Laserfiche WebLink
agreement among various persons for less <br />than a sixty-day period in any year for any <br />occupant, and is regulated under the <br />provisions of chapter 514E, Hawaii <br />Revised Statutes, as amended. <br />Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) is <br />a cumulative body of knowledge, belief, and <br />practice handed down through generations <br />and focused on the relationship of plants, <br />animals, and humans with place -specific <br />traditional practices and with their <br />environment. <br />Traditional Neighborhood Development (TND) <br />involves compact, mixed -use neighborhood <br />where residential, commercial, and civic <br />buildings are within proximity to each other. <br />Transfer of Development Rights (TDR) is a <br />process by which development rights may be <br />transferred from one parcel of land to another. <br />(See Development Rights) <br />Transient Accommodation means the <br />furnishing of a room, apartment., suite, single <br />family dwelling, or the like to a transient for a <br />designated period of time that provides living, <br />sleeping, or housekeeping accommodations. <br />Transit Oriented Development (TOD) is a <br />development of high -density mixed land use <br />that uses a transit facility as a focal point and <br />thereby seeks to encourage the use of public <br />transit. <br />Underserved Subdivisions are characterized <br />Universal Design Principles aim to create <br />environments,, products, and services that are <br />accessible and usable by all people, regardless of <br />their age, ability, or disability. These principles <br />emphasize inclusivity ensuring that designs <br />accommodate a wide range of users with varying <br />needs and preferences. Key aspects include <br />I I <br />simplicity, flexibility, intuitive use, and equitable <br />41 40 <br />access., which together promote usability and <br />accessibility for everyone. By integrating universal <br />I I 1 <br />design principles,aesigners and planners create <br />more inc1 <br />lusive, functional, and user-friendly <br />1 1 1 1 <br />solutions that benefit all members of society. <br />Urban Development Plan is a plan having a local <br />scale primarily comprising one or more existing or <br />proposed urban areas including towns, villages., <br />resort -residential nodes and/or suburban residential <br />neighborhoods where more intensive uses are <br />contemplated. These may include redevelopment <br />plans for all or part of such urban areas. <br />Urban Forestry is the planting, maintenance, <br />care, and protection of tree populations in urban <br />settings. Urban forests come in many different <br />shapes and sizes. They include urban parks, street <br />trees., landscaped boulevards, gardens, river and <br />coastal promenades, greenways, river corridors, <br />wetlands'. nature preserves, shelter belts of trees, <br />and working trees at former industrial sites. <br />Urban forests, through planned connections of <br />green spaces, form the green infrastructure on <br />which communities depend. Green infrastructure <br />works at multiple scales from the neighborhood <br />to the metro area to the regional landscape. <br />by having: <br />Urban Growth Areas (UGA) are established as <br />• Lot sizes that do not conform to <br />land that is envisioned for future areas of urban <br />State or County standards or other <br />use and should include only those lands that <br />zoning criteria; <br />meet the following criteria: <br />• At least 10 lots; and <br />Are characterized by urban development <br />• Limited access to public <br />that can be efficiently and cost-effectively <br />infrastructure and services; and <br />served by roads, water, sanitary sewer and <br />• High lot vacancy rates or a pattern <br />storm drainage, schools,, and other urban <br />of "leapfrog" development; and <br />governmental services within the next 20- <br />Lot sizes too small for agricultural <br />40 years <br />development (1/2 to 3 acres ); and <br />Respect topographical features that form <br />• A location outside County <br />a natural edge,, such as watercourses and <br />designated preferred development <br />ridgelines <br />areas <br />Are sufficiently free of environmental <br />Glossary I County of Hawaii General Plan <br />19 <br />