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(Village Design Guidelines <br /> Extension Line: a line prescribed at a certain level of a building for the major part of the width of a <br /> Facade, regulating the maximum height for an Encroachment by an ARCADE Frontage. See Table <br /> 5. <br /> Facade: the exterior wall of a building that is set along a Frontage Line. See Elevation. Forecourt: <br /> a Private Frontage wherein a portion of the Facade is close to the Frontage Line and the central <br /> portion is set back. See Table 4. <br /> Frontage: the area between a building Facade and the vehicular lanes, inclusive of its built and <br /> planted components. Frontage is divided into Private Frontage and Public Frontage. See Table 3A <br /> and Table 4. <br /> Frontage Line: a Lot line bordering a Public Frontage. Facades facing Frontage Lines define the <br /> public realm and are therefore more regulated than the Elevations facing other Lot Lines. See <br /> Table 14. <br /> Function: the use or uses accommodated by a building and its Lot, categorized as Restricted, <br /> Limited, or Open, according to the intensity of the use. See Table 7 and Table 9. <br /> Gallery: a Private Frontage conventional for Retail use wherein the Facade is aligned close to the <br /> Frontage Line with an attached cantilevered shed or lightweight colonnade overlapping the <br /> Sidewalk. See Table 4. <br /> Green: a Civic Space type for unstructured recreation, spatially defined by landscaping rather than <br /> building Frontages. See Table 10. <br /> Greenfield: an area that consists of open or wooded land or farmland that has not been previously <br /> developed. <br /> Greenway: an Open Space Corridor in largely natural conditions which may include trails for <br /> bicycles and pedestrians. <br /> Greyfield: an area previously used primarily as a parking lot. Shopping centers and shopping malls <br /> are typical Greyfield sites. (Variant: Grayfield.) <br /> Highway: a rural and suburban Thoroughfare of high vehicular speed and capacity. This type is <br /> allocated to the more rural TRANSECT ZONES (T -1, T -2, and T -3). <br /> Home Occupation: non - Retail Commercial enterprises. The work quarters should be invisible from <br /> the Frontage, located either within the house or in an Outbuilding. Permitted activities are defined <br /> by the Restricted Office category. See Table 7. <br /> House: an Edgeyard building type, usually a single - family dwelling on a large Lot, often shared <br /> with an ACCESSORY BUILDING in the back yard. (Syn: single.) <br /> Infill: noun - new development on land that had been previously developed, including most <br /> Greyfield and Brownfield sites and cleared land within Urbanized areas. verb- to develop such <br /> areas. <br /> Infill RCD: a Village Unit type within an Urbanized, Greyfield, or Brownfield area based on a Long <br /> or Linear Pedestrian Shed and consisting of T -4 and /or T -5 Zones. An Infill RCD is permitted BY <br /> RIGHT in the Kailua Village TOD and the Rural Towns TODs and is regulated by Article 4. See <br /> Section 4.2.3. (Var: downtown.) <br /> 30 <br />