Wake Forest Community Plan - May 2023

EXISTING LAND USE Wake Forest is a unique place to live and work in the Research Triangle region. Existing land uses provide insight into how the Town has grown and developed over time and inform what type of development will be appropriate in the future. The Town’s existing land use was inventoried based on field reconnaissance and research conducted in October 2020. All parcels within the planning area have been categorized into one of the following 15 land use classifications:

Single-Family Detached Includes single-family homes occupying individual lots. This is the predominant residential development in the Town. The single-family detached land use includes newer planned subdivisions as well as older established neighborhoods. It also includes manufactured homes and mobile home parks, where detached single-family homes are constructed on a permanent chassis. Single-Family Attached Includes single-family attached homes where dwelling units share an exterior wall with at least one adjacent unit. Each dwelling unit has a separate dedicated building entrance. This land use includes townhomes and duplexes. Multifamily Includes structures containing multiple dwelling units stacked vertically and/ or horizontally. Multifamily housing often features shared building entrances, stairways, hallways, and occasionally amenities. This land use includes apartments, condominiums, two-over-twos, congregate care, and assisted living facilities. Mixed Use Includes buildings with two or more distinct uses vertically stacked. Developments usually contain commercial on the ground-floor and residential or office uses above. Mixed Commercial Includes properties with a mix of commercial retail, commercial service, or office uses. This use contains individual free-standing structures with different uses on a single property, such as at the southern corner of S Main Street and Rogers Road, as well as large commercial strip buildings containing multiple tenants with varying uses, such as at Gateway Commons.

Commercial Retail Includes commercial establishments that sell a product, such as grocery stores, gas stations, clothing stores, pharmacies, and home goods stores. Commercial Service Includes commercial establishments that sell a service, such as hair salons, auto repair shops, restaurants, drive-thru dining options, and cafes. Heavy Industrial Includes facilities involved in the processing of chemicals and plastics, refineries, and industrial machinery. These uses are larger in scale and typically have environmental, noise, and visual impacts on adjacent areas. Light Industrial Includes facilities involved in the manufacturing, processing, storage, and distribution of goods and materials. Light industrial uses typically have a minimal impact on surrounding areas and are generally clustered together within established industrial parks. Office Includes offices used for professional services as well as medical office uses. Individual small offices, legal firms, and family physicians are included. Public/Semi-Public Includes local government uses, municipal facilities, Town-owned parking lots, community service providers, schools, nonprofit organizations, and religious institutions. Examples include Town Hall, fire stations, libraries, places of worship, and Wake County Public Schools.

Parks & Open Space Includes designated public park spaces managed by the Wake Forest Parks, Recreation, and Cultural Resources Department, as well as private parks and recreational facilities located within traditional subdivision developments. This category also includes preserved natural areas, greenways, active golf courses, detention and retention ponds, and designated open spaces areas within private developments. Agriculture Includes land that is actively being used to produce crops, livestock, and other farming- related activities. Utility Includes utility infrastructure, such as electrical substations, power line rights-of-way, and water treatment facilities. Utility uses are dispersed throughout the Town to support existing development . Redevelopable/Vacant Land This category includes areas that have not been developed for any use and are not designated open space. This includes land that has yet to be cleared for development, as well as land that has been cleared and primed for development, potentially with connections to one or multiple utilities, including water, sewer, electric, gas, and telecommunications. This category also includes land that contains vacated existing structures that can be reasonably considered available for redevelopment.

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COMMUNITY PLAN | TOWN OF WAKE FOREST

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