, to ensure that new development
provides on-site streets and accessways that provide reasonably direct routes
for pedestrian and bicycle travel in areas where pedestrian and bicycle travel
is likely if connections are provided, and that avoids wherever possible levels
of automobile traffic that might interfere with or discourage pedestrian or
bicycle travel.
(a) Bicycle parking facilities
as part of new multi-family residential developments of four units or more, new
retail, office and institutional developments, and all transit transfer
stations and park-and-ride lots;
(b) On-site facilities shall be provided that
accommodate safe and convenient pedestrian and bicycle access from within new
subdivisions, multi-family developments, planned developments, shopping
centers, and commercial districts to adjacent residential areas and transit
stops, and to neighborhood activity centers within one-half mile of the
development. Single-family residential developments shall generally include
streets and accessways. Pedestrian circulation through parking lots should
generally be provided in the form of accessways.
(A) "Neighborhood activity centers" include,
but are not limited to, existing or planned schools, parks, shopping areas,
transit stops, or employment centers;
(B) Bikeways shall be required along
arterials and major collectors. Sidewalks shall be required along arterials,
collectors, and most local streets in urban areas, except that sidewalks are
not required along controlled access roadways, such as freeways;
(C) Cul-de-sacs and other dead-end streets
may be used as part of a development plan, consistent with the purposes set
forth in this section;
(D) Local
governments shall establish their own standards or criteria for providing
streets and accessways consistent with the purposes of this section. Such
measures may include but are not limited to: standards for spacing of streets
or accessways; and standards for excessive out-of-direction travel;
(E) Streets and accessways need not be
required where one or more of the following conditions exist:
(i) Physical or topographic conditions make a
street or accessway connection impracticable. Such conditions include but are
not limited to freeways, railroads, steep slopes, wetlands or other bodies of
water where a connection could not reasonably be provided;
(ii) Buildings or other existing development
on adjacent lands physically preclude a connection now or in the future
considering the potential for redevelopment; or
(iii) Where streets or accessways would
violate provisions of leases, easements, covenants, restrictions or other
agreements existing as of May 1, 1995, which preclude a required street or
accessway connection.
(c) Where off-site road improvements are
otherwise required as a condition of development approval, they shall include
facilities accommodating convenient pedestrian and bicycle travel, including
bicycle ways along arterials and major collectors;
(d) For purposes of subsection (b) "safe and
convenient" means bicycle and pedestrian routes, facilities and improvements
that:
(A) Are reasonably free from hazards,
particularly types or levels of automobile traffic that would interfere with or
discourage pedestrian or cycle travel for short trips;
(B) Provide an accessible and reasonably
direct route of travel between destinations such as between a transit stop and
a store; and
(C) Meet travel needs
of cyclists and pedestrians considering destination and length of trip; and
considering that the most common trip length of pedestrians is generally under
one-half mile.
(e)
Internal pedestrian circulation within new office parks and commercial
developments shall be provided through clustering of buildings, construction of
accessways, walkways and similar techniques.
(4) To support transit in urban areas
containing a population greater than 25,000, where the area is already served
by a public transit system or where a determination has been made that a public
transit system is feasible, local governments shall adopt land use and
subdivision regulations as provided in subsections (a)-(g) below:
(a) Transit routes and transit facilities
shall be designed to support transit use through provision of bus stops,
pullouts and shelters, optimum road geometrics, on-road parking restrictions
and similar facilities, as appropriate;
(b) New retail, office, and institutional
buildings at or near major transit stops shall provide for convenient
pedestrian access to transit through the measures listed in paragraphs (A) and
(B) below.
(A) Accessible walkways shall be
provided connecting building entrances and streets adjoining the
site;
(B) Accessible pedestrian
facilities connecting to adjoining properties shall be provided except where
such a connection is impracticable as provided for in paragraph (3)(b)(E).
Pedestrian facilities shall connect the on-site circulation system to existing
or proposed streets, walkways, and driveways that abut the property. Where
adjacent properties are undeveloped or have potential for redevelopment,
streets, accessways and walkways on site shall be laid out or stubbed to allow
for extension to the adjoining property;
(C) In addition to paragraphs (A) and (B)
above, on sites at major transit stops provide the following:
(i) Either locate buildings within 20 feet of
the transit stop, a transit street or an intersecting street or provide a
pedestrian plaza at the transit stop or a street intersection;
(ii) An accessible and reasonably direct
pedestrian facility between the transit stop and building entrances on the
site;
(iii) A transit passenger
landing pad accessible to people with disabilities;
(iv) An easement or dedication for a
passenger shelter if requested by the transit provider; and
(v) Lighting at the transit stop.
(c) Local governments
may implement paragraphs (b)(A) and (B) through the designation of pedestrian
districts and adoption of appropriate implementing measures regulating
development within pedestrian districts. Pedestrian districts must comply with
the requirement of paragraph (b)(C);
(d) Designated employee parking areas in new
developments shall provide preferential parking for carpools and
vanpools;
(e) Existing development
shall be allowed to redevelop a portion of existing parking areas for
transit-oriented uses, including bus stops and pullouts, bus shelters, park and
ride stations, transit-oriented developments, and similar facilities, where
appropriate;
(f) Road systems for
new development shall be provided that can be adequately served by transit,
including provision of pedestrian access to existing and identified future
transit routes. This shall include, where appropriate, separate accessways to
minimize travel distances;
(g)
Along existing or planned transit routes, designation of types and densities of
land uses adequate to support transit.
(5) In developing a bicycle and pedestrian
circulation plan as required by OAR
660-012-0020(2)(d),
local governments shall identify improvements to facilitate bicycle and
pedestrian trips to meet local travel needs in developed areas. Appropriate
improvements should provide for more direct, convenient, accessible, and safer
bicycle or pedestrian travel within and between residential areas and
neighborhood activity centers (i.e., schools, shopping, transit stops).
Specific measures include, for example, constructing walkways between
cul-de-sacs and adjacent roads, providing walkways between buildings, and
providing direct access between adjacent uses.
(6) Local governments shall establish
standards for local streets and accessways that minimize pavement width and
total right-of-way consistent with the operational needs of the facility. The
intent of this requirement is that local governments consider and reduce
excessive standards for local streets and accessways in order to reduce the
cost of construction, provide for more efficient use of urban land, provide for
emergency vehicle access while discouraging inappropriate traffic volumes and
speeds, and which accommodate convenient pedestrian and bicycle circulation.
Notwithstanding section (1) or (3) of this rule, local street standards adopted
to meet this requirement need not be adopted as land use regulations.
Notes
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 197.040
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 197.012
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