HomeMy WebLinkAbout2021-133 - ResolutionRESOLUTION NO. 2021-133
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY
OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA, CALIFORNIA, ADOPTING
THE 2020 PLANRC GENERAL PLAN UPDATE, 2021-2029
HOUSING ELEMENT, AND CLIMATE ACTION PLAN,
AND MAKING FINDINGS IN SUPPORT THEREOF
A. Recitals.
WHEREAS, the PlanRC General Plan Update is a comprehensive update to the City of
Rancho Cucamonga (the "City") General Plan which serves to build on our success as a world-
class community, to create an equitable, sustainable, and vibrant city, rich in opportunity for all to
thrive; and
WHEREAS, The PlanRC General Plan Update would improve the City's economic base by
creating opportunities for development and redevelopment in a well-planned community; and
WHEREAS, the General Plan applies to lands within City limits and also certain lands
outside the City limits within the Sphere of Influence, which collectively comprise the City's Planning
Area, covering a total of 31,627 gross acres (46.5 square miles); and
WHEREAS, although in person engagement was limited due to COVID-19, the City
engaged the community regarding the PlanRC General Plan Update through a variety of digital
platforms including 72 virtual workshops, meetings, webinars and pop-ups and 17 online surveys
netting input from over 2,300 community members and over 1 million digital impressions through
various social media platforms; and
WHEREAS, in conformance with Government Code sections 65351 through 65352.5, the
City has provided opportunities for public input and involvement in the PlanRC General Plan Update
and provided opportunities for consultation to affected public agencies and California Native
American Tribes; and
WHEREAS, the 2021-2029 Housing Element represents the City of Rancho Cucamonga's
satisfaction of the requirements under state housing element law to meet the mandate that all cities
and counties prepare a Housing Element as part of a comprehensive General Plan to meet the plan
for new housing growth mandated through the Regional Housing Needs Assessment, of which
Rancho Cucamonga is allocated 10,525 units; and
WHEREAS, the City submitted the Housing Element to the California Department of
Housing and Community Development ("HCD") on June 3, 2021 and revised version on September
2, 2021. The City received its second review letter on November 2, 2021. Revisions requested by
HCD have been incorporated into the final document; and
WHEREAS, the City has prepared a Climate Action Plan ("CAP") as a companion to the
General Plan to reduce the community's contributions to climate change grounded it the General
Plan's core community values of Health, Equity and Stewardship and to build on the broad climate
change policies set forth in the General Plan; and
WHEREAS, on November 10, 2021, the Planning Commission conducted a duly noticed
public hearing and considered the PlanRC General Plan Update, 2021-2029 Housing Element, and
Climate Action Plan and related Program Environmental Impact Report prepared pursuant to the
California Environmental Quality Act("CEQA"). The Planning Commission concluded the hearing
on the same date and thereafter adopted Resolution No. 21-71, recommending that the City Council
certify the Environmental Impact Report, make findings pursuant to the California Environmental
Quality Act, adopt a statement of overriding considerations, and recommending that the City
Council adopt the PlanRC General Plan Update, 2021-2029 Housing Element and Climate Action
Plan.
WHEREAS, on December 15, 2021 the City Council conducted a duly noticed public hearing
on the PlanRC General Plan Update, 2021-2029 Housing Element, and Climate Action Plan, and
concluded said hearing on that date. At the conclusion of this hearing, the City Council certified the
Final Program Environmental Impact Report, and adopted the findings, statement of overriding
considerations, and mitigation monitoring and reporting program for the PIanRC General Plan
Update, 2021-2029 Housing Element, and Climate Action Plan.
8. All legal prerequisites prior to the adoption of this Resolution have occurred.
B. Resolution.
NOW, THEREFORE, it is hereby found, determined, and resolved by the City Council of the
City of Rancho Cucamonga as follows:
1.Recitals. The City Council hereby specifically finds that all of the facts set forth
in the Recitals, Part A, of this Resolution are true and correct.
2.CEQA. The PlanRC General Plan Update, 2021-2029 Housing Element, and
Climate Action Plan (collectively, the "Project") have been environmentally reviewed pursuant to the
provisions of the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), the State CEQA Guidelines, and the
City's Local CEQA Guidelines. The City prepared an Program EIR for the Project in order to
analyze the Project's potential impacts on the environment. A Draft Program EIR was prepared and
circulated for public review and comment, and a Final FEIR was reviewed by the City Council. By
separate Resolution No. 2021-132, the City Council has: (i) made the required CEQA findings and
determinations, (ii) certified the Final Program EIR; (iii) adopted a Statement of Overriding
Considerations and (d) adopted a Mitigation Monitoring and Reporting Program for the Project.
Resolution No. 2021-132 is incorporated herein by reference, and made a part hereof as if fully set
forth herein. The documents and other materials that constitute the record on which this
determination was made are located in the Planning Department and are in the custody of the
Planning Director. Further, the mitigation measures and related standard conditions of approval set
forth therein are made applicable to the Project and will be incorporated into future development as
appropriate.
3.Findings. Based upon all available evidence presented to the City Council
during the above-referenced public hearing on December 15, 2021, including written and oral staff
reports, together with public testimony, the City Council hereby specifically finds as follows:
A. General Plan. As a comprehensive update to the City's General Plan, the
PlanRC General Plan Update has been written a unified document to ensure that the General Plan
as amended will remain internally consistent. Adoption of the PlanRC General Plan Update is in the
public interest because it provides goals and policies that would facilitate the following:
1. Human-scaled design, with buildings and outdoor spaces oriented towards
people connected by safe and comfortable streets, pathways, and trails that provide equitable
access for all;
2. Focus transformative growth along major corridors and allow incremental
change in neighborhoods;
Resolution No. 2021-133—Page 2 of 4
3. Increase jobs in the City to encourage more residents to work locally and
reduce commuting out of the City to work;
4. Maintain and enhance conservation areas; and
5. Create vibrant activity nodes and a "real downtown" with one or several
major activity centers with varied cultural opportunities and public art providing areas for social,
civic, and commercial activity.
B. Housing Element. The 2021-2029 Housing Element has been written in
conjunction with the PlanRC General Plan Update to ensure that it remains internally consistent
with the General Plan, as amended. The 2021-2029 Housing Element works is a comprehensive
housing element that meets the requirements of state law and, together with the PlanRC General
Plan Update, demonstrates that the City has planned for the required number of housing units at all
income levels to meet the City's RHNA obligations. It will therefore help alleviate the state and
regional housing crisis. For that reason, adoption of the 2021-2029 Housing Element is in the
public interest.
C. Climate Action Plan. The Climate Action Plan will help ensure that future
development within the City does not unduly contribute to greenhouse gas emissions and is needed
to help facilitate the policies and standard conditions of approval outlined in the PlanRC General
Plan Update and Program EIR.
4. Adoption. Based upon the substantial evidence presented to the City Council
during the above-referenced public hearing on December 15, 2021, including written and oral staff
reports, together with public testimony, and the recommendation from the Planning Commission,
the City Council hereby adopts the PlanRC General Plan Update as a comprehensive update to the
City of Rancho Cucamonga's General Plan, 2021-2029 Housing Element, and Climate Action Plan,
as attached to the staff report accompanying this Resolution and incorporated herein by this
reference.
5.HCD Submittal Authorization. The City Council authorizes the City Manager, or the
City Manager's designee, to submit the 2021-2029 Housing Element to HCD for final approval and
make revisions or additions to the adopted Housing Element to facilitate final certification of the
Housing Element by HCD.
6.Location of Records. The PlanRC General Plan, 2021-2029 Housing Element
andClimate Action Plan shall be available for public inspection at the Rancho Cucamonga City Hall,
at the Planning Department, 10500 Civic Center Drive, Rancho Cucamonga, California 91730.
7. Certification. The City Clerk shall certify to the adoption of this Resolution.
Resolution No. 2021-133— Page 3 of 4
PASSED, APPROVED, and ADOPTED this 15th day of December 2021.
f
L. a nis ich-ael, Mayor
L
ATTEST:
Ja e C. Reynolds, City C` rk
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
COUNTY OF SAN BERNARDINO ) ss
CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA )
I, Janice C. Reynolds, City Clerk of the City of Rancho Cucamonga, do hereby certify
that the foregoing Resolution was duly passed, approved, and adopted by the City Council of
the City of Rancho Cucamonga, at a Regular Meeting of said Council held on the 15th day of
December 2021.
AYES: Hutchison, Kennedy, Michael, Scott, Spagnolo
NOES: None
ABSENT:None
ABSTAINED: None
Executed this 16th day of December, 2021, at Rancho Cucamonga, California.
J ice C. Reynolds, City Cler
Resolution No. 2021-133—Page 4 of 4
City of Rancho Cucamonga
GENERAL PLAN
Adopted December 2021
Foundational values defining the vision of our world class community
Health, Equity, and tewardship
iv PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA v
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Darryl Adams
Christian Agraso
Mike Albertson
Teri Alvarez
Destiny Alzate
Manuela Amaya
Mary Armstrong
Richard Arnold
Britany Ashcraft
George Atalla
Abdul Bahar
Jerry Bajwa
Mrs. Baksh
Ryan Balber
Concepcion Barragan
Michael Bell
Lauren Bell-Nagy
Nancy Berk
Amoha Bhale
Spencer Bogner
Melissa Boyd
Ernie Braunwalder
Pamela Brown
Michelle Brown
Robert Brown
Mariatu Browne
Jessica Bruny
Bullardhouse
Brad Buller
Curtis Burnett
Art Camacho
Cheryl Camp
Bobbie Campbell
Nikki Campbell
Carina Campos
Benjamin Cards
Carolina Ceballos
Ben Cendejas
Benjamin Cendejas
Siri Champion
Jutta Chaney
Russ Chaney
John Chang
Jackson Chang
Hector Chavez
Max Cherubin
Terry Chiever
Peter Chin
Rohan Chowdhury
Gary Christian
Bryan Clark
Samuel Coleman
Tito Condori Josue
Carolyn Cooper
Elizabeth Coronel
Eric Corral
Crystal
Catherine Creech
Emerson
Frank Cuomo
James Curtis
Ben Cutler
Avril Dafne
Rebecca Davies
Karen Davis
Linda Davis
Jordan Davis
Steve Dee
Melissa Diaz
Martin Dickey
Danielle Dirksen
Donald Dreyer
Garland Dyer
Rick E.
Pamela Easter
Mark Edgemon
COMMUNITY MEMBERS
We would like the acknowledge and thank the many members of the community of Rancho
Cucamonga who gave their time to provide us with invaluable information, insights and input
throughout the PlanRC process. Their specific, local perspectives have been critical to the development
of this General Plan. This list includes those members of the community who provided their names
while participating. We also recognize the countless others who engaged during the PlanRC process.
Mercy Ejiaga
Jimmy Elrod
Bethany Encina
Angel Esparza
Eduardo Espinoza
Chris Esteves
Jamila Fazel
Zhaonan Feng
Connie Ferrante
Wade Fultz
Tom G
John Gallegos- Cordero
Ursula Garcia
JR Garcia
Ann Gatsi
Josh Gause
Steven George
R Gilani
Brad Giles
James Gilliam
Gilman Bishop
John Gonzales
Enrique Gonzalez
Pamela Grasso
Jeni Graves
Dan Griffith
Cheree Griffith
Eric Grubb
Diane Gunther
Marilyn Hall
Courtney Harper
Jennetta Harris
Linda Harris
Ron Hastings
L. Henderson
David Hering
Gail Hernandez
Kurt Hofmeister
Kathy Holguin
Hope Hope
Don Horvatich
Maritza Ibanez-Farrell
Glenda Jackson
Gita Jaishankar
Steven Jarvie
LuAnna Jauregui
Christine Jeffrey
Vincent Jimenez
Annette Johnson
Victoria Jones
Jennifer Jones
Nita Kansara
Mike Karim
Hope Kaufman
Mitchell Kauker
Navjot Kaur
Lorraine Kindred
Robert Kindron
Amanda Knight
Robert Knox
Sarah Knox
Cory Kohn
Russell Kraft
Praseetha Krishnan
Teresa Kuan
Vishal Reddy Kunam
Linda Laffittee
Douglas Law
Te Le
Maria Lemus Garcia
Jaymie Leslie
Dina Lopez
Lourdes Lopez
Gidti Ludesirishoti
Janet Ludolph
Tony M.
John Machado
Monica Mahoney
Paige Garcia
Barbara Marino
Caterina Marji
Diane Martin
Armando Martinez
Diego Martinez
Tony Martinez
Natalie Masacho
Leslie Matamoros
Lynn McCall
Richard McDonald
Tim McGinnis
Michael Milhiser
Angel Millla
Frank Minano
Emily Minnotte
Gary Mirabella
Janice Mizuhara
Carmen Monzon
Tony Morales
Kimberly Morris
Rosalind Morton
Stanley Moy
Kristen Murrieta-Morales
Kavin Murugan
Terri Musa
Kathy Nelson
Jeff Nesbit
PG Noel
Marven Norman
Jasmine M Owens
Paula Pachon
Rob Patel
Caryn Payzant
Mary Perez
Michael Perez
Jennifer Pezda
Catherine Phifer
Kevin Piper
AJ Pointer
Kathi Pryor
Vinita Pugal
Siska Purnawan
Gema Ramirez
Ric Ramos
Nicole Reyes
Barbara Rivera
George Ruiz
Mark Rush
David Sage
Ava Salazar
Gelza Salazar
Giovanni Salgado
Arnold San Miguel
Angela Sandoval
Joslyn Santana
Camille Santos
Maya Saraf
Stephanie Sawyer
Stephen Scauzillo
Brian Schmid
Mary Jane Schoenborn
Denise School
Kristie Sepulveda Burchit
Tina Shafer
Dallas Shugart
Danielle Simmoore
B Sims
Sid Siphomsay
Matthew Slaton
Susan Sluka Kelly
Terri Smith
Don Smith
Marilyn Smith
Tim Sowles
Lindsey Squirewell
Elizabeth Stevenson
Jack Stiegel
Lisa Stimpson
Jared Swop
Alex Tank
Becky Taylor
Paul Tecson
Steve Thomas
Tatiana Torres
Cuong Trinh
Nancy Turnage
Kyle Urrutia
Frank Valverde
Krishnaraj Vasudevan
Danielle Vega
Karla Villanueva
Aparna Warade
Matthew West
Hicxell Wester
Jeff Widen
Kim Williams
Carol Williams
Andrea Winzer
Lauren Wittenbrock
Lana Wong
Ashley Wright
Mireya Xocua
Paula Yates
JR Ybarra
Eden Young
Brandon Young
Mike Zehner
Miner Zhang
Kanghui Zhang
vi PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA vii
CITY COUNCIL
L. Dennis Michael, Mayor
Lynne B. Kennedy, Mayor Pro Tem
Ryan A. Hutchison, Council Member
Kristine D. Scott, Council Member
Sam Spagnolo, Council Member
PLANNING & HISTORIC PRESERVATION COMMISSION
Tony Guglielmo, Chairman
Francisco Oaxaca, Vice-Chairman
Bryan Dopp, Commissioner
Tony Morales, Commissioner
Diane Williams, Commissioner
CITY STAFF
John Gillison, City Manager
Matt Burris, Deputy City Manager
Elisa Cox, Deputy City Manager
Lori Sassoon, Deputy City Manager
Mena Abdul Ahad, Assistant Planner
Gary Ablard, Community Services Supervisor
Vince Acuna, Associate Planner
Isaiah Aguilera, Senior GIS Analyst
Deborah Allen, Management Aide
Rob Ball, Fire Marshal
Jeff Benson, Parks Superintendent
Jennifer Camacho-Curtis, Community Affairs
Officer
Linda Ceballos, Environmental Programs
Manager
Morgan Chavez, Community Affairs Technician
Jana Cook, Community Improvement Manager
Gabrielle Costello, Community Affairs Senior
Coordinator
Nicole Dalton, Community Affairs Coordinator
Noah Daniels, Finance Manager
Clarence DeGuzman, Community Programs
Coordinator
Katie Distelrath, Community Services Deputy
Director
David Eoff, Senior Planner
Albert Espinoza, Public Works Deputy Director
Veronica Fincher, Animal Services Director
Mike Frasure, Building and Safety Director
Justine Garcia, Engineering Deputy Director
Sandy Griffin, QI Nurse
Joann Gwynn, Community Services
Superintendent
Jennifer Hunt-Gracia, Community Services
Director
Steve Lawdis, GIS Supervisor
Erika Lewis-Huntley, Management Analyst III
Fred Lyn, Engineering Deputy Director
Mike McCliman, Deputy Fire Chief
Anne McIntosh, Planning Director
Sean McPherson, Senior Planner
Joanna Marrufo, Management Aide
Celeste Medrano, Community Services
Supervisor
Annette Mumolo, Community Affairs Senior
Coordinator
Jennifer Nakamura, Management Analyst II
Zack Neighbors, Building Inspector Supervisor
Robert Neiuber, Human Resources Director
Baldwin Ngai, Assistant Engineer
Flavio Nunez, Management Analyst II
Tamara Oatman, Finance Director
Marissa Ostos, Management Analyst I
Neil Plummer, Facilities Superintendent
Darryl Polk, Innovation & Technology Director
Joseph Ramos, Emergency Management
Coordinator
Beth Ross, Management Analyst I
Brian Sandona, Senior Civil Engineer
Mike Smith, Principal Planner
Mike Smith, Police Lieutenant
Julie Sowles, Library Director
Griffin Sproul, Associate Planner
John Thompson, Senior Plans Examiner
Allison Town, Community Affairs Coordinator
Dat Tran, Associate Planner
Linda Troyan, City Clerk Services Director
Trina Valdez, Management Analyst I
Tabe Vander Zwaag, Associate Planner
Hope Velarde, Management Analyst I
Valerie Victorino, Executive Assistant II
Fabian Villenas, Principal Managment Analyst
Jean Ward, Contract Project Manager
Jason Watts, Fire Prevention Specialist I
Jason Welday, Engineering Director
Bill Wittkopf, Public Works Services Director
CONSULTANT TEAM
PlaceWorks
Sargent Town Planning
Fehr & Peers
CirclePoint
Veronica Tam & Associates
Ascent Environmental
Atlas Planning
Strategic Economics
Lisa Wise Consulting
Urban3
Civic Solutions
Torti Gallas + Partners
INDIGENOUS PEOPLE OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA
For thousands of years prior to the Spanish colonization of California, a large community of Indigenous
people inhabited an area that today includes all or part of Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, and San
Bernardino counties. Spanish colonization indelibly altered their way of life; names by which the
affiliation of native villages were known were discarded and the Indigenous people were given
the identity of Mission Indians. With the San Gabriel Mission being the centerpiece of the Spanish
colonization of the greater Los Angeles area, the people indigenous to this area became known as
the Gabrieleno Indians; however their descendants, wanting to continue their original heritage and
culture, prefer the name Kizh (pronounced keech). It is the Kizh people who originally named many of
the places that we know to this day, including Cucamonga, sometimes spelled Kucamonga. The City
of Rancho Cucamonga desires to acknowledge the history of this area along with the enduring culture
and traditions of the Kizh people. It is an honor to share this beautiful place with the original stewards
of the land. One of Rancho Cucamonga’s core values is equitable prosperity for all people and, to that
end, we hereby formally recommit to being inclusive, valuing cultural diversity, and continuing to build
a community that welcomes all people. Those who were here originally and contributed to the present
will always be acknowledged, never forgotten, and forever valued by the City of Rancho Cucamonga.
viii PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA ix
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 1: VISION & CORE VALUES
VOLUME 3: ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE
RESOURCE CONSERVATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208
SAFETY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .232
NOISE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .252
VOLUME 4: IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGY
GENERAL PLAN WORK PLAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .268
PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .306
ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE STRATEGY . . . . . . . . . .394
VOLUME 1: VISION
VISION & CORE VALUES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4
CONTEXT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20
ADMINISTRATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .40
VOLUME 2: BUILT ENVIRONMENT
LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER . . . . . . . . .54
FOCUS AREAS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .100
OPEN SPACE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .136
MOBILITY & ACCESS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .148
HOUSING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .182
PUBLIC FACILITIES & SERVICES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .188
CONTENTS
x PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA
Volume 1
VISION
IN THIS VOLUME
1
VISION & CORE VALUES
A City Is . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Vision . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Community Values . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Big Ideas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Putting the Plan into Action . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Measuring Our Success . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20
CONTEXT
The City of Rancho Cucamonga . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
History of Our City . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Community Engagement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Community Planning Areas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
The first Volume of this General Plan proclaims the vision statement for
the City and sets the core values as expressed by the people during the
PlanRC outreach. The vision of building on the world-class community
that is Rancho Cucamonga is supported by the core values of health,
equity, and stewardship of its residents. This Volume explains these
important concepts, sets the context for decision making, and above
all sets the tone that this is a city designed, built, and governed for the
people. There are big goals in this General Plan that intend to give more
people better options for living, access, jobs, and recreation, in a world-
class city designed to help make these ideas real.
32 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA
FIGURES
IN THIS VOLUME (CONT’D)
ADMINISTRATION
Purpose . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
How to Use This Document . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
General Plan Environmental Impact Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
VISION & CORE VALUES
Figure V-1 Degrees of Change Map. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Figure V-2 Vision Diagram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Figure V-3 Value per Acre Models 19
CONTEXT
Figure C-1 General Plan Area Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Figure C-2 1980 General Plan Neighborhoods & Districts Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .27
Figure C-3 Community Planning Areas Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
4 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 5
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 1: VISION & CORE VALUESVision & Core Values
A CITY IS…
people. Not buildings, roads, or cars, but people define a city. Despite
excellent design, beautiful color, and designer intent, buildings, roads, and
cars are inanimate. Alone they provide no life for the city. When designers
talk about “activating a street or space,” they are talking about the people,
who interact, socialize, recreate, and live in that space. The vibrancy of a
city is measured by its people, not its things. The overarching goal of every
General Plan is to create places where people want to be and can thrive—
places that people will find vibrant, welcoming, and inclusive, connected by
safe, comfortable streets for all users. This General Plan aims to build places
that are focused around people, creating a city and future that will meet
the diverse needs and preferences of the community for all residents and
visitors.
VISION
Since its beginning, the City of Rancho Cucamonga has been committed to
creating a world-class community. With each decade and each generation,
our idea of what makes a world-class community has evolved, but it
remains grounded in the concepts of excellence, opportunity, and high
quality of life. The vision for this General Plan embodies these concepts in a
single sentence:
Build on our success as a world-class community, to create an
equitable, sustainable, and vibrant city, rich in opportunity for
all to thrive.
Accordingly, this General Plan lays out a series of strategies to chart a path
towards building a 21st century world-class community. The intent is to
create a city with a wide variety of housing, recreation, arts and culture,
entertainment, and employment opportunities that are well connected
and accessible to everyone. Through the implementation of this General
Plan, the city will develop so as to be more welcoming and accessible to
both its residents and its visitors. This plan reflects the shared values and
common goals of a city abundant in opportunity for all; a city that has
a history of deep appreciation for the differences that enrich daily life in
Rancho Cucamonga.
“Our vision is to build on our success as a world-class community,
to create an equitable, sustainable, and vibrant city,
rich in opportunity for all to thrive.”
- The City Council and Community’s Vision for the Future
6 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 7
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 1: VISION & CORE VALUES
COMMUNITY VALUES
While people make up a city, it is only when people come together and
become a community that cities achieve their full potential. It is no
surprise, then, that a good plan is based on the foundational values of a
community and takes input from the wide diversity of people, businesses,
community groups, and other organizations that make up the totality of
the community. From the robust and authentic community engagement
that is the cornerstone of this document, the core values of health,
stewardship, and equity encompass what the community as a whole finds
most important and aspirational. These values are the pillars upon which
the vision rests. Without applying these values to future investments in
the community, we will not be able to achieve our vision for a world class
community.
HEALTH
Health is the foundation of human existence and is more than just
longevity. Good health and a good quality of life are the results of a
combination of many factors beyond an individual’s genetic history and
behaviors. The places we live shape us in ways beyond our values and
personal relationships. Community design, such as street layout and design
or location of parks, inevitably determines our ability to access healthy food
choices and health care, a variety of housing types and affordability, clean
air and natural open spaces, and safe neighborhoods and walkable streets.
A healthy lifestyle is not simply a matter of choice, but is fundamentally
a matter of access and opportunity. Research shows that chronic health
conditions such as asthma, diabetes, and heart disease, are concentrated
in the same neighborhoods as poverty, environmental hazards,
unemployment, and lower educational attainment.
Fostering a healthy community requires a comprehensive approach to
creating healthy minds, bodies, and a clean, sustainable earth, which is has
been a long-held value of the City and the focus of Healthy RC’s mission
since 2008. Although we cannot change our genes, we can certainly
make strategic decisions about our communities through the General
Plan that shape the places where we live, work, and play; provide a more
equitable distribution of resources and services; and ultimately improve our
chances for living long, healthy, fruitful lives. Health is a value that Rancho
Cucamonga is built on, and as such, it is important that this General
Plan purposefully include design elements that allow our community to
experience optimal health.
EQUITY
Equity is essential for creating and sustaining a world-class community.
Everyone should have a fair and just opportunity to thrive and experience
a high quality of life. Whereas equality is giving everyone the exact same
resources, equity involves the distribution and investment of resources
based on the unique needs of each neighborhood. This includes equitable
access to goods and services throughout the city, the ability to live in
clean and safe neighborhoods, real opportunities for meaningful work
and housing, and the opportunity to actively and meaningfully participate
in the community. We recognize that everyone has different needs and
abilities, and we should strive, through the General Plan and all decision-
making processes, to create a city that meets the unique needs, abilities,
and characteristics of all those within our community.
Past development practices have unintentionally resulted in health and
economic impacts that disproportionately affected groups of people living
in specific areas, thus creating and continually affecting disadvantaged
neighborhoods across the nation as well as Rancho Cucamonga. To resolve
existing health and income disparity, some neighborhoods will need more
investment in design, public improvements, and services. The intent of
this General Plan is for the city to remain a great place to live, work, shop,
learn, and play for all residents and households, and actively address the
issues that disproportionately affect certain neighborhoods and areas of
the city. Addressing inequity requires communication, understanding, and
collaboration with those most affected. This means providing opportunity
for meaningful neighborhood input, prioritizing public investment, and
collaborating with the community. Equity is at the heart of a world-class
community, and is a core value of this General Plan.
STEWARDSHIP
Stewardship is balancing the need to use limited resources today with
the knowledge that more will be needed tomorrow. Being good stewards
means taking on the responsibility of ensuring the well-being of the city
by understanding the resources we have and allocating them in ways that
consider the future. It means efficiently utilizing our finite, non-renewable
natural and historic resources, and considering how all decisions we make
impact the development or diminishment of these resources. Not only
does stewardship involve the protection of historic and natural resources,
but it also ensures the City is fiscally sustainable to provide the necessary
services and infrastructure to weather the impact of both economic
and climate change. A world-class city is resilient and adaptable and
maintains its significant history, culture, and values. As a world-class city,
Rancho Cucamonga must adapt effectively to shifting economic, social,
and demographic trends, and resiliently rebound from environmental,
economic, and public health shocks. Stewardship captures the essence of
this responsibility, and is a core value of this General Plan.
8 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 9
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 1: VISION & CORE VALUES
BIG IDEAS
To successfully achieve the City’s vision and uphold the core values
identified by the community, this General Plan is designed around
strengthening Rancho Cucamonga’s sense of identity and character by
creating places where people want to be and improving their ability to
move around. The overarching strategy is one of human-scaled design,
with buildings and outdoor spaces oriented towards people connected by
safe and comfortable streets, pathways, and trails that provide equitable
access for all. Each chapter of this plan is rooted in the vision and core
values, with an expectation that the future can be harnessed to improve
on the past. The following big ideas are considered critical to meeting the
vision and core values for the community:
DESIGN FOR PEOPLE FIRST
Regardless of the type of place designed, the focus must be on people,
and development should be human scale and inviting. The public realm of
streets, paths, trails, open space, and buildings represent the city’s “rooms”
and are the first impression of anyone visiting the city. These spaces should
be a sense of pride for residents and be welcoming to everyone. To achieve
this, buildings must be designed to be visually appealing, interesting, and
at an appropriate scale that attracts activity, but is not overwhelming.
Open spaces, plazas, and streets must be designed to be safe, convenient,
and comfortable for users of all modes of transportation. All aspects of the
public realm should have robust amenities. By designing for people first,
Rancho Cucamonga will continue to thrive as a community with a high
quality of life for residents, employees and visitors.
PROVIDE CONNECTIVITY AND
ACCESSIBILITY
Creating a community with equitable accessibility and connectivity
between places is an overall priority for the City. People of all abilities and
means need to be able to move about freely in their city and have choices
for how they get around. To achieve this, physical improvements in the city
must provide a range of travel options including new opportunities and
improved networks for walking, bicycling, and transit, suited to all residents,
employees and visitors. In addition to connecting streets, developing
sidewalks, and building trails, there must also be connections between
similar land uses and essential destinations. Neighborhoods should not
be gated or separated from each other, and should be well connected
to commercial centers, arts, culture and entertainment venues, and
employment districts.
Walkable communities and communities with varied transportation
options are not only easier to get around, but they also foster a greater
sense of community, provide the opportunity to incorporate more activity
into everyday life, encourage fewer car trips, provide numerous public
safety benefits, and support the local business environment and boost its
appeal to visitors by increasing accessibility. The outcomes of improved
accessibility and connectivity are increased social, health, environmental
and economic benefits to the community.
Bikeways to throughout the city and to the foothillsPlaza with outdoor furniture and nice landscaping provide
pleasant gathering spaces for people
Usable open space for a variety of
activities
Natural trails for equestrians and hikers
All-mode environmentPublic realm designed for a wide range of activity
10 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 11
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 1: VISION & CORE VALUES
CREATE DESTINATIONS
An overarching theme expressed by the community throughout the
PlanRC public engagement process is the desire for “more fun places to go,
more things to do, and more ways to get there.” Residents and visitors want
places to congregate, gather, and socialize in lively centers, shopping areas,
and arts, culture and entertainment venues.
This General Plan aims to evolve the relatively uniform suburban
environments of the city’s arterial corridors, shopping centers, and business
parks to a diverse range of distinctive places welcoming to all people. These
places may include small centers near established neighborhoods, more
vibrant and dense centers of a downtown scale near Rancho Cucamonga
Station and Victoria Gardens, and larger mixed-use centers along major
corridors, such as Foothill Boulevard and Haven Avenue.
Creating destinations also applies to the outdoors, and maintaining and
increasing a variety of quality open spaces in the city was similarly an
expressed desire by the community. The city’s open space destinations will
include small neighborhood parks, plazas and paseos, sports fields, and
natural areas, such as the extensive trails system in the foothills and the
North Etiwanda Preserve. This General Plan will further our commitment
to providing world-class outdoor destinations and preserving our beautiful
natural setting in the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains.
ESTABLISH RANCHO CUCAMONGA AS
THE CULTURAL AND ECONOMIC HUB OF
THE INLAND EMPIRE
The Inland Empire is similar in size and population as many states, yet it
does not have a clear economic or cultural center. This fact was identified
and discussed multiple times during the public outreach process and the
community repeatedly articulated a desire to set the example and lead the
region. As the city transitions from a sprawling suburban growth model to
a more sustainable urban growth model, it is important to remember that
people are at the core of what makes a city.
Through the community engagement process, the concept of creating
vibrant activity nodes and a “real downtown” resonated deeply with people
of all ages from all areas of the city. A downtown area, or several major
activity centers, with varied cultural opportunities and public art, will
provide areas for social, civic, and commercial activity.
By creating vibrant, high value places, Rancho Cucamonga will not only
ensure its fiscal sustainability and resiliency, but will also distinguish itself
as the cultural and economic hub of the Inland Empire. This General Plan
envisions a future Rancho Cucamonga with a stronger sense of place,
higher quality of life, and more competitive economy.
Community event at the Victoria Gardens Cultural CenterLarge outdoor space for concerts and other events Nightlife in Victoria Gardens Promenade bustling with people and activity
Walkable destinations for the whole
family
Public art provides focal point for open
space
12 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 13
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 1: VISION & CORE VALUES
RC CommUNITY Paint Day: Transformation of intersection at E. 9th Street and Baker Avenue
ADDRESS ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE
In Rancho Cucamonga, environmental justice means that everyone in the
city have a fair and just opportunity to thrive and no one, especially those
with the least means, should shoulder the additional health burdens of
environmental degradation and pollution. Environmental justice is also
concerned with the thrivability of ecosystems, prioritizing renewable
energy, and proactively reducing environmental hazards, pollution, and
habitat destruction.
With this General Plan, the City is striving to reduce and eliminate
disproportionate burdens to living, participating and thriving in this city. A
key first step is continuing to improve access to City processes and decision
making. While we have a long history of robust public engagement, we
will continue to work hard to improve the ease of participation by the
community.
It is also critical for the City’s future to improve everyone’s ability to
get around the city and access the goods, services, jobs, housing, and
amenities they need to have a quality life. Every neighborhood is different
and the future of each neighborhood will be unique. Universally, however,
through this General Plan the City is committed to engaging those
directly impacted by future decisions and development to collaborate on
strategies to reduce disproportionate environmental burdens and strive for
equitable access to amenities and services and equitable protection from
environmental hazards and pollution.
Recreational opportunities for all ages Access to goods and services in all parts of town
Community event on healthy foods
14 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 15
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 1: VISION & CORE VALUES
PUTTING THE PLAN INTO
ACTION
To be successful, the General Plan must be implemented purposefully,
enhancing areas that are already thriving, and focusing more investment
in key opportunity areas where change is desired over time. During the
PlanRC community engagement process, it was clear that residents
strongly identify with their neighborhoods and, with some exceptions,
are happy with where they live and how their neighborhoods function.
Accordingly, this General Plan is focused on understanding each area of
the city on its own terms and calibrating the degree and nature of change
to the neighborhoods and its people. Most of the city has already been
built. There is very little undeveloped land left and most of the developed
areas will not change. This is both a constraint and an opportunity for
the community. We cannot afford to waste land with changes that do
not benefit the community. To achieve the vision, all future development
and investment will need to be strategic. As such, this General Plan
provides specific direction on where to focus future efforts. Some
changes will be small and incremental, similar to that which is already
occurring. Other changes will be transformative, through both land use
design and implementation strategies, in focused areas of the city where
improvements have been suggested by the community to meet the overall
vision of a world-class city.
Figure V-1, Degrees of Change Map, illustrates and defines the general
degree of change anticipated by this General Plan. These areas are broadly
categorized as limited change, moderate change, and significant change,
and describe areas of the city that have the greatest opportunities or
likelihood for change. It is important to note that not all the anticipated
change is directly related to private development. Some change may be
the result of public improvements like completing trail networks, sidewalks,
landscaping, and open space. Other change may be a function of one
existing land use transitioning to another.
FIGURE V-1 DEGREES OF CHANGE MAP
+Limited Change . Areas of the city where the general character, uses and activities of the area will remain
the same but enhanced in limited ways. This includes, but is not limited to, enhancements to the public
realm, the addition of a second story to a single-story home, the addition of community facilities, and
neighborhood-serving retail uses that are desired but currently absent.
+Moderate Change . Areas of the city where change is desired and planned for over the time horizon of the
General Plan and beyond. These areas are expected to see moderate development over time and the area
may, after 15 to 20 years, look different than it does today, albeit consistent in character, use and intensity
with the surrounding areas.
+Significant Change . Areas where the community wants to actively facilitate significant change in the
short to middle term. These areas may look very different in a short period of time and are the areas where
the City may prioritize staff and financial resources or actively encourage new private development and
public improvements.
“Vision without
action is merely
a dream. Action
without vision just
passes time. Vision
with action can
change the world.”
- Joel A. Barker
16 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 17
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 1: VISION & CORE VALUES
FIGURE V-2 VISION DIAGRAM
NEIGHBORHOODS
Semi-Rural Neighborhood
Traditional Neighborhood
Suburban Neighborhood - Very Low
Suburban Neighborhood - Low
Suburban Neighborhood - Moderate
Urban Neighborhood
CORRIDORS
Neighborhood Corridor
City Corridor - Moderate
City Corridor - High
CENTERS
Neighborhood Center
Traditional Town Center
City Center
DISTRICTS
Office Employment District
21st Century Employment District
Neo-Industrial Employment District
Industrial Employment District
OPEN SPACES
Natural Open Space
Rural Open Space
General Open Space & Facilities
COMMUNITY ACTIVITY NODES
Neighborhood Activity Node
Corridor Activity Node
Focus Areas
MOBILITY CORRIDORS
Transit Priority Street
Bicycle Priority Street
Trail Corridors Network
Figure V-2, Vision Diagram, illustrates how the vision, core values and big
ideas will be achieved as a physical place. It is a conceptual land use and
mobility plan that presents a policy level approach for how and where we
target investment and growth to create thriving places, and a framework
for multi-modal access between these places. The Vision Diagram
characterizes how we best balance the community input received by:
1. Increasing services and amenities in all neighborhoods;
2. Focusing investment along key corridors; and
3. Focusing investment at key nodes or centers in the city.
The intent of the General Plan is to create a city for people—a city of great
neighborhoods, natural open spaces and parks, thriving commercial
and industrial areas, and walkable and active centers and districts, all
connected by safe and comfortable streets. The Vision Diagram serves as
the foundation for the land use and mobility plans and policies presented
in the succeeding chapters, and is described in more detail in Chapter 1,
Land Use and Community Character, of Volume 2.
As mentioned above, the key to the success of this General Plan will be
focusing investment strategically. As such, several focus areas are identified
where the public support for, and potential value of, significant near-term
change is particularly high. Chapter 2, Focus Areas, in Volume 2 of this Plan,
provides fundamental priorities for strategic implementation of key areas of
moderate and significant change. These key areas are specific parts of the
city where the potential value of coordinated private and public investment
is especially high, and near-term improvement is supported by a broad
cross section of the community. A higher level of detail, illustration, and
strategic recommendations for the Focus Areas are provided to prioritize
those areas to help “jump-start” implementation of this General Plan. All
recommendations for the Focus Areas are a statement of City policy that
guide public and private investment for the following eight areas:
+Focus Area 1: Downtown Rancho Cucamonga (Victoria Gardens &
Epicenter)
+Focus Area 2: Civic Center
+Focus Area 3: HART District
+Focus Area 4: Red Hill Gateway
+Focus Area 5: Cucamonga Town Center
+Focus Area 6: Alta Loma Old Town
+Focus Area 7: Etiwanda Heights Town Center
+Focus Area 8: Southeast Industrial Area
“Rancho Cucamonga
must avoid becoming
an under-developed
city. Suburbs that are
urbanizing in specially
selected areas of their
cities are experiencing
tremendous prosperity
and sustainable growth”
- Community Member
(Public input received during
the Virtual Workshop on
Community Character,
September 2020)Carmelian StVineyard Ave19th St
Upland
Ontario
Fontana
6th St
4th St
Baseline Rd
Wilson Ave Wilson Ave
Church St
Cucamonga
Central South
Central North
Red Hill
Alta Loma Etiwanda
Southeast
Eastside
Pacific Electric Trail
Day Creek ChannelDeer Creek ChannelDeer Creek ChannelArrow Route Archibald AveHaven AveMilliken AveEtiwanda Ave10
10
15
15
210
210
18 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 19
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 1: VISION & CORE VALUES
+Total Value: $32.4 billion
+Avg. Value/Acre: $10.7 million
+Peak Value/Acre: $58.4 million
+Total Value: $27.7 billion
+Avg. Value/Acre: $1.3 million
+Peak Value/Acre: $13.9 million
San Bernardino County
Rancho Cucamonga Current General Plan Buildout
NEW VALUE CREATED:$4.7 billion
0
< 100,000
100,001 - 1,000,000
1,00,001 - 1,500,000
1,500,001 - 1,750,000
1,750,001 - 2,100,000
2,100,001 - 2,300,000
2,500,001 - 3,500,000
3,500,001 - 4,000,000
4,000,001 - 5,000,000
Taxable Value
per Acre ($)
5,000,001 - 7,000,000
7,000,001 - 15,000,000
> 15,000,001
Source: Urban 3, 2021
By strategically planning for the diverse needs of the community and
creating vibrant, high-value places, Rancho Cucamonga can ensure its
fiscal sustainability and resiliency, and distinguish itself as the economic
hub of the Inland Empire. This General Plan envisions a future Rancho
Cucamonga with a higher quality of life and more competitive economy.
As such, it promotes development patterns that secure the city’s fiscal
condition while reinforcing a strong sense of place.
In preparing this General Plan, a spatial economic analysis of the General
Plan at buildout was conducted using a value per acre model, an emerging
industry standard for measuring the fiscal health of communities. This
model analyzes the fiscal implications of different patterns of development
and demonstrates how the way Rancho Cucamonga is built drives the
way it is funded. The value per acre metric was used to create a visual
representation of the fiscal productivity and economic potential of the City,
including both property and sales tax revenue streams.
The results of the visual analysis demonstrate the economic potency of
having denser, mixed use urban centers, or a real “downtown,” within
the city. As shown in Figure V-3, Value per Acre Models, a side-by-side
comparison of the taxable value per acre of the current and planned
buildout of the City shows a significant increase in the total, average, and
peak value, including a nearly 20 percent increase in total value created.
It also show how Rancho Cucamonga has the potential to become the
economic hub of the region. Creating active centers or nodes of denser
mixed-use development, as illustrated by the “purple spikes,” can help
Rancho Cucamonga maintain a high level of fiscal performance and
become a regional destination and focal point of activity.
“This is the time for Rancho to become the gateway city the founders
intended it to be. They [founders] would be very proud to see how it has
developed and would be excited about Rancho’s future.”
- Community Member (Public input received during Community Discussions on
Considering Our Options, November 2020)
FIGURE V-3 VALUE PER ACRE MODELS
20 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 21
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 1: VISION & CORE VALUES
MEASURING OUR SUCCESS
A word-class community does not just materialize in an instant but is rather
the result of a series of choices. Our choices. This document was drafted
by hundreds of people who care about this community. Residents took
time to participate in the process and share their stories and experiences.
Business owners shared their challenges. All community members shared
their ideas for how the city can be improved to better suit the needs of
current and future residents, and those ideas were translated into a shared
vision and tangible steps for how to get there in this document.
The General Plan will be implemented over an extended period of time
that will likely span several decades. During this time, long-range planning
efforts will continue using the General Plan goals and polices as a guide.
However, the General Plan is a living document. State law allows it to
be updated and refined over the coming decades. In fact, State law
encourages annual reviews of implementation actions and recommends
that the entire General Plan be thoroughly reviewed every five years to
ensure that it is still consistent with the community’s goals. Part of this
ongoing annual review of the General Plan should include objective
monitoring of progress towards success. A table of implementation action
items, or work plan, including level of priority for achieving these actions
can be found in Volume 4, Implementation.
People make places, community and culture dynamic. City governments
have to be responsive to change as it happens in the communities
they serve. We cannot plan for everything, but we can commit to
collaborative problem solving, evidence driven decision-making and open
communication, by making decision together as a community, not just as
a city government. In the pages that follow you will find our path to the
future.
Family/children playing in the Library’s
Second Story and Beyond space
Playground fun
Rancho Cucamonga Police
“Props,” a public sculpture by Amy Maloof installed on the Chaffey College campus (2019)
Brulte Senior Center
Children ready for the Founder’s Day Parade
22 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 23
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 2: CONTEXT
FIGURE C-1 GENERAL PLAN AREA MAP
THE CITY OF
RANCHO CUCAMONGA
The City Rancho Cucamonga shares borders with the cities of Upland,
Ontario, Fontana, the San Bernardino National Forest, and the
unincorporated areas of San Bernardino County. (See Figure C-1) Access
to the city is possible from the Ontario International Airport, Metrolink
train, and by car by State Route 210, Interstate 15, Interstate 10, and Foothill
Boulevard, also known as the Historic Route 66.
This General Plan addresses all lands within the City’s corporate limits,
as well as unincorporated San Bernardino County properties within the
City’s Sphere of Influence (SOI). In this General Plan, the combined city
area and Sphere of Influence create the General Plan Area shown in Figure
C-2. Under State law, the City is permitted to plan for areas outside of its
boundaries if the areas have a direct relationship to the City’s planning
needs. Since land within the Sphere of Influence may be annexed, planning
for these areas is essential.
Context
Multifamily residential neighborhood Trails in the foothills
24 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 25
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 2: CONTEXT
HISTORY OF OUR CITY
The intention of including a historical section is to consider how the past
informs our present. The history of the city runs deeper than is included
here; however, we acknowledge and respect it and we will use it as a
foundation for moving forward in the General Plan.
ORIGINS: 1200 TO 1944
The Native American cultures of Southern California had stabilized some
three thousand years ago, and by about 1200 A.D., the Kucamongan Native
Americans established a settlement around the area we know as Red
Hill. The Kucamongans were part of the Kizh people, one of the largest
concentrations of indigenous peoples on the North American continent.
In the eighteenth century, Spain set out to explore North America, and
colonized Southern California to Baja California. The Mission System
established by Father Junipero Serra supported a loosely-constructed
social system of ranchos, primarily cattle producing, ordered by a feudal
and kinship way of life. By 1833, the amount of control held by Spain
diminished, and as Mexico won its independence from the Crown, all land
in Southern and Baja California was opened up for granting from the new
governor of Mexico. Rancho Cucamonga was a 13,045-acre Mexican land
grant in present-day San Bernardino County, California, given in 1839 to
the dedicated soldier, smuggler, and politician Tiburcio Tapia by Mexican
governor Juan Bautista Alvarado. The grant formed parts of present-day
Rancho Cucamonga and Upland.
With the cession of California to the United States following the Mexican–
American War, the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo provided that the
land grants would be honored. As required by the Land Act of 1851, a claim
for Rancho Cucamonga was filed with the Public Land Commission in 1852.
In 1977 three agricultural communities which had emerged on the old
ranch lands—Alta Loma, Cucamonga and Etiwanda—became the City
of Rancho Cucamonga. Each community was established as an agrarian
railhead along the Pacific Electric Railroad “Red Cars” of California’s first
wine-producing region.
*The above content is excerpted from City of Rancho Cucamonga History, Portal
to the Past. Please visit Portal to the Past for more information on the indigenous
people of Rancho Cucamonga and the City’s history.
Cucamonga
Known originally as North Cucamonga, or Northtown, Cucamonga
comprised a rural landscape of vineyards and other agricultural production.
It was called North Cucamonga in relation to South Cucamonga, the
original settlement around the historic Virginia Dare Winery and Guasti
Depot (in the current City of Ontario) when the Southern Pacific Railroad
Historic Virginia Dare Winery
Etiwanda Depot soon after
construction in 1914
Map of the founding communities—
Cucamonga, Alta Loma, and Etiwanda
was connected from Los Angeles to Arizona in 1875. The Cucamonga depot
of the Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad was established in 1888, and
the community continued to grow around the depot with packing house
neighborhoods on the west side of Haven Avenue north of the tracks.
By 1900, highway commercial development was established along what
later became Route 66 and the North and Northtown was dropped from
the name simply becoming Cucamonga.
Alta Loma
Alta Loma has historically been, and remains, the most authentically “semi-
rural” community in Rancho Cucamonga. It began as a small agricultural
settlement on Amethyst Avenue just north of Base Line Road near the
Alta Loma Pacific Electric Rail station. The community grew to include
several wineries and packing houses to the north served by rail spur lines
extending from the Santa Fe Railroad. At the end of World War II, the area
remained fully rural with a few houses along the farm roads serving the
vineyards and wineries, and a small but bustling Old Town Alta Loma.
Etiwanda
Etiwanda began as three small settlements at rail depots along Etiwanda
Avenue. The most southerly was on the Southern Pacific Railroad in what
is now Ontario, the second was on the Santa Fe Railroad (now utilized by
the Metrolink and Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railroad) south of Foothill
Boulevard, and the best-known of the three was on the Pacific Electric
Railway (Red Car) line, which began service to Los Angeles in 1914. The Red
Car station is still present and sits next to the Pacific Electric Trail, just north
of Base Line Road. Until the end of World War II, Etiwanda remained fully
rural, with houses built along Etiwanda Avenue, which was and remains
characterized by windrows and curbs faced with river cobbles.
POSTWAR COUNTY GROWTH: 1944-1978
The size and nature of the founding communities remained largely
unchanged until the end of World War II. However, with the post-war
abundance of federal housing and highway funding, these communities
grew very rapidly in the mid-1900s. New residential neighborhoods sprung
up to the north and west from the original Cucamonga townsite to Route
66 and Old Town Alta Loma and on into Alta Loma to the north of Old Town
and into the foothills. Most of the Red Hill Country Club neighborhood was
built out during this time as well. Etiwanda saw much less development
than the communities of Cucamonga and Alta Loma at this time.
Land to the south, west and east of Cucamonga was zoned by the County
for industrial use, and remaining land throughout the area that is now
Rancho Cucamonga was generally available for new housing tracts, and for
shopping centers along major streets.
26 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 27
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 2: CONTEXT
CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA: 1978-
2020
In the 1970s, leaders within Cucamonga, Alta Loma, Etiwanda, and Red Hill
determined that it was time to take local control of future development
and successfully incorporated as the City of Rancho Cucamonga. At the
time of incorporation, in 1977, many of the vineyards had ceased operation
and were in the process of being sold for development. As such, the first
Rancho Cucamonga General Plan was adopted in 1980 to present a clear
vision for what this new city might become.
To preserve the character of the original neighborhoods while planning
for a prosperous and progressive future, the 1980 General Plan organized
the City into several neighborhoods and districts, as a framework to
shape future growth. A key exhibit in the 1980 Plan was a map of the
“Neighborhoods and Districts” of Rancho Cucamonga, shown in Figure C-2.
Based on the original rural patterns of large agricultural holdings and small
settlements around rail depots, these Neighborhoods and Districts were
generally separated from one another by the primary “section line” roads,
which over time were widened to major suburban arterial streets and
highways focused almost exclusively on carrying vehicular through-traffic.
As the city grew, those major street corridors—most lined with commercial
centers and the sound walls of new housing developments—connected
the growing “parts of town” to one another by automobile trips, while
also effectively separating adjacent neighborhoods and districts from one
another by other travel modes.
FUTURE OF OUR CITY
Over the 20-year planning horizon of this General Plan, the City anticipates
an additional 75,000 new residents and approximately 35,000 jobs.
Estimating future growth is difficult at the best of times, and particularly
difficult in the midst of a worldwide pandemic. Unlike recessions that
primarily affect income, the COVID-19 pandemic may change future
perspectives on employment, commuting, and both where and how
we choose to live. Historic patterns that were traditionally relied upon to
project future growth may be in question as more people work from home,
and businesses downsize their physical space while expanding the number
of employees. The effects of the pandemic on human behavior may not be
known for some time; this General Plan uses growth assumptions based on
the City’s history, and projections from the Southern California Association
of Governments (SCAG), as well as marketing information to estimate
future demand for housing, commercial, and industrial land.
The purpose of preparing population growth and land demand estimates
is to ensure that the Land Use Element contains sufficient land set aside to
meet the projected needs. It is important to note that the numbers in this
General Plan are neither targets for the City nor limits to future growth.
FIGURE C-2 1980 GENERAL PLAN NEIGHBORHOODS & DISTRICTS MAP
Neighborhoods of Rancho Cucamonga
28 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 29
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 2: CONTEXT
COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
Community inclusive planning is a deeply held value of the City of Rancho
Cucamonga and has been the foundation for how the City plans for its
future since the preparation of the first General Plan in 1980. While the
preparation of this General Plan is no different, the City has evolved since
the 1980s and greatly expanded efforts to be inclusive, intentional and
equitable in efforts to engage community members in the planning effort.
The public engagement process for the General Plan Update was called
PlanRC and involved extensive involvement by the community. Efforts
prioritized determining values and ideas for the future of the City and
there were many opportunities for participants to express their visions,
collaborate with neighbors, and explore possible innovations in housing,
transportation, recreation, and economic development throughout each
planning phase.
PlanRC involved longtime residents, new residents, seniors, youth,
clubs, organizations, business owners, and many more. Although in-
person outreach was extremely limited due to COVID-19 constraints, the
community adapted and found meaningful ways to get involved in PlanRC
through digital engagement platforms. During, and after engagement, the
community had an opportunity to share their thoughts and engage in live
polling to provide additional feedback.
The PlanRC community
engagement process was
inclusive of Spanish speakers
and others with technology
needs by providing Spanish
language only breakout
sessions and socially
distanced live session for those
who needed support with
technology.
Snippets from various community engagement events
Summary infographic of community engagement
25 EMAIL BLASTS
(636,000+ VIEWS)
17
STAKEHOLDER
INTERVIEWS 72
VIRTUAL WORKSHOPS,
MEETINGS, WEBINARS &
POP-UPS1.1 MILLION+
SOCIAL MEDIA
IMPRESSIONS
15,000+
WEBSITE VIEWS
2,300+
MEETING PARTICIPANTS
INFORMATIONAL VIDEOS
MONTHS
2,700+
SURVEY
RESPONSES
LOCAL GROUP
PRESENTATIONS
ONLINE SURVEYS
19 17
11
18
30 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 31
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 2: CONTEXT
FIGURE C-3 COMMUNITY PLANNING AREAS MAP
Some of the highlights of the PlanRC community engagement effort are
shown below:
+Two internet-based “Forum on Our Future” events were held during
the Discovery & Visioning phase. These interactive small group sessions
built on results from the initial online visioning survey and engaged
community members in informal dialogue on specific topics such as
housing, resiliency, trails and mobility, equity and more.
+An informative “dollars and sense” webinar was also provided as part of
the Forum on Our Future week to provide more in-depth information
about economic development.
+The PlanRC Virtual Workshop was a robust and visually engaging
Character and Place online event designed to engage community
members in exploring visual images and ideas of what the City could
be in the future. The week-long online activity allowed participants to
drop in and view and rate character images for different community
planning areas in the city—collections of photos represented different
housing, activity centers, mobility options, business and job districts,
and more.
+Two online surveys were conducted to guide engagement activities
and future outreach. Conducted during the Discovery & Visioning
phase of plan development, the surveys asked about community
members’ vision and priorities for Rancho Cucamonga and garnered
more than 800 responses.
+An online mapping tool was shared as part of the Character & Place
online workshop, which allowed community members to drop pins on
a virtual map in areas where they would like to see certain amenities
and activity centers. Participants could further expand on their ideas
through a comment system and by providing photos of what they
envisioned.
+The PlanRC General Plan Video Series was designed to explain
the General Plan update process, State requirements and existing
conditions. Topics included housing, resiliency, community mobility,
community health and equity, land use and community design.
+Community input was solicited and reflected throughout each phase
of the planning process. In total, PlanRC received input from over 2,300
community members through online surveys and virtual meetings and
generated over 1.1 million digital impressions through website visits,
emails, diital newslateers, and social media views.
The PlanRC process helped form the content of this General Plan. The
importance of community, understanding of areas where improvement is
needed, and validation of the City’s commitment to lead the region all stem
from this foundational process.
COMMUNITY PLANNING AREAS
A priority of the General Plan is to make sure that future development
and public improvements are informed by a clear understanding of our
community’s heritage and guided by our vision for what it will become.
While Rancho Cucamonga is one city, it is not homogeneous. There are
unique identities that were originally developed in the 1980 General
Plan, and to a large extent still exist today. Understanding these areas are
important to the character and place of different areas of the community.
The following Community Planning Areas reflect the unique history and
character of each part of town and provide a framework for discussion of
those various parts —what makes each of them unique, and what unifies
them into a single larger community.
32 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 33
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 2: CONTEXT
CUCAMONGA
Since its inception in the late 1800’s Cucamonga has evolved from an
idyllic agrarian village in a rural landscape, to a patchwork of residential
neighborhoods, shopping centers, and industrial development. This
patchwork pattern has been identified in multiple General Plan cycles as
a challenge to be resolved to improve the quality of life for residents and
the work environment for businesses. While striking this balance is indeed
a challenge, it also represents a significant opportunity to provide good
quality, relatively affordable living environments near jobs in the southern
part of the city with easy access to a growing array of amenities and
conveniences along the Foothill Corridor.
Opportunities & Challenges
The most apparent challenge, and very significant opportunity, in
Cucamonga is the Foothill Corridor. This historic highway “put Cucamonga
on the map,” but also bisected the community into two parts with a
highway commercial environment separating the neighborhoods to the
north and south.
Through targeted modifications to the design of the street, and new
mixed-use and residential infill development along the corridor, the
historic rip through the community caused by Foothill Boulevard can
be transformed to function as a zipper; stitching the community back
together through new activity centers oriented to and served by new
transit options. The City Corridor designation (see Vol. 2 Chapter 1 Land
Use & Community Character) along this segment of Foothill Boulevard,
enables an array of housing options for households of many sizes, types,
incomes, and lifestyle preferences, and will provide a growing variety of
commercial, civic and transit amenities within activity centers at major
crossroads, all the while protecting the character and quality of established
neighborhoods.
The current residential/industrial patchwork that Cucamonga inherited
from its rural/industrial railroad settlement past has long resulted in
inequitable impacts on residents of Cucamonga. Homes very near
industrial uses and heavy truck traffic mixed with neighborhood vehicular,
pedestrian, and bicycle traffic present long-standing and persistent
challenges related to quality of life, environmental justice, social equity,
and public health. As older industrial properties are redeveloped, this
challenge also presents the opportunity for an array of new types
and mixes of employment opportunities, new housing options within
easy reach of those jobs, and new activity centers with neighborhood-
serving commercial, recreational, and civic amenities for this historically
underserved community.
Mixed-use development in Foothill
corridor
Patchwork pattern of housing, office
and industrial uses
RED HILL
The Red Hill Community Planning Area is the westerly gateway to Rancho
Cucamonga located on the north side of Foothill Boulevard (Historic Route
66). It is home to the Red Hill Country Club and the landmark Sycamore
Inn at the site of an historic stagecoach stop between Los Angeles and the
rest of the country prior to the arrival of the Santa Fe and Southern Pacific
Railroads in the 1880s. It also has a rich heritage as a Tongva culture site.
The hilly terrain, winding semi-rural roadways, and limited grading of the
natural terrain reflect a synthesis of the characteristics of early Alta Loma
and the prevailing suburban character of mid-Century custom-built homes,
making Red Hill a truly unique and special place.
Red Hill is abutted by two very significant trail corridors that provide access
to other parts of town and to the foothill open spaces. The Cucamonga
Creek flood control channel and trail corridor run between the Red Hill
neighborhood and Red Hill Park, and the Pacific Electric Trail brushes the
southeast corner of the neighborhood, where the Red Car station was
located on Carnelian Street.
Opportunities & Challenges
While little change is anticipated within the Red Hill neighborhood and
country club, significant opportunities for development and infill are
present in this area, specifically adjacent to Foothill Boulevard, to create a
unique gateway at the west end of town. This area at the base of Red Hill
could include commercial, residential, and recreational facilities potentially
spanning both sides of Foothill Boulevard to create a remarkable western
gateway to Rancho Cucamonga. As an important part of the centers
and corridors system, this gateway contributes to providing residents of
Cucamonga and Red Hill with more equitable access to goods, services,
and transit and—by way of the Pacific Electric Trail—access to the natural
and rural open spaces of our foothills to the north.
Sycamore Inn Signage
Red Hill Country Club
34 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 35
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 2: CONTEXT
ALTA LOMA
Alta Loma has historically been and remains the most authentically “semi-
rural” community in Rancho Cucamonga. It began as a small agricultural
settlement around the Alta Loma Pacific Electric Rail station on Amethyst
Avenue, just north of Base Line Road. The 1980 General Plan recognized
this unique part of town as Old Town Alta Loma and a contemporary vision
for this (focus) area is described in Volume 2 Chapter 2 of this General Plan.
Over time, rural and semi-rural residential development has expanded
to the north into the foothills, known as the “Alta Loma Highlands,” and
has had a strong equestrian heritage and character, along with good trail
connections to the foothill open spaces to the north. It is also home to
several significant cultural assets, including the Sam and Alfreda Maloof
Foundation for Arts and Crafts, the Wignall Museum of Contemporary Art,
and the Chaffey College Visual and Performing Arts Center.
More recent residential development (over the past 30-40 years)—
including several neighborhoods in the “Chaffey College Area”—has
tended to be prototypically suburban in character; that is without the
rural and equestrian heritage of the original Alta Loma neighborhoods.
Neighborhood shopping centers of a similar suburban character have also
been developed at several major intersections, some with suburban multi-
family housing adjacent or nearby.
Opportunities & Challenges
The community’s vision for Alta Loma includes very limited change in
development character, intensity, or use. The neighborhoods of Alta Loma
are generally very stable and undeveloped parcels are generally small
to moderate in size. Within these undeveloped parcels and commercial
centers there is potential to add appropriately sized, scaled, and designed
community amenities and infill housing of low- to mid-rise house forms.
One clear opportunity to provide such amenities is identified in the Alta
Loma Town Center Focus Area which envisions a consolidated rural
neighborhood center around the intersections of Base Line Road and
Amethyst Avenue and Archibald Avenue, the historic location of the Alta
Loma Pacific Electric Rail Station, and at the juncture of the Alta Loma and
Cucamonga Community Planning Areas. Beyond providing much more
equitable access to goods and services, and civic and cultural amenities to
the residents of Alta Loma and Cucamonga, such a neighborhood center
could conserve and celebrate the heritage of Old Town Alta Loma, one of
the seeds from which the City of Rancho Cucamonga grew.
In addition to specific infill opportunities, targeted improvements to
pedestrian, bicycle, and equestrian networks within the streets and trail
corridors of Alta Loma have the potential to provide more healthy and
equitable mobility choices, and reduce dependence on the automobile,
while also enhancing the historic semi-rural character of Alta Loma.
Alta Loma Pacific Electric Station
Equestrian heritage
ETIWANDA
To guide Etiwanda’s growth and development over the past 40 years,
several Specific Plans have been prepared with the intent that all future
neighborhood development reflect the essential architectural and
landscape characteristics of the original Etiwanda settlement along
Etiwanda Avenue, including the original 1980 Etiwanda Specific Plan; the
1992 North Etiwanda Specific Plan; and most recently, the 2019 Etiwanda
Heights Neighborhood and Conservation Plan, which provides direction
for the systematic conservation of the rural and natural open spaces of the
foothills to the north. This General Plan integrates each of these plans into a
cohesive policy plan for Etiwanda.
Opportunities & Challenges
Portions of Etiwanda are already “built out” with numerous stable
neighborhoods and housing developments. These are intended to be
preserved and protected with limited incremental improvements over
time. However, there are also many opportunities for improved pedestrian,
bicycle and equestrian circulation and connectivity between Etiwanda’s
neighborhoods, schools, parks, commercial amenities, and natural and
rural foothill open spaces above.
Several large parcels designated for development but not yet developed
remain in Etiwanda. The largest of these lands is the 800-acre
“Neighborhood Area” within the recently adopted Etiwanda Heights
Neighborhood & Conservation Plan (EHNCP). Within that area, the long-
planned “missing links” of Wilson and Rochester Avenues are to be filled
in, along with a collection of new foothill neighborhoods between existing
Etiwanda and Alta Loma. The EHNCP also provides strategies, policies,
regulations, and programs intended to ensure that approximately 3,600
acres of rural and natural open space will be permanently conserved, with
the potential for very limited, “authentically rural” development, as a rural
foreground and transition from the neighborhoods of Etiwanda to the San
Bernardino National Forest to the north.
Other large opportunity sites for “infill neighborhoods” are present in the
northern portions of Etiwanda. These sites are designated as “Traditional
Neighborhood,” for which standards very similar to those of the EHNCP will
be prepared and offer the opportunity to finally realize the visions of the
1982 and 1992 Etiwanda and North Etiwanda Specific Plans. It is intended
that these “infill neighborhoods” will offer a diverse array of authentically
Etiwanda housing types, connecting, and completing the neighborhood
structure of Etiwanda. In some cases, such parcels also represent the
opportunity for new “village-scale neighborhood-centers,” as envisioned by
the 1980 General Plan and subsequent Specific Plans for Etiwanda.
Etiwanda Preserve
Historic Etiwanda adjacent to the
Pacific Electric Trail
36 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 37
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 2: CONTEXT
CENTRAL NORTH
Mapped as “New Rancho Cucamonga” in the original 1980 General Plan,
this area was developed under the Terra Vista and Victoria Community
Plans. This area is prototypical of the “planned community” characteristics
of the region in the last two decades of the 20th century. It includes a
mix of single-family detached, single-family attached, and multi-family
housing, and large community-scale shopping centers. The more intense
housing types are generally located between the single-family detached
neighborhoods to the north and shopping centers to the south, providing a
transition and the opportunity for residents to live near goods, services, and
activities in the center of town.
Opportunities & Challenges
Within the existing neighborhoods of Terra Vista and Victoria, envisioned
change is limited to targeted improvements to the pedestrian and bicycle
network within the streets and trail corridors of Central North to improve
the safety and comfort of residents, encourage use of active mobility
modes, and better connect residents to recreational, commercial, and civic
amenities.
The northerly half of the Foothill Boulevard corridor is envisioned for
significant transformation from a highway commercial development to
a major concentration of mixed-use, pedestrian-priority, transit-oriented
city corridor environment. This transformation can significantly increase
and improve the diversity and quantity of available housing, mixed-use
activity centers, and employment options in an amenity-rich and transit-
advantaged environment.
The Victoria Gardens “Downtown” Focus Area guides the long-envisioned
intensification of the area to a real “downtown” environment, potentially
with an Arts and Culture District around the Victoria Gardens Cultural
Center, that may expand southward over time to connect to the Epicenter.
The westerly end of this Foothill corridor segment—at the intersection of
Foothill Boulevard and Haven Avenue—is part of the Civic Center Focus
Area (see Volume 2, Chapter 2 of this General Plan).
Realizing this evolution from highway to city corridor will require significant
improvements to Foothill Boulevard, market-driven intensification and infill
within existing shopping centers, and new development of pedestrian-
oriented, mixed use neighborhoods and centers within large remaining
vacant parcels. Housing, shopping, employment, and public gathering
spaces will be developed in well-connected walkable, bikable, and transit-
oriented patterns. This living, working, shopping environment will enable a
new range of healthy, active lifestyles for individuals and households across
a wide range of economic strata, while generating significant new fiscal
resources to support high levels of municipal services, responding robustly
to the City’s core values of health, equity, and stewardship.Streets and paseos encourage walking
Residential neighborhoods
CENTRAL SOUTH
The 1980 General Plan identified the area south of Foothill Boulevard and
east of Haven Avenue as simply “Industrial Area.” Through the subsequent
adoption of an Industrial Area Specific Plan—followed by a series of
Specific Plan amendments and General Plan updates—this large area was
differentiated into several heavier industrial, lighter industrial, business
park, and office areas. An “office overlay zone” was also added along Haven
Avenue to express the City’s intent to prioritize that corridor for office
buildings and uses.
Over time, a much wider range and mix of uses have been enabled within
this area, but with no unifying vision or connective street system. Today, the
Central South is a mix of offices, civic facilities, shopping centers, hospitality,
and other non-industrial or very light industrial uses. Multi-family housing
can also be found amidst shopping centers and industrial uses.
Several very important civic facilities—the City and County Civic Center, the
Epicenter sports complex, and the Cucamonga Station—are in the Central
South. Recently “The Resort” residential and mixed-use development was
planned and entitled for the former Empire Lakes Golf Course site to the
south and west of the Rancho Cucamonga Station, the busiest station on
the busiest line of the Metrolink regional commuter rail system.
Opportunities & Challenges
Central South is now on a path toward becoming a 21st century, mixed-use,
transit-oriented employment district. In addition to the well-established
industrial and office businesses, residential neighborhoods, and office and
civic uses near City Hall, the planned concentration of office and mixed-use
development along Haven Avenue, and opportunities for intensification
around the Cucamonga Station and Epicenter sports complex present the
high potential for Central South to evolve into a significant, transit-oriented,
mixed-use urban center and regional employment hub.
Given this area’s central location within the Inland Empire metropolitan
region and the presence of such significant business activity, civic
amenities, and regional transportation connections, the opportunity
for further investment and reinvestment clearly represents a once-in-a-
century opportunity of regional, statewide, and even national significance.
Furthermore, just across 4th Street to the south of this area is the City of
Ontario’s “Airport Metro Center,” also long envisioned as an intense, mixed-
use, urban center environment. The potential for the two cities to work
cooperatively to unify and connect those areas as a single metropolitan
district could easily further multiply the opportunity and future value of
such a regional hub.
Rancho Cucamonga Station
Game at the Epicenter
38 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 39
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 2: CONTEXT
EASTSIDE
The Eastside Community Planning Area—originally the site of the West
Etiwanda station on the Santa Fe Railroad—is the easterly gateway to
the Foothill Boulevard corridor and the “hinge” between the Southeast
industrial area to the south, the City of Fontana to the east, Etiwanda
to the north, and Central North and Central South to the west. Existing
development in this area consists primarily of suburban single- and multi-
family housing developments and shopping centers.
Opportunities & Challenges
As the natural east gateway to the Foothill Boulevard corridor, Eastside
presents the opportunity for a significant community activity center at the
intersection of Foothill Boulevard and Etiwanda Avenue. Though located at
the eastern edge of Rancho Cucamonga, this Community Planning Area is
central to a significant area of neighborhoods within Rancho Cucamonga
and Fontana, much as Central South is both the southern edge of
Rancho Cucamonga yet the center of the Rancho Cucamonga/Ontario
metropolitan area. It is also a natural activity center for Etiwanda. The
northwest corner of Foothill Boulevard and Etiwanda Avenue is the location
of one of the two neighborhood-serving commercial centers identified in
the 1982 Etiwanda Specific Plan, neither of which has been built.
“Four Corners” East Gateway
Historic Route 66 Marker
SOUTHEAST
The Southeast area is bounded by Arrow Route on the north, the San
Bernardino County heavy industrial area around the former Kaiser Steel
plant on the east, the City of Ontario’s very large industrial area to the
south, and Interstate 15 Freeway on the west. The area was designated
for heavy industry in the 1980 General Plan and all subsequent updates.
Heavy industrial uses, such as machinery, manufacturing, logistics, and
warehousing, were established in former vineyards with very little planning
or construction of streets and other infrastructure normally required for
industrial districts. Given the area’s adjacency and good access to two
interstate freeways and transcontinental railroads; the Southeast area is
ideally positioned to receive a range of modern industrial uses.
Opportunities & Challenges
Like the San Bernardino County industrial land to the east, the Southeast
transitioned directly from agriculture to industry with little planning
or infrastructure. Streets are few, some are still unpaved, parcels were
platted for farming not industry, and utility infrastructure is primitive. The
great opportunity in this area is to upgrade directly to modern industrial
infrastructure, to capitalize on the prime location and untapped potential
for jobs and wealth creation to support Rancho Cucamonga’s continuing
ascent as a premier and diversified employment center of the current and
future regional economy.
Contemporary Industrial Building
Southeast Industrial Area
40 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 41
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 3: ADMINISTRATION
PURPOSE
More than a legal requirement, a General Plan serves as a guide to meeting
the vision and core values expressed by the community. The narrative,
illustrations, and goals and polices all provide a common reference point
for residents, landowners, and decision makers. In a real sense, this General
Plan is a blueprint for the future City of Rancho Cucamonga. The future
city will be full of innovation, opportunity, and enterprise with a foundation
securely set in the rich history of the community.
HOW TO USE THIS DOCUMENT
Cities are complex and even a thorough plan for the future requires
instruction, updates, amendments, and direction. There will undoubtedly
be requests to make changes, explore new and exciting potentials, and
address new needs. This chapter explains how the General Plan will be
used by all levels of the City in the decision-making process.
Administration
OVERALL FORMAT
This General Plan is separated into four volumes that are subsequently
divided into topical chapters. The content of the chapters corresponds to
the State requirements for the contents of a General Plan. There is always
a bit of overlap between the subject areas and the State requirements,
however the law allows the City to organize the topics in any fashion that
meets the needs of the City.
+Volume 1 Vision
Chapter 1: Vision & Core Values
Chapter 2: Context
Chapter 3: Administration
+Volume 3 Environmental Performance
Chapter 1: Resource Conservation
Chapter 2: Safety
Chapter 3: Noise
+Volume 2 Built Environment
Chapter 1: Land Use & Community Character
Chapter 2: Focus Areas
Chapter 3: Open Space
Chapter 4: Mobility & Access
Chapter 5: Housing
Chapter 6: Public Facilities & Services
+Volume 4 Implementation Strategy
Chapter 1: General Plan Work Plan
Chapter 2: Placemaking Toolkit
Chapter 3: Environmental Justice Strategy
FORMAT OF CHAPTERS
Each of the chapters begins with a brief overview of the contents followed
by a summary of the State requirements. The legal requirements of a
General Plan are quite lengthy and change regularly and therefore are
not included in this General Plan. General Plan law can be found on the
California Office of Planning and Research website (https://opr.ca.gov/
planning/general-plan/guidelines.html).
The Heart of the Matter explains how the topic in each chapter affects
people. This section raises equity issues the City hopes to resolve and
suggests methods of resolution. Because of the emphasis on people, this
text has distinctive formatting so that it can be easily identified in each
chapter. The human focus of Heart of the Matter helps set the foundation
for the subsequent discussion leading to the Goals and Policies.
Following the Heart of the Matter discussion are individual topical areas
that are important to the chapter, and to the setting of Goals and Policies.
Each chapter concludes with goals and policies that direct action by the
City to implement the vision and follow the core values of the City. Goals
and policies are numbered so they can be easily referenced.
+Goals are broad in both purpose and aim but are designed to establish
directions and outcomes. Often goals are aspirational and express the
desired result either within the planning horizon, or eventually.
42 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 43
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 3: ADMINISTRATION
+Policies are specific position statements that support the achievement
of goals and serve as guides to the City when reviewing development
proposals and making other decisions. Policies seek to achieve the
goals by mandating, encouraging, or permitting certain actions.
Words are important and the language used in this plan includes the
terms: will, must, require, prohibit, conduct, maintain and implement.
These terms result in specific action as directed by the policy. Where more
discretion is anticipated this General Plan uses words such as: support,
encourage, consider, explore, discourage, and promote.
ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE
The California Government Code (Section 65040.12) defines Environmental
Justice as: “the fair treatment and meaningful participation of people of
all races, culture and incomes with respect to the development, adoption,
implementation, and enforcement of environmental laws, regulations, and
policies.” Environmental justice policies and laws have been established
to ensure that all people, regardless of race, color, national origin or
income, have equal protection from environmental hazards where they
live, work and play. Furthermore, all people should have the equal ability
to participate in, and influence, the decision-making process regarding
environmental regulations.
In the context of this General Plan, equity is one of the three foundational
pillars, or core values, upon which this Plan was developed. As such, goals
and policies directly supporting and furthering environmental justice are
included in the development of each chapter. The Environmental Justice
Strategy, contained in Volume 4 of this General Plan, provides a list of the
environmental justice goals and policies from each chapter of this General
Plan in one location.
MAPS, ILLUSTRATIONS, &
PHOTOGRAPHS
This General Plan includes a variety of maps, diagrams, and illustrations,
which reinforce the text of each element. Graphics are incorporated into
the General Plan to delineate land use and circulation patterns, community
focal points, open space and recreation facilities, biological and cultural
resources, and areas requiring special consideration or study. Important
or significant environmental resource and hazard areas are also mapped,
as well as public and quasi-public facilities. These official maps carry
equal authority to the goals and policies of the General Plan. The narrative
text in the Plan is explanatory and not considered regulation. It is nearly
impossible to show a city as large as Rancho Cucamonga on a single page
with any kind of precision. As a result, all the maps are available on-line
through the City’s GIS portal (https://rcdata-regis.opendata.arcgis.com/).
IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGY
Accompanying the first three volumes of this General Plan is an
Implementation Strategy in Volume 4. While policies serve as the primary
guidance for decision-making, the implementation strategy is the work
plan of actions the City must undertake to implement the General Plan. In
some cases, the implementation is a directive to study the issue further,
and in others it is to update existing codes and regulations of the City or
establish a program to carry out a policy in the General Plan. As many of
the policies in the General Plan can be implemented in a variety of ways,
the implementation strategy allows for flexibility and creativity in achieving
the vision. The implementation strategy provides a list of actions the City
will need to undertake to carry through the vision, and each action includes
a responsible party and timeframe.
SUPPORTING DOCUMENTS
The polices and implementation measures of this General Plan were
based on technical studies, background reports, and existing information
concerning the City that are incorporated by reference, but not actually
part of the General Plan. The documents can be found on the City’s website
(https://www.cityofrc.us/GeneralPlan).
INTERPRETATION OF THE GENERAL
PLAN
In the event uncertainty exists regarding the location of boundaries of any
land use category, proposed public facility symbol, circulation alignment,
or other symbol or line found on the official maps of the General Plan, the
following procedures will be used to resolve such uncertainty.
Boundaries shown in the General Plan and on official maps as
approximately following the limits of any municipal corporation are to
be construed as following these limits. Boundaries shown as following or
approximately following section lines, half- or quarter-section lines shall be
construed as following such lines.
Where a General Plan designation applied to a parcel is not mapped to
include an adjacent street or alley, the designation shall be considered to
extend to the centerline of the right of way. Boundaries shown as separated
from, parallel, or approximately parallel to any of the features listed above
shall be construed to be parallel to such features and at such distances
therefrom as are shown on the map. Symbols that indicate appropriate
locations for proposed public facilities are not property-specific. Rather,
they indicate only the general area within which a specific facility should be
established.
44 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 45
VOLUME 1 • CHAPTER 3: ADMINISTRATION
ANNUAL REVIEW AND MAINTENANCE
The General Plan will be implemented over the next two decades. During
this time, the long-range planning efforts for Rancho Cucamonga will
use the goals and policies in this plan as a guide. However, a General
Plan is a living document, and as the city grows and changes, it may
become necessary to amend specific policies and implementation actions
from time to time over the life of the plan. In fact, State law encourages
annual reviews of implementation actions and recommends that the
entire General Plan be thoroughly reviewed every five years to ensure
it is still consistent with the community’s goals. As part of this review,
the City will consider progress towards achieving its goals in context
of the implementation actions and work plan presented in Volume 4,
Implementation Strategy. State law further requires that the Housing
Element be reviewed and updated at least once every eight years.
Any part of the General Plan may be amended to accommodate changing
conditions. Property owners, the Planning Commission, the City Council, or
City staff may propose amendments. Proposed changes must be reviewed
by the Planning Commission and the City Council at public hearings and
the potential of environmental impacts must be evaluated in accordance
with the California Environmental Quality Act as part of that review process.
Community members, neighborhood groups and local organizations are
encouraged to stay involved in the on-going planning efforts of the City by
actively engaging the in the decision-making process and participating in
the implementation of the General Plan.
COORDINATION WITH OTHERS
Planning is a collaborative process. The City must work with applicants to
ensure development meets the expectations and needs of the community.
As a leader in the region, the City also works with other public agencies
to plan for regional improvements and obtain services for the City and its
residents. The agencies are varied and cover the full range of public and
private institutions. The City will continue to serve in this leadership role
and will coordinate with existing, and future, groups to meet the needs and
of the residents, and to ensure the goals of the General Plan are met. As
this is considered a primary function of the City, this General Plan does not
include policies for this coordination.
GENERAL PLAN
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT
REPORT
An environmental impact report (EIR) was prepared for the General Plan
to comply with the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). The EIR
contains an analysis of the possible environmental impacts that could
result from implementation of this General Plan, and how the Goals,
Policies, and implementation measures would address the impacts. As
part of the EIR, the City has customized the initial study checklist and
adopted thresholds of significance that would apply to the environmental
analysis associated with all new development. The intent of the EIR is
for the City to focus on environmental issues important to the City and
streamline later reviews. The General Plan EIR is available online (https://
www.cityofrc.us/GeneralPlan) The City anticipates that changes to State
law and the environment will require a regular review and possibly update
to the EIR. Any updates to the General Plan EIR will be concurrent with the
maintenance and update of the General Plan.
Volume 2
BUILT ENVIRONMENT
IN THIS VOLUME
46 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 47
LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
Land Use & Community Character Is.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
State Legal Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
Heart of the Matter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Overview of this Chapter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
Placemaking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
General Plan Designations & Land Plan . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
Neighborhood Designations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .64
Corridor Designations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
Center Designations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
District Designations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .84
Goals & Policies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .91
While a city is nothing without its people, it is the built environment
that is the stage for all our daily activities. How we live, work, shop, learn,
travel, exercise, and play in the City of Rancho Cucamonga is strongly
affected by the way the city is built. This volume of the General Plan
contains the goals and policies that will most directly influence how the
city, including its neighborhoods, districts, streets, and parks, is built.
While each of the topics in this Volume are presented in individual
chapters, they function together to support options for people. Because
how we move about is intrinsic to the design of where we are going,
increasing options for access improves equity by ensuring all people
can enjoy the opportunities the City has to offer. Improving access,
whether by completing trails, adding transport hubs, or ensuring
connectivity between where people are and where they want to be, is
the overarching design theme of this volume.
Volume 2
BUILT ENVIRONMENT
48 | PLANRC 2040 | CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 49
MOBILITY & ACCESS
Mobility and Access Is... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 148
State Legal Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149
Heart of the Matter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149
Overview of this Chapter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150
Becoming the Regional Hub of the Inland Empire. . . 151
Complete Streets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155
Roadway Typologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 160
Mobility Choices for People . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 166
Safety. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .171
Future Traffic Operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 172
Goods Movement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 174
Future of Transportation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 176
Goals & Policies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 177
HOUSING
Housing is... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 182
State Legal Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 182
Heart of the Matter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183
Overview of this Chapter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 184
Housing Affordability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 184
Housing Plan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 184
Goals & Policies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 185
IN THIS VOLUME (CONT’D)IN THIS VOLUME (CONT’D)
FOCUS AREAS
Focus Areas Are.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
Focus Area 1: Downtown Rancho Cucamonga. . . . . . . 102
Focus Area 2: Civic Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108
Focus Area 3: HART District . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .114
Focus Area 4: Red Hill Gateway . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .118
Focus Area 5: Cucamonga Town Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122
Focus Area 6: Alta Loma Town Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126
Focus Area 7: Etiwanda Heights Town Center . . . . . . . 130
Focus Area 8: Southeast Industrial Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134
OPEN SPACE
Open Space Is... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136
State Legal Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136
Heart of the Matter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137
Overview of this Chapter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137
Open Space Designations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 138
Parks and Recreation System . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 140
Goals & Policies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145
FIGURES
50 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 51
LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
Figure LC-1 Vision Diagram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Figure LC-2 Place Types and General Plan Designations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
Figure LC-3 Land Plan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .58
Figure LC-4 Neighborhood Designations Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63
Figure LC-5 Corridor Designations Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
Figure LC-6 Center Designations Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .77
Figure LC-7 District Designations Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .83
FOCUS AREAS
Figure F-1 Focus Areas Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .101
Figure F-2 Focus Area 1: Downtown Rancho Cucamonga . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103
Figure F-3 Focus Area 2: Civic Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .109
Figure F-4 Focus Area 3: HART District . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .115
Figure F-5 Focus Area 4: Red Hill Gateway . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .119
Figure F-6 Focus Area 5: Cucamonga Town Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123
Figure F-7 Focus Area 6: Alta Loma Town Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127
Figure F-8 Focus Area 7: Etiwanda Heights Town Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .131
Figure F-9 Focus Area 8: Southeast Industrial Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135
OPEN SPACE
Figure OS-1 Open Space Designations Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139
Figure OS-2 Trails and Sidewalks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .144
PUBLIC FACILITIES & SERVICES
Public Facilities Are.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 188
State Legal Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 188
Heart of the Matter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 189
Overview of this Chapter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 189
City Facilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 190
Infrastructure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 194
Goals and Policies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .200
IN THIS VOLUME (CONT’D)
52 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 53
TABLESFIGURES (CONT’D)
MOBILITY
Figure M-1 Transit Plan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153
Figure M-2 Local Mobility Hub Concepts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154
Figure M-3 Layered Roadway Network . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 156
Figure M-4 Bicycle and Pedestrian Priority . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157
Figure M-5 Automobile Priority . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158
Figure M-6 Pedestrian Focus Areas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 167
Figure M-7 Bikeway Classifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 169
Figure M-8 Proposed Street Network in Southeast Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 173
Figure M-9 Truck Routes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 175
PUBLIC FACILITIES & SERVICES
Figure PF-1 City Facilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 192
Figure PF-2 School Facilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193
LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
Table LC-1 General Plan Designations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .59
Table LC-2 Neighborhood Designations Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62
Table LC-3 Corridor Designations Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .70
Table LC-4 Center Designations Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .76
Table LC-5 District Designations Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .82
OPEN SPACE
Table OS-1 Open Space Designations Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 138
Table OS-2 Parks and Open Space General Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 142
PUBLIC FACILITIES & SERVICES
Table PF-1 Community Facilities. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .191
Table PF-2 Drainage Facility Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 197
Table PF-3 Recycling Programs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 199
54 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 55
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 1: LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
LAND USE & COMMUNITY
CHARACTER IS..
the first thing anyone notices, and remembers, when they visit a city. Every
world-class city is known for the way it looks and how it engages people.
Whether it is a natural feature, such as the San Gabriel Mountains, tree-
lined streets, or a special shopping district like Victoria Gardens, there is
always something that creates feelings and memories, even if they can’t
be easily described. These are all “places” within the larger city, and have
often been intentionally created to enhance community life. Similarly,
great cities display a mix of historical, cultural and architectural heritage
that provides a visual connection to the past, while embracing the future.
A consistent message heard throughout the PlanRC engagement process
was the importance of displaying the rich history and culture of the City.
This Chapter of the General Plan preserves the character and strengths of
each neighborhood and recommends appropriate change—small in some
cases, larger in others.
STATE LEGAL REQUIREMENTS
California law requires a Land Use Element to “designate the proposed
general distribution and general location and extent of the uses of the land
for housing, business, industry, open space, including agriculture, natural
resources, recreation, and enjoyment of scenic beauty, education, public
buildings and grounds, solid and liquid waste disposal facilities, greenways,
as defined in Section 816.52 of the Civil Code, and other categories of public
and private uses of land. The location and designation of the extent of the
uses of the land for public and private uses shall consider the identification
of land and natural resources. The Land Use Element shall include a
statement of the standards of population density and building intensity
recommended for the various districts and other territory covered by
the plan. The Land Use Element shall identify and annually review those
areas covered by the plan that are subject to flooding identified by flood
plain mapping prepared by the Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) or the Department of Water Resources.”
The required Land Use Element has the broadest scope of the required
elements of a General Plan, regulating how all land in the city is to be
used in the future, and works in conjunction with the other elements. To
fully reflect the range of physical attributes that are important for Rancho
Cucamonga’s success, this chapter also contains goals and policies to guide
urban design and character.
HEART OF THE MATTER
Rancho Cucamonga is a city of three historic communities that have
developed into one city. This General Plan is designing connections between
many great existing places and making way for new, livable places within.
Certainly, land uses are about where and how a city accommodates people.
With residential land uses the accommodations can range from a single-
family home on large lots to multi-story apartments to small work/live units.
Non-residential land uses cater to people while they work, shop, and play. This
Land Use and Community Character Chapter helps shape how the city looks
and feels, but the focus is on how the design of places helps people live.
This General Plan also recognizes that not all areas of the city are expected,
or desired, to change and some areas need greater investment. No matter
the degree of change, all change is intended to be made at the human-
scale to make the most efficient use of space and to connect people. As
envisioned here, pedestrians, cyclists, equestrians, and skateboarders,
will enjoy the freedom of mobility choice. Neighborhoods will be linked
by pleasant places to walk, wander, and enjoy. This approach reinforces
connection to the city and to nature, one trip, errand, or jog at a time.
Further, streets will remain important and with them bicycles, cars, trucks
and buses. The future has this space shared with buildings oriented
towards people. Transit and last-mile options will be enhanced and
expected to relate to development. Much of this is happening already but
this General Plan will continue this trend and expand the mobility network
into neighborhoods most in need.
Land Use & Community Character
“All fine
architectural values
are human values,
else not valuable.”
- Frank Lloyd
Wright
56 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 57
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 1: LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
OVERVIEW OF THIS CHAPTER
The Land Use and Community Character Chapter describes and defines
the distinct types of places—or “place types”—that the City aims to create
to achieve the community’s vision for Rancho Cucamonga. This General
Plan unifies the inseparable topics of land use and community character
and design into a single chapter to ensure that the uses, experiences, and
activities that current and future community members enjoy in our city
cannot be divorced from our vision for the unique look, feel, character,
ambiance and quality of life that we enjoy in Rancho Cucamonga.
Goals and policies that serve to guide and direct long-term planning for
Land Use and Community Character in the City of Rancho Cucamonga are
provided at the end of this chapter. A summary of the goals is provided
here as an overview and to set the foundation for this chapter. Goals
LC-1 through LC-3, and their respective policies express the overarching
citywide commitment to placemaking that unifies land use planning and
community character design. Goals LC-4 through LC-7 and their related
policies clarify the intent for each place type.
+Goal LC-1 A City of Places. A beautiful city with a diversity of unique
and well-connected places.
+Goal LC-2 Human Scaled. A city designed and built for people
fostering human interaction, comfort, activity, and safety.
+Goal LC-3 Fiscally Sustainable. A fiscally sound and sustainable City.
+Goal LC-4 Complete Neighborhoods. A diverse range of unique
neighborhoods, each of which provides an equitable range of housing
types and choices with a mix of amenities and services that support
active, healthy lifestyles.
+Goal LC-5 Connected Corridors. A citywide network of transportation
and open space corridors that provides a high level of connectivity for
pedestrians, bicyclists, equestrians, motorists, and transit users.
+Goal LC-6 Active Centers. A rich variety of commercial and mixed-
use centers throughout the city, which bring a range of opportunities
for shopping, dining, recreations, commerce, employment, arts and
culture within easy reach of all neighborhoods.
+Goal LC-7 Robust Districts. A series of unique, employment-oriented
environments for a range of business activities, shopping and
entertainment, and community events and gathering.
Destination and gathering place for
day- and night-time activities
PLACEMAKING
The intent of this General Plan is to create a city for people—a city of great
neighborhoods, natural open spaces and parks, and walkable and active
centers and districts, all connected by safe and comfortable streets. The
Vision Diagram, as described in detail in Volume 1 and shown here in Figure
LC-1, is a conceptual land use and mobility plan that illustrates a policy level
approach for how and where we target investment and growth to create
great places, and a strategic framework for multi-modal access between
these places.
FIGURE LC-1 VISION DIAGRAM
COMMUNITY ACTIVITY NODES
Neighborhood Activity Node
Corridor Activity Node
Focus Areas
MOBILITY CORRIDORS
Transit Priority Street
Bicycle Priority Street
Trail Network
Note: See Figure LC-3 Land Plan for
General Plan DesignationsCarmelian StVineyard Ave19th St
Upland
Ontario
Fontana
6th St
4th St
Baseline Rd
Wilson Ave Wilson Ave
Church St
Cucamonga
Central South
Central North
Red Hill
Alta Loma Etiwanda
Southeast
Eastside
Pacific Electric Trail
Day Creek ChannelDeer Creek ChannelDeer Creek ChannelArrow Route Archibald AveHaven AveMilliken AveEtiwanda Ave10
10
15
15
210
210
58 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 59
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 1: LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
Building upon the Vision Diagram, this General Plan uses five basic “place
types” to guide vision-directed conservation and change as appropriate
and express the development intention for each part of the city over the life
of this General Plan. Each place type addresses a range of components—
land use, built form, streetscapes, and building-to-street relationships—all
of which are important in creating places, or “placemaking.” The basic place
types are defined as follows:
+Neighborhoods describe the places where most of us live. They are
predominantly residential and can include supporting amenities and
services. The wide range of neighborhoods in Rancho Cucamonga
include semi-rural neighborhoods, historic neighborhoods with stately
tree rows, older neighborhoods interspersed with industrial business,
and newer neighborhoods of single and multifamily homes.
+Corridors describe the places along major streets in the city that
connect our neighborhoods, centers, districts, and open spaces, enable
smooth transitions between neighborhoods and districts, and provide
a range of amenities, conveniences, transit access, and housing options
on the edges of existing and future neighborhoods.
+Centers describe the places we go for shopping, dining, entertainment,
and gathering as a community. Centers are nodes of activity
throughout the city, providing retail and employment opportunities
close to neighborhoods and, in some cases, also opportunities for new
forms of housing within a short walk of those amenities and transit.
Centers range in size and character to provide the desired services and
activities of nearby residents.
+Districts describe the places where we work and conduct business.
Districts are predominantly non-residential with a primary activity that
is functionally specialized, such as a commercial, office, or industrial
use, and can also include some supportive commercial and recreational
uses and housing.
+Open Spaces are the places we go to play, exercise, learn, relax, and
socialize, such as large recreational parks, natural conservation areas,
and schools. Community playfields, Central Park and the conserved
natural and rural open spaces of the foothills are large, specialized
areas, whereas small- and medium-size parks, which provide places for
informal play, family activities, and quiet recreation, are considered part
of the neighborhood they serve. These different types of open spaces
and recreational facilities together meet the full range of residents’
needs for active and healthy lifestyles. Open space designations are
described in Chapter 3 of this volume with additional standards and
policies for parks.
FIGURE LC-2 PLACE TYPES AND GENERAL PLAN DESIGNATIONS
Semi-Rural
Neighborhood
Traditional
Neighborhood
Suburban
Neighborhood
- Very Low
Suburban
Neighborhood
- Moderate
Suburban
Neighborhood
- Low
Urban
Neighborhood
Neighborhood
Center
Neighborhood
Corridor
Natural Open
Space
Traditional
Town Center
City Corridor
- Moderate
Rural Open
Space
City CenterCity Corridor
- High
General Open
Space &
FacilitiesNEIGHBORHOODSCORRIDORSCENTERSDISTRICTSOPEN SPACESGENERAL PLAN DESIGNATIONS
& LAND PLAN
Given the City’s broad place-making goals and the community’s interest
in shaping the form and character of the city, this General Plan uses “place
type” designations that go beyond conventional land use designations to
better define the existing and intended character, form, and function of
each part of the city. As shown in Figure LC-2, Place Types and General Plan
Designations, each place type is organized into designations that provide
direction on the intended range of uses, appropriate levels of development
density and intensity, and intended physical design character. While the
location and general area of each designation is shown in Figure LC-3, Land
Plan, an easier to read version of the map is available on the City’s website
(https://bit.ly/gplandplan).
Additional, parcel-specific precision is provided in the City’s Zoning
Ordinance, which refines and clarifies the allowable development density
and intensity for that parcel within the range specified by the General Plan
Designation.
Neighborhoods of Rancho Cucamonga
Office
Employment
District
21st Century
Employment
District
Neo-Industrial
Employment
District
Industrial
Employment
District
60 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 61
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 1: LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
FIGURE LC-3 LAND PLAN TABLE LC-1 GENERAL PLAN DESIGNATIONS
NEIGHBORHOODS
Semi-Rural Neighborhood
Traditional Neighborhood
Suburban Neighborhood - Very Low
Suburban Neighborhood - Low
Suburban Neighborhood - Moderate
Urban Neighborhood
CORRIDORS
Neighborhood Corridor
City Corridor - Moderate
City Corridor - High
CENTERS
Neighborhood Center
Traditional Town Center
City Center
DISTRICTS
Office Employment District
21st Century Employment District
Neo-Industrial Employment District
Industrial Employment District
OPEN SPACES
Natural Open Space
Rural Open Space
General Open Space & Facilities
General Plan Designation Residential Density
(DU/AC)*
Non-Residential
Intensity (FAR)
Target Use Mix Ratio
(Res/Non-Res)
NEIGHBORHOODS
Semi-Rural Neighborhood Max. 2 NA 100/0
Traditional Neighborhood Max. 8 Max. 0.4 80/20
Suburban Neighborhood - Very Low Max. 6 NA 100/0
Suburban Neighborhood - Low Max. 14 NA 100/0
Suburban Neighborhood - Moderate Max. 30 Max. 0.3 100/0
Urban Neighborhood 20 - 50 0.2 - 0.4 80/20
CORRIDORS
Neighborhood Corridor Max. 24 0.4 - 0.6 70/30
City Corridor - Moderate 24 - 42 0.4 - 1.0 70/30
City Corridor - High 36 - 60 0.6 - 1.5 70/30
CENTERS
Neighborhood Center Max. 24 0.2 - 0.4 20/80
Traditional Town Center Max. 30 0.2 - 0.6 50/50
City Center 40 - 100 1.0 - 2.0 50/50
DISTRICTS
Office Employment District 18 - 30 0.6 - 1.0 20/80
21st Century Employment District 24 - 42 0.4 - 1.0 30/70
Neo-Industrial Employment District 14 - 24 0.4 - 0.6 10/90
Industrial Employment District NA 0.4 - 0.6 0/100
OPEN SPACES
Natural Open Space NA NA NA
Rural Open Space Max. 2 NA NA
General Open Space & Facilities NA NA NA
Note: See the following page on “Calibrating Development” for further details on density, FAR, and use mix ratio. The standard for population
density for all areas covered by the General Plan will be dictated by the occupancy limits in the City’s building codes. Carmelian StVineyard Ave19th St
Upland
Ontario
Fontana
6th St
4th St
Baseline Rd
Wilson Ave Wilson Ave
Church St
Cucamonga
Central South
Central North
Red Hill
Alta Loma Etiwanda
Southeast
Eastside
Pacific Electric Trail
Day Creek ChannelDeer Creek ChannelDeer Creek ChannelArrow Route Archibald AveHaven AveMilliken AveEtiwanda Ave10
10
15
15
210
210
CALIBRATING DEVELOPMENT TO CREATE
PLACES, NOT PROJECTS
Density and Intensity
The residential density (du/ac) and non-residential intensity (FAR) ranges presented in Table LC-1 are intended
to guide the intensity and type of development in each General Plan Designation area with consideration of
the surrounding context. The low/high ends of the range do not apply uniformly to every parcel with the same
General Plan Designation. The achievable density and intensity for a specific parcel will be regulated by the
City’s Development Code, and is contingent upon variable factors such as proximity to centers/districts/etc.,
lot size, lot depth, and adjacent uses. Density and intensity are additive for mixed-use development provided
the development achieves the intended outcomes of the relevant Place Type and Focus Area and adheres to
placemaking design principles and guidelines in the Placemaking Toolkit (Vol. 4 Ch. 2).
The City, at its discretion, may allow exceptions in density and/or intensity, in both reductions and increases, based
on the developer’s contribution toward community benefits as outlined in the Community Benefits Strategy
section of this chapter.
Use-Mix Ratio
Table LC-1 identifies target land-use mix ratios (residential to non-residential) for each General Plan Designation.
The listed ratios in Table LC-1 are “targets” for their respective overall Designation - and are not necessarily
intended to represent the required land-use mix for an individual site or project. A primary purpose of
establishing overall targets is to maintain citywide fiscal sustainability, per Land Use Policy LC-3.5, however,
determining an appropriate use mix on a site-by-site and project-by-project basis must take into account a
number of additional variables, including market conditions, development feasibility, and contribution toward
achieving the intended outcomes of the relevant Place Type and Focus Areas defined in this General Plan.
Additionally, “Community Activity Nodes” - active, walkable, mixed-use and transit-oriented environments - have
been identified and are prioritized at key locations throughout the city (see Figure LC-1 Vision Diagram). Within
such nodes, all infill and redevelopment should provide retail or retail-ready spaces - per Land Use Policy LC-2.6 -
as follows:
+Retail is generally required at the corners of major
intersections.
+Retail-ready development should primarily front
major streets toward the front of the block.
+Where new internal streets are created, retail-ready
development should front the main entry street
up to the corners of the next intersection, building
front, or around a central public space.
+These standards do not preclude the location of
retail uses throughout the block.
+See the Placemaking Toolkit (Vol. 4 Ch. 2) for
applicable design principles and strategies.
Community Benefits Program
The intent of the Community Benefits Program (CBP) is to allow a developer the opportunity to contribute toward
key priority benefits to the community in exchange for flexibility in development standards, such as density
(du/ac), FAR, and building height. The CBP is applicable only to new development, infill, and redevelopment in
the Center, Corridor and District designation areas. The requirements and process for utilizing the CBP will be
provided in the Development Code. The community benefits gained through the CBP shall be in addition to,
not instead of, those obtained through required standards in the City’s Development Code as well as any other
impact fee or in-lieu fee program. Incentives to the developer will be proportional to the benefit provided to the
community as determined by the City.
The following community benefits are identified by the City as key priorities to achieve the vision of this General
Plan. This list does not preclude the option for developers to propose other potential benefits to the community.
KEY PRIORITY COMMUNITY BENEFITS
1. Affordable Housing. Providing housing that is affordable to moderate and lower incomes (see Housing
Element for details) in a variety of housing types, especially for ownership.
2. Retail-Ready Development. Providing retail-ready flex space at the ground floor of buildings in addition to
any retail-required or retail-ready space as identified in this Plan.
3. Office-Ready Development. Providing office-ready flex space at the upper floors or the backs of buildings.
4. Streetscape Improvements. Providing, or contributing toward, streetscape improvements, such as lighting,
benches, transit shelter, etc., that are in addition to any required improvements resulting from a direct nexus
between the impact of the development on the street network.
5. Roadway Improvements. Providing, or contributing toward, roadway improvements, such as lane
modifications, frontage lanes, etc., that are in addition to any required improvements resulting from a direct
nexus between the impact of the development on the street network.
6. Other Public Improvements. Providing, or contributing toward, public improvements, such as the installation
of utilities or stormwater improvements, railroad improvements, etc., that are above and beyond those
otherwise required to mitigate the impact of the new development.
7. Civic Space. Providing, or contributing toward, civic or civil support space, such as a site for a future fire
station, police station, library, etc.
8. Transit-Related Benefit. Providing, or contributing toward, the improvement of transit access and mobility,
such as new tunnel connections
9. Sustainability-Related Benefit. Providing, or contributing toward, sustainable and energy efficient
development beyond what is identified in the City’s General Plan and Climate Action Plan, such as battery
storage, resilient micro-grids, etc.
Example of retail-required and retail-ready priority areas at
major intersection and within new block structure.
Retail-Required
New Internal Street Retail-Ready
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VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 1: LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
64 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 65
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 1: LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
Carmelian St19th St
Upland
Ontario
Fontana
6th St
4th St
Baseline Rd
Wilson Ave Wilson Ave
Church St
CUCAMONGA
CENTRAL SOUTH
CENTRAL NORTH
RED HILL
ALTA LOMA ETIWANDA
SOUTHEAST
EASTSIDE
Arrow Route Archibald AveHaven AveMilliken AveEtiwanda Ave10
10
15
15
210
210
NEIGHBORHOOD
DESIGNATIONS
Neighborhoods are the places where most people live. They are
predominantly residential and should be well-connected with safe and
comfortable connections to amenities and services for pedestrians and
bicyclists of all ages in addition to motorists. The density and intensity of
neighborhoods in Rancho Cucamonga, shown in Table LC-2, range from
semi-rural to urban, providing a wide range of housing and lifestyle choices.
These neighborhoods are organized into several distinct neighborhood
designations, each of which describes the general size and orientation of
homes, the way the streets look and function, neighborhood amenities,
and access to activity centers, jobs and major parks and open spaces.
In most cases, the emphasis of the neighborhood designation is on
preserving and enhancing the existing and intended character of the
City’s established neighborhoods. In some cases, the focus is on expanding
the range and variety of housing and lifestyle choices available to take
advantage of transit and provide housing opportunities to households of all
income levels.
TABLE LC-2 NEIGHBORHOOD DESIGNATIONS SUMMARY
General Plan Designation
Residential
Density
(DU/AC)*
Non-
Residential
Intensity
(FAR)
Target Use
Mix Ratio
(Res/Non-Res)
Semi-Rural
Neighborhood Max. 2 NA 100/0
Traditional
Neighborhood Max. 8 Max. 0.4 80/20
Suburban Neighborhood
- Very Low Max. 6 NA 100/0
Suburban Neighborhood
- Low Max. 14 NA 100/0
Suburban Neighborhood
- Moderate Max. 30 Max. 0.3 100/0
Urban Neighborhood 20 - 50 0.2 - 0.4 80/20
* See “Calibrating Development” on page 62 for further details on applying density, intensity,
and use mix ratio.
FIGURE LC-4 NEIGHBORHOOD DESIGNATIONS MAP
Semi-Rural Neighborhood
Traditional Neighborhood
Suburban Neighborhood - Very Low
Suburban Neighborhood - Low
Suburban Neighborhood - Moderate
Urban Neighborhood
Cottage court with small homes and shared gardens Walkable neighborhood adjacent to natural open spaces
66 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 67
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 1: LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
SEMI-RURAL NEIGHBORHOOD
Purpose & Intent
To maintain and promote single family housing in neighborhoods that
strengthen the semi-rural character of existing neighborhoods.
Land Use & Development Intensity
Uses are primarily low density residential. Limited neighborhood-serving
businesses in small buildings may be allowed on select corner parcels to
provide goods and services for daily needs and community gathering spots.
Civic uses, such as fire stations, schools, churches, and house-form
multifamily residential may also be allowed provided such uses are oriented
toward serving the needs of rural, low density neighborhoods.
+Residential Density: Max. 2 units/acre
+Non-Residential Intensity: NA
Built Form & Character
Neighborhoods are semi-rural in character. Buildings are oriented toward
the public street and set back large distances from the natural street edge
to provide large front yards. Building height and scale are site appropriate
(depending on topography and slope). Houses are typically custom-built
and reflect a wide range of architectural styles compatible with the semi-
rural character of the neighborhood.
Sites and streets conform to the natural terrain, minimizing grading
and preserving natural landforms. Small portions of sites are developed
with single-family houses leaving much of each site relatively natural.
Streetscapes are also semi-rural with gutterless roads defined by informal
tree arrangements and natural street edges. Sidewalks may or may not be
present, nonetheless safe and comfortable pedestrian paths are provided
with large shade trees.
Access & Connectivity
Streets have relatively low vehicular interconnectivity. Pedestrian and
equestrian connections to trail systems are provided from neighborhood
streets where possible. Buffered bike lanes may be present on collector
streets along with street trees and other landscape enhancements.
Parks & Open Space
Open space is typically in the form of neighborhood parks for active
and passive recreational use that maintain natural topography, native
landscaping, and naturalistic playground equipment.
Deep front yards with rustic landscape
Semi-Rural Neighborhood
Rural fences define the lot front
TRADITIONAL NEIGHBORHOOD
Purpose & Intent
To maintain and promote single family housing in neighborhoods with
traditional pedestrian-oriented neighborhood development patterns,
including in new master planned neighborhoods.
Land Use & Development Intensity
Uses are primarily low and low-medium density residential. Context-sensitive
neighborhood commercial uses are also allowed in certain locations, such as
neighborhood edges and at designated nodes within new master planned
neighborhoods (see Chapter 2 Focus Areas for additional details on the
Etiwanda Heights Town Center).
Civic uses, such as fire stations, schools, and churches may be allowed
provided such uses are oriented toward serving the needs of neighborhoods.
+Residential Density: Max. 8 units/acre
+Non-Residential Intensity: Max. 0.4 FAR
Built Form & Character
Neighborhoods are traditional in character. Buildings are set back from the
sidewalk with moderately sized front yards and welcoming entries scaled
and oriented to pedestrians. Commercial groundfloors may be set nearer
to the sidewalk to support such activities as outdoor dining and provide
clear views into shopfronts. Buildings are up to 2.5 stories in height with
varied massing and a wide range of architectural styles compatible with the
existing character of adjacent houses. Multifamily and mixed-use buildings
are compatible in scale, form, and character with nearby houses.
Lots, blocks, and streets conform to the natural terrain, minimizing
grading and preserving natural landforms. Streetscapes provide safe and
comfortable environments for pedestrians and bicyclists with continuous
sidewalks uninterrupted by wide driveways, large shade trees and native
landscaping.
Access & Connectivity
Streets are highly interconnected with a grid network pattern and human-
scale blocks. Pedestrian and equestrian connections to trail systems are
provided from neighborhood streets. Buffered or protected bike lanes may
be added to collector streets along with street trees and other landscape
enhancements that define the public spaces and provide shade canopy.
Parks & Open Space
Open space is in the form of neighborhood parks for active and passive
recreational use for all ages and other small open spaces such as plazas and
squares at mixed-use and commercial areas.
Lots conform to natural terrain
Traditional Neighborhood
“House-form” town houses
ALTA LOMA
RED HILL
CUCAMONGA
CENTRAL SOUTH SOUTHEAST
EASTSIDE
ETIWANDA
CENTRAL NORTH
ALTA LOMA
RED HILL
CUCAMONGA
CENTRAL SOUTH SOUTHEAST
EASTSIDE
ETIWANDA
CENTRAL NORTH
68 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 69
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 1: LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
SUBURBAN NEIGHBORHOOD - VERY
LOW
Purpose & Intent
To maintain and enhance the character of established suburban
neighborhoods of single family detached housing.
Land Use & Development Intensity
Uses are primarily low density residential. Civic uses, such as fire stations,
schools, and churches are allowed provided such uses are oriented toward
serving the needs of the neighborhoods.
+Residential Density: Max. 6 units/acre
+Non-Residential Intensity: NA
Built Form & Character
Neighborhoods are suburban in character. Building setbacks are deep
with large front yards defining the outdoor spaces of the public realm with
landscaped edges.
Remodels of existing homes and accessory dwelling units (ADUs) reinforce
the suburban character of the neighborhood in size, scale and form.
Building heights are typically 1 to 2 stories and can be up to 2.5 stories.
Streetscapes provide safe and comfortable environments for bicyclists
and pedestrians with continuous sidewalks, large shade trees and native
landscaping.
Access & Connectivity
Street networks provide relatively low vehicular interconnectivity and
are generally internalized. Nonetheless, pedestrian and bike connections
are provided to major streets, trails, and neighborhood-serving uses and
amenities.
Parks & Open Space
Open space is in the form of neighborhood parks for active and passive
recreational use for all ages. On-site neighborhood amenities are required
for large neighborhood projects.
Suburban Neighborhood - Very Low
Suburban neighborhood with a range
of housing types and styles
Common open space fronting
bungalows
SUBURBAN NEIGHBORHOOD - LOW
Purpose & Intent
To maintain and enhance the character of established suburban
neighborhoods of single family detached and attached housing, such as
duplexes, triplexes, quadplexes, and townhomes, in house-form buildings.
Land Use & Development Intensity
Uses are primarily low and low-medium density residential. Civic uses, such
as fire stations, schools, and churches are allowed provided such uses are
oriented toward serving the needs of the neighborhoods.
+Residential Density: Max. 14 units/acre
+Non-Residential Intensity: NA
Built Form & Character
Neighborhoods are suburban in character. Building setbacks are short with
the facades forming the outdoor spaces of the public realm. Neighborhood
commercial buildings are set near or at the sidewalk to support such
activities as outdoor dining and provide clear views into shopfronts.
Remodels of existing homes and accessory dwelling units (ADUs) reinforce
the suburban character of the neighborhood in size, scale and form.
Neighborhood-serving commercial buildings are compatible in size, scale
and character with existing houses in the neighborhood. Building heights
are up to 3 stories.
Streetscapes provide safe and comfortable environments for bicyclists
and pedestrians with continuous sidewalks, large shade trees and native
landscaping.
Access & Connectivity
Street networks provide relatively low vehicular interconnectivity and
are generally internalized. Nonetheless, pedestrian and bike connections
are provided to major streets, trails, and neighborhood-serving uses and
amenities.
Parks & Open Space
Open space is in the form of neighborhood parks for active and passive
recreational use for all ages and other small open spaces such as plazas and
squares at commercial areas. On-site neighborhood amenities are required
for large neighborhood projects.
Suburban Neighborhood - Low
Attached single family homes in house-
form buildings
Courtyards provide open space for
attached homes
ALTA LOMA
RED HILL
CUCAMONGA
CENTRAL SOUTH SOUTHEAST
EASTSIDE
ETIWANDA
CENTRAL NORTH
ALTA LOMA
RED HILL
CUCAMONGA
CENTRAL SOUTH SOUTHEAST
EASTSIDE
ETIWANDA
CENTRAL NORTH
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VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 1: LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
SUBURBAN NEIGHBORHOOD -
MODERATE
Purpose & Intent
To maintain and enhance the character of suburban neighborhoods of
single family detached, single family attached, and multifamily housing.
Attached housing, such as duplexes, triplexes, quadplexes, and townhomes,
should be in house-form buildings.
Land Use & Development Intensity
Uses are primarily low-medium and medium density residential. Limited
context-sensitive neighborhood commercial uses may be allowed in select
locations to provide goods and services for daily needs and community
gathering spots and as part of mixed-use buildings and projects.
Civic uses, such as fire stations, schools, and churches are allowed provided
such uses are oriented toward serving the needs of the neighborhoods.
+Residential Density: Max. 30 units/acre
+Non-Residential Intensity: Max. 0.3 FAR
Built Form & Character
Neighborhoods are suburban in character. Building setbacks are short with
the facades forming the outdoor spaces of the public realm. Buildings with
non-residential ground floors are set near or at the sidewalk to support
such activities as outdoor dining and provide clear views into shopfronts.
Multifamily, neighborhood-serving commercial and mixed-use buildings
are compatible in size, scale and character with existing houses in the
neighborhood. Building heights are up to 5 stories.
Streetscapes provide safe and comfortable environments for bicyclists
and pedestrians with continuous sidewalks, large shade trees and native
landscaping.
Access & Connectivity
Street networks provide relatively low vehicular interconnectivity and
are generally internalized. Nonetheless, pedestrian and bike connections
are provided to major streets, trails, and neighborhood-serving uses and
amenities.
Parks & Open Space
Open space is in the form of neighborhood parks for active and passive
recreational use for all ages and other small open spaces such as plazas
and squares at mixed-use and commercial areas. On-site neighborhood
amenities are required for large neighborhood projects.
Suburban Neighborhood - Moderate
Front stoops provide semi-private
spaces along neighborhood streets
Internal greens and courtyards provide
open space for residents
URBAN NEIGHBORHOOD
Purpose & Intent
To provide for multifamily neighborhoods adjacent to and supportive of
higher intensity mixed-use centers of activity.
Land Use & Development Intensity
Uses include medium to high density residential and mixed-use that
comprise residential uses with non-residential uses and services, such as
retail shops, restaurants, and offices. Standalone non-residential uses may
be allowed in certain locations to serve a high need for commercial uses.
Civic uses, such as fire stations, schools, and churches are allowed provided
such uses are oriented toward serving the needs of the neighborhoods.
+Residential Density: 20 - 50 units/acre
+Non-Residential Intensity: 0.2 - 0.4 FAR
Built Form & Character
Neighborhoods are urban in character. Buildings are oriented toward
the street and the facades form the outdoor spaces of the public realm.
Buildings with non-residential ground floors are set near or at the sidewalk
to support such activities as outdoor dining and provide clear views into
shopfronts.
Buildings are compatible in size, scale and character with adjacent
buildings and designed for soft transitions to surrounding neighborhoods
of lower densities. Mixed-use buildings may be in vertical or horizontal
layout. Buildings are typically 3 to 5 stories and can be up to 12 stories.
Streetscapes provide safe and comfortable environments for bicyclists and
pedestrians with continuous, wide sidewalks, large shade trees and native
landscaping.
Access & Connectivity
Street networks comprise relatively large blocks and moderate vehicular
interconnectivity within a grid pattern. Pedestrian and bike connections
are provided to major streets, trails, and destinations with commercial,
recreational, and employment uses and amenities.
Parks & Open Space
Open space is in the form of neighborhood parks for active and passive
recreational use for all ages and other open spaces such as plazas and
squares at mixed-use and commercial areas. On-site neighborhood
amenities are required for large multifamily and mixed-use projects.
Cars, bikes and pedestrians can safely
mix in low-speed “in-town” places
Flex space in “light-courts” below
Urban Neighborhood
ALTA LOMA
RED HILL
CUCAMONGA
CENTRAL SOUTH SOUTHEAST
EASTSIDE
ETIWANDA
CENTRAL NORTH
ALTA LOMA
RED HILL
CUCAMONGA
CENTRAL SOUTH SOUTHEAST
EASTSIDE
ETIWANDA
CENTRAL NORTH
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VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 1: LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
CORRIDOR DESIGNATIONS
Corridors comprise the primary streets and public open space rights-of-way
and the properties and environments along them through which we move
from neighborhood to neighborhood, from home to work, and to shop and
meet friends. Like most cities, Rancho Cucamonga’s major streets were
initially built primarily for efficient flow of automobile traffic with very little
consideration of how adjacent development connects to the public realm
of the streets or to other development across the street. However, over the
last 20 years, there has been new understanding of the value of designing
corridors to be places people go to rather than places people drive through.
This same value has been observed by the community. Throughout the
PlanRC public engagement process, community members requested that
streets provide safer, more comfortable spaces for pedestrian, bicyclists,
and equestrians and better accommodate transit service in addition to
continuing to carry automobile traffic efficiently throughout the city.
Fortunately, the wide public rights-of-way and “first generation” street
improvements offer both the space and the opportunity for refinements
that can meet this request. The corridors envisioned here, and summarized
in Table LC-3, are where commercial and recreational amenities and
appropriate types of multifamily housing can open to the street, allowing
residents to enjoy their neighborhoods and amenities, rather than hiding
homes and businesses behind large parking lots and screen wall
Further, corridor activity nodes of moderately higher development
intensities and greater concentrations of commercial uses at major
intersections, as shown in Figure LC-1, Vision Diagram, will generate
a “series of places” connected by a major street. Requiring adjacent
development to include human-scale design features and improving the
streets for better access will transform these streets into people-centric
corridors that can add great value to the city.
TABLE LC-3 CORRIDOR DESIGNATIONS SUMMARY
General Plan Designation
Residential
Density
(DU/AC)*
Non-
Residential
Intensity
(FAR)
Target Use Mix
Ratio
(Res/Non-Res)
Neighborhood Corridor Max. 24 0.4 - 0.6 70/30
City Corridor - Moderate 24 - 42 0.4 - 1.0 70/30
City Corridor - High 36 - 60 0.6 - 1.5 70/30
* See “Calibrating Development” on page 62 for further details on applying density, intensity,
and use mix ratio.
FIGURE LC-5 CORRIDOR DESIGNATIONS MAP
Neighborhood Corridor
City Corridor - Moderate
City Corridor - High
Shops and offices on ground floor with housing above Housing is enabled on quiet side streets of main corridorCarmelian St19th St
Upland
Ontario
Fontana
6th St
4th St
Baseline Rd
Wilson Ave Wilson Ave
Church St
CUCAMONGA
CENTRAL SOUTH
CENTRAL NORTH
RED HILL
ALTA LOMA ETIWANDA
SOUTHEAST
EASTSIDE
Arrow Route Archibald AveHaven AveMilliken AveEtiwanda Ave10
10
15
15
210
210
74 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 75
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 1: LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
NEIGHBORHOOD CORRIDOR
Purpose & Intent
To provide for more intense development in an active, pedestrian-oriented,
and transit-ready environment within certain segments of major corridors
adjacent to low and medium density neighborhoods.
Land Use & Development Intensity
Uses comprise medium-density residential and neighborhood-serving
commercial uses, both freestanding and in mixed-use projects and
buildings. Preferred neighborhood commercial uses include general retail,
personal services, banks, restaurants, and cafes.
Civic uses, such as fire stations, schools, and churches, and auto-dependent
uses, such as gas stations, car washes, and drive-throughs, may be allowed
and should be designed to be compatible with the scale and character of
the corridor environment.
+Residential Density: Max. 24 units/acre
+Non-Residential Intensity: 0.4 - 0.6 FAR
Built Form & Character
Corridors are suburban in character. Buildings are set near or at the
sidewalk and oriented toward the primary street(s) to provide spatial
definition of the public realm and groundfloor activity. Buildings are up
to 3 stories in height and designed for soft transitions to surrounding
neighborhoods of lower densities. Building size, scale, and character
are further calibrated to respect the scale and character of the adjacent
neighborhood.
Streetscapes provide safe and comfortable environments for bicyclists and
pedestrians with continuous, wide sidewalks, large shade trees and native
landscaping. Street parking is provided along the primary street or “side
access lane,” where appropriate, to physically and psychologically buffer
pedestrians from vehicular traffic.
Access & Connectivity
Neighborhood streets and pedestrian pathways connect to the corridor
to provide greater mobility options, such as biking and walking, from
surrounding neighborhoods to the uses and amenities along the corridor.
Parks & Open Space
Open spaces are in the form of small plaza, greens, and other publicly
accessible open spaces. These spaces are surrounded by active frontages
and are designed to accommodate a range of neighborhood activities,
such as gathering, dining, and informal play.
Neighborhood Corridor
Neighborhood cafe at the corner of an
intersection
Low-rise mixed-use buildings fronting
the street
Active groundfloor environment
CITY CORRIDOR - MODERATE
Purpose & Intent
To provide for a mix of uses at moderate development intensities along
Foothill Boulevard.
Land Use & Development Intensity
Uses comprise medium- and medium-high density residential and a broad
range of commercial uses including general retail, personal services, banks,
restaurants, cafes, and office. Uses may be in freestanding or mixed-use
buildings and projects.
Civic uses, such as fire stations, schools, and churches, and auto-dependent
uses, such as gas stations, car washes, and drive-throughs, may be allowed
and should be designed to be compatible with the scale and character of
the corridor environment.
+Residential Density: 24 - 42 units/acre
+Non-Residential Intensity: 0.4 - 1.0 FAR
Built Form & Character
Corridors are urban in character. Buildings are set near or at the sidewalk
and oriented toward the primary street(s) to provide spatial definition of
the public realm and groundfloor activity. Groundfloors are tall with clear
views of shopfronts and have frequent entrances. Buildings range from 3
to 5 stories in height and are designed for soft transitions to surrounding
neighborhoods of lower densities.
Streetscapes provide safe and comfortable environments for bicyclists and
pedestrians with continuous, wide sidewalks, large shade trees and native
landscaping. Street parking is provided along the primary street or “side
access lane” to buffer pedestrians from vehicular traffic.
Access & Connectivity
Blocks are moderate in size. Large sites are reorganized into walkable
blocks by the insertion of a new network of pedestrian-friendly streets
that connect surrounding neighborhoods to amenities and services in
the corridor. These streets may be privately owned but will be publicly
accessible and look, feel, and function like public streets.
Parks & Open Space
Open spaces are in the form of plaza, squares, greens, parks and other
publicly accessible open spaces. These spaces are surrounded by active
frontages and designed to accommodate a wide range of community
activities and events. On-site neighborhood amenities are required for large
multifamily and mixed-use projects.
City Corridor - Moderate
Mixed-use building at corner of transit-
oriented street
ALTA LOMA
RED HILL
CUCAMONGA
CENTRAL SOUTH SOUTHEAST
EASTSIDE
ETIWANDA
CENTRAL NORTH
ALTA LOMA
RED HILL
CUCAMONGA
CENTRAL SOUTH SOUTHEAST
EASTSIDE
ETIWANDA
CENTRAL NORTH
76 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 77
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 1: LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
CITY CORRIDOR - HIGH
Purpose & Intent
To provide for high development intensities along Foothill Boulevard,
particularly adjacent to city centers.
Land Use & Development Intensity
Uses comprise medium-high and high density residential and a broad
range of commercial uses including general retail, personal services, banks,
restaurants, cafes, and office. Office uses are strongly encouraged along
Haven Avenue. Uses may be in freestanding or mixed-use buildings and
projects.
Civic uses, such as fire stations, schools, and churches, and auto-dependent
uses, such as gas stations, car washes, and drive-throughs, may be allowed
and should be designed to be compatible with the scale and character of
the corridor environment.
+Residential Density: 36 - 60 units/acre
+Non-Residential Intensity: 0.6 - 1.5 FAR
Built Form & Character
Corridors are urban in character. Buildings are set near or at the sidewalk
and oriented toward the primary street(s) to provide spatial definition
of the public realm and groundfloor activity along the corridor. Building
groundfloors are tall with clear views of shopfronts and have frequent
entrances and clean fenestration. Buildings range from 4 to 7 stories in
height and are designed for soft transitions to surrounding neighborhoods
of lower densities.
Streetscapes provide safe and comfortable environments for bicyclists
and pedestrians with continuous, wide sidewalks, large shade trees and
native landscaping. Street parking is provided along the primary street or
“side access lane” to physically and psychologically buffer pedestrians from
vehicular traffic.
Access & Connectivity
Blocks are moderate in size. Large sites are reorganized into walkable
blocks by the insertion of a new network of pedestrian-friendly streets that
connect surrounding neighborhoods, centers, and districts to the corridor.
These streets may be privately owned but will be publicly accessible and
look, feel, and function like public streets.
City Corridor - High
Street network includes “carless
streets” for pedestrians and cyclists
Wide sidewalks and active frontages
Parks & Open Space
Open spaces are in the form of plaza, squares, greens, parks and other
publicly accessible open spaces. These spaces are surrounded by active
frontages and designed to accommodate a wide range of community
activities and events. On-site neighborhood amenities are required for large
multifamily and mixed-use projects.
Streetscapes designed for pedestrians Building facades define outdoor spaces
Tall, distinct ground floors provide pedestrian-oriented environmentsOutdoor dining in the cool of the
evening
ALTA LOMA
RED HILL
CUCAMONGA
CENTRAL SOUTH SOUTHEAST
EASTSIDE
ETIWANDA
CENTRAL NORTH
78 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 79
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 1: LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
CENTER DESIGNATIONS
Centers are the focal points of community activity, providing residents of
surrounding neighborhoods with a wide range of retail and civic amenities
and community gathering places within close reach of their home. Centers
are generally located along the City’s primary street corridors and serve
as focal points of neighborhoods, and as transitions between quieter
neighborhoods and the more intense activity of corridor and districts. Many
centers provide primarily retail and service commercial uses to surrounding
neighborhoods, while others may emphasize civic and cultural activities,
provide small concentrations of jobs, and may also include housing in
various forms.
One important aspiration articulated by the community through the
PlanRC process was to have more destinations within easier reach of
neighborhoods. Centers will be key in achieving this outcome. This General
Plan enables existing and future centers to be more inviting, human-
scale public gathering spaces that are highly accessible from surrounding
neighborhoods by pedestrians, bicyclists, and equestrians in addition to
motorists.
To ensure that each center contributes well to the community of which
it is a part, several center designations are defined, as summarized in
Table LC-4, ranging from commercial and mixed-use Neighborhood
Centers at major crossroads of the city, to Traditional Town Centers close
to and serving well-established neighborhoods, and larger, more intense
community-scale, transit-ready City Centers on major corridors adjacent to
employment districts.
TABLE LC-4 CENTER DESIGNATIONS SUMMARY
General Plan Designation
Residential
Density
(DU/AC)*
Non-
Residential
Intensity
(FAR)
Target Use Mix
Ratio
(Res/Non-Res)
Neighborhood Center Max 24 0.2 - 0.4 20/80
Traditional Town
Center Max 30 0.2 - 0.6 50/50
City Center 40 - 100 1.0 - 2.0 50/50
* See “Calibrating Development” on page 62 for further details on applying density, intensity,
and use mix ratio.
FIGURE LC-6 CENTER DESIGNATIONS MAP
Neighborhood Center
Traditional Town Center
City Center
Varied massing and architecture creates sense of placeAttached housing in Center areaCarmelian St19th St
Upland
Ontario
Fontana
6th St
4th St
Baseline Rd
Wilson Ave Wilson Ave
Church St
CUCAMONGA
CENTRAL SOUTH
CENTRAL NORTH
RED HILL
ALTA LOMA ETIWANDA
SOUTHEAST
EASTSIDE
Arrow Route Archibald AveHaven AveMilliken AveEtiwanda Ave10
10
15
15
210
210
80 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 81
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 1: LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
NEIGHBORHOOD CENTER
Purpose & Intent
To provide for a range of daily needs—commercial goods and services, civic
amenities, and community gathering spaces—at prime locations within
easy reach of neighborhood residents.
Land Use & Development Intensity
Uses are primarily commercial, including general retail, personal services,
banks, restaurants, and cafes. Medium density residential is allowed and
encouraged as infill and redevelopment with a mix of uses. Uses may be in
freestanding or mixed-use buildings and projects.
Civic uses, such as fire stations, schools, and churches, and auto-dependent
uses, such as gas stations, car washes, and drive-throughs, may be allowed
and should be designed to be compatible with the scale and character of
the corridor environment.
+Residential Density: Max. 24 units/acre
+Non-Residential Intensity: 0.2 - 0.4 FAR
Built Form & Character
Centers are suburban in character. Buildings face the primary street.
Internal streets/drives are lined with shopfronts and wide comfortable
sidewalks that accommodate seating and outdoor dining. Building heights
are up to 3 stories. Building size, scale, and character are further calibrated
to respect the scale and character of the surrounding neighborhood.
Access & Connectivity
Street networks are generally internalized. Nonetheless, pedestrian and bike
connections are provided to major streets, trails, and neighborhoods. Infill
and redevelopment of large sites create walkable blocks with a network
of pedestrian-friendly streets that connect surrounding neighborhoods to
uses and amenities in the center. These streets may be privately owned but
will be publicly accessible and look, feel, and function like public streets.
Parking is located behind or between buildings in lots that are well shaded,
well lighted and secure with clear and convenient access to buildings
Parks & Open Space
Open spaces are in the form of small plazas and other well-defined open
spaces in front of shops and restaurants. Open spaces are well-furnished,
including heating and cooling amenities as appropriate, and well-
landscaped with native plants and large shade trees, to provide comfortable
seating and dining areas. On-site neighborhood amenities are required for
large multifamily and mixed-use projects.
Neighborhood Center
Large trees define comfortable spaces
Amenity-rich outdoor space
TRADITIONAL TOWN CENTER
Purpose & Intent
To provide neighborhood-serving commercial uses and amenities within
an active, walkable mixed-use environment hearkening back to the original
historic communities of Rancho Cucamonga. See Chapter 2 Focus Areas
for additional details on Red Hill Gateway, Alta Loma Town Center, and the
Cucamonga Town Center.
Land Use & Development Intensity
Uses comprise medium to medium-high density residential and
neighborhood-serving commercial uses, including general retail, personal
services, banks, restaurants, and cafes. Uses may be in freestanding or
mixed-use buildings and projects. Infill and redevelopment with a mix of
uses is encouraged.
+Residential Density: Max. 30 units/acre
+Non-Residential Intensity: 0.2 - 0.6 FAR
Built Form & Character
Centers are traditional in character. Buildings are set near or at the sidewalk
and oriented toward the primary street(s) to provide spatial definition of
the public realm and groundfloor activity along the corridor. Buildings are
up to 4 stories in height and designed for soft transitions to surrounding
neighborhoods of lower densities. Building size, scale, and character are
further calibrated to respect the scale and character of the surrounding
neighborhood.
Streetscapes provide safe and comfortable environments for bicyclists
and pedestrians with continuous sidewalks, large shade trees and native
landscaping. Street parking is provided along the primary street to curb
speeding and buffer pedestrians from vehicular traffic.
Access & Connectivity
Neighborhood streets and pedestrian pathways connect to the Center
providing greater mobility options, such as biking and walking, from
surrounding neighborhoods to the uses and amenities in the center. Local
streets include traffic-calming measures to reduce vehicular speed.
Parks & Open Space
Open spaces are in the form of small plazas, greens, and other well-
defined open spaces. Open spaces are well-furnished, including heating
and cooling amenities as appropriate, and well-landscaped with native
plants and large shade trees, to provide comfortable seating, dining, and
gathering areas. On-site neighborhood amenities are required for large
multifamily and mixed-use projects.
Traditional Town Center
Active frontages make centers
comfortable late into the evening
“Town-scale” massing and design of
buildings
ALTA LOMA
RED HILL
CUCAMONGA
CENTRAL SOUTH SOUTHEAST
EASTSIDE
ETIWANDA
CENTRAL NORTH
ALTA LOMA
RED HILL
CUCAMONGA
CENTRAL SOUTH SOUTHEAST
EASTSIDE
ETIWANDA
CENTRAL NORTH
82 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 83
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 1: LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
CITY CENTER
Purpose & Intent
To provide for intense concentrations of retail and civic activity,
multifamily housing, and employment in a pedestrian-oriented, transit-
ready environment. See Chapter 2 Focus Areas for additional details on
Downtown Rancho Cucamonga (Victoria Gardens & Epicenter), Civic
Center, and the Regional Transit Hub.
Land Use & Development Intensity
Uses comprise medium-high to high density residential and a wide range
of commercial uses, including general retail, personal services, banks,
restaurants, cafes, and office. Uses may be in freestanding or mixed-use
buildings and projects. Infill and redevelopment with a mix of uses is
encouraged.
+Residential Density: 40 - 100 units/acre
+Non-Residential Intensity: 1.0 - 2.0 FAR
Built Form & Character
Centers are urban in character. Buildings are set near or at the sidewalk
and oriented toward the primary street(s) to provide spatial definition of
the public realm and groundfloor activity along the corridor. Buildings are
up to 12 stories in height and designed for soft transitions to surrounding
neighborhoods of lower densities. Building size, scale, and character
are further calibrated to respect the scale and character of the adjacent
context.
Streetscapes provide safe and comfortable environments for bicyclists and
pedestrians with continuous, wide sidewalks, large shade trees and native
landscaping. Street parking is provided along the primary street, or side
access lanes, to curb speeding and buffer pedestrians from vehicular traffic.
Access & Connectivity
Major streets are improved to accommodate a range of vehicular modes,
including bus rapid transit (BRT) and potentially streetcar light rail.
Infill and redevelopment of large sites create walkable blocks with a new
network of pathways and pedestrian-friendly streets that connect uses and
amenities in the center to major streets and to adjacent neighborhoods
and districts. These new streets may be privately owned but will be publicly
accessible and look, feel, and function like public streets.
Parking is located behind or between buildings in surface lots that are
well shaded, well lighted and secure with clear and convenient access to
buildings
City Center
Trees screen pedestrians from traffic
and lead views to the tall shopfronts
Local and native landscape greens the
public realm
Victoria Gardens has the foundation to become the downtown of
Rancho Cucamonga
Parks & Open Space
Open spaces are in the form of plaza, squares, greens, parks and other
publicly accessible open spaces in varying sizes. These spaces are
surrounded by active frontages and designed to accommodate a wide
range of community activities and events. On-site neighborhood amenities
are required for large multifamily and mixed-use projects.
Lively dining court Public squares punctuate and provide activity focal points within corridors
Streets for people
ALTA LOMA
RED HILL
CUCAMONGA
CENTRAL SOUTH SOUTHEAST
EASTSIDE
ETIWANDA
CENTRAL NORTH
84 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 85
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 1: LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
DISTRICT DESIGNATIONS
Districts describe the primary places where we work and conduct
business. Districts, as summarized in Table LC-5, are predominantly non-
residential with a primary activity that is functionally specialized, such as a
commercial, office, or industrial use, and can also include some supportive
commercial and recreational uses and housing. These places in Rancho
Cucamonga can be organized into several different types of employment
districts that improve the business environment with compatible and
supportive services and improved and appropriate transportation networks.
Districts are larger than centers and more specialized in their purpose and
uses. They are generally located near major transportation facilities, or
centrally located within the larger community or sub-region. Contextual
considerations for each Community Planning Area are encouraged to
support the existing and intended character of each Community Planning
Area.
TABLE LC-5 DISTRICTS DESIGNATIONS SUMMARY
General Plan
Designation
Residential
Density
(DU/AC)*
Non-
Residential
Intensity
(FAR)
Target Use Mix
Ratio
(Res/Non-Res)
Office Employment
District 18 - 30 0.6 - 1.0 20/80
21st Century
Employment District 24 - 42 0.4 - 1.0 30/70
Neo-Industrial
Employment District 14 - 24 0.4 - 0.6 10/90
Industrial
Employment District 0 0.4 - 0.6 0/100
* See “Calibrating Development” on page 62 for further details on applying density, intensity,
and use mix ratio.
FIGURE LC-7 DISTRICT DESIGNATIONS MAP
Office Employment District
21st Century Employment District
Neo-Industrial Employment District
Industrial Employment District
Housing, retail and office uses mix well in this setting Convenient shops and restaurants add more value and healthy
lifestyles to employment districts than in typical “office parks”.Carmelian St19th St
Upland
Ontario
Fontana
6th St
4th St
Baseline Rd
Wilson Ave Wilson Ave
Church St
CUCAMONGA
CENTRAL SOUTH
CENTRAL NORTH
RED HILL
ALTA LOMA ETIWANDA
SOUTHEAST
EASTSIDE
Arrow Route Archibald AveHaven AveMilliken AveEtiwanda Ave10
10
15
15
210
210
86 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 87
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 1: LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
OFFICE EMPLOYMENT DISTRICT
Purpose & Intent
To provide for the location and retention of professional office uses and
related-services in close proximity to the City’s Civic Center.
Land Use & Development Intensity
Uses are primarily professional office, business, financial services, and
government agency and service facilities. Accessory and supporting
uses include retail, restaurants, personal services, hotels, work-live and
multifamily residential. Uses may be in freestanding or mixed-use buildings
and projects. Infill and redevelopment with a mix of uses is encouraged.
+Residential Density: 18 - 30 units/acre
+Non-Residential Intensity: 0.6 - 1.0 FAR
Built Form & Character
Districts are urban in character. Buildings are set near or at the sidewalk
and oriented toward the primary street(s) to provide spatial definition of
the public realm and groundfloor activity. Buildings are up to five stories in
height and have tall ground floors with high transparency.
Parking structures are consistent in architectural design with adjacent
buildings and have landscaping and/or screens at all levels to veil views of
parked cars from public rights-of-way.
Streetscapes provide safe and comfortable environments for bicyclists and
pedestrians with continuous sidewalks, shade trees and native landscaping.
Access & Connectivity
Infill and redevelopment of large sites create walkable blocks with a new
network of pathways and pedestrian-friendly streets that connect to major
streets and to adjacent neighborhoods, centers and districts. These new
streets may be privately owned but will be publicly accessible and look, feel,
and function like public streets.
Parking is located behind or between buildings in surface lots that are
well shaded, well lighted and secure with clear and convenient access
to buildings. Street parking is provided along primary streets wherever
possible. Loading areas are located to the rear of buildings.
Parks & Open Space
Open spaces are in the form of plazas, greens, parks, and other publicly
accessible open spaces in varying sizes. Open spaces are well-defined by
building fronts and well-landscaped with trees, plants, and park furniture.
Office Employment District
Shops with offices above
Mixed-use buildings with active
groundfloors
21ST CENTURY EMPLOYMENT DISTRICT
Purpose & Intent
To provide for professional office and innovative businesses in a multi-
functional environment that has an array of amenities and services, is close
to housing, and is conveniently accessible by all modes of transportation.
Land Use & Development Intensity
Uses comprise a mix of business and professional office with supporting
services, retail, and multifamily residential. Uses may be in freestanding or
mixed-use buildings and projects. Adaptive reuse, infill and redevelopment
with a mix of uses is encouraged.
Existing industrial uses may remain and expansions with clean industrial
uses are allowed. However, any new industrial uses shall be in the Neo-
Industrial or Industrial Employment Districts, as appropriate.
+Residential Density: 24 - 42 units/acre
+Non-Residential Intensity: 0.4 - 1.0 FAR
Built Form & Character
Districts are urban in character. Buildings are set near or at the sidewalk
and oriented toward the primary street(s) to provide spatial definition of
the public realm and groundfloor activity. Buildings are up to five stories in
height and have tall ground floors with high transparency.
Parking structures are consistent in architectural design with adjacent
buildings and have landscaping and/or screens at all levels to veil views of
parked cars from public rights-of-way.
Streetscapes provide safe and comfortable environments for bicyclists and
pedestrians with continuous sidewalks, shade trees and native landscaping.
Access & Connectivity
Streets and pathways provide safe, comfortable, and convenient
connections throughout the District and to adjacent destinations,
particularly the Cucamonga Station.
Parking is located behind or between buildings in surface lots that are
well shaded, well lighted and secure with clear and convenient access
to buildings. Street parking is provided along primary streets wherever
possible. Loading areas are located to the rear of buildings.
Parks & Open Space
Open spaces are in the form of plazas, greens, parks, and other publicly
accessible open spaces in varying sizes. Open spaces are well-defined by
building fronts and well-landscaped with trees, plants, and park furniture.Housing above restaurant
“Pocket spaces” for people
21st Century Employment District
ALTA LOMA
RED HILL
CUCAMONGA
CENTRAL SOUTH SOUTHEAST
EASTSIDE
ETIWANDA
CENTRAL NORTH
ALTA LOMA
RED HILL
CUCAMONGA
CENTRAL SOUTH SOUTHEAST
EASTSIDE
ETIWANDA
CENTRAL NORTH
88 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 89
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 1: LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
NEO-INDUSTRIAL EMPLOYMENT
DISTRICT
Purpose & Intent
To provide for light industrial uses with low environmental impacts and
to support the growth of creative and innovative industries and new
businesses. This designation also serves as a transition zone between
sensitive uses, such as residential, and more intense industrial uses.
Land Use & Development Intensity
Uses are primarily light industrial, including creative industries such
as small-scale breweries and communal maker-spaces. Office, retail,
and residential are permitted as an accessory use only. Adaptive reuse
of buildings to accommodate these uses are encouraged. Standalone
residential is not permitted.
Low impact industrial uses, such as incubator spaces and small
warehouses, that are context-sensitive and calibrated to minimize impacts
to adjacent residential uses are preferred. Industrial uses with minimal
or reduced impacts on nearby residential uses may be allowed. More
intensive industrial uses with substantive impacts on adjacent uses are not
permitted.
+Residential Density: 14 - 24 units/acre
+Non-Residential Intensity: 0.4 - 0.6 FAR
Built Form & Character
Buildings are modern industrial in character and tend to be smaller in
size and scale in comparison to buildings in the Industrial Employment
District. Building fronts are oriented to the primary street with clear views
of entrances. Buildings are up to three stories in height and designed for
soft transitions between uses and intensities, especially where adjacent
to residential neighborhoods. Visual screens are provided between any
unenclosed industrial operations and new accessory residences.
Streetscapes provide safe and comfortable environments for bicyclists and
pedestrians with continuous sidewalks, shade trees and native landscaping,
and accommodate the heavy vehicles that serve the businesses.
Access & Connectivity
Streets and pathways provide safe, comfortable, and convenient
connections throughout the District and to adjacent destinations,
particularly the Cucamonga Station. Where possible, large existing blocks
are subdivided into smaller blocks to improve access and connectivity of
the street network.
Neo-Industrial Employment District
Active, “creative” workplaces with open
space for repose
Creative reuse of industrial building
Visitor parking areas are well-lighted and landscaped and provide clear and
convenient access to buildings. Large parking lots, outdoor storage and
fabrication areas, and loading/docking areas are located to the rear or side
of buildings and well screened from public view.
Parks & Open Space
Open spaces are provided in the form of small plazas, parks, and greens.
Open spaces are well-defined by building fronts and well-landscaped with
trees, plants, and park furniture. On-site open spaces should have clear
sightlines from public streets and adjacent buildings.
Industrial buildings repurposed for non-industrial uses
Pathway oriented frontage Repurposed building with small cafe restaurant
Multipurpose paths provide connections throughout
employment districts
ALTA LOMA
RED HILL
CUCAMONGA
CENTRAL SOUTH SOUTHEAST
EASTSIDE
ETIWANDA
CENTRAL NORTH
90 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 91
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 1: LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
Adaptive reuse of old loading dock
INDUSTRIAL EMPLOYMENT DISTRICT
Purpose & Intent
To provide for industrial activities of all types and promote reinvestment
and reuse of industrial lands into more clean and sustainable industrial
uses and operations.
Land Use & Development Intensity
Uses are a broad range of light and medium industrial uses, including light
industrial research parks, logistics centers, low impact manufacturing, and
machining operations. Office and retail uses are permitted as an accessory
use only. Adaptive reuse of buildings to accommodate these uses are
encouraged.
New residential uses, with the exception of on-site caretaker units, are not
permitted.
+Residential Density: 0 units/acre
+Non-Residential Intensity: 0.4 - 0.6 FAR
Built Form & Character
Districts are industrial in character. Building fronts are oriented to the
primary street with clear views of entrances. Buildings are up to three
stories in height and designed for soft transitions between uses and
intensities, especially where adjacent to lower intensity uses.
Streetscapes provide safe and comfortable environments for bicyclists and
pedestrians with continuous sidewalks, shade trees and native landscaping.
Access & Connectivity
Streets and pathways provide safe, comfortable, and convenient
connections throughout the District and to adjacent destinations,
particularly the Cucamonga Station. Where possible, large existing blocks
are subdivided into smaller blocks to improve access and connectivity of
the street network.
Visitor parking areas are well-lighted and landscaped and provide clear and
convenient access to buildings. Large parking lots, outdoor storage and
fabrication areas, and loading/docking areas are located to the rear or side
of buildings and well screened from public view.
Parks & Open Space
Open spaces are provided in the form of small plazas, parks, and greens.
Open spaces are well-defined by building fronts and well-landscaped with
trees, plants, and park furniture. On-site open spaces should have clear
sightlines from public streets and adjacent buildings.Cafe in parking structure “liner space”
ALTA LOMA
RED HILL
CUCAMONGA
CENTRAL SOUTH SOUTHEAST
EASTSIDE
ETIWANDA
CENTRAL NORTH
Industrial Employment District
GOALS AND POLICIES
GOAL LC-1 A CITY OF PLACES. A beautiful city with a
diversity and balance of unique and well-connected places.
LC-1.1 Complete Places. Ensure that a broad range of recreational,
commercial, educational, arts, cultural, and civic amenities are
nearby and easily accessible to residents and workers in each
neighborhood and each employment district.
LC-1.2 Quality of Place. Ensure that new infill development is
compatible with the existing, historic, and envisioned future
character and scale of each neighborhood.
LC-1.3 Quality of Public Space. Require that new development
incorporate the adjacent street and open space network into
their design to soften the transition between private and public
realm and creating a greener more human-scale experience.
LC-1.4 Connectivity and Mobility. Work to complete a network of
pedestrian- and bike-friendly streets and trails, designed in
concert with adjacent land uses, using the public realm to
provide more access options.
LC-1.5 Master Planning. When planning a site, there must be
meaningful efforts to master plan the site so as to ensure a
well-structured network and block pattern with sufficient
access and connectivity to achieve the placemaking goals of
this General Plan.
LC-1.6 Disadvantaged Communities. Prioritize development
appropriate to the needs of disadvantaged communities,
particularly south of Foothill Boulevard.
LC-1.7 Design for Safety. Require the use of Crime Prevention
Through Environmental Design (CPTED) techniques such
as providing clear lines of sight, appropriate lighting, and
wayfinding signs to ensure that new development is visible
from public areas and easy to navigate.
LC-1-8 Public Art. Require new construction to integrate public art in
accordance with the City Public Arts Program.
LC-1.9 Infill Development. Enable and encourage infill development
within vacant and underutilized properties through flexible
design requirements and potential incentives.
LC-1.10 Development Incentives. Consider incentives for new
development that provides substantial economic and
placemaking benefit to the community and prohibit the
provision of incentives that outweigh the direct benefits of the
development and its use.
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LC-2.5 Gradual Transitions. Where adjacent to existing and planned
residential housing, require that new development of a larger
form or intensity, transition gradually to complement the adjacent
residential uses.
LC-2.6 Commercial Requirements. Require development projects in non-
residential and mixed-use areas to provide for enhanced pedestrian
activity through the following techniques:
• Require that the ground floor of buildings where retail uses are
allowed have a minimum 15 feet floor to floor height.
• Require that the ground floor of the building occupy the majority
of the lot’s front, with exceptions for vehicular access where
necessary.
• Require that most of the linear ground floor retail frontage
(where such occurs) be visually and physically “open” to the
street, incorporating windows and other design treatments to
create an engaging street front.
• Minimize vehicle movements across the sidewalk.
• Allow for and encourage the development of outdoor plazas and
dining areas.
LC-2.7 Shared Parking. Encourage structured and shared parking
solutions that ensure that parking lots do not dominate street fronts
and are screened from public views whenever possible.
LC-2.8 Landscaping. Require development projects to incorporate high
quality, predominantly native and drought-tolerant landscaping to
extend and enhance the green space network of the city.
LC-2.9 Buffer Zones. Require development projects to incorporate buffer
zones when determined to be necessary or desirable to serve
as managed open space for wildfire safety and vegetation fuel
modification.
LC-2.10 Pedestrian-Oriented Auto-Dependent Uses. Require auto
dependent uses such as drive-throughs, car washes, automobile
service stations, and similar auto-focused businesses, to be
designed with buildings oriented toward the primary street and
the auto-servicing use/activity in the rear. Prohibit auto-dependent
uses from locating in pedestrian-priority environments, such as City
Centers, Traditional Town Centers, and all Neighborhoods.
LC-2.11 Park-Once. Allow and encourage strategies that enable adjacent
uses and properties to flexibly share parking facilities, so that
users can park once and pursue multiple activities on foot before
returning to their car, such as:
• Unbundling parking from development
• Considering parking “districts” demonstrating sufficient parking
within a convenient walking distance.
LC-1.11 Compatible Development. Allow flexibility in density and intensity
to address specific site conditions and ensure compatibility of new
development with adjacent context.
LC-1.12 Adaptive Reuse. Support the adaptive reuse of historic properties
consistent with neighborhood character.
LC-1.13 Improved Public Realm. Require that new development extend the
“walkable public realm” into previously vacant and/or parking lot-
dominant large single-use parcels of land.
LC-1.14 Street Amenities and Lighting. Modify pedestrian and street
amenities, lighting styles and intensities to be compatible with the
character of the surrounding neighborhoods.
LC-1.15 Historic Route 66. Build on the history and significance of Historic
Route 66 (Foothill Boulevard) by incorporating design features, such
as public art, signage, and architecture, that reflect its history and
heritage.
LC-1.16 Healthy Development. Ensure that the design and development
of our communities supports the health and well-being of our
residents. Use the Healthy Development Checklist, or similar
assessment tool, to assess the overall health performance and
supportiveness of new development projects.
GOAL LC-2 HUMAN SCALED. A city planned and designed for
people fostering social and economic interaction, an active and
vital public realm, and high levels of public safety and comfort.
LC-2.1 Building Orientation. Require that buildings be sited near the
street and organized with the more active functions —entries,
lobbies, bike parking, offices, employee break rooms and outdoor
lunch areas—facing toward and prominently visible from the street
and visitor parking areas.
LC-2.2 Active Frontages. Require new development abutting streets and
other public spaces to face the public realm with attractive building
facades, and entries to encourage walking, biking, and public transit
as primary—not “alternative”—mobility modes.
LC-2.3 Streetscape. Enhance the pedestrian experience through
streetscape improvements such as enhanced street lighting, street
trees, and easement dedications to increase the widths of the
sidewalks, provide side access parking lanes, and other pedestrian
and access amenities.
LC-2.4 Tree Planting. Require the planting of predominantly native and
drought-tolerant trees that shade the sidewalks, buffer pedestrians
from traffic, define the public spaces of streets, and moderate high
temperatures and wind speeds throughout the city.
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• Design parking facilities to be architecturally compatible and
integrated with adjacent buildings so as to not dominate or
detract from the character of the area.
GOAL LC-3 FISCALLY SUSTAINABLE. A fiscally sound and
sustainable City.
LC-3.1 Community Value. Actively manage growth and investments in
the community to maximize the value of new development, seeking
value-per-acre outcomes of up to six times higher.
LC-3.2 Community Benefit. Require a community benefit and economic
analysis for large projects that abut existing neighborhoods or for
any project at the maximum density, with a focus on resolving
physical, economic, long-term fiscal, and aesthetic impacts.
LC-3.3 Community Amenities. Balance the impacts of new development,
density, and urbanization through the provision of a high-level of
neighborhood and community amenities and design features.
LC-3.4 Institutional Land Uses. Site new institutional land uses based
on all forms of access available to the service population. Satellite
offices that are disbursed in the community may be necessary to
ensure equitable access.
LC-3.5 Efficient Growth. Manage growth in a manner that is fiscally
sustainable, paced with the availability of infrastructure, and
protects and/or enhances community value. Discourage growth
and development that will impact the City’s ability to sustainably
maintain infrastructure and services.
LC-3.6 Diverse Economy. Guide development and public investments
to maintain a fiscally sound city with a diverse and sustainable tax
base.
LC-3.7 Developing Our Economy. Actively promote and encourage
opportunities for local economic development, education, housing,
locally hiring, internships and employment from cradle to career
so as to increase resident retention, improve and grow a strong
local economy, achieve a positive jobs-housing match; retain
critical educational resources and human capital, reduce regional
commuting, gas consumption and greenhouse gas emissions
and ensure equitable opportunities for all residents of the City and
region to thrive.
LC-3.8 Jobs-housing match. Encourage new employment generating
uses and businesses that improve the jobs-housing match in the
city.
LC-3.9 Infrastructure Funding. Actively investigate and support new
funding mechanisms that enable the City to maintain services and
infrastructure. Discourage the formation of bonded Community
Facilities Districts unless there are compelling and substantial wide-
spread community benefits.
LC-3.10 Economic Synergy. Encourage businesses and development that
will support and/or enhance the operations of existing businesses
when complimentary to the General Plan Vision while discouraging
new development and businesses that will have detrimental
impacts to existing businesses and development.
GOAL LC-4 COMPLETE NEIGHBORHOODS. A diverse range of
unique neighborhoods, each of which provides an equitable
range of housing types and choices with a mix of amenities and
services that support active, healthy lifestyles.
LC-4.1 Neighborhood Preservation. Preserve and enhance the character
of existing residential neighborhoods.
LC-4.2 Complete Neighborhoods. Strive to ensure that all new
neighborhoods, and infill development within or adjacent to
existing neighborhoods, are complete and well-structured such that
the physical layout, and land use mix promote walking to services,
biking and transit use, and have the following characteristics.
• Be organized into human-scale, walkable blocks, with a high level
of connectivity for pedestrians, bicycles, and vehicles.
• Be organized in relation to one or more focal activity centers,
such as a park, school, civic building, or neighborhood retail, such
that most homes are no further than one-quarter mile.
• Require development patterns such that 60 percent of dwelling
units are within 1/2-mile walking distance to neighborhood goods
and services.
• Provide as wide a diversity of housing styles and types as possible,
and appropriate to the existing neighborhood context.
• Provide homes with entries and windows facing the street,
with driveways and garages generally deemphasized in the
streetscape composition.
LC-4.3 Connected Neighborhoods. Require that each new increment of
residential development make all possible street, trail, and open
space connections to existing adjoining residential or commercial
development and provide for future connections into any adjoining
parcels.
LC-4.4 Balanced Neighborhoods. Within the density ranges and housing
types defined in this General Plan, promote a range of housing and
price levels within each neighborhood to accommodate diverse
ages and incomes.
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LC-4.5 Equitable Housing Opportunities and Diversity of Housing
Types. Within the density ranges and housing types defined in this
General Plan, promote a diversity of land tenure opportunities to
provide a range of choices on the types of property estate available
and ready access to an equitable array of opportunities at a variety
of price points. For projects five acres or larger, require that diverse
housing types be provided and intermixed rather than segregated
by dwelling type.
LC-4.6 Block Length. Require new neighborhoods to be designed with
blocks no longer than 600 feet nor a perimeter exceeding 1,800
feet. Exceptions can be made if mid-block pedestrian and bicycle
connections are provided, or if the neighborhood is on the edge of
town and is intended to have a rural or semi-rural design character.
LC-4.7 Intersection Density. Require new neighborhoods to provide high
levels of intersection density. Neighborhood Center and Semi-Rural
Neighborhoods should provide approximately 400 intersections per
square mile. Suburban Neighborhoods should provide at least 200
intersections per square mile.
LC-4.8 Solar Orientation. Street, block, and lot layouts should orient a
majority of lots within 20 degrees of a north-south orientation for
increased energy conservation.
LC-4.9 Public Art. Encourage public art that reflects the culture, history,
and character of the surrounding neighborhood.
LC-4.10 Minimize Curb Cuts. Require new commercial development, and
residential to the extent possible, to have common driveways and/
or service lanes and alleys serving multiple units, to minimize the
number of curb cuts along any given block to improve pedestrian
safety.
LC-4.11 Neighborhood Transitions. Require that new neighborhoods
provide appropriate transitions in scale, building type and density
between different General Plan designations, Place Types and
Community Planning Areas.
LC-4.12 Conventional Suburban Neighborhood Design. Discourage
the construction of new residential neighborhoods that are
characterized by sound walls on any streets, discontinuous cul-de-
sac street patterns, long block lengths, single building and housing
types, and lack of walking or biking access to parks, schools, goods,
and services.
LC-4.13 Neighborhood Edges. Encourage neighborhood edges along
street corridors to be characterized by active frontages, whether
single-family or multifamily residential, or by ground floor,
neighborhood-service non-residential uses. Where this is not
possible due to existing development patterns or envisioned
streetscape character, neighborhood edges shall be designed
based on the following policies:
• Strongly discourage the construction of new gated communities
except in Semi-Rural Neighborhoods.
• Allow the use of sound walls to buffer new neighborhoods from
existing sources of noise pollution such as railroads and limited
access roadways. Consider sound walls as sites for public art.
• Prohibit the use of sound walls to buffer residential areas from
arterial or collector streets. Instead design approaches such as
building setbacks, landscaping and other techniques shall be
used.
• In the case where sound walls might be acceptable, require
pedestrian access points to improve access from the
Neighborhoods to nearby commercial, educational, and
recreational amenities, activity centers and transit stops.
• Discourage the use of signs to distinguish one residential project
from another. Strive for neighborhoods to blend seamlessly into
one another. If provided, gateways should be landmarks and
urban design focal points, not advertisements for home builders.
GOAL LC-5 CONNECTED CORRIDORS. A citywide network of
transportation and open space corridors that provides a high
level of connectivity for pedestrians, bicyclists, equestrians,
motorists, and transit users.
LC-5.1 Improved Street Network. Systematically extend and complete a
network of complete streets to ensure a high-level of multi-modal
connectivity within and between adjacent Neighborhoods, Centers
and Districts. Plan and implement targeted improvements to the
quality and number of pedestrian and bicycle routes within the
street and trail network, prioritizing connections to schools, parks,
and neighborhood activity centers.
LC-5.2 Connections Between Development Projects. Require the
continuation and connectivity of the street network between
adjacent development projects and discourage the use of cul-de-
sacs or other dead-end routes.
LC-5.3 Green Public Realm. Ensure that a significant tree canopy and
landscaping is provided along corridors, and linkages between
land uses, to provide shade and wind protection for pedestrians
and bicyclists, and to define these corridors as the “outdoor living
rooms” of the City.
LC-5.4 Multi Family Development. Focus new multifamily housing
development along corridors between commercial nodes
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and centers and ensure that it is well-connected to adjoining
neighborhoods and centers by high quality walking and biking
routes.
LC-5.5 Foothill Boulevard as a Gateway. Transform the ends of Foothill
Boulevard near the city boundary to a unique gateway environment
through street improvements and coordinated infill development
along both sides of Foothill Boulevard.
LC-5.6 Foothill Boulevard as a Connector. Transition Foothill Boulevard
from a “divider” to a “connector” that brings the north and south
sides together. Ensure that new development along the Foothill
Corridor generates a high-quality pedestrian- and transit-oriented
environment and a concentration of commercial and civic amenities
and community gathering places for residents from all parts of the
city.
LC-5.7 Public Arts Master Plan. Develop a citywide master plan that
integrates the arts into the transportation, trails, open space and
greenways network to enhance the public realm and creatively
connect communities through innovative arts and cultural
amenities and programming.
LC-5.8 Equestrian Uses. Continue to protect equestrian uses and to
implement the Equestrian Overlay Zone.
GOAL LC-6 ACTIVE CENTERS. A rich variety of commercial
and mixed-use centers throughout the city, which bring a
range of opportunities for shopping, dining, recreations,
commerce, employment, arts and culture within easy reach of
all neighborhoods.
LC-6.1 Diverse Centers. Encourage the development of neighborhood-
serving, community-serving and city-wide serving centers that
address the full range community needs and market sectors.
LC-6.2 Small Scale Centers. Support one or more very small-scale Centers
on well-located under-developed parcels within walking, biking,
or horseback riding distance of neighborhoods in Alta Loma and
Etiwanda.
LC-6.3 Evolving Centers. Encourage the improvement of existing
commercial centers to provide more active, human scale
environments and community gathering places, including the
potential for infill housing and office use.
LC-6.4 Access to Transit. Encourage the development of commercial and
mixed-use centers that are located at and organized in relation to
existing or planned transit stops, especially along Foothill Boulevard
and Haven Avenue.
LC-6.5 Walkable Environments. Centers should include very walkable
and pedestrian-friendly streets with active building fronts along
primary corridors and internal streets. In some cases, side access
lanes may be inserted between existing major streets and building
fronts, providing a low-speed environment that is very safe and
comfortable for pedestrians and bicyclists, with pedestrian-oriented
frontages.
LC-6.6 Outdoor Commerce. Encourage outdoor activities such as farmers
markets, small performances, visual arts and culture events, dining,
and gatherings that take advantage of the Centers and the relation
to the public realm.
GOAL LC-7 ROBUST DISTRICTS. A series of unique,
employment-oriented environments for a range of business
activities, shopping and entertainment, arts and culture
activities, and community events and gathering.
LC-7.1 Gateway & Employment Hub. Establish the Central South
Community Planning Area as the City’s main “gateway from the I-10
Freeway” and an employment hub of regional significance. Haven
Avenue and 4th Street, in particular, is a significant gateway location
that is envisioned as a higher intensity urban environment with
iconic architecture and a mix of uses that can include luxury or full-
service hotel, high rise office building, fine dining restaurant, and/or
a public recreation amenity in addition to higher density residential
uses.
LC-7.2 Unify and Connect Development. Require that new development
in the 21st Century Employment District land use designation unify
and connect development along the Haven Avenue Corridor.
LC-7.3 Campus Design. Encourage employment areas to be developed
like a college campus with buildings oriented toward an internal
roadway, buffer landscaping along the perimeter, and ample
opportunities for paths and trails connecting to the City system, as
well as relaxation areas for employees.
LC-7.4 Compatibility. Discourage large industrial projects within 1,000 feet
of existing and planned residential development.
LC-7.5 Adaptive Industrial Reuse. Encourage adaptive reuse with
residential and live/work units, and local serving commercial, in
existing industrial structures, particularly in the Central South
Community Planning Area.
LC-7.6 Loading Docks. Require that parking lots, loading docks, outdoor
storage, and processing, be located behind or beside buildings, not
in front, and be screened from public views.
100 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA
Focus Areas
FOCUS AREAS ARE..
specific parts of the city where the vision indicates focused change. The
potential value of coordinated private and public investment in these areas
is especially high, and near-term improvement is supported by a broad
cross section of the community. A higher level of detail, illustration, and
strategic recommendations for the Focus Areas are provided in this chapter
to prioritize these areas to help “jump-start” implementation of this Plan.
Each Focus Area reflects the context, goals and policies of their respective
Community Planning Areas and the mix of General Plan Designations
within it. All recommendations herein are a statement of City policy that
guide public and private investment for the following eight Focus Areas:
+Focus Area 1: Downtown Rancho Cucamonga (Victoria Gardens &
Epicenter)
+Focus Area 2: Civic Center
+Focus Area 3: HART District
+Focus Area 4: Red Hill Gateway
+Focus Area 5: Cucamonga Town Center
+Focus Area 6: Alta Loma Town Center
+Focus Area 7: Etiwanda Heights Town Center
+Focus Area 8: Southeast Industrial Area
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VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 2: FOCUS AREAS
FIGURE FA-1 FOCUS AREAS MAP
12
7
83
5
6
4
COMMUNITY ACTIVITY NODES
Neighborhood Activity Node
Corridor Activity Node
Focus Areas
MOBILITY CORRIDORS
Transit Priority Street
Bicycle Priority Street
Trail Network
Note: See Figure LC-3 Land Plan for
General Plan DesignationsCarmelian StVineyard Ave19th St
Upland
Ontario
Fontana
6th St
4th St
Baseline Rd
Wilson Ave Wilson Ave
Church St
Cucamonga
Central South
Central North
Red Hill
Alta Loma Etiwanda
Southeast
Eastside
Pacific Electric Trail
Day Creek ChannelDeer Creek ChannelDeer Creek ChannelArrow Route Archibald AveHaven AveMilliken AveEtiwanda Ave10
15
15
210
210
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FOCUS AREA 1: DOWNTOWN
RANCHO CUCAMONGA
Focus Area 1 illustrates the potential of the area around Victoria Gardens
and the Epicenter to become the “real downtown” of Rancho Cucamonga.
It is intended to show how walkable block patterns can be inserted within
the large parking surfaces of Victoria Gardens and other commercial
centers and underutilized parcels, and how these new blocks can support
higher intensity development to generate significant new value for
property owners and the community.
This Focus Area also illustrates how Foothill Boulevard can become a
connector—rather than the divider—between the north and south sides of
the corridor generating a very walkable, bikeable, and transit accessible City
Center environment while continuing to accommodate vehicular traffic.
Existing and new housing in this area will thus be very well connected to
new employment along and south of Foothill Boulevard with a wide choice
of travel modes.
Key Priorities for Strategic Implementation
+Victoria Gardens “Downtown.” Complete the Victoria Gardens
community by creating an expanded network of pedestrian-oriented
streets, walkable blocks and beautiful, comfortable public gathering
spaces and high intensity mixed-use development to create a “real
downtown” for the City of Rancho Cucamonga.
+City Center Mixed-Use Development. Infill current areas of low-
density development and large surface parking lots with a diverse mix
of housing and nonresidential uses and activities, such as retail, office,
and entertainment.
+Victoria “Community Gardens” and Open Space. Work with Southern
California Edison and the San Bernardino County Flood Control district
to improve the large open spaces along Day Creek Channel as a
downtown park. This recreational open space should be conveniently
accessible by walking and biking from adjacent neighborhoods and
connect to a multipurpose trail along Day Creek Channel that also
connects to the Pacific Electric Trail.
+Complete Green Network. Expand the citywide green network with a
multipurpose trail along the Day Creek Channel and other pedestrian/
bike connections to the north and south.
FIGURE FA-2 FOCUS AREA 1: DOWNTOWN RANCHO CUCAMONGA
Improve Foothill Boulevard from a highway to a
city center boulevard, integrating and prioritizing
human activity, active transportation and transit.
Improve Church Street, Arrow Route and
Rochester Avenue with buffered bike lanes.
Consider lane reductions on Rochester from 5 to
3 lanes to accommodate bikes. Rochester Avenue
is an important connection from the Cucamonga
Station to the foothills.
Create a large usable open space activities and
services such as community gardens.
Create new crossing and signal for Day Creek
Channel trail and Park Drive.
Create connections via trails along Day Creek
Channel to Etiwanda Heights and along 8th
Street to Cucamonga Town Center south of the
Cucamonga Station tracks under the future High
Speed Rail.
Extend trail and pedestrian connections under
I-15 south to the industrial districts.
Integrate mixed-use infill development within
“parking blocks” of Victoria Gardens extending
over time south of Foothill as well.
Create Epicenter branding at entrances along
Rochester and activate the street and park with
infill buildings and streetscape improvements,
including banners, signage and landscaping.
8
9
2
1
2
3
9
7
4
5 1
4
6
2
2
3
4
5
6
7
Existing Street
Recommended Street
Recommended Alley/Drive
New Network Connection
Recommended Multipurpose Trail
Recommended Trailhead
Recommended Park/Plaza
Transit Priority Street
Bike Priority Street
Recommended Development Pattern
* Diagram is shown for illustrative purposes only.
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65
3
1 2
4
987
Recreational open space in large easement
Active ground floors fronting Foothill
Blvd.
Semi-private courts, roof terraces, and
amenities for urban housing
Public plazas and parks provide premium addresses for new buildings
Frontage lanes with parking enable shops to face Foothill Blvd.
Large community garden
This illustrative sketch shows how infill and
intensification of Victoria Gardens and the
transformation of the Foothill Corridor can create a
“downtown” for Rancho Cucamonga that is accessible,
walkable, and bikeable to a wide-range of amenities
and services.
Key points for the evolution of this area as a downtown
environment are as follows:
+Intense infill development and new structured
parking is organized within the existing “parking
blocks” of Victoria Gardens, as envisioned by the
original Victoria Gardens master plan.
+Low density, surface parked development on
large lots is reorganized with a finer grain street
network and walkable block structure, comfortable
human-scale public realm character, and mix of
commercial and residential uses in urban buildings.
+Foothill Boulevard is improved to provide wider,
more comfortable sidewalks and bike lanes,
significant new tree canopy for shade and wind
protection, Bus Rapid Transit or streetcar facilities,
and curbside parking for visitors and customers of
mixed-use development facing Foothill Boulevard.
+The existing wide utility easement evolves into a
fine community open space amenity—Victoria
Gardens Park—including upgraded trails, shaded
play areas, and community gardens.
+Comfortable walking and biking connections in a
park-like setting are provided from Victoria Gardens
and the new downtown area southwesterly to the
Rancho Cucamonga Sports Center and Epicenter,
southeasterly to the industrial districts, and
northward to Etiwanda and the foothills.
Local street with active frontage and wide, flexibly programmable sidewalkSafe, comfortable crossing for pedestrians and cyclists Generous, active, comfortable outdoor space defined by
buildings
2
5
1
6
8 9
7
3
4
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Human-scale, pedestrian-oriented frontage All-mode environment along Foothill Blvd.
Foothill Boulevard improved with bike lanes and low-speed “side access lanes” for customer and visitor parking in safe, comfortable pedestrian environment.
Day Creek Channel improved as Victoria Gardens Park, with multipurpose trail and public open space
Parks multifunction as play areas and gathering spaces next to the stadium
Active uses in parks and liner buildings infuse life into the evening Pedestrian-oriented “gateways”
Banners, signage, and landscaping can create a sense of arrival and branding for the Epicenter
Mixed-use building with active groundfloor
Buffered bike lane example for local streets
Key points for the transformation of Foothill Corridor from a suburban arterial and
historic highway to an active, city center boulevard environment are as follows:
+Curbside parking is introduced along both sides—in some cases in side access
lanes—to enable visitors and customers to park in front of new mixed-use infill
buildings.
+Taller buildings and significant numbers of large canopy trees are integrated
along Foothill Boulevard to clearly define the corridor as a significant community
open space and important focal point of community life and activity.
+High quality transit system(s) is provided along Foothill Boulevard to support—
and be supported by—a human-scale, transit-oriented and very active corridor
environment as envisioned through the 2020 PlanRC engagement.
+Building uses are quite flexible—including retail, office, housing, civic/community,
etc.—both at the time of initial construction and over time to meet evolving
market conditions and community needs.
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FOCUS AREA 2: CIVIC CENTER
Focus Area 2 illustrates the potential of the area around the intersection
of Foothill Boulevard and Haven Avenue to become the active, mixed-
use civic heart of Rancho Cucamonga. Foothill Boulevard and Haven
Avenue will become primary boulevards, transformed from separators to
connectors between the neighborhoods, centers and districts on either
side of these corridors. This Focus Area also shows how walkable block
patterns and pedestrian networks can be extended into large undeveloped
parcels, and throughout the parking lots of the City/County Civic Center
and adjoining commercial centers to generate a high quality walkable
public realm framework that can support more intense, active, mixed-use,
transit-oriented infill development at the center of the city. It can also add
significant new value to existing lower intensity development by providing
more access for more people by more modes.
Key Priorities for Strategic Implementation
+Transit-Oriented Corridors. Improve the pedestrian environments on
all streets, integrate high quality bus rapid transit and/or rail transit
into Transit Priority Streets, and extend active mode connectivity
into adjoining neighborhoods and districts. Improvements include
comfortable, wide, shaded sidewalks and more closely spaced
signalized intersections with safe, comfortable pedestrian crosswalks.
+Mixed-Use Infill. Prioritize key parcels for mixed-use infill development,
especially those that are vacant or have large, underutilized surface
parking areas. Infill buildings must have active ground floor frontages—
whether retail, residential or office—and parking should be well-
screened from public views within the blocks.
+Connected Streets. Improve connectivity for bikes, pedestrians, and
cars to this center of our City’s civic services and activities by extending
Civic Center Drive to the west, bridging over the Deer Creek Channel
and connecting through a new neighborhood to Foothill Boulevard
and to Hermosa Avenue via Devon Street.
+Complete Pedestrian Network and Environment. Reorganize large
blocks with pedestrian-oriented street networks to ensure walkable
block sizes, especially within the existing City/County Civic Center
complex. Extend the pedestrian network eastward through existing
commercial development to Spruce Avenue and southward to Arrow
Route.
+Multipurpose Trail Network. Create new trailhead connections to
the Deer Creek Corridor—both south and north of Foothill Boulevard
—to provide multi-use trail access between the Civic Center area and
neighborhoods to the north and south and connecting to the Pacific
Electric Trail.
FIGURE FA-3 FOCUS AREA 2: CIVIC CENTER
Improve Foothill Boulevard and Haven Avenue
to prioritize human activity, active transportation
and transit.
Improve Church Street, Arrow Route, and
Hermosa Avenue with buffered bike lanes.
Create new park with access to multipurpose trail
along Deer Creek Channel and extend Devon
Street to connect with Civic Center Drive.
Infill mixed-use buildings on large surface lots.
Buildings fronting Foothill Boulevard should
have active ground floor uses and contribute to a
pedestrian-friendly environment.
Develop vacant lots with mixed-use buildings.
New block patterns should extend and complete
to the area’s network of complete streets.
Intensify commercial center to transit-oriented
mixed-use development with housing and
ground floor commercial.
Create plaza space along north side of Civic
Center Dr from crosswalk to City Hall stair.
Faciliate outdoor dining in front of restaurants.
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Existing Street
Recommended Street
Recommended Alley/Drive
New Network Connection
Recommended Multipurpose Trail
Recommended Trailhead
Recommended Park/Plaza
Transit Priority Street
Bike Priority Street
Recommended Development Pattern
* Diagram is shown for illustrative purposes only.
110 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA
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This illustrative sketch shows how Haven Avenue evolves
into a transit-oriented corridor that accommodates all-
modes of transportation and supports mixed-use infill
development with active ground floors.
Key points for the evolution of this area as the civic heart
of the city are as follows:
+Haven Avenue transforms from a wide highway-like
roadway to a multi-modal boulevard providing new
high-quality pedestrian, bicycle and transit facilities
while retaining significant automobile traffic
capacity.
+Simple improvements, such as the addition of
some outdoor dining spaces within small portions
of existing parking areas, provide a comfortable
pedestrian route from City Hall to Haven City Market.
Such improvements could easily be implemented
within a year with modest investments.
+New 4- and 5-story mixed-use developments along
the west side of Haven Avenue have active frontages
and curbside parking enabled by the introduction of
new side access lanes
+Civic Center Drive extends to the west via a new
bridge over Deer Creek Channel connecting a new
neighborhood in the large vacant parcel south of
Foothill Boulevard directly into the heart of the Civic
Center.
+Relatively simple paving and landscape
improvements provide enhanced pedestrian
environments from the County Courthouse and City
Hall up to Foothill Boulevard where a new mixed-use
development is currently under design just east of
Haven Avenue. A new signalized crossing of Foothill
connects directly into Terra Vista Town Center, which
may in the future also be updated to a mixed-use
center environment.
+Additional pedestrian, bicycle and landscaping
improvements create much more walkable and
comfortable environments and community
gathering place for special events in the areas
around City Hall, the County Courthouse, and
adjacent parking lots.
Green open spaces bring nature into City Center “outdoor
rooms”
Side access lane provides curbside visitor and customer parking on major streetFurnishings make outdoor room in front of retail shops
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Shops activate public plaza
Semi-private open space within housing complex
Parking structure “lined” with retail uses Low-rise parking structure lined with retail
Outdoor seating and dining in plazas and squares in front of buildings
Outdoor seating and dining in shopping center
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Foothill Boulevard improved with “bulb-in” parking on one side and a side access lane on the other in front of new mixed-use
development
Bus lane outside of frontage lane to reduce stopping time for buses.
Outdoor dining along wide sidewalks
Safe intersection for all modes
Transparent shopfronts and strong signage and branding create strong retail
presence.
112 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA
Streetscape Improvements: Expand bike lane to side access lane with
bulb-in parking as new mixed use infill development occurs.
Existing Condition: 3 travel lanes in each
direction and a median with left turn lane.
Narrow, unbuffered bike lanes are present along
the curb on both sides, and right-turn lanes are
provided at selected intersections.
Retail ground floor uses along side access lane in “multi-way
boulevard”.
This street section illustrates how Haven Avenue
may be improved over time to accommodate new
development and provide a more comfortable and
safer environment for pedestrians, bicyclists and transit
users without disrupting automobile traffic flow.
Key points for the improvement and evolution of Haven
Avenue are as follows:
+Vehicular speeds and peak hour capacities along
Haven Avenue are modestly reduced to achieve the
long-envisioned urban character of the Civic Center
area and the Haven corridor as a primarily urban
office environment.
+Conversion of the outer travel lane to planting strips
create high quality public realm environment for
pedestrians and bicyclists.
+Existing curbs are “bulbed in” for curbside parking.
This provides direct access to active ground floors
and enables low speed, one-way vehicular flows in
the side access/bike lane.
+Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) stations are integrated into
the streetscape design. The illustrations to the right
show one of many options.
+New mixed-use buildings are developed along the
west side of Haven Avenue between 4th Street and
Foothill Boulevard. Additional intensification of use
on the east side is also anticipated over time.
+Streetscape improvements to Haven Avenue not
only transform the corridor from “a through place”
to a “to place” but also improve connectivity to
adjacent neighborhoods, such as Cucamonga,
centers, and districts.
Example of bike lane striping near intersection to reduce conflicts.Public open spaces on corners adjacent to lively uses can activate an
entire district or corridor or center.
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FOCUS AREA 3: HART DISTRICT
This Focus Area illustrates the potential of the HART District to become an
intense, mixed-use transit hub of regional significance. With the expected
addition of high-speed rail (HSR) and an underground transit link to
Ontario International Airport, the environment around the Cucamonga
Station is expected to scale upwards significantly with a dynamic mix
of housing, employment and supporting commercial development.
Accordingly, the City has been working collaboratively with property
owners, developers, and transit agencies to ensure unified, mixed-use,
transit-oriented City Center and Urban Neighborhood environments, as
envisioned by the community through the PlanRC process. As part of
the City’s ongoing economic development strategy for more and better
employment opportunities, the surrounding areas are prioritized as a more
intense, diverse, and accessible regional and local employment districts,
well-connected by all modes to the growing regional transit hub.
Key Priorities for Strategic Implementation
+Human-Scale Public Realm. Systematically, strategically and
opportunistically reorganize the existing large block pattern into a fine
grain network of streets and open spaces to create an urban fabric of
accessible community gathering spaces and active building fronts.
+Complete Streets. In addition to implementation of the planned
Omnitrans West Valley Connector Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) line, support
all-mode mobility to the Station. Improve streets with pedestrian-
friendly sidewalks and high-quality bike lanes, especially on Transit
and Bike Priority Streets, thereby reducing the need to drive and
encouraging walking and biking to the Station to reduce traffic
congestion throughout and parking demand at the Station.
+Multipurpose Trail Connections. Expand the trail network by
creating a new multipurpose trail in the historic 8th Street right-of-
way adjacent to the planned HSR line. This will provide a direct link
from the Station westward to the Cucamonga Town Center area with
a safe, comfortable, 2-mile bike ride or walk, and also eastward to
the Day Creek Channel Trail or Etiwanda Avenue to better connect
northward to Victoria Gardens and the foothills, and southward to the
employment districts in the Southeast Area.
+Adaptive Reuse of Industrial Properties. Proactively promote,
encourage and enable the repositioning and adaptive reuse of existing
industrial properties and structures, where appropriate, to attract and
grow new businesses that provide an increasing number and diversity
of employment opportunities compatible within a mixed-use, transit-
oriented employment district environment.
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FIGURE FA-4 FOCUS AREA 3: HART DISTRICT
Improve Haven Avenue, Milliken Avenue, and 4th
Street to prioritize active transportation—walking,
biking and transit use.
Improve Rochester Avenue and 6th Street with
buffered bike lane.
Extend Azusa Court to connect with Acacia
Street.
Extend 7th Street to connect Milliken Avenue to
Haven Avenue.
Create new 8th Street multipurpose trail
connection.
Create new trailhead with parking.
Develop planned HSR Station with large public
plaza.
Implement the HSR Master Plan for City Center
mixed-use development.
Continue implementation of the Resort as an
Urban Neighborhood.
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Existing Street
Recommended Street
Recommended Alley/Drive
New Network Connection
Recommended Multipurpose Trail
Recommended Trailhead
Recommended Park/Plaza
Transit Priority Street
Bike Priority Street
Planned BRT Route
Planned Tunnel Connection
Proposed Transit Connection
Proposed Local Circulator (potential
tunnel connection)
Recommended Development Pattern
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Bus connections and comfortable stops Conceptual illustration of retail street in mixed-use district
Conceptual illustration of intensification in the HART District
Conceptual illustration of Station Plaza and new terminal, with elevated HSR and new multipurpose trail within the historic 8th
Street right of way.
BRT Station
Courtyard housing
Parking structure artfully screened, and shaded with solar panels
Active plaza amidst tall buildings
118 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA
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FIGURE FA-5 FOCUS AREA 4: RED HILL GATEWAY
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Existing Street
Recommended Street
Recommended Alley/Drive
New Network Connection
Multipurpose Trail
Recommended Trailhead
Recommended Park/Plaza
Transit Priority Street
Recommended Development Pattern
Develop a new, mixed-use neighborhood with
retail fronting a new side access (frontage) lane
along Foothill Boulevard, and neighborhood-
scale housing arranged around a central
neighborhood green.
Provide a new side access (frontage) lane along
Foothill Boulevard for improved street frontage
and access to new commercial development.
Realign Red Hill Country Club Drive at new,
signalized intersection to provide a new
street connection and address for future infill
development south of Foothill Boulevard.
Create a new neighborhood green at San
Bernardino Road and Red Hill Country Club Drive.
Preserve Sycamore Inn and explore opportunities
to improve access and create a stronger presence
on Foothill Boulevard with an entry plaza or
green.
Improve Foothill Boulevard to prioritize transit
and active transportation.
Vision for Foothill Boulevard entering into Rancho Cucamonga from the west. Streetscape improvements include widened sidewalks and a
class IV cycle track on the south side of the street(right). A side access lane with curbside parking and wide sidewalks provide access to new
mixed-use infill buildings to the north (left).
Design character of new Red Hill neighborhoods south of the Red Hill
Country Club
Streetscape and landscape reflect the historic character of Red
Hill.
New neighborhood-serving parks and plazas, as well as some
streets, can be programmable spaces for a variety of activities.
Access to the Pacific Electric Trail is provided via several new trailhead/trail
connections in Red Hill.
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* Diagram is shown for illustrative purposes only.
FOCUS AREA 4: RED HILL GATEWAY
Located at the foot of Red Hill on the Foothill corridor, this Focus Area
illustrates the potential to develop a unique mixed-use town center and
significant “western gateway” to the City at the earliest of the several
“original townsites” of Rancho Cucamonga. Built amidst several landmarks
of Rancho Cucamonga hearkening back to the original ranchos and
historic Route 66, this center will bring many daily and weekly needs and
wants within easy reach of residents of Red Hill and Cucamonga, including
a wide range of commercial services, civic amenities, and community
gathering spaces. New housing opportunities will be available within a
comfortable walk or bike ride of this new center. It will also provide a very
high-quality location for a new transit stop on Foothill, and a new trailhead
on the Cucamonga Creek Trail and Pacific Electric Trail.
Key Priorities for Strategic Implementation
+Unique Character Tied to Red Hill and Sycamore Inn. Create a
compact, walkable, and mixed-use gateway center with a small-town
scale and character that pays close attention to beautifully integrating
and respecting the historic Santa Fe Trail Sycamore Inn and unique
Route 66 Magic Lamp and Red Hill Cafe. At a high level, the scale
and character of the mixed-use activity centers planned at major
cross-roads along Foothill Boulevard is intended to trend from “town
scale and character” here at Red Hill on the west end of the corridor,
toward an emphatically “city scale and character” at Victoria Gardens
“Downtown” center near the east end, and an intermediate scale and
character in the Civic Center area at Haven Avenue.
+High Quality Active Transportation and Transit Linkages. Provide
access to future Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) and/or streetcar or light rail
transit on Foothill Boulevard and pedestrian and bike connections
to the Pacific Electric Trail and the Cucamonga Creek Trail.
Complete streets improvements are provided from this area into the
neighborhoods of Red Hill and Cucamonga as well.
+Rethinking the Pacific Electric Trail Parking Lot and Bridge.
Reconfigure the existing trailhead parking lot and access way to the
Pacific Electric Trail to integrate it better into the gateway center
environment while ensuring adequate parking for visitors and trail
users. The existing bridge is visually enhanced as a more appropriate
“gateway statement” for the city. Walking, biking and horseback
access and connectivity to this trailhead from the westerly portion of
the Gateway Center and all surrounding neighborhoods should be
prioritized.
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Neighborhood ParkTown-scale retail shops along side access lane on north side of Foothill
Rancho Cucamonga Gateway Sign on the Pacific Electric Trail
Crossing of Foothill Boulevard.
Historic Sycamore Inn to be carefully preserved and better-connected to Foothill.A new neighborhood park/plaza for the
neighborhood south of Foothill.
Iconic Magic Lamp Inn is better connected to Foothill Boulevard
with streetscape improvements and new customer parking,
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120 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA
This drawing illustrates the potential for unified
streetscape improvements to Foothill Boulevard and
infill development at the western gateway to Rancho
Cucamonga at Red Hill.
Key points to generate a vibrant new community
activity center for western Rancho Cucamonga as
follows:
+A new mixed-use center and small neighborhood
is developed at the foot of Red Hill. New
neighborhoods include a mix of single-family
detached, single-family attached, and town-scale
multifamily housing types, to provide a range of
housing choices in a very high-quality traditional
neighborhood and center environment.
+New “town-scale” mixed-use buildings front the
north side of Foothill Boulevard, with a new side
access lane in front for curbside customer parking.
+A new neighborhood park is provided, which could
take the form of a single larger park and/or multiple
smaller parks and greens.
+Red Hill Country Club Drive is realigned to create a
safer and more functional intersection with Foothill
Boulevard and extends southward to a small new
park at San Bernardino Road. The abandoned
segment of that street provides parking areas
behind new buildings fronting Foothill.
+Historic Route 66 establishments - including the
Sycamore Inn, Magic Lamp, and Red Hill Cafe -
are preserved and enhanced by new streetscape
improvements to Foothill Boulevard.
+A new two-way cycle track is provided along the
south side of Foothill Boulevard in this segment,
connecting to the Pacific Electric Trail.
Active outdoor spaces fronting new and adaptively re-used
buildings on Foothill.
Neighborhood homes fronting shared greensPocket neighborhoods
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FIGURE FA-6 FOCUS AREA 5: CUCAMONGA TOWN CENTER
Improve Archibald Avenue to prioritize active
transportation and transit, including streetscape
improvements, such as lighting, landscaping, and
signage, and striping Class II buffered bike lanes in
both directions.
Improve Hellman Avenue and Hermosa Avenue with
buffered bike lanes.
Prioritize bike and pedestrian activity along
segments of Arrow Route through Cucamonga Town
Center and residential neighborhoods to contribute
to and maintain the character of these areas.
Create Cucamonga Town Square on 9th Street as
focal point for the Town Center. This could begin
by simply adding furnishings and shade structures
within a portion of existing parking lots.
Explore opportunities for infill and redevelopment.
Extend 7th and 9 th Street, as a trail or street, to
connect Archibald Avenue and Hermosa Avenue.
Extend Feron Boulevard, as drive or paseo, to
connect to Archibald Avenue.
Create a new multipurpose trail along 8th Street
right-of-way south of the Metrolink/BNSF
railroad connecting Cucamonga Town Center to
Cucamonga Station.
Create new park—Old Town Park—for 8th Street
multipurpose trail.
Create a new multipurpose trail along Deer
Creek Channel through “Northtown,” the original
settlement of Cucamonga.
Create Humboldt trailhead and trail along the north
side of the railroad to Old Town Park.
Existing Street
Recommended Street
Recommended Alley/Drive
Recommended Connection
Recommended Multipurpose Trail
Recommended Trailhead
Transit Priority Street
Bike Priority Street
Loading bay of a former industrial building-turned-brewery, with
additional outdoor dining in a converted portion of the parking lot.
“Tactical Urbanism” - simple retrofits to existing conditions in front of businesses - including “parklets” (lower-left; outdoor dining areas in parking
areas in front of businesses) or converting industrial loading bays into dining terraces (lower-right) to create new places for activity.
Alley (in Old Town Pasadena) converted into a pedestrian paseo with
attractive landscaping and seating for outdoor dining and socializing.
An outdoor dining court activates a flex-
industrial district.
Auto repair shops converted into new uses in a new neighborhood center environment.
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FOCUS AREA 5: CUCAMONGA TOWN
CENTER
The intention of this Focus Area is to provide clear recommendations for
how existing properties and projects along Archibald Avenue in Cucamonga
may become better connected to one another, establishing a new town
center for the residents of Southwest Rancho Cucamonga that can be
accessed by foot or bike via an expanded network of neighborhood streets
and trails—in addition to driving. It also provides clear illustrations of ways,
both small and large, in which the existing shopping centers and business
parks may be improved and connected to evolve them toward more human-
scale, comfortable and walkable community gathering places. Targeted
improvements to pedestrian and bicycle mobility, street frontage, and public
landscape can incrementally transform this area into a much safer, more
attractive activity center for Cucamonga.
Key Priorities for Strategic Implementation
+Archibald “Main Street.” Improve Archibald Avenue as a “main street”
environment to connect the existing concentration of commercial and
civic amenities with pedestrian-friendly streets and more comfortable
bike lanes.
+Cucamonga Town Square. Explore the possibility of reassigning
portions of existing parking lots for outdoor dining and public
gathering spaces to create a lively activity center—Cucamonga Town
Square—as a focal point on 9th Street.
+Improved Connectivity. Extend 7th Street, 9th Street, and Feron
Boulevard to create a more complete street network that improves
connectivity and access to and from the Town Center to neighboring
destinations.
+8th Street Trail. Create a new multipurpose trail along the 8th Street
right-of-way on the south edge of the Metrolink/BNSF railroad. This
trail will provide direct connection to the Cucamonga Station. Create a
small park at Archibald Avenue with potential to extend further west to
Grove and connect to the Pacific Electric Trail.
+Tactical and Permanent Improvements. Employ simple façade,
lighting and landscaping enhancements to underutilized parking lots
and buildings for outdoor dining and community activities.
+Town Center Management. Intentionally manage improvements in
the Town Center area, possibly through a public/private partnership
between the City and local businesses and property owners.
Management priorities would include managing shared parking
facilities, coordinating streetscape and site improvements, planning
and promoting special events, and managing complete or partial street
closures related to special events.
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Creative landscaping framing an
outdoor dining area
Local street improvements for greater bikability and walkability
Active ground-floor frontages that create seamless indoor/
outdoor space
Adaptive re-use of a former industrial building into an eatery
Pedestrian street/paseo with ample seating and landscaping
functions as an outdoor room
Outdoor dining fronting the street
124 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA
This illustrative sketch presents a vision of a neighborhood green (fronted by new and existing housing) at the terminus of a new 8th Street
trail connecting Cucamonga Town Center to Cucamonga Station, 2-miles to the east. Improvements to Archibald Avenue in this area include
buffered bike lanes and landscaped medians.
This illustrative sketch presents a vision for Cucamonga Town Center on 9th Street that includes streetscape improvements such as adding
parking lane planters, lighting, signage and furnishings, “tactical” frontage improvements to industrial properties to accommodate new,
active uses, and infill housing fronting a new public open space.
Key points for the evolution of the Cucamonga Town
Center are as follows:
+A combination of well planned, very simple
streetscape, landscape, parking lot, and building
improvements infuse the area with a much more
inviting, fun, and walkable character.
+A large, underutilized parking area on 9th street
is converted into a new public open space—
Cucamonga Town Square—flanked by new infill
housing to the north.
+Tactical and Permanent Improvements. Simple
façade, lighting and landscaping enhancements
to parking lot spaces of commercial centers
create opportunities for new outdoor dining and
community activities. Similar improvements can
be made to existing industrial buildings that are
occupied by food and beverage uses.
+A multi-use trail is provided along the historic 8th
Street right of way—paralleling the Metrolink/BNSF
railroad along its south edge—connecting from the
Town Center directly into Cucamonga Station, 2
miles to the east.
+Vacant land is improved to provide a small
neighborhood green fronted by new and existing
housing at the junction of the 8th Street Trail and
Archibald Avenue.
+Modest restriping improvements create wider
and safer bike lanes on Archibald Avenue with
no decreases in traffic capacity. Wider, shadier
walkways are provided along the west side of
Archibald Avenue from 8th Street to Arrow Route.
+New outdoor dining areas are added within small
portions of existing large parking lots and/or within
landscaped areas of eateries in existing shopping
centers or along major streets.
Outdoor sidewalk dining accommodated by simple furnishings
Streetscape improvements, including landscaped medians and
enhanced pedestrian crossings
Industrial buildings converted into shops and restaurants
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FIGURE FA-7 FOCUS AREA 6: ALTA LOMA TOWN CENTER
Creatively re-use the historic Packing House and
provide a new community open space at Roberds
Street and Base Line Road.
Improve Amethyst Avenue for the comfort and
safety of pedestrians. Active uses and building
fronts should contribute to creating a “main
street” environment.
Improve Baseline Road and Archibald Avenue to
prioritize active transportation and transit.
Improve Hellman Avenue with buffered bike
lanes.
Create a unique “town center park” and trailhead
in coordination with Cucamonga Valley Water
District.
Create shared parking for the Town Center and
access to Pacific Electric Trail.
Enhance building fronts of existing shopping
centers to accommodate arcades with outdoor
seating and dining.
Take advantage of opportunities for
neighborhood-scale infill in a variety of forms.
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Existing Street
Recommended Street
Recommended Alley/Drive
Recommended Connection
Multipurpose Trail
Trailhead
Recommended Park/Plaza
Transit Priority Street
Bike Priority Street
“Main Street”
Recommended Development Pattern
Archibald Avenue improved with median and bike lanes
Baseline Road improved with median and bike lanes
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FOCUS AREA 6: ALTA LOMA TOWN
CENTER
Focus Area 6 illustrates the potential for Rancho Cucamonga’s first and
only “small town main street” to anchor a unique mixed-use town center
at the junction of the Alta Loma and Cucamonga Planning Communities
taking advantage of existing connections, especially via the Pacific Electric
Trail.
The Alta Loma Town Center will be a highly active and attractive
community activity center reflective of traditional development patterns.
Existing shopping centers and streets are improved to create more
human-scale, comfortable and walkable community gathering places.
Strategic infill of new commercial and residential development responds
to shifting market conditions. Connectivity and walkability improvements
are provided so that residents from surrounding neighborhoods may walk,
bike or ride a horse to existing and future commercial amenities.
Key Priorities for Strategic Implementation
+Historic Traditional Town Center. Weave together the new urban
fabric with remnants of the historic Old Town Alta Loma to create a
walkable, human-scaled, traditional mixed-use center for the City.
Adjacent neighborhoods should also integrate traditional development
patterns to provide a consistent and compatible environment.
+Amethyst “Main Street.” Reinstate Amethyst Avenue as a mixed-use
“main street” by enhancing its sense of place with active ground floor
uses, such as outdoor dining, and inviting frontages with clear view into
shops. Improve the pedestrian environment by adding new street trees
along parking lanes and encourage other opportunistic public and
private landscape improvements.
+Packing House District. Transform the historic Alta Loma Packing
House to be adaptively reused as a market hall of fresh foods and
eateries, and to become a significant anchor for the Alta Loma Town
Center. Create a new neighborhood park at Roberds Street and
Baseline Road to accommodate a variety of community activities.
+Shared Parking. Organize parking sharing arrangements to enable
more and higher quality active “town center” uses without devoting
excessive and important land areas and budgets to parking facilities.
Shared parking should comprehensively include on-street parking,
public and private parking lots and facilities, and consider differing
peak parking demands of participating businesses and uses
throughout the day or week.
+Shopping Center Improvements and Infill. Improve and activate
existing shopping centers with temporary tactical or permanent
enhancements within existing parking lots and along existing building
fronts.
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Mural on water tank evokes Alta Loma’s agricultural heritage
Simple retrofits to existing suburban shopping centers with outdoor seating and dining areas can spur new business types
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Well-known local store located in the historic Alta Loma
Market building
Conversion of industrial buildings, such as the historic Packing House, into a food hall or public market lined with outdoor dining
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128 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA
Opportunities for neighborhood-scale infill development in various house forms (including mixed-use) at key locations in the Alta Loma Town Center
This illustrative sketch shows the evolution of the center
of the original Alta Loma settlement into a thriving
Town Center adjacent to the Pacific Electric Trail.
Key points for the evolution of Alta Loma Town Center
into a pedestrian-friendly environment with a mix of
active uses and services are as follows:
+Extension of Roberds Street—and possibly a
new north-south street parallel to and east of
Amethyst Avenue—provides improved connection
between the historic retail businesses and the
newer shopping centers and opportunities for infill
housing in the Town Center.
+The historic Alta Loma “main street” on Amethyst
Avenue—where the Alta Loma Pacific Electric Rail
(“Red Car”) station was located—is enhanced with
simple streetscape improvements, such as street
tree plantings, to create a renewed sense of place.
+The existing trailhead is expanded into a
community park at the intersection of the Pacific
Electric Trail and Amethyst Avenue. The tanks have
potential to be a unique landmark with murals or
other public art.
+New outdoor dining and community activity spaces
in existing parking lots, new development, and
historic buildings are created to infuse this area
with new life.
+The historic Alta Loma Packing House is creatively
reused as a market hall of fresh foods and eateries
with outdoor dining patios overlooking the Pacific
Electric Trail.
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FOCUS AREA 7: ETIWANDA HEIGHTS
TOWN CENTER
This Focus Area illustrates a new amenity-rich village-scale commercial
center at the heart of Etiwanda Heights creating a two-block “main street”
environment. At the crossroads of Wilson and Rochester Avenues, small
shops, restaurants and service businesses surround Wilson Square, a 2-acre
park designed as a day-to-day family play and rest area and flexible venue
for community events. Across the street at the north corner of the square
is a potential future multipurpose civic building (community center) that is
programmed with a wide range of functions for the community.
Key Priorities for Strategic Implementation
+Community Activity Center for Foothill Neighborhoods. Facilitate the
creation of shops, restaurants and community gathering spaces for the
new neighborhoods of Etiwanda Heights as well as those of Alta Loma
to the west and Etiwanda to the east.
+Seamless Integration with Neighborhoods. Employ “traditional town
planning” principles and patterns to plan and design the Town Center
as an amenity for immediate residential neighbors as well as the
larger community. For instance, the main streets—Wilson Avenue and
Rochester Avenue— are not fronted by large parking lots and adjacent
housing is not separated from the Town Center by tall walls.
+Complete Network of Complete Streets. Complete Wilson Avenue
and create a network of new neighborhood streets to improve and
distribute traffic in the area. A new school and a neighborhood-serving
commercial center located on the new segment of Wilson Avenue will
be accessible to many residents in the foothill neighborhoods without
the need to drive.
+Multipurpose Trail Connections. Improve the Day Creek flood control
channel and the adjacent Southern California Edison (SCE) right of
way as the City’s most significant north-south open space and active
transportation corridor that is immediately adjacent to the Etiwanda
Heights Town Center. This will provide trail connections from the Town
Center south to the Victoria Gardens Downtown, and north into the
North Etiwanda Preserve, rural foothill open spaces and trails, and San
Bernardino National Forest and the mountains.
1 4
5
6
7
FIGURE FA-8 FOCUS AREA 7: ETIWANDA HEIGHTS TOWN CENTER
Plan for a potential future community center
building that has a large event space with
operable openings that face the square.
Create a “tabled” street segment (at grade with
sidewalks) that connects the potential future
community center building to Wilson Square.
This segment of the street may be temporarily
closed to traffic for special events.
Design a hardscaped area of Wilson Square for a
variety of community events, such as a farmer’s
market with tent and table set-ups;
Design an outdoor theater with terraced seating
carved into the natural inclined topography of the
square for community performances and other
special events.
Install naturalistic play equipment that is rural
in character, such as boulders, wooden climbing
assemblies, etc.
Sidewalk dining: Provide wide sidewalks flanking
the square to accommodate outdoor dining for
cafés/restaurants.
Use gravel/rough stone to distinguish parking
apron from the street. This area is suitable for
temporary parking and provides necessary street
width for emergency services.
2
3
7
4
5
6
3
2
1
* This figure is excerpt from the EHNCP and is shown here for illustrative purposes only.
132 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 133
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 2: FOCUS AREAS
Wilson Square is envisioned as a vibrant community center at the heart of the Etiwanda Heights neighborhoods.
Programmable open spaces allow for a wide variety of uses
and activities.
Community performances at an outdoor pavilion
Conceptual illustration of a “main street,” such as Wilson Avenue and other streets surrounding the square, with wide sidewalks,
active open shopfronts, sidewalk dining, comfortable seating, and bicycle parking.
Dining terraces that conform to the natural sloping topography Wilson Square and activate the public realm
The design character of shops and restaurants, as well as potential civic buildings, should reflect the rural character of Etiwanda.
134 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 135
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 2: FOCUS AREAS
FOCUS AREA 8: SOUTHEAST
INDUSTRIAL AREA
This Focus Area illustrates the potential of the Southeast Area to become
a modernized industrial employment district with convenient access to a
wide range of services and amenities. The current subdivision patterns and
infrastructure in this area still reflect its agrarian past, with many of the
current industrial uses simply built within vineyards one at a time. A more
complete network of complete streets—accommodating light and heavy
vehicles and active mobility modes—is critical to supporting many more
and better jobs and increasing economic activity per acre of land.
Key Priorities for Strategic Implementation
+Complete Network Connectivity. Reorganize the existing fragmented
network of paved, unpaved, public and private roadways systematically,
strategically and opportunistically into a high quality, complete
network of streets to increase access to and support industrial
businesses large and small and to improve public safety. Top priorities
include new and enhanced connections from the Southeast Area to
other parts of the city, including a new north-south facility west of
Etiwanda Avenue between 4th Street and Arrow Route, completion
of the 6th Street connection into this area, and a new east-west
connection under the I-15 to Rochester Boulevard.
+Complete Streets. Provide high quality pedestrian and bicycle facilities
in all streets to enable and encourage workers to commute by active
modes and transit. Such facilities connecting the Southeast Area
to Cucamonga Station are a top priority, including a new 8th Street
multipurpose trail and potential east-west route north of the Metrolink/
BNSF railroad.
+Efficient Goods Movement. Complete the network of local industrial
streets and other access routes to enable robust goods movement as
well as all-mode worker and user access to businesses in the Southeast
Area.
+Employment District Place-Making. Create human-scale activity
centers and a comfortable all-mode public realm in which workers
and visitors may access business support services, meals, and
recreational amenities within the Southeast Area. This will help reduce
the demand for frequent automobile trips for meals, breaks, and
errands in employees’ daily lives, and will help to attract and retain a
broader range of creative and innovative business types, in addition to
warehousing and trucking related uses.
FIGURE FA-9 FOCUS AREA 8: SOUTHEAST INDUSTRIAL AREA
Consider improving Etiwanda Avenue and 4th
Street to facilitate active transportation and
transit.
Consider improving Arrow Route, Rochester
Avenue and 6th Street with buffered or separated
bike lanes.
Extend Whittram Avenue from Etiwanda Avenue
to Rochester Avenue and under the I-15 to
provide better access to the Southeast Area.
Consider creating a new trailhead/park at the
intersection of the new 8th Street multipurpose
trail and potential trail along Day Creek Channel.
Develop a more complete, modern, multi-modal
street network for improved circulation and
access. The street network in this area is at or
near capacity. If the legacy heavy industrial uses
redevelop, additional east-west street capacity
between Rochester Avenue and Etiwanda
Avenue and north-south street capacity between
Arrow and 6th Street will be needed.
Strategically infill development in a range of
building and lot sizes to accommodate various
industrial activities.
Infill development fronting Etiwanda Avenue and
4th Street.
1
15
1
2
3
4
7
6
5
1
5
7
2
6
64
3
3
3
2
5 6
2
1
Existing Street
Recommended Street*
New Network Connection
Recommended Multipurpose Trail
Recommended Trailhead
Open Space
Transit Priority Street
Bike Priority Street
Recommended Development
* As per state law, these recommended road alignments
are not intended to interfere with utility operations.
* Diagram is shown for illustrative purposes only.
136 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA
OPEN SPACE IS…
the place people go to recharge, play, exercise and learn. While open
spaces can be large recreational parks, natural conservation areas, and
schools, they can also be trails, or a green space between buildings. Open
spaces are windows that let natural light and life into the urban fabric of
the city. Community playfields, Central Park and the conserved natural and
rural open spaces of the foothills are large specialized open space areas,
whereas small- and medium-size parks, which provide places for informal
play, family activities, and quiet recreation, are considered part of the
neighborhood they serve. A wide range of open space types together meet
the full range of residents’ needs for active and healthy lifestyles.
STATE LEGAL REQUIREMENTS
While California law requires that a general plan include an element that
addresses open space, the provisions of Government Code Section 65560
are mainly focused on preserving agricultural land. While agriculture
was once the dominant land use in the City of Rancho Cucamonga, as
discussed in the Conservation Chapter, the historic agriculture businesses
in the City are largely gone. This chapter, therefore, focuses on open
space as a general plan designation intended to preserve the natural
environment, water courses, and rural areas of the City, as well as preserve
and enhance park space for recreation.
Open Space
137
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 3: OPEN SPACE
HEART OF THE MATTER
People are part of nature and we thrive when we can go outdoors. Access
to parks and recreational space is only part of the equation. People need
the things that are best found in nature ranging from vitamins from
sunlight, to stress relief found with a simple walk. Being in the outdoors can
rejuvenate the spirit, improve mental health, and helps us sleep. As housing
density increases and individual yards diminish, having a place nearby to
play, to relax, or just to be out of the house is an essential amenity. While
there are several parks and open space areas in the City, not all of them are
within walking distance of our residents, and even if they are close the trail
and sidewalk system may not be complete.
Existing community open space amenities include the natural and rural
foothill open spaces, neighborhood and regional parks, and an extensive
network of trails that connect these open spaces to one another and to
the nearby neighborhoods. Continuing to grow and enhance the network
of open spaces and trails linking them is a commitment to remaining a
regional leader in environmental quality, quality of life, community health,
and sustainable long-term value.
OVERVIEW OF THIS CHAPTER
While the City has several parks and conservation areas, this General Plan
intentionally weaves open space into every land use designation and focus
area connecting people to the outside. Then intent of this Plan is to make
use of areas large and small giving people the ability to enjoy the beauty of
the City. Open space is important to conservation and to recreation and is
an important part of healthy living.
The following open space goals serve to guide and direct long-term
planning in the City of Rancho Cucamonga:
+Goal OS-1 Open Space. A complete, connected network of diverse
parks, trails, and rural and natural open space that support a wide
variety of recreational, educational and outdoor activities.
+Goal OS-2 Trails. A complete, connected network of diverse trails and
connected open space that improves access to all areas of the city and
encourages non-motorized activities.
Building on the Mobility and Access chapter emphasis on connectivity,
the approach to Open Space is to provide a variety of trails and paths
connecting open space with existing and new neighborhoods.
138 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 139
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 3: OPEN SPACE
OPEN SPACE DESIGNATIONS
Creating and maintaining Rancho Cucamonga’s remarkable open spaces
is a goal of the City as the network of open spaces is a core element of
the City’s commitment to retaining and elevating the City’s position as a
regional leader in environmental quality, quality of life, community health,
and sustainable long-term value.
Open Space types are generally characterized by the absence of, or limited
presence, of buildings and other development. The Open Space place type
includes three General Plan Designations: Natural Open Space, Rural Open
Space, and General Open Space & Facilities.
Table OS-1 summarizes the allowed ranges of residential density and non-
residential intensity consistent with the intentions of each Designation.
TABLE OS-1 OPEN SPACE DESIGNATIONS SUMMARY
General Plan Designation Residential Density (DU/AC)*Non-Residential Intensity (FAR)
Natural Open Space 0 NA
Rural Open Space Max. 2.0 NA
General Open Space &
Facilities 0.1**NA
* See “Calibrating Development” on page 62 for further details on applying density, intensity,
and use mix ratio.
**Not applicable to parks, which do not allow any residential development.
NATURAL OPEN SPACE
The Natural Open Space designation is established to respect and respond
to the sensitive environmental conditions in the hillsides by doing the
following: 1) maintain the natural open space character of the existing
conservation areas and proposed preservation areas in the Sphere of
Influence and northern portion of the City, 2) protect natural land forms
from extensive grading and minimize erosion, 3) provide for public safety
against wildland fire, fault, and flooding hazards, 4) protect water, plant,
and animal resources, and 5) provide design standards that allow for
limited residential development.
Because this land use designation is intended for preservation and
appreciation of natural open space, development is often prohibited.
Some public improvements such as trails, restrooms, small maintenance
structures may be necessary, however the developed footprint would be
minimal.
Natural environment of the foothills
FIGURE OS-1 OPEN SPACE DESIGNATIONS MAP
Natural Open Space
Rural Open Space
General Open Space & Facilities
Trailheads
Neighborhood green as activity center and gathering placeNatural open space habitats for wild animalsCarmelian StVineyard Ave19th St
Upland
Ontario
Fontana
6th St
4th St
Baseline Rd
Wilson Ave Wilson Ave
Church St
Pacific Electric Trail
Day Creek ChannelDeer Creek ChannelDeer Creek ChannelArrow Route Archibald AveHaven AveMilliken AveEtiwanda Ave10
10
15
15
210
210
140 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 141
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 3: OPEN SPACE
RURAL OPEN SPACE
The Rural Open Space designation is established to preserve rural lands
and protect natural landforms and landscapes, including conservation
areas or preserves, while still allowing limited residential development on
privately owned land in some hillside areas depending on slope and other
natural factors. Development may include houses on large lots, barns and
other structures accessory to agricultural uses, and community facilities for
public education and interpretation of natural habitats and resources.
GENERAL OPEN SPACE & FACILITIES
The General Open Space designation is applied to lands intended for
recreational, educational, public utility, and flood control uses and systems
that are typically owned or controlled by the City, other public agencies,
and public utility companies. The intent of this designation is that these
public lands—together with the City’s street network—will increasingly
become a single connected system of publicly accessible open space
that will provide a green citywide network for active transportation and
outdoor recreation that connects the neighborhoods and people of Rancho
Cucamonga. On private lands designated General Open Space, one
residential unit is generally permitted per 10 acres.
The built form of each facility and corridor within this designation will
reflect both its purpose and a respect for the character of the Community
Planning Area within which it is located. For example, the landscape
character of trail corridors should transition from semi-rural to suburban
to urban as they flow southward from the foothills into the city. The Pacific
Electric Trail should likewise adopt more of a neighborhood character in
Cucamonga, Red Hill, Alta Loma and Etiwanda, and perhaps a more formal
and civic character as it becomes an edge of the Central Park.
PARKS AND RECREATION
SYSTEM
Rancho Cucamonga’s parks and recreation system includes all usable
recreation space—parks, trails, and community/cultural centers —in the
city with the singular purpose to function as a place for people to gather,
relax, and enjoy. These places support activities that range from purely
passive recreational uses to heavily programmed activities, and from small
mini parks to large special use parks and facilities such as Central Park,
the Rancho Cucamonga Adult Sports Complex, and the Victoria Gardens
Cultural Center. The City offers diverse recreational programs at each facility
depending upon the size of the park and the type of facility.
Flood Control/Utility Corridor
Civic/Regional
Schools
The City’s parks and recreation system is supplemented by school facilities,
which may be available on a limited basis for recreation activities and
sports leagues. Twenty-three elementary schools and eight junior high/
middle schools offer use of athletic fields, playgrounds, basketball courts,
and other facilities during evenings and weekends. Four high schools and
Chaffey College also provide access to a wide range of athletic facilities
during non-school hours. The locations of established schools are shown on
Figure PF-2, in Chapter 6: Public Facilities and Services of this volume.
Other methods to supplement the City’s park system include encouraging
the development of private open space and recreational amenities (beyond
public park requirements) within large residential projects.
Parks Standards and Guidelines
Park standards determine how many parkland acres the City should develop
based on population levels, locations of parks, and amount of existing
parkland. The City park standard is 5.0 acres of parkland for every 1,000
residents. In addition to the amount and size of parks, access to the park
from home or work is equally, if not more, important to accommodating
the park needs of the community. Therefore, in addition to the City park
standard, the City policy is to ensure there is a park or open space area within
a 10- to 20-minute walk, or approximately ½ mile of every residence and
most jobs. While a walk of 10 minutes may equate to ¼ to ½ mile to reach
a park, many factors such as physical ability, young children, or walking
environment can make both the walk and distance difficult. The time
and distance can also be much greater than would appear on a map as a
neighborhood may not be directly connected to sidewalks or trails leading
to the park meaning that a more circuitous route is required. Finally, crossing
busy roadways or rail lines can be uncomfortable for some, and must be
considered when siting a park and considering the radius of visitors the
park is intended to serve. As the parks must be accessible to the people, the
master plan for parks will refine the parkland metric to also consider the
path of travel and not just distance from home or office when planning for
new parks.
While there is no limit to the size of a park or range of amenities that can be
considered a park, Table OS-2 lists possible park facilities and amenities that
are intended for each type of park. Active park spaces include sports fields,
game courts, and playgrounds while passive parks generally consist of open
space with walking paths, sitting and picnic areas, and natural, undeveloped
areas. Rancho Cucamonga’s parks frequently contain both active and
passive spaces, with park size, location, and primary function influencing the
level of improvements.
Parks
142 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 143
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 3: OPEN SPACE
TABLE OS-2 PARKS AND OPEN SPACE GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS
Park Type Typical Size Population
Radius
Distance
Radius General Characteristics
Mini Parks Less than 1 acre
to 1.5 acres
Not
population
radius
sensitive
Within ¼ mile
(<10 minute)
walking distance
of immediate
area
Parks most often located in residential
neighborhoods and employment areas adjacent
to nonresidential buildings, or along trails.
Improvements are often based on size and
commonly feature grassy areas, shade trees,
benches, shelters, and playground equipment
for small children. Mini parks are intended to
serve a population within walking distance or
short biking distance.
Piazzas/
Greens Up to 2 acres
Not
population
radius
sensitive
Near high
density
residential,
entertainment
and offices
Pedestrian-oriented open spaces that serve as
formal or informal community gathering spaces
and may be used for local events and public
markets. They are typically less than 2 acres and
commonly include shade trees, landscaping,
water features, gazebos, performance areas,
public art and other similar features. Plazas
are primarily hardscape and largely shaped by
frontages. They may serve as an extension of
adjacent businesses such as cafes, restaurants,
and bars. Greens are landscaped open areas
typically serving as a central gathering space for
a community.
Neighborhood
Parks
About 1.5-15
acres
Up to 5 acres
per 1,000
residents
About a ½ mile
(<20 minute)
walking distance
from the
developed area
Neighborhood parks provide large unobstructed
areas for passive or active recreation serving
the needs of nearby residents and commonly
feature grassy areas, shade trees, tot lots, picnic
facilities, restrooms, and open fields. The parks
may also contain community gardens and
playgrounds and are primarily landscaped.
Usually located in residential areas but can also
be near high employment concentrations.
HIKING AND RIDING TRAILS
Rancho Cucamonga’s climate and terrain create perfect conditions for
moving about the City on foot, bicycle, or horse. Trails within the hillside
land preserves allow access into open space areas, where users can enjoy
the natural environment. Urban trails—consisting primarily of sidewalks
and paths within linear parks—increase connectivity by providing direct
access to neighborhoods and destinations. As shown in Figure OS-2,
there are gaps in the sidewalk and trail system throughout the city and
in the disadvantaged communities south of Foothill Boulevard. Both
the Land Use and Mobility chapters, emphasize connectivity between
neighborhoods and land uses is a focus to improve access, including
retrofitting areas that are already developed.
Park Type Typical Size Population
Radius
Distance
Radius General Characteristics
Community
Parks
About 10-50
acres
One site
per 25,000
residents
About a 5- to
10- mile service
radius
Parks located in large areas that are compatible
to surrounding uses with features such as
large grassy areas large picnic facilities, ponds
and/or water features, restrooms, on-site
parking, swimming pool, lighted athletic fields
and courts, recreation/community centers,
skate facilities, and other community-serving
recreational and cultural use amenities.
Special Use
Parks 50+ acres
One site
per 50,000
to 200,000
residents
Citywide
Spaces and facilities for unique recreational,
social, and cultural uses and activities. These
parks are typically over 50 acres and can
accommodate uses and facilities not usually
found in typical parks such as fairs, festivals,
and large-scale sports complexes. The largest
existing special use park is the Epicenter/Adult
Sports Complex, which contains adult softball,
baseball, and soccer fields, as well as a minor
league baseball stadium.
Natural/Open
Space
As resources
available (usually
large)
Not
population
radius
sensitive
As natural re-
source areas are
available
Areas often within or adjacent to conservation
areas or having unique natural elements such
as slope, biological resources, and drainages.
These areas are typically free from development
or may be developed at low intensity uses that
respect natural environmental characteristics
to support agricultural or land management
needs. Some open space areas may have or
support working lands such as farms, and
vineyards.
Greenways/
Trails
As resources are
available
Not
population
radius
sensitive
Within ¼ mile
(<10 minute)
walking distance
of immediate
area
Greenways and trails often make joint use of
existing utility corridors, excess right of way, or
as part of developed landscaping connecting
pedestrians to amenities. These areas are
dedicated paths that provide connections and
access to open space areas, neighborhoods, and
other destinations throughout the city on foot,
bicycle, or horse. Trails within the hillside land
preserves allow access into open space areas,
where users can enjoy the natural environment.
Urban trails—consisting primarily of sidewalks
and paths within linear parks—increase
connectivity by providing direct access to
neighborhoods and destinations.
Linear Parks Should connect
with trails
Not
population
radius
sensitive
Tied to
neighborhood
entries and park
sites
Passive or active open spaces that are
substantially longer than they are wide. They
are typically designed to facilitate connections
between destinations via walking and biking,
and can be used for stormwater management
and as protective buffers for wildlife habitat, fire
safety, and fuel modification.
Note: The City may add additional park and recreational amenities and have more classifications than shown in Table OS-2. Park sizes
may vary from those in the table as the City will maximize the potential for people to access parkland enabling small pieces of land to
serve a purpose even if the size might not fit into the ideal for a park.
144 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 145
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 3: OPEN SPACE
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Me tro lin k
16th St Cherry AveEast AveHighland Ave
San Bernardino Ave
Base Line Rd
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C I T Y O F
U P L A N D
C I T Y O F
O N T A R I O
C I T Y O F
F O N T A N AArchibald AveHaven AveMilliken AveFoothill BlvdCarnelian StArrow Hwy
Church St
T e r r a V i s t a P k w y
6th St Rochester AveSapphire StHermosa AveHellman AveBanyan St
S A N B E R N A R D I N O N A T I O N A L F O R E S T
C I T Y O F
F O N T A N A
S a n G a b r i e l M o u n t a i n s
Deer
Canyon
Day
Canyon
East
Etiwanda
Canyon San
Sevaine
Canyon
County
Canyon
ChaffeyCollege
n¤Vineyard Ave19th St
Hillside Rd
DEM ENS CREEK CHAN N ELCUCAMONGACREEK DAY CREEK CHANNELE
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CREEKCHANNELSAN SEVAINE WASHDAY CREEK CHANNELDEERDEER CREEK CHANNELCANYONETIWANDACREEKCHANNELAlmond St
Amethyst AveBeryl StC h u r c h S t
Wilson Ave
Lemon Ave
Victoria StDay Creek BlvdWardman Bullock RdPowerline Rd
Metrolink Station Etiwanda AveVictoriaGardens
4th St
Jersey Blvd9th StTurquoise AvThe Epicenter
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S P H E R E O F I N F L U E N C E
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Fehr & Peers, 2021
O N TA R I O I N T E R N A T I O N A L A I R P O R T
Disadvantaged Communities
¡Trailheads
!Points of Interest
!Schools
Equestrian Trails
Community Trails
Regional Trails
Existing Sidewalk
Metrolink
Rancho Cucamonga City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Railroads
Parks
TRAILS AND SIDEWALKS GAPS AND DISADVANTAGED COMMUNITIES
FIGURE OS-2 TRAILS AND SIDEWALKS
Points of Interest
School
Existing Sidewalk
Regional Trails
Community Trails
Equestrian Trails
Trailheads
Disadvantaged Communities
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Adjacent City Limits
Metrolink/BNSF Railroad
Parks
Fehr & Peers, 2020 | Sources: City
of Rancho Cucamonga, 2019;
CalEnviroScreen 3.0, 2018
GOALS AND POLICIES
GOAL OS-1 OPEN SPACE. A complete, connected network
of diverse parks, trails, and rural and natural open space
that support a wide variety of recreational, educational and
outdoor activities.
OS-1.1 Equitable Access to Parks. Strive to ensure that at least one
park or other public open space is within safe, comfortable
walk from homes and jobs, without crossing major streets
except at signalized crossings. Equitable access to parks
should be determined based on the fundamental character
of the place (rural, suburban, urban) and corresponding
transportation infrastructure.
OS-1.2 Underserved Communities. Prioritize the provision of new
trails, parks, plazas, and other open space types in areas of the
city that are underserved by parks, services, and amenities.
OS-1.3 Accessible Parks. Require parks be designed with special
attention to usability by and safety for small children, seniors,
and those with mobility, sight, hearing or other special needs.
OS-1.4 Design Character and Public Art. Require neighborhood
parks, greens, and playgrounds to be designed as an integral
element of their Community Planning Area, reflecting the
design character, art, and culture, of that neighborhood, center
or district.
OS-1.5 Design for Safety. Require the use of Crime Prevention
Through Environmental Design (CPTED) design techniques
such as providing clear lines of sight, appropriate lighting, and
wayfinding signs to ensure that parks are safe and easy to
navigate.
OS-1.6 New Development. Ensure that new residential and non-
residential developments provide adequate on-site recreational
and open space amenities consistent with applicable General
Plan Designations, and the needs of new development.
OS-1.7 New Parks. Provide adequate park and recreational facilities
that meet the City standard of 5.0 acres of parkland (including
trails and special facilities) for every 1,000 persons.
OS-1.8 Central Park. Continue to develop Central Park as envisioned
in the Central Park Master Plan.
OS-1.9 Joint Use. Pursue and expand joint use of public lands that
are available and suitable for recreational purposes, including
school district properties and flood control district, water
district, and other utility properties.
146 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 147
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 3: OPEN SPACE
OS-1.10 Buffer Zones. Provide buffer zones, as appropriate and
necessary, to serve as managed open space for wildfire safety
and vegetation fuel modification. Buffer zones may include
trails, small recreational amenities, information kiosks and
signage, and even staging points for fire vehicles.
OS-1.11 Locally Grown Food. Support small-scale locally grown food
in front/backyard gardens, community gardens, parks/open
space areas, and utility and flood control easements.
GOAL OS-2 TRAILS. A complete, connected network of
diverse trails and connected open space that improves
access to all areas of the city and encourages non-
motorized activities.
OS-2.1 Trail Corridors. Extend, improve and complete the multi-
purpose trail network, wherever possible, by utilizing existing
flood control channel and utility corridor rights-of-way as
public trail corridors.
OS-2.2 Connectivity. Connect trails in Rancho Cucamonga to trails
in the San Bernardino National Forest and other hillside open
space areas.
OS-2.3 Trailheads. Provide trailhead amenities such as parking,
restrooms, information boards, and maps.
OS-2.4 Equestrian Trails. Continue to maintain and pursue the
development of planned trails and facilities for equestrian use.
OS-2.5 Utility Corridors. Preserve the primary function of utility
corridors while providing every reasonable opportunity for
shared public use for active mobility and recreational purposes.
OS-2.6 Design for Heat. Consider extreme heat in the design of
streets, parks, trails, and playgrounds to support activity
throughout the year and in all weather conditions by including
shade trees, shade structures, water fountains, splash pads,
lighting for night play in most spaces.
OS-2.7 Access. Require new development to provide access to
existing or future trails and provide appropriate trail amenities
(e.g., benches, drinking fountains, hitching posts, bike stands,
and other amenities).
OS-2.8 Art and Education. Require public are, education, and
recreation features on trails, where appropriate.
OS-2.9 Trail and Park Sponsorship. Support the creation of
partnerships with organizations to sponsor and maintain green
spaces, parks, trails, and community gardens.
Route 66 Community Garden Red Hill Park
North Etiwanda Preserve
Epicenter—home of the Rancho Cucamonga Quakes
Rancho Cucamonga Equestrian Community Riders
Etiwanda Falls Trail
148 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA
MOBILITY AND ACCESS IS…
the opportunity to move around the city in an efficient manner using a
variety of methods. Everything from walking to skateboarding, transit to
trucks is included in this chapter. The ability to move around enables us to
get to jobs, goods, services, and education and enjoy entertainment, family,
and friends. While the car has been the dominant mode of transportation
for years, as the city grows there is an opportunity to develop more mobility
choices that focus on connecting people to places in the city. These new
opportunities will promote health, sustainability, and economic benefits
for the residents and change how the city is developed. While autonomous
vehicles, car share, electric scooters and the like are evolving technologies,
they are not yet a large part of the mobility picture for the city.
Mobility & Access
149
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 4: MOBILITY & ACCESS
STATE LEGAL REQUIREMENTS
California law requires that the General Plan include an element that
identifies existing and proposed major thoroughfares, transportation
routes, terminals, any military airports and ports, and other local public
utilities and facilities, all correlated with the Land Use Element of the
Plan. The law also stipulates that the City plan for a balanced, multimodal
transportation network that meets the needs of all users of streets, roads,
and highways for safe and convenient travel. A balanced network means
a system that provides for all users of all ages and abilities; including
bicyclists, children, persons with disabilities, motorists, movers of
commercial goods, pedestrians, users of public transportation, and seniors.
HEART OF THE MATTER
Planners have all sorts of terms to talk about mobility, but it all comes down
to giving people choices in how they move about their city. The automobile
is the dominant choice for most people because it is convenient but it also
the most expensive for the person and the City. Because of the emphasis
on the automobile there is an urban landscape where cars can move about
more easily than people, and the lack of access is a barrier to much the City
has to offer. The lack of connectivity between neighborhoods discourages
walking and biking for mobility rather than only recreation. For some
the lack of access also means a simple trip to the store is more difficult
than it should be. For example, some areas of the City lack complete
sidewalks which makes walking difficult. This chapter does not advocate
the abandonment of the automobile, but rather requires that roads be
designed to include people who are not in automobiles. It should be
possible to walk or bike to any part of this world class city safely, therefore
this chapter includes policies to extend improvements into older areas of
the City where people lack these choices.
150 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 151
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 4: MOBILITY & ACCESS
OVERVIEW OF THIS CHAPTER
Mobility needs to connect people to places. In Rancho Cucamonga, this
includes connecting residents to their employers, connecting residents to
destinations within the city, and connecting the rest of the Inland Empire
to Rancho Cucamonga. Ultimately, the mobility system needs to provide for
safe, enjoyable, and healthy accessibility within the city.
The following mobility goals serve to guide and direct long-term planning
in the City of Rancho Cucamonga.
+Goal MA-1 Regional Mobility Hub. A multimodal transportation hub
that connects regional and local destinations.
+Goal MA-2 Access for All. A safe, efficient, accessible, and equitable
transportation system that serves the mobility needs of all users.
+Goal MA-3 Safety. A transportation network that adapts to changing
mobility needs while preserving sustainable community values.
+Goal MA-4 Goods Movement. An efficient goods movement system
that ensures timely deliveries without compromising quality of life,
safety and smooth traffic flow for residents and businesses.
+Goal MA-5 Sustainable Transportation. A transportation network that
adapts to changing mobility needs.
This is accomplished through a focus on the available rights-of-way to
create better connections within the city using utility corridors and flood
control channels to create an active transportation system and repurposing
“extra” roadway width to provide additional bicycle, pedestrian, and transit
facilities. In this fashion, the City is implementing complete streets by
designing for people of all ages and all abilities. This chapter also furthers
the coordination with others to make Rancho Cucamonga the mobility
center of the Inland Empire. Some of the big ideas include support for the
following innovative mobility options: Brightline high speed rail connection
from the High Desert and Las Vegas to the Cucamonga Station, the Boring
Company’s effort to connect the Cucamonga Station to the Ontario Airport,
and a future regional north/south transit connection from the Cucamonga
Station to Riverside County generally paralleling the I-15 corridor. The
overarching approach to mobility and access is to provide options for
people to move around the city and the region
Streets for all users and all modes of
travel
BECOMING THE REGIONAL HUB
OF THE INLAND EMPIRE
The following planned regional connection activities are already underway
and will assist the City in becoming the regional hub of the Inland Empire:
HIGH-SPEED RAIL
Brightline West, a 260-mile privately funded high-speed rail system, is
planned to connect Las Vegas to the Los Angeles area. The proposed
Brightline West extension would terminate at the Cucamonga Station,
providing connectivity to the existing regional Metrolink system and future
connections to the Ontario Airport. The area around the Cucamonga
Station is planned for transit-oriented mixed-use development as shown in
Volume 2 Chapter 2: Focus Areas.
CONNECTION TO ONTARIO AIRPORT
This chapter supports the Ontario Airport Loop, a 2.8-mile tunnel, that
would connect from the Cucamonga Station to Ontario Airport. The tunnel
is more efficient and cost effective than above-ground rail and will use the
latest electric vehicle technology.
LA METRO L LINE EXTENSION
The Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (LA Metro)
has developed plans for extending operations to San Bernardino County
with the planned extension of the L Line (also referred to as the Foothill
Gold Line). The two options under consideration are along the Pacific
Electric right-of-way to Foothill Boulevard or along the Metrolink right-
of-way and then along either Cucamonga Creek or Vineyard Avenue to
Ontario International Airport. San Bernardino County Transportation
Authority (SBCTA) is currently proposing to replace the portion of the L
Line Extension in San Bernardino County with Gold Link, which utilizes a
different technology to connect to the Metrolink system. The City Council
adopted a resolution supporting enhanced train service to the Ontario
Airport via the Cucamonga Station and a connection to the wider Metrolink
network via high quality transit to provide better regional connectivity.
BUS RAPID TRANSIT
SBCTA has initiated the West Valley Connector (WVC) project, a 35-mile-
long Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) route connecting Rancho Cucamonga,
Pomona, Montclair, Ontario, and Fontana. The first phase of the project will
include the Milliken Alignment, starting from the Pomona Regional Transit
Center to Victoria Gardens in Rancho Cucamonga. LA Metro L Line
Onatario Airport Loop
Brightline West High Speed Rail
Cucamonga Station
152 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 153
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 4: MOBILITY & ACCESS
PROPOSED REGIONAL CONNECTIONS
The convergence of high-speed rail, the connection to the Ontario Airport,
and redevelopment around the HART District in the City of Rancho
Cucamonga provides a unique opportunity for the City to become the
mobility center of the metropolitan region. Although much of this activity
is ongoing, this Mobility Chapter further supports the connection of transit
south into Riverside County; connecting Rancho Cucamonga to Eastvale
and Corona.
In addition to this new north-south transit connection, this Plan proposes
a new circulator route within the city that connects the Cucamonga
Station (including high speed rail, BRT and the Ontario Airport Loop)
to Victoria Gardens, the Civic Center, and the mixed-use corridors on
Foothill Boulevard and Haven Avenue. This will provide access to the
key destinations within the city and support connectivity to the transit
investments that converge at the Cucamonga Station. The planned and
proposed transit connections are shown on Figure M-1.
The City also identifies the need for a loop route to connect the northern
part of the city to the Cucamonga Station along with some intermediate
connections. These proposed connections are also shown on Figure M-1.
LOCAL MOBILITY HUBS
Enhanced transit by itself does not usually connect people from their
origin to their ultimate destination—people need assistance making
the connection between the transit station and their destination. This
seemingly small distance (often less than a mile) is referred to as first/last
mile connection and is often the hardest part of the journey to solve for
people. The idea of a mobility hub is to bring major transit and last-mile
solutions together in one place. This could allow for ride-share or car pool
pickup/drop off points, electric bicycle charging, lockers for bicycles, and
similar design elements.
One way to assist with that connectivity is to identify key local mobility
hubs at major stations along Foothill Boulevard. A mobility hub concept
is shown on Figure M-2 and shows how concept mobility hubs could be
implemented to facilitate multi-model connectivity to/from the transit
stations. These concepts illustrate specific attributes, such as designated
locations for car share, drop-off/pick-up lanes, bicycle/scooter share stations,
and designated bus stops, that serve the first/last mile connectivity
concerns by providing a consolidated accessibility hub that connects the
community to the enhanced transit network.
Planned High Speed Rail
Planned Bus Rapid Transit
Planned Tunnel Connection
Proposed Bus Route
Proposed Bus Rapid Transit
Proposed Local Circulator (possible Tunnel
Connection)
Proposed Transit Connection
Omnitrans Bus Routes####!@
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Campus AveBurlington Northern San ta F e Ra ilwa y
Metrolin k
16th St Cherry AveEast AveHighland Ave
San Bernardino Ave
Base Line Rd
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C I T Y O FUPLAND
C I T Y O F
O N T A R I O
C I T Y O FFONTANAArchibald AveHaven AveMilliken AveFoothill BlvdCarnelian StArrow Hwy
Church St
T e r r a V i s t a P k w y
6th St Rochester AveSapphire StHermosa AveHellman AveBanyan St
S A N B E R N A R D I N O N A T I O N A L F O R E S T
C I T Y O F
F O N T A N A
S a n G a b r i e l M o u n t a i n s
Deer
Canyon
Day
Canyon
East
Etiwanda
Canyon San
Sevaine
Canyon
County
Canyon
ChaffeyCollege
n¤Vineyard Ave19th St
Hillside Rd
DEM EN S C REEK C HANNELCUCAMONGACREEK DAY CREEK CHANNELE
TI
WA
N
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CREEKCHANNELSAN SEVAINE WASHDAY CREEK CHANNELDEERDEER CREEK CHANNELCANYONETIWANDACREEKCHANNELAlmond St
Amethyst AveBeryl StC h u r c h S t
Wilson Ave
Lemon Ave
Victoria StDay Creek BlvdWardman Bullock RdPowerline Rd
Metrolink
Station Etiwanda AveVictoriaGardens
4th St
Jersey Blvd9th StTurquoise AvThe Epicenter
·|}þ210
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//66
S P H E R E O F I N F L U E N C E
0 1 20.5 Miles °O N T A R I O I N T E R N A T I O N A L A I R P O R T
Planned High Speed Rail
Planned Bus Rapid Transit
Planned Tunnel Connection
Proposed Bus Route
Proposed Bus Rapid Transit
Proposed Local Circulator
(Possible Tunnel Connection)
Proposed Transit Connection
Omnitrans Bus Routes
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Rancho Cucamonga Station
Metrolink Tracks
Railroads
Parks
Fehr & Peers, 2021
TRANSIT PLAN
!
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FIGURE M-1 TRANSIT PLAN
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Cucamonga Station
Metrolink Tracks
Railroads
Parks
Fehr & Peers, 2021
154 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 155
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 4: MOBILITY & ACCESS
P P
P
P
Mobility Hub Concepts
High Density Area Along Streetfront
Medium Density Area around Community Space
FIGURE M-2 LOCAL MOBILITY HUB CONCEPTS COMPLETE STREETS
According to Smart Growth America, streets should be appropriately
designed to meet the needs of all users of all ages and abilities. To
accomplish this goal, commonly known as “Complete Streets,” the City will
consider the following components when implementing complete streets:
+Improve safety for all
+Consider all users of all ages and abilities
+Focus on vulnerable users
+Consider innovative street and intersection designs whenever possible
+Prioritize modes based on guidance provided in the General Plan
+Implement Complete Streets during planning, engineering, and
maintenance activities
While some transportation experts interpret complete streets
implementation to mean that all streets within a jurisdiction must
accommodate all users to the same level, others see it as more appropriate
to develop specific networks of streets to prioritize specific modes,
although most modes should be accommodated on most streets
where possible and practical. The City supports the latter approach to
implementing a complete streets policy and opted for implementing the
Institute of Transportation Engineers’ (ITE) layered networks approach.
This approach is intended to assist the City in identifying the priority
mode along corridors depending on the context of the adjacent land
use. The layered networks approach identifies preferred travel modes
(auto, pedestrian, bicycle, and/or transit) for each street. Non-preferred
travel modes are accommodated along the street, but their service is not
prioritized.
Figure M-3 depicts the City’s layered network complete street system
and identifies the City’s complete streets strategy for prioritizing modes
based on street typology. A street network that prioritizes pedestrians and
bicycles is shown on Figure M-4. Figure M-5 shows the network of streets
where automotive travel is prioritized. As shown on the maps, it is this
network of priority modes that provides a comprehensive mobility system
within the city.
Complete streets provide comfortable
and safe environments for all users
156 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 157
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 4: MOBILITY & ACCESS
FIGURE M-3 LAYERED ROADWAY NETWORK
Freeway
Arterial Roadway
Boulevard
Collector Street
Bicycle Corridor
Multi-Use Trail
Local Streets
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Cucamonga Station
Metrolink
Railroads
Parks
Fehr & Peers, 2021Priority Modes of Travel
Typology Auto Bike Pedestrian Transit
Freeway P X X P
Arterial Roadway P A A P
Boulevard A P P P
Collector Street P P P A
Bicycle Corridor A P P A
Multi-Use Trail X P P X
Local Street A P P A
P=Priority Mode, A=Allowable Mode, X=Prohibited ModeCampus AveBurlington Northern San ta F e Railway
Metrolink
16th St Cherry AveEast AveHighland Ave
San Bernardino Ave
Base Line Rd
%&'(10
C I T Y O F
U P L A N D
C I T Y O FONTARIO
C I T Y O F
F O N T A N AArchibald AveHaven AveMilliken AveFoothill BlvdCarnelian StArrow Hwy
Church St
T e r r a V i s t a P k w y
6th St Rochester AveSapphire StHermosa AveHellman AveBanyan St
S A N B E R N A R D I N O N A T I O N A L F O R E S T
C I T Y O F
F O N T A N A
S a n G a b r i e l M o u n t a i n s
Deer
Canyon
Day
Canyon
East
Etiwanda
Canyon San
Sevaine
Canyon
County
Canyon
ChaffeyCollege
n¤Vineyard Ave19th St
Hillside Rd
DEM EN S CREEK C HA NNELCUCAMONGACREEK DAY CREEK CHANNELE
TI
WA
N
D
A
CREEKCHANNELSAN SEVAINE WASHDAY CREEK CHANNELDEERDEER CREEK CHANNELCANYONETIWANDACREEKCHANNELAlmond St
Amethyst AveBeryl StC h u r c h S t
Wilson Ave
Lemon Ave
Victoria StDay Creek BlvdWardman Bullock RdPowerline Rd
Metrolink Station Etiwanda AveVictoriaGardens
4th St
Jersey Blvd9th StTurquoise AvThe Epicenter
·|}þ210
%&'(10
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//66
S P H E R E O F I N F L U E N C E
0 1 20.5 Miles °
Fehr & Peers, 2021
O N T A R I O I N T E R N A T I O N A L A I R P O R T
Freeway
Arterial Roadway
Transit Corridor
Collector Street
Bicycle Corridor
Multi-Use Trail
Metrolink
Rancho Cucamonga City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Railroads
Local Streets
Parks
Layered Roadway Network
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16th St Cherry AveEast AveHighland Ave
San Bernardino Ave
Base Line Rd
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C I T Y O F
U P L A N D
C I T Y O F
O N T A R I O
C I T Y O F
F O N T A N AArchibald AveHaven AveMilliken AveFoothill BlvdCarnelian StArrow Hwy
Church St
T e r r a V i s t a P k w y
6th St Rochester AveSapphire StHermosa AveHellman AveBanyan St
S A N B E R N A R D I N O N A T I O N A L F O R E S T
C I T Y O F
F O N T A N A
S a n G a b r i e l M o u n t a i n s
Deer
Canyon
Day
Canyon
East
Etiwanda
Canyon San
Sevaine
Canyon
County
Canyon
ChaffeyCollege
n¤Vineyard Ave19th St
Hillside Rd
DEM EN S C REEK C HANNELCUCAMONGACREEK DAY CREEK CHANNELE
TI
WA
N
D
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CREEKCHANNELSAN SEVAINE WASHDAY CREEK CHANNELDEERDEER CREEK CHANNELCANYONETIWANDACREEKCHANNELAlmond St
Amethyst AveBeryl StC h u r c h S t
Wilson Ave
Lemon Ave
Victoria StDay Creek BlvdWardman Bullock RdPowerline Rd
Metrolink Station Etiwanda AveVictoriaGardens
4th St
Jersey Blvd9th StTurquoise AvThe Epicenter
·|}þ210
%&'(10
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//66
S P H E R E O F I N F L U E N C E
0 1 20.5 Miles °
Fehr & Peers, 2021
O N T A R I O I N T E R N A T I O N A L A I R P O R T
"¡Trailheads
Bicycle and Pedestrian Priority
¹Trail Corridors
Equestrian Trails
Community Trails
Regional Trails
Metrolink
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Railroads
Parks
Bicycle and Pedestrian Priority
FIGURE M-4 BICYCLE AND PEDESTRIAN PRIORITY
Bicycle and Pedestrian Priority
Trail Corridors
Proposed Connections
Equestrian Trails
Community Trails
Regional Trails
Trailheads
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Cucamonga Station
Metrolink
Railroads
Parks
Fehr & Peers, 2021
159
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 5: HOUSING
158 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA Campus AveBu rlington Northern S anta Fe Railway
Metrolink
16th St Cherry AveEast AveHighland Ave
San Bernardino Ave
Base Line Rd
%&'(10
C I T Y O FUPLAND
C I T Y O F
O N T A R I O
C I T Y O FFONTANAArchibald AveHaven AveMilliken AveFoothill BlvdCarnelian StArrow Hwy
Church St
T e r r a V i s t a P k w y
6th St Rochester AveSapphire StHermosa AveHellman AveBanyan St
S A N B E R N A R D I N O N A T I O N A L F O R E S T
C I T Y O F
F O N T A N A
S a n G a b r i e l M o u n t a i n s
Deer
Canyon
Day
Canyon
East
Etiwanda
Canyon San
Sevaine
Canyon
County
Canyon
ChaffeyCollege
n¤Vineyard Ave19th St
Hillside Rd
DEM ENS C R EEK C HAN NELCUCAMONGACREEK DAY CREEK CHANNELE
TI
WA
N
D
A
CREEKCHANNELSAN SEVAINE WASHDAY CREEK CHANNELDEERDEER CREEK CHANNELCANYONETIWANDACREEKCHANNELAlmond St
Amethyst AveBeryl StC h u r c h S t
Wilson Ave
Lemon Ave
Victoria StDay Creek BlvdWardman Bullock RdPowerline Rd
Metrolink Station Etiwanda AveVictoriaGardens
4th St
Jersey Blvd9th StTurquoise AvThe Epicenter
·|}þ210
%&'(10
%&'(15
//66
S P H E R E O F I N F L U E N C E
0 1 20.5 Miles °
F
Note: See Figure M-8 for information on additional capacity needs.
ehr & Peers, 2021
O N T A R I O I N T E R N A T I O N A L A I R P O R T
Auto Priority
C Proposed Interchange
][Proposed Railroad Grade Separation
Metrolink
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Railroads
Parks
Automobile Priority
Metrolink Sta�on¤][FIGURE M-5 AUTOMOBILE PRIORITY
Auto Priority
Proposed Interchange
Proposed Railroad Grade Separation
Proposed Street
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Cucamonga Station
Metrolink
Railroads
Parks
Fehr & Peers, 2021Note: See Figure M-8 for information on additional capacity needs in the Southeast Area.
WHAT ARE COMPLETE STREETS?
Complete Streets are streets for everyone. They are designed and operated to prioritize
safety, comfort, and access to destinations for all people who use the street, especially
people who have experienced systemic underinvestment or whose needs have not been
met through a traditional transportation approach, including older adults, people living with
disabilities, people who cannot afford or do not have access to a car, and Black, Native, and
Hispanic or Latino/a/x communities. Complete Streets make it easy to cross the street, walk to
shops, jobs, and schools, bicycle to work, and move actively with assistive devices. They allow
buses to run on time and make it safe for people to walk or move actively to and from train
stations.
Creating Complete Streets means transportation agencies must change their approach
to community roads. By adopting a Complete Streets policy, communities direct their
transportation planners and engineers to routinely design and operate the entire right of way
to prioritize safer slower speeds for all people who use the road, over high speeds for motor
vehicles. This means that every transportation project will make the street network better
and safer for people walking, biking, driving, riding transit, and moving actively with assistive
devices—making your town a better place to live.
- SmartGrowth America, 2021
MULTI-MODAL LEVEL OF SERVICE
(MMLOS)
MMLOS is an approach that evaluates the service levels for all modes of
travel on a street. For example, a street with a lot of travel lanes and a high
rate of speed, the service level may be good from the driver’s perspective
but poor from a cyclist or pedestrian perspective.
Although evaluating non-automotive Level of Service is still an evolving
practice, the City can find value in this analysis and will monitor this
evolution and evaluate priority modes identified for each street to ensure
the street is designed to maintain service levels for that priority user.
The City will update traffic impact study guidelines as needed to reflect
the City’s preferred methodologies for evaluating MMLOS. Rancho
Cucamonga’s residents do value high service levels along prioritized
corridors. As such, MMLOS goals are established through this policy
document for key corridors in the city.
160 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 161
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 4: MOBILITY & ACCESS
ROADWAY TYPOLOGIES
Functional classifications of roadway networks categorize streets by
purpose, location, and typical land uses to which they provide access. In
Rancho Cucamonga, the local street system is organized into a hierarchy
of nine roadway types according to the Circulation Plan in the 2010 Rancho
Cucamonga General Plan. These nine types are Local Streets, Collector
Streets, Modified Collector Streets with Median, Secondary Streets,
Modified Secondary Streets with Median, Major Arterials, Modified Major
Arterials with Median, Major Divided Arterials, and Major Divided Highways.
The functional classification system for roads is increasingly considered an
automobile-centric method of planning and does not typically consider
travel characteristics and multimodal priorities (e.g., cyclists, pedestrians,
and transit users); consequently, this classification is becoming less
common in California cities. Because streets oftentimes have multiple
functions, defining street “typologies” beyond the existing functional
roadway classifications could better support a multimodal transportation
network, assist in implementing complete streets, and generally match
the context of the land use environment. Due to Rancho Cucamonga’s
commitment to expanding opportunities for connections and mode
choices throughout the city, this chapter acknowledges the traditional road
classifications, but establishes policies that go well beyond maintaining this
outdated system.
The following pages provide additional detail for each roadway typology
identified in the City’s layered network complete street system, including
definitions, an example cross section and photo, and information on
priority modes of travel. Exact street dimensions are not identified in this
chapter, rather, they will be developed and approved by the City Engineer.
The roadway typologies are:
+Freeway
+Arterial Roadway
+Boulevard
+Collector Street
+Bicycle Corridor
+Multi-Use Trail
+Local Street
Two major freeways serve Rancho
Cucamonga—SR-210 and I-15
Travel
Lane
Travel
Lane
Travel
Lane
Travel
Lane
Travel
Lane
Median with
Barrier
Travel
Lane
Travel
Lane
Travel
Lane
NEXT EXIT
Sidewalk SidewalkTravel
Lane
Travel
Lane
Travel
Lane
Travel
Lane
Landscaped
Median
Travel
Lane
Travel
Lane
FREEWAY
Freeways, which are under the jurisdiction of and operated by Caltrans,
provide for inter-regional travel by automobile. They have high vehicle
speeds and can provide access for transit vehicles (although automobiles
are prioritized). Bicycles and pedestrians are prohibited on freeways.
Freeways in Rancho Cucamonga include State Route 210 (SR-210) and
Interstate 15 (I-15). SR-210 runs through the northern portion of the city and
I-15 extends through the southeastern area of the city. Interstate-10 (I-10) is
located approximately 0.7 miles south of the city limit.
Example cross-section of freeway
Example cross-section of arterial roadway with large right-of-way
Modes of Travel - Freeway
Pedestrian Prohibited
Bike Prohibited
Transit Prioritized
Auto Prioritized
Modes of Travel - Arterial Roadway
Pedestrian Allowed
Bike Allowed
Transit Prioritized
Auto Prioritized
ARTERIAL ROADWAY
Arterial roadways are the primary links in the city’s vehicular transportation
system even as they provide for all modes of travel. These facilities are
oftentimes four to six lanes with raised medians and higher vehicle speeds
are anticipated. Key facilities include portions of Base Line Road, Arrow
Route, Archibald Avenue, Milliken Avenue, Etiwanda Avenue, East Avenue
and 4th Street. Portions of Arrow Route through Cucamonga Town Center
and residential neighborhoods prioritize pedestrian and bike modes to
contribute to and maintain the character of these areas.
Landscaped
Median
Travel
Lane
Travel
Lane
Travel
Lane
Travel
Lane
Sidewalk SidewalkBike Lane Bike Lane
Example cross-section of arterial roadway with bike lanes
162 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 163
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 4: MOBILITY & ACCESS
Sidewalk SidewalkParkingParkingBike Lane Bike LaneTravel Lane
(Local Trac)
Travel Lane
(Local Trac)
Bus Lane Bus Lane Bus StopBus Stop Travel Lane MedianTravel Lane Travel Lane Travel Lane
MedianSidewalk SidewalkParkingParkingBike Route/
Sharrow
Bus Lane Bus Lane Bus StopBus Stop Travel Lane Travel Lane Travel Lane Travel Lane Bike Route/
Sharrow
Sidewalk SidewalkParkingParkingBike Lane Bike LaneBus Lane Bus LaneTravel LaneTravel Lane Travel Lane Travel LaneTravel LaneTravel LaneBus Stop Bus Stop
BOULEVARD
Boulevards promote economic development around high-quality transit
service, including light rail (LRT), streetcar, and bus rapid transit (BRT), while
fostering a pedestrian scale environment in which walking and biking
actively complement public transit. As major generators of pedestrian
traffic, heavy surface transit routes should be prioritized for pedestrian
safety improvements in both the immediate surrounding area and major
access routes within the transit access shed such as Foothill Boulevard and
Haven Avenue south of Foothill Boulevard.
Multi-Use PathMulti-Use Path Floating
Bus Stop
Floating
Bus Stop
Bus LaneBus Lane MedianTravel Lane Travel Lane Travel Lane Travel LaneTravel Lane Travel Lane
Modes of Travel - Boulevard
Pedestrian Prioritized
Bike Prioritized
Transit Prioritized
Auto Allowed
Example cross-sections of arterial roadway
**Transit and station requirements shall reflect current transit provider standards and/or will be based on input from the City Engineer.
Travel
Lane
Travel
Lane
Sidewalk SidewalkParkingParkingBike Route/
Sharrow
Bike Route/
Sharrow
Landscaped
Median
Travel
Lane
Travel
Lane
Travel
Lane
Travel
Lane
Sidewalk SidewalkBike Lane Bike Lane
COLLECTOR STREET
These are streets that are intended to connect neighborhoods together.
They should provide accessibility for bicycles, pedestrians, and vehicles;
however, speeds should be managed to ensure that all modes safely travel
together. These corridors are specified along numerous street segments
throughout the City and can substantially vary in terms of width. For
example, Church Street is a four-lane roadway and would include bicycle
lanes as well as raised medians. In contrast, segments such as Banyan
Street, are similar to local streets with smaller rights-of-way. These narrower
streets would have Class III bikeways and “sharrows” as well as street
furniture in some areas to encourage pedestrian activity.
Note: A shared lane, or “sharrow,” marking is a road marking which
indicates a shared lane for both bicycles and automobiles. Sharrows differ
from bike lanes in that they do not include a line separating the path
between vehicles and bicycles.
Example cross-section of collector street with large right-of-way
Example cross-section of collector street with small right-of-way
Modes of Travel - Collector
Street
Pedestrian Prioritized
Bike Prioritized
Transit Allowed
Auto Prioritized
164 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 165
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 4: MOBILITY & ACCESS
Sidewalk SidewalkParkingParkingTravel Lane Travel Lane Travel Lane Travel LaneCycle Track Cycle TrackLandscaped
Median
BICYCLE CORRIDOR
These roadways provide the main bicycle network for the city. Specifically,
vehicle speeds should be managed to travel at 35 miles per hour or less and
bicycle infrastructure should be maximized. This typically includes buffered
bicycle lanes or separated bicycle lanes on the roadway or, at a minimum,
seven-foot bicycle lanes. Separation can be provided by plastic bollards,
raised medians, and/or planters. Corridors include portions of Carnelian
Street, Hellman Avenue, Hermosa Avenue, 19th Street, Base Line Road,
Church Street, Jersey Boulevard and 6th Street. Raised landscaped medians
may also be included in some areas to further encourage slower speeds.
Note: Separated Bicycle Lanes, also called cycle tracks or Class IV bicycle
facilities, are delineated right-of-way assigned to bicyclists that have a
physical separation between them and a vehicle.
BIKE PATH
NOMOTORVEHICLESORMOTORIZEDBICYCLES
MULTI-USE TRAIL
Description: These facilities allow for pedestrians and bicycles only. They
are envisioned along the utility channels in the City. These facilities provide
bicycles and pedestrians with their own space for travel. These pathways
are also known as Class I bikeways.
Note: Class I Bikeways provide a separated corridor that is not served by
streets and highways and is away from the influence of parallel streets;
they are for non-vehicle use only.
Modes of Travel - Bicycle
Corridor
Pedestrian Prioritized
Bike Prioritized
Transit Allowed
Auto Allowed
Modes of Travel - Bicycle Corridor
Pedestrian Prioritized
Bike Prioritized
Transit Prohibited
Auto Prohibited
Example cross-sections of bicycle corridor
Example cross-sections of bicycle corridor
Modes of Travel - Local Street
Pedestrian Prioritized
Bike Prioritized
Transit Allowed
Auto Allowed
LOCAL STREET
Local streets are typically located in neighborhoods and provide access to
adjacent land uses (typically housing). On-street parking is typically allowed
on both sides of the street. They should be designed to accommodate
automobiles, but at a slow rate of speed (ideally 15 to 20 miles per hour).
They prioritize pedestrians walking on sidewalks and bicycles typically take
the lane within the roadway; Class III bikeway ‘sharrows’ may be provided in
some areas. Traffic calming attributes (such as bulb-outs or other devices
that minimize speeds) may be present.
Travel
Lane
Travel
Lane
Sidewalk SidewalkParkingParkingBike Lane Bike Lane
Example cross-section of local street with Class II bike lanes
Example cross-section of local street with Class III sharrows
Sidewalk SidewalkParkingParkingBike Route/
Sharrow
Bike Route/
Sharrow
166 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 167
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 4: MOBILITY & ACCESS
MOBILITY CHOICES FOR
PEOPLE
A balanced transportation system in Rancho Cucamonga should provide
safe and convenient options for people to bicycle, walk, or take transit to
their destinations.
PEDESTRIANS
Walking is an environmentally friendly and cost-efficient mode of
transportation that enhances both personal and social well-being. This
mode of travel also provides many public access, health and economic
benefits. Well-designed pedestrian facilities are safe, attractive, convenient,
and easy to use.
Most, but not all, areas of the city have sidewalks (about 76% of streets)
and crosswalks. Areas with no existing sidewalks are mainly located in the
northwest, southwest, south and eastern portions of the city. While the
sidewalk gaps in the established neighborhoods in the northwest part
may be intentional, the gap closures in the southern part are important
to address as this area of the community was generally built prior to
local requirements for including sidewalk in the street design, members
of community in this area may be more likely to get around by biking
and walking, and the area experiences a higher density of pedestrian-
vehicle collisions. Figure M-6 shows key areas where the City will focus the
implementation of pedestrian facility connectivity.
BICYCLES
In addition to meeting some of the community’s transportation needs,
bicycling provides many improved accesses to public amenities, and
several health and economic benefits. There are many opportunities to
improve the quantity and quality of bicycle facilities and the connectivity
to key destinations (employment centers, residential areas, and high use
activity centers).
Bicycle facilities in Rancho Cucamonga consist of bike lanes, routes, trails,
and paths, as well as bike parking. On-street bicycle facilities are classified
into four categories depending on their design and function:
+Class I Bike Path. Provides a separated corridor that is not served
by streets and highways and is away from the influence of parallel
streets. Class I bikeways are for non-vehicle use only with opportunities
for direct access and recreational benefits, have right-of-way for the
exclusive use of bicycles and pedestrians, and designed so that cross
flow conflicts with other modes are minimized.
All-mode environment
FIGURE M-6 PEDESTRIAN FOCUS AREAS
Campus AveBurlington Northern Santa F e Railway
Metrolink
16th St Cherry AveEast AveHighland Ave
San Bernardino Ave
Base Line Rd
%&'(10
C I T Y O FUPLAND
C I T Y O F
O N T A R I O
C I T Y O FFONTANAArchibald AveHaven AveMilliken AveFoothill BlvdCarnelian StArrow Hwy
Church St
T e r r a V i s t a P k w y
6th St Rochester AveSapphire StHermosa AveHellman AveBanyan St
S A N B E R N A R D I N O N A T I O N A L F O R E S T
C I T Y O F
F O N T A N A
S a n G a b r i e l M o u n t a i n s
Deer
Canyon
Day
Canyon
East
Etiwanda
Canyon San
Sevaine
Canyon
County
Canyon
ChaffeyCollege
n¤Vineyard Ave19th St
Hillside Rd
DEM EN S C REEK C HANNELCUCAMONGACREEK DAY CREEK CHANNELE
TI
WA
N
D
A
CREEKCHANNELSAN SEVAINE WASHDAY CREEK CHANNELDEERDEER CREEK CHANNELCANYONETIWANDACREEKCHANNELAlmond St
Amethyst AveBeryl StC h u r c h S t
Wilson Ave
Lemon Ave
Victoria StDay Creek BlvdWardman Bullock RdPowerline Rd
Metrolink Station Etiwanda AveVictoriaGardens
4th St
Jersey Blvd9th StTurquoise AvThe Epicenter
·|}þ210
%&'(10
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0 1 20.5 Miles °
Fehr & Peers, 2021
O N T A R I O I N T E R N A T I O N A L A I R P O R T
Existing Sidewalk
Missing Sidewalk
Pedestrian Focus Area
Metrolink
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Railroads
Parks
Pedestrian Focus Area
Pedestrian Focus Area
Existing Sidewalk
Missing Sidewalk
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Cucamonga Station
Metrolink
Railroads
Parks
Fehr & Peers, 2021
168 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 169
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 4: MOBILITY & ACCESS
+Class II Bike Lane. Provides a delineated right-of-way assigned to
bicyclists to enable more predictable movements, establishing specific
lines of demarcation between areas reserved for bicycles and lanes to
be occupied by motor vehicles.
+Class III Bike Route. Shared facility that serves either continuity to
other bicycle facilities or designates preferred routes through high
demand corridors.
+Class IV Separated Bikeway or Cycle Track. Provides delineated
right-of-way assigned to bicyclists that have a physical separation
between them and a vehicle. This separation can include parked
vehicles, bollards, curbs, or any other physical devise that provides this
separation.
Local streets with low vehicle speeds and volume help complete the
bicycle network even without signage and formal bike facilities. Although
the city has a comprehensive network of Class II bikeways, many of these
are on high speed, wide roadways that limit rider comfort on the corridors
(whereas the proposed bike path system provides a comfortable, low
stress biking environment). As such, this Plan considers bicycle comfort
and looks at increasing the connectivity of low stress facilities through
street prioritization (e.g., layered networks approach) or through better
connections between activity centers and the Class I trails system (e.g., the
bicycle freeway system).
PROPOSED BICYCLE FACILITIES
The bicycle and pedestrian priority network as shown on Figure M-4
has been developed to enhance active transportation on these facilities.
Additionally, Healthy RC is launching an Active Transportation Plan in 2021
that will begin an in-depth look at facilities throughout the city which will
further refine the guidance provided in this chapter.
Trails as Transportation
Trails are not just for recreation, but also provide opportunity to walk or
bike to work, school, and other destinations. While some trails are clearly
intended for community members to enjoy the outdoors, others are
an essential part of the City’s mobility network. As the City grows, the
network of trails will also increase providing opportunities for residents
to walk rather than drive to their destination As such, some trails may be
considered as part of the City’s Capital Improvements Program (CIP) similar
to roadways and sidewalks.
Protected bike lane
Graded Shoulders Recommended
Bike Lane
Sign
Bike Lane
SignSolid
White
Stripe
Bike
Lane
Bike
Lane
Travel Lane Travel Lane
Solid
White
Stripe
Bike Lane
Sign
Bike Lane
Sign
Parking &
Bike Lane
Bike LaneTravel Lane Travel Lane
Provides a completely separated
right-of-way for exclusive use of
bicycles and pedestrians
with crossow minimized.
CLASS I - Multi-Use Path
BIKE PATH
NOMOTORVEHICLESORMOTORIZEDBICYCLES
MUTCD R44A (CA)
CLASS II - Bike Lane
Provides a striped lane for
one-way bike travel on a
street or highway.
BIKE LANE
MUTCD R81 (CA)
CLASS II - Bike Lane
Provides a striped lane for
one-way bike travel on a
street or highway.
BIKE LANE
MUTCD R81 (CA)
FIGURE M-7 BIKEWAY CLASSIFICATIONS
170 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 171
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 4: MOBILITY & ACCESS
FIGURE M-7 BIKEWAY CLASSIFICATIONS (CONT’D)
Bike Lane
Sign
Bike Lane
Sign
Shared-Use
Travel Lane
Shared-Use
Travel Lane
Bike Route
Sign
Bike Route
Sign
Solid
White
Stripe
4’-5’
Shoulder
4’-5’
Shoulder
Travel Lane Travel Lane
CLASS III - Bike Route
Provides a shared use with
pedestrians or motor vehicle
trac, typically on lower
volume roadways.
BIKE ROUTE
MUTCD D11-1
CLASS III - Bike Route
Provides a shared use with
pedestrians or motor vehicle
trac, typically on lower
volume roadways.
BIKE ROUTE
MUTCD D11-1
CLASS IV - Separated Bikeway
(Cycle Track)
Provides a protected lane for
one-way bike travel on a
street or highway.
Bike Lane
Sign
Bike Lane
Sign
Bike
Lane
Bike
Lane
Parking Travel
Lane
Travel
Lane
SAFETY
Safety for all modes of travel is of utmost importance for the City of Rancho
Cucamonga. This safety discussion addresses two key areas. The first is to
manage and minimize collisions, especially collisions involving vulnerable
users (e.g., pedestrians and bicyclists), and setting a goal to reduce those
collisions as much as possible. The second key area relates to emergency
response and evacuation.
COLLISION PROFILE
While vehicle collisions occur throughout the city, collisions involving
a vehicle and pedestrian and/or bicycle were more concentrated in the
southwest part of the city. The number of fatal collisions of this type
are comparatively higher than collisions involving two vehicles. This
plan prioritizes focusing pedestrian infrastructure improvements in the
southwest portion of the city to improve safety.
CONNECTIVITY
One key aspect of this chapter is providing connectivity. Although
connectivity supports walking and biking in the city, it also provides
benefits for emergency personnel by providing additional resiliency and
redundancy on the network. Connectivity also provides additional route
choices for emergency personnel and improves access during evacuation
events in the city. Connectivity is a key cornerstone for undeveloped areas
of the city to improve walking and bicycling and to promote accessibility
that promotes safety during emergency events.
Safe routes to school
172 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 173
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 4: MOBILITY & ACCESS
FUTURE TRAFFIC OPERATIONS
The City desires to adopt a differential level of service policy (e.g., the level
of service (LOS) goal for each mode is dependent on the street type, the
priority user of the street, and the place the street is connecting people to)
customized for different streets. This allows the City to focus on bicycles,
pedestrians, and/or transit modes in some areas of the city (such as mixed-
use corridors) and also focus on the automobile for key corridors that
serve as automotive thoroughfares (like Milliken Avenue). In each case,
prioritizing key travel modes provides the City clear direction that guides
infrastructure implementation. Additionally, some corridors of the city
are built out to their ultimate configuration and further expansion of the
system to improve vehicle service levels will result in increased right-of-way
costs and/or increased impacts to the environment, both of which are not
desirable. In these instances, the City acknowledges the limitations and can
accept reduced service levels in these specific locations that are exempt
from the City’s level of service policies.
NETWORK CONNECTIVITY
An additional key consideration for the City is to enhance roadway network
connectivity, particularly the need to complete and connect the network
north of State Route 210 (SR-210) and within the Southeast Area. New
streets are critical to safe, effective, and efficient vehicular and pedestrian
circulation in the city. These facilities are focused on the following key
needs identified throughout the planning process:
+Connecting Wilson Avenue throughout the city to provide another
east-west travel way north of SR-210.
+Completing 18th Street to connect to Carnelian Street.
+Investigating a westerly connection north of SR-210 to provide
additional accessibility (especially in the event of an emergency).
+New connections for circulation, accessibility, and emergency
accessibility in the Southeast Area. This includes creating a new north-
south connection west of Etiwanda Avenue, completion of the 6th
Street connection into this area, and a new east-west connection
between Rochester Boulevard and the Southeast Area. The improved
network connectivity is also shown on Figure M-8. Because the city’s
utility infrastructure and service providers play an important role in
the quality of life for the community, if the planned streets would
unreasonably interfere with the primary utility function on utility
owned parcels, the final location of those street segments would be
designed to accommodate the current and prospective utility needs
of the community to the greatest extent possible. Except for the one
identified east-west road, this General Plan’s circulation network omits
any public streets through property owned by Southern California
Edison in the Southeast Area, as depicted in Figures M-8 and FA-9.
Grade-separated crossing improves
vehicle traffic and enhances safety
FIGURE M-8 PROPOSED STREET NETWORK IN SOUTHEAST AREA
Consider improving Etiwanda Avenue and 4th
Street to facilitate active transportation and
transit.
Consider improving Arrow Route, Rochester
Avenue and 6th Street with buffered or separated
bike lanes.
Extend Whittram Avenue from Etiwanda Avenue
to Rochester Avenue and under the I-15 to
provide better access to the Southeast Area.
Consider creating a new trailhead/park at the
intersection of the new 8th Street multipurpose
trail and potential trail along Day Creek Channel.
Develop a more complete, modern, multi-modal
street network for improved circulation and
access. The street network in this area is at or
near capacity. If the legacy heavy industrial uses
redevelop, additional east-west street capacity
between Rochester Avenue and Etiwanda
Avenue and north-south street capacity between
Arrow and 6th Street will be needed.
Strategically infill development in a range of
building and lot sizes to accommodate various
industrial activities.
Infill development fronting Etiwanda Avenue and
4th Street.
1
15
1
2
3
4
7
6
5
1
5
7
2
6
64
2
5 6
2
1
Existing Street
Recommended Street*
New Network Connection
Recommended Multipurpose Trail
Recommended Trailhead
Recommended Park
Transit Priority Street
Bike Priority Street
Recommended Development
* As per state law, these recommended road alignments
are not intended to interfere with utility operations.
* Diagram is shown for illustrative purposes only.
3
3
3
174 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 175
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 4: MOBILITY & ACCESS
GOODS MOVEMENT
Goods movement plays an important role in both the circulation network
and the economy of Rancho Cucamonga. Often, it can be difficult to
accommodate trucks and other vehicles without impeding other travel
modes or the well-being of residents. Due to its important location
between two freeways and its role of logistics in the local economy,
effectively accommodating goods movement along city roadways is critical
for local transportation planning.
TRUCK ROUTES
Truck traffic on city streets is restricted to specific routes that are
designated for through-traffic of trucks over three tons. These designated
truck routes have been adopted through City ordinance and are shown
in Figure M-9 for context within this chapter. These truck routes help to
facilitate the movement of goods throughout the city, while providing
a connection between major freeway facilities to local roadways. Trucks
are allowed on designated routes even if they do not have an origin or
destination within the city.
Technological innovation is presenting opportunities to improve the
efficiency of goods movement in the future, especially with the recent
increase in online shopping and delivery due to COVID-19. The future of
truck travel in the state will continue to evolve. Autonomous trucks and
electrification of the truck fleet will be phased in over the next 5 to 20
years. Rancho Cucamonga supports this innovation, as this technology will
improve safety and improve health for the community.
FREIGHT RAIL
Local freight service operates through trackage rights on the Metrolink
San Gabriel subdivision (formerly owned by Santa Fe Railroad) through
Rancho Cucamonga—the same line that carries Metrolink trains on the
San Bernardino line. Citywide, railroad lines cross most streets at grade,
including on Vineyard, Hellman, Archibald, Hermosa, Rochester, and
Etiwanda Avenues. The grade separated crossings at Milliken Avenue and
Haven Avenue have been constructed along these key travel corridors.
A grade separation at Etiwanda Avenue and the BNSF Railway line is
currently under design to better accommodate truck traffic.
Freight rail train
C
][Campus AveB url i ng t on N o rth e rn S an t a Fe R ai l way
Me tr ol in k
16th S t Cherry AveEast AveHig hl an d Ave
Sa n Bern ard in o Ave
Base Li n e R d
%&'(10
C I T Y O F
U P L A N D
C I T Y O F
O N T A R I O
C I T Y O F
F O N T A N AArchibald AveHaven AveMilliken AveFo oth il l B lvdCarnelian StArro w H wy
Chu rch S t
T e r r a V i s t a P k w y
6th S t Rochester AveSapphire StHermosa AveHellman AveB any an St
S A N B E R N A R D I N O N A T I O N A L F O R E S T
C I T Y O F
F O N T A N A
S a n G a b r i e l M o u n t a i n s
De e r
Ca n yo n
Da y
Ca n yo n
Ea st
Etiw a n da
Can yo n Sa n
Se va in e
Ca n yon
Co u n ty
Ca n yo n
Ch a ffe yCollege
n¤Vineyard Ave19th S t
Hil ls id e Rd
DEM ENS CR EEK CH A N N ELCUCAMONGACREEK DAY CREEK CHANNELE
T
I
WA
N
D
A
CREEKCHANNELSAN SEVAINE WASHDAY CREEK CHANNELDEERDEER CREEK CHANNELCANYONETIWANDACREEKCHANNELA lm o nd St
Amethyst AveBeryl StC h u r c h S t
Wi lso n Ave
Lemo n Av e
Vi cto ria S tDay Creek BlvdWardman Bullock RdPo we rli n e R d
Metro link Sta ti o n Etiwanda AveVic tor iaGardens
4th S t
Jerse y B lvd9th S tTurquoise AvThe Ep ic en te r
·|}þ210
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O N T A R I O I N T E R N AT I O N A L A I R P O RT
C P
Consider Poten�al Removal
Truck Routes (38 Foot Kingpin Limit)
Truck Routes
roposed Interchange
][Proposed Railroad Gra de S eparation
Metroli nk
Rancho Cucamonga City Boundary
Sphe re of Influence
Railroads
Parks
Truc k Routes
FIGURE M-9 TRUCK ROUTES
Truck Routes
Truck Routes (38-Foot Kingpin Limit)
Consider Potential Removal
Proposed Interchange
Proposed Railroad Grade Separation
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Cucamonga Station
Metrolink
Railroads
Parks
Fehr & Peers, 2020 | Sources: City of
Rancho Cucamonga, 20191
Note: See Figure M-8 for information on additional capacity needs in the Southeast Area.
176 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 177
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 4: MOBILITY & ACCESS
FUTURE OF TRANSPORTATION
To prepare for the wave of emerging changes in transportation technology,
this chapter identifies policies and actions that would enable the City to
meet its community goals. In this changing mobility landscape, there are
great opportunities to be national leaders by connecting the dots between
disruptive trends, existing transportation governance, and funding
structures. It is also important to be aware about what the future mobility
options should and should not do.
The following disruptive trends have changed mobility choices over the
past five years and will change our mobility options into the future:
+Transportation Network Companies (TNCs): also called a ride-hailing
service, are companies like Uber and Lyft that provide on-demand rides
for passengers with mobile apps or websites. TNCs tend to increase
demand for curb space but can decrease the demand for parking. They
are useful to reduce the instances of driving under the influence and
increase people’s accessibility to automotive travel.
+Autonomous Vehicles (AVs): are vehicles that are capable of driving
with limited or no human involvement. There are six levels of autonomy
(0-5) that range from issuing warnings and momentary interventions
with the human driver to a fully automated machine which requires
no human involvement to operate. AVs can either reduce VMT in
the future (if they are priced accordingly and are implemented
through a shared vehicle experience) or can increase VMT if they are
implemented in an owned vehicle experience.
+Connected Vehicles (CVs): are vehicles that can interact with one
another and/or with infrastructure. Some CVs can also be autonomous
vehicles; however, CVs can be human operated. Given the potential to
integrate CVs with infrastructure, ensuring that future infrastructure
is set up to handle the increased communications associated with
CVs is important and can be inexpensive when considered early in
the design process by including additional conduit capacity or power
availability. The City will need to continue investing in its Advanced
Traffic Management System (ATMS) to both manage exiting traffic but
ensure compatibility as more CVs enter the vehicle fleet and require
information infrastructure for communications.
+Car sharing services are services that allow consumers access to a
vehicle without owning a personal car. Car share services typically
charge a monthly or yearly membership fee and an hourly rate for
access to its shared vehicle fleet.
+Micromobility: is a combination of emerging trends including bike
share, e-scooters, and e-bikes.
+Bike Sharing Services: bike sharing services operate like car sharing
services in that consumers can rent from a shared bicycle fleet.
Connected and autonomous cars
+Electric Scooters and Bikes: E-scooters and e-bikes are powered by an
electric motor to propel riders along streets and up hills.
+Microtransit: is defined as a privately-operated transit system, which
in many cases mirrors the operations of public transit agencies along
select routes. Microtransit operators can be highly flexible, tailoring
their operations to match short-term or long-term changes in travel
behavior.
GOALS AND POLICIES
GOAL MA-1 REGIONAL MOBILITY HUB. A multimodal
transportation hub that connects regional and local
destinations.
MA-1.1 Transportation Leadership. Take a leadership role in local and
regional transportation related planning and decision making.
MA-1.2 Cucamonga Station Redevelopment. Support redevelopment
in and around the Cucamonga Station to support transit-
oriented development.
MA-1.3 Funding. Support federal, statewide, and regional
infrastructure funding for transit and transportation.
MA-1.4 Local Mobility Hub. Require new development at mobility
hubs and key stops along the future bus rapid transit and
future transit circulator system to facilitate first mile/last mile
connectivity to neighborhoods.
MA-1.5 Provide Mobility Options. Provide roadway connections and
local mobility hubs designed to capture 80% of the population
and employment south of Base Line Road.
MA-1.6 Boulevard Implementation. Require boulevards with high-
quality transit to not only account for how transit service is
impacted by the geometry of the corridor, but also by signal
timing, signal phasing, turns, and other operations that may
jeopardize the quality of service.
GOAL MA-2 ACCESS FOR ALL. A safe, efficient, accessible,
and equitable transportation system that serves the
mobility needs of all users.
MA-2.1 Complete Streets. Require that new roadways include
provisions for complete streets, balancing the needs of all users
of all ages and capabilities.
178 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 179
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 4: MOBILITY & ACCESS
MA-2.2 New Streets. To achieve the vision for transportation and
mobility in the city, the final design, location, and alignment
of streets shall provide levels of access, connectivity, and
circulation consistent with the conceptual layouts shown in this
Mobility and Access Chapter.
MA-2.3 Street Design. Implement innovative street and intersection
designs to maximize efficiency and safety in the city. Use
traffic calming tools to assist in implementing complete street
principles. Possible tools include roundabouts, curb extensions,
high visibility crosswalks, and separated bicycle infrastructure.
MA-2.4 Street Connectivity. Require connectivity and accessibility
to a mix of land uses that meets residents’ daily needs within
walking distance.
MA-2.5 Street Vacations. Prioritize pedestrian and utility connectivity
over street vacations.
MA-2.6 Context. Ensure that complete streets applications integrate
the neighborhood and community identity into the street
design. This can include special provisions for pedestrians and
bicycles.
MA-2.7 Roadway Scale. Balance roadway size and design
configuration to ensure that vehicular speeds, volumes and
turning movements do not compromise the safety and
comfort of pedestrians and bicyclists.
MA-2.8 Facility Service Levels. Maintain level of service (LOS) D for
priority modes on each street; LOS E or F may be acceptable
at intersections or segments for modes that are not prioritized.
The City will develop a list of intersections and roadways
that are protected from this level of service policy where 1)
maintaining the standard would be a disincentive to walking,
biking or transit; 2) constructing facilities would prevent the
City from VMT reduction goals or other priorities, and ; 3)
maintaining the standard would be incompatible with adjacent
land uses and built forms.
MA-2.9 High-Quality Pedestrian Environment. Enhance sidewalks to
create a high-quality pedestrian environment, including wider
sidewalks, improved pedestrian crossings, buffers between
sidewalks and moving traffic, pedestrian lighting, wayfinding
signage, shade trees, increased availability of benches, end of
cul-de-sac access, etc.
MA-2.10 Block Pattern. Require development projects to arrange
streets in an interconnected block pattern, so that pedestrians,
bicyclists, and drivers are not forced onto arterial streets for
inter- or intra- neighborhood travel.
MA-2.11 Master Planning. Master plan sites so as to ensure a well-
structured network and block pattern with sufficient access
and connectivity; especially in all focus areas, including the
Cucamonga Town Center, Etiwanda Heights Town Center, and
the Southeast Industrial Area.
MA-2.12 Transportation Demand Management. Require new projects
to implement Transportation Demand Management strategies,
such as employer provided transit pass/parking credit, high-
speed communications infrastructure for telecommuting,
carpooling incentives, etc.
MA-2.13 Healthy Mobility. Provide pedestrian facilities and class II
buffered bike lanes (or separated bikeways) on auto-priority
streets where feasible to promote active transportation.
MA-2.14 Bicycle Facilities. Enhance bicycle facilities by maintaining
and expanding the bicycle network, providing end-of-trip
facilities (bike parking, lockers, showers), improving bicycle/
transit integration, wayfinding signage, etc.
GOAL MA-3 SAFETY. A transportation network that adapts
to changing mobility needs while preserving sustainable
community values.
MA-3.1 Pedestrian and Bicycle Networks. Maintain the Active
Transportation Plan supporting safe routes to school, and a
convenient network of identified pedestrian and bicycle routes
with access to major employment centers, shopping districts,
regional transit centers, and residential neighborhoods.
MA-3.2 Traffic Safety. Prioritize transportation system improvements
that help eliminate traffic-related fatalities and severe injury
collisions.
MA-3.3 Vulnerable User Safety. Prioritize pedestrian improvements
in the Pedestrian Priority Area shown on Figure 8 to promote
safety in the southwest area of the city.
MA-3.4 Emergency Access. Prioritize development and infrastructure
investments that work to implement, maintain, and enhance
emergency access throughout the community.
180 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 181
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 4: MOBILITY & ACCESS
GOAL MA-4 GOODS MOVEMENT. An efficient goods
movement system that ensures timely deliveries without
compromising quality of life, safety and smooth traffic flow
for residents and businesses.
MA-4.1 Truck Network. Avoid designating truck routes that use
collector or local streets that primarily serve residential uses
and other sensitive receptors.
MA-4.2 Southeast Area Connectivity. Require new development in
the Southeast Area to provide the necessary infrastructure to
maintain access and public safety as shown on Figure M-8.
MA-4.3 Future Logistics Technology. Support and plan for
electrification and autonomy of the truck fleet.
MA-4.4 Rail Access. Avoid abandonment of rail access to industrial
parcels or utilize such right of way to balance and enhance
other connectivity goals within the City (such as pedestrian/
bicycle trails).
MA-4.5 Grade Separation. Support the construction of grade
separations of roadways and trails from rail lines.
GOAL MA-5 SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORTATION. A
transportation network that adapts to changing mobility
needs.
MA-5.1 Land Use Supporting Reduced VMT. Work to reduce VMT
through land use planning, enhanced transit access, localized
attractions, and access to non-automotive modes.
MA-5.2 Emerging Technologies. Prioritize investments in critical
infrastructure and pilot programs to leverage proven new
transportation technology.
MA-5.3 Funding. Remain flexible in the pursuit and adoption of
transportation funding mechanisms that fund innovative
transportation solutions.
MA-5.4 Intelligent Systems Preparation. Upgrade the City’s ATMS
and communications systems to ensure that the City meets
the intelligent transportation system demands of today while
planning for future demands associated with AVs and CVs.
Car charging station High visibility crosswalk
Omnibus transit center
Multipurpose pathBicycle repair station
182 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA
HOUSING IS..
one of the most basic human needs and recognized as a fundamental
right under California law. Planning for housing in a community usually
addresses the following three aspects:
+Availability. Housing growth that is keeping in pace with population
and job growth.
+Adequacy. A housing inventory that provides a variety of housing
options to meet the diverse housing needs in the community and
offers a safe and decent living environment for all residents.
+Affordability. A housing inventory that offers a range of price points
that would be considered affordable to all socioeconomic segments of
the population.
STATE LEGAL REQUIREMENTS
The 2021-2029 Housing Element represents the City of Rancho
Cucamonga’s effort in fulfilling the requirements under State Housing
Element law. The California State Legislature has identified the attainment
of a decent home and suitable living environment for every Californian as
the State’s major housing goal. Recognizing the important role of local
planning and housing programs in the pursuit of this goal, the Legislature
Housing
183
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 5: HOUSING
has mandated that all cities and counties prepare a Housing Element as
part of the comprehensive General Plan. Unlike all the other elements of
the General Plan, the Housing Element must be approved by the State
and includes a substantial amount of information that is both duplicative,
and more detailed than the rest of the General Plan. As such, the approved
Housing Element is summarized here, included in its entirety as an
appendix to this General Plan, and incorporated herein by reference.
Pursuant to State law, the Housing Element must be updated periodically
according to statutory deadlines. This Housing Element covers the
planning period of October 15, 2021 to October 15, 2029.
HEART OF THE MATTER
The Housing Element focuses on understanding the housing needs in
Rancho Cucamonga and sets forth its best plan of actions to meeting
those needs through residential land use planning and programmatic
efforts. A key component of housing planning for Rancho Cucamonga is
the amount and location of new housing in the community. For Housing
Element purposes, the planning for housing growth is mandated by State
law through the Regional Housing Needs Assessment (RHNA) process.
California General Plan law requires each city and county to have land
zoned to accommodate its fair share of the regional housing need. For
this Housing Element (2021-2029), the City of Rancho Cucamonga has
been allocated a RHNA of 10,525 units, divided into the following income
categories in relation to Area Median Income (AMI):
+Very Low Income (up to 50 percent AMI) – 3,245 units
+Low Income (51-80 percent AMI) – 1,920 units
+Moderate Income (81-120 percent AMI) – 2,038 units
+Above Moderate Income (>120 percent AMI) – 3,322 units
The Housing Element, in connection with the Land Use Element, must
demonstrate adequate sites to accommodate at least 10,525 units. As
demonstrated in the complete Housing Element included as an appendix
to this General Plan, the City has identified adequate sites to accommodate
the need for all of these income groups
184 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 185
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 5: HOUSING
OVERVIEW OF THIS CHAPTER
This chapter summarizes a much larger evaluation of housing need and
potential included as an appendix to this General Plan. The overarching
focus for the City is to provide housing for people who live here now, and
who may want to live here in the future.
The following goals serve to guide and direct long-term planning for
housing in the City of Rancho Cucamonga.
+Goal H-1 Housing Opportunities. A diverse community with a broad
range of housing types and opportunities to accommodate expected
new households.
+Goal H-2 Affordable Housing. A city where housing opportunities
meet the needs of all socioeconomic segments of the community.
The approach for this chapter was to move beyond the state mandated
RHNA requirements and embrace the business and community need to
provide housing as an opportunity rather than an obligation. The design
ideas for housing styles are aligned with the Land Use and Community
Character chapter and incorporated into the vision for the future.
HOUSING AFFORDABILITY
Housing is generally considered affordable if a household spends no more
than 30 percent of its gross household income on housing costs (rent or
mortgage, utilities, taxes, and insurance). Households experiencing housing
cost burden may face other housing programs such as overcrowding
or residing in sub-standard housing. Households experiencing severe
cost burden (spending more than 50 percent of house-hold income on
housing costs) could be at risk of becoming homeless in the event of loss of
employment or income.
Affordable housing, especially housing that is affordable to very low- and
low-income households, is not typically produced by the market. The City
must, through land use policies and development regulations, as well as
incentives, facilitate and encourage the development of affordable housing
and help mitigate the costs of development.
HOUSING PLAN
The previous sections of this Housing Element provided an assessment of
the City’s housing needs, an assessment of constraints to the development
of housing, and an inventory of housing resources. This section establishes
the City of Rancho Cucamonga’s strategy for addressing the housing needs
and mitigating constraints with available resources.
Homebuilding
GOALS AND POLICIES
H-1 Housing Opportunities. A diverse community with
a broad range of housing types and opportunities to
accommodate expected new households.
H-1.1 RHNA Requirement. Encourage the development of a wide
range of housing options, types, and prices that will enable the
City to achieve its share of the RHNA .
H-1.2 Elderly and Disabled Household Needs. Recognize the
unique characteristics of elderly and disabled households and
address their special needs.
H-1.3 Accessory Dwelling Units. Facilitate the development
of accessory dwelling units to provide additional housing
opportunities pursuant to State law and established zoning
regulations.
H-2 Affordable Housing. A city where housing
opportunities meet the needs of all socioeconomic
segments of the community.
H-2.1 Rental Assistance Programs. Encourage the use of rental
assistance programs to assist lower income households and
support the Housing Authority of the County of San Bernardino
(HACSB) applications for additional vouchers to meet the
needs of lower income households.
H-2.2 Mobile Home Park Accord. Support the Mobile Home Park
Accord voluntary rent stabilization as a means of keeping rents
at reasonable levels.
H-3 Homelessness. A compassionate community with a
wide range of options and support for the housing insecure
and those experiencing homelessness. .
H-3.1 Homeless Services. Provide assistance as it becomes
available towards efforts of local organizations and community
groups to provide emergency shelters, transitional housing
opportunities, and services to the City’s homeless population
and those at-risk of homelessness.
H-3.2 Homeless Programs. Participate with adjacent communities
toward the provision of a sub-regional shelter program and
encourage the County to develop a comprehensive homeless
program.
186 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 187
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 5: HOUSING
H-4 Housing Quality. A community with quality, healthy
housing.
H-4.1 Mills Act Contracts. Encourage rehabilitation and preservation
of historic residences through participation in Mills Act
contracts.
H-4.2 Substandard Housing. Encourage the revitalization and
rehabilitation of substandard residential structures.
H-4.3 Residential Rehabilitation. Focus rehabilitation to
neighborhoods with deteriorating units.
H-4.4 Home Improvement Programs. Implement the Home
Improvement Programs to benefit lower income single-family
homeowners and mobile homeowners.
H-4.5 Housing Maintenance. Actively encourage the maintenance
of existing housing in to as to maintain the housing stock in
sound condition.
H-4.6 Code Enforcement. Utilize concentrated Code Enforcement
programs to target specific areas or problems when the need
and community support warrants such activity.
H-5 Government Constraints. A city with an efficient
process for improving and developing housing.
H-5.1 Development Review Processes. Consider new polices, codes,
and procedures that have the potential to reduce procedural
delays, provide information early in the development process
regarding development costs, and charge only those fees
necessary to adequately carry out needed public services and
improvements.
H-5.2 Fee Schedule. Periodically review and update the City’s fee
schedule and the methodology on which the fees are based to
determine the necessary costs for providing adequate public
services and public improvements to ensure the continued
health, safety, and welfare of the community.
H-5.3 Development Review Process. Facilitate the development
review process for new housing through multiple techniques,
including staff assistance, public information, articles in the
City’s newsletter, informal meetings with applicants, and
Preliminary Review applications to address technical issues
and facilitate the production of quality housing.
H-5.4 Development Standards. Evaluate and adjust as appropriate
residential development standards, regulations, and
processing procedures that are determined to constrain
housing development, particularly housing opportunities for
lower and moderate income households and for persons with
special needs.
H-6 Equal Housing Opportunities. An equitable
community that provides equal housing opportunities for
all residents.
H-6.1 Reduce Housing Discrimination. Explore and consider
programs that will reduce the incidence of housing
discrimination within the City.
H-6.2 Land Use Plan. Facilitate development projects that
will improve a neighborhood’s access to resources and
opportunities.
H-6.3 Fair Housing Outreach and Education. Support outreach
and education efforts to actively further fair housing practices
and understanding of fair housing rights, with emphasis on
proactive education and voluntary compliance, as well as
through legal enforcement on a case-by-case basis, including,
but not limited to, assistance with the resolution of tenant/
landlord disputes and housing discrimination complaints.
H-6.4 Accessible or Barrier-Free Housing. Encourage the provisions
of disabled-accessible units and housing for the mentally and
physically disabled.
188 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA
PUBLIC FACILITIES ARE..
vital to any city’s health, safety, livability, and economic well-being. Public
facilities in the City of Rancho Cucamonga include the Civic Center,
community sports complexes, family resource center, cultural and senior
centers, fire stations, public works facilities, and libraries. An efficient and
reliable system of public facilities and infrastructure is essential as the
city grows. Every built facility has a useful service life therefore the City
needs to plan for both expansion and maintenance. Likewise expanding
services requires an ongoing investment in terms of training and support.
While new facilities are often funded by new development, maintenance
responsibility for existing facilities generally falls to the City’s existing
residents. Many of the essential utilities in the city are not under City
jurisdiction however the City works closely with the service providers to
ensure a collaborative approach to meeting the needs of our residents.
STATE LEGAL REQUIREMENTS
California Government Code Section 65302(a) states that the Land Use
Element of the General Plan must identify the location and designation of
land for public uses and utilities. This Chapter has been prepared to address
these issues, in addition to other issues involving the City’s public facilities
and services. All other land uses are discussed in detail in Volume 2 Chapter
1 of this General Plan.
Public Facilities & Services
189
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 6: PUBLIC FACILITIES & SERVICES
HEART OF THE MATTER
Public facilities are the community’s gathering places, where people can
go to participate in local government, attend community events, recreate,
obtain information, and learn about resources in the community. Each of
the City’s different community centers provides a different focus to meet
the needs of the area and populations served. Certain facilities, such as the
two community centers located in Central Park, provide indoor spaces that
are flexible and able to accommodate many uses, including fitness and
athletic activities, childcare, information and referral for human services,
space for nonprofit groups, nutrition services, special event rentals, and
classrooms. The City invests in the future through development of public
facilities and the services it can offer to the community.
OVERVIEW OF THIS CHAPTER
The facilities and services provided in Rancho Cucamonga are world class
and it is a matter of community pride that the services are responsive to
the needs of the people. This Chapter ensures that future growth does not
negatively affect impact the facilities or reduce services.
The following goals serve to guide and direct long-term planning of public
facilities and services in the City of Rancho Cucamonga.
+Goal PF-1 State-of-the-Art Facilities. Residents enjoy state-of-the-
art public and community facilities that support existing programs,
accommodate future needs, and are accessible to all members of the
community.
+Goal PF-2 Education. All residents have access to high-quality
educational opportunities.
+Goal PF-3 Libraries. High-quality library resources are provided to
meet the educational, cultural, civic, and general business needs of all
residents.
+Goal PF-4 Animal Care. Animal care and services are provided,
including facilitation of adoptions, promotion of animal health and
safety, and animal awareness education.
+Goal PF-5 Water-Related Infrastructure. Water and wastewater
infrastructure facilities are available to support future growth needs
and existing development.
+Goal PF-6 Solid Waste. The volume of solid waste that enters regional
landfills is minimized and the amount of recycling increased.
+Goal PF-7 Communications. Access to high-quality established and
emerging communications technologies is improved for individuals,
businesses, educational institutions, and government functions.
190 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 191
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 6: PUBLIC FACILITIES & SERVICES
CITY FACILITIES
The City of Rancho Cucamonga manages a comprehensive range of
community facilities to meet the varied needs of residents and businesses.
Table PF-1, Community Facilities, and Figure PF-1, Public Facilities, identify
the categories of public facilities located in Rancho Cucamonga.
SCHOOLS
Four elementary school districts and one high school district serve
residents of Rancho Cucamonga. The city also has many private K-12
schools.
CHAFFEY COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Chaffey Community College serves the Rancho Cucamonga community
and surrounding region. Founded in 1883 as a private college, Chaffey has
been a publicly funded college since 1916 and is accredited by the Western
Association of Schools and Colleges. Chaffey Community College is a full-
service community college occupying a 200-acre site along north Haven
Avenue. The college offers a wide range of educational programs, including
the following schools: Business and Applied Technology; Health Sciences;
Language Arts; Mathematics and Science; Social and Behavioral Sciences;
and Visual, Performing, and Communication Arts.
LIBRARY SERVICES
Rancho Cucamonga Public Library was established in 1994 when the
City assumed operation of the local library from the San Bernardino
County Library System. In addition to the circulation and processing of
library materials, the City’s Library Services Department is responsible for
children’s services, programs, and special events; adult information services;
and adult and family literacy services. The Rancho Cucamonga Public
Library has two library facilities and is consistently one of the busiest library
systems in California.
The Paul A. Biane Library is part of the Victoria Gardens Cultural Center and
is home to a book and media collection of approximately 100,000 items
and features amenities such as a 21-seat technology center, a story room, a
traditional reading room with a fireplace, a homework center, and the Local
History Room.
The Rancho Cucamonga Public Library offers programs and services for
people of all ages, including a bookmobile, technology classes, story time
for children, programs for teens, book clubs, literacy programs, and special
programs that all help develop healthy minds.
Chaffey College
TABLE PF-1 COMMUNITY FACILITIES
FACILITY ADDRESS FEATURES
CITY GOVERNMENT FACILITIES
Animal Care and Adoption
Center
11780 Arrow Highway • Animal care and adoption services
Archibald Library 7368 Archibald Avenue • Library
Central Park 11200 Base Line Road • Goldy S. Lewis Community Center
• James L. Brulte Senior Center
Corporate Yard 9153 9th Street • City maintenance and storage facility
Civic Center 10500 Civic Center Drive • City Hall
• Fire Protection District Offices
• Rancho Cucamonga Police Department
Epicenter/Adults Sports
Complex
8408 Rochester Avenue • Minor league baseball stadium and sports fields
Lions Center East 9191 Base Line Road • Multi-use facility
Lions Center West 9161 Base Line Road • Multi-use facility
RC Family Resource Center 9791 Arrow Route • Social services center
RC Sports Center 8303 Rochester Avenue • Indoor sports facility
Victoria Gardens Cultural
Center
12505 Cultural Center Drive • Paul A. Biane Library
• Lewis Family Playhouse
• Celebration Hall
• Bank of America Imagination Courtyard
SAN BERNARDINO GOVERNMENT FACILITIES
San Bernardino/Foothill
Communities Law and
Justice Center
8303 North Haven Avenue • San Bernardino County Superior Court (Located
at Civic Center)
West Valley Detention
Center
9500 Etiwanda Avenue • San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department jail
facility
192 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 193
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 6: PUBLIC FACILITIES & SERVICES
Public Facility Land Use
Civic/Regional
Schools
Parks
Base Layer
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Waterways
Freeway
Roads
RailroadsCampus AveSan Bernardino Freeway
Burlington No rthern Santa Fe Railway
Metrolin k
Arrow Hwy
16th St Cherry AveEast AveVineyard AveSan Bernardino Freew ay
Foothill Blvd
24TH ST
Base Line Ave
20th St
Milliken AveHermosa AveHaven AveEtiwanda AveArchibald AveSan Bernardino Ave
Base Line Rd
%&'(10
C I T Y O F
U P L A N D
C I T Y O F
O N T A R I O
C I T Y O F
F O N T A N AArchibald AveHaven AveCherry AveFoothill BlvdMilliken AveFoothill BlvdCarnelian StArrow Hwy Arrow Hwy
Church St
Base Line Rd
T e r r a V i s t a P k w y
6th St Rochester AveRochester AveOntario FreewayState Route 210 Freeway
·|}þ210Sapphire StHaven AveHermosa AveHellman AveHillside Rd
Hellman AveBanyan St
Wilson Ave
Banyon St
East AveS A N B E R N A R D I N O N A T I O N A L F O R E S T
C I T Y O F
F O N T A N A
San
Antonio
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S a n G a b r i e l M o u n t a i n s
Deer
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Day
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Etiwanda
Canyon San
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Canyon
County
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ChaffeyCollege
Banyan St
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//66Carnelian St19th St ·|}3 0
Hillside Rd
Day Creek BlvdDEM ENS CR EEK CH A NN ELCUCAMONGACREEK Vineyard AveDAY CREEK CHANNELE
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WA
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CREEKCHANNELSAN SEVAINE WASHDAY CREEK CHANNELDEERDEER CREEK CHANNELCANYONETIWANDACREEKCHANNELAlmond St
Amethyst AveBeryl StArchibald AveC h u r c h S t
Wilson Ave
Lemon Ave
Victoria StDay Creek BlvdWardman Bullock RdPowerline Rd
Metrolink Station Etiwanda AveEtiwanda AveVictoriaGardens
4th St
Jersey Blvd9th St Hermosa AveTurquoise AvThe Epicenter
Vineyard Ave4th St4th St
·|}þ210
%&'(10
%&'(15
%&'(15
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//66
S P H E R E O F I N F L U E N C E
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Public Facilities00.5 1 1.5 20.25
Miles
Source: Rancho Cucamonga, 2001 and San Bernardino County Assessor, 2009.
Figure PF-1:
Notes: (1) Location of future parks are not fixed and may be adjusted to accommodate future planning needs.
ANCHO
UCAMONGACRSchools and Parks
E Elementary School
J Junior High/Middle School
H High School
C College
P Future Park
d Dog Park
Public Safety Facilities
F Fire Station
PF Future Fire Station
S Sheriff's Station
SS Sheriff's Sub-Station
San Bernardino Government Facilities
C Rancho Cucamonga Courthouse
W West Valley Detention Center
City Facilities
1 Animal Care and Adoption Center
2 Archibald Library
3 Central Park: Senior and Community Centers
4 City Corporate Yard
5 Civic Center
6 Epicenter/Adult Sports Complex
7 Lions Center East and West
8 RC Family Resource Center
9 RC Sports Center
10 Victoria Gardens Cultural Center (Theater/Library)
Public Facilities and Infrastructure
R A N C H O C U C A M O N G A G E N E R A L P L A N PF-7
Public Facility Land Use Designations
Civic/Regional
Schools
Parks
Base Layers
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Waterways
Freeway
Roads
Railroads
FIGURE PF-1 CITY FACILITIES
Source: Rancho Cucamonga, 2001 and
San Bernardino County Assessor, 2009
Schools and Parks
Elementary School
Junior High/Middle School
High School
College
Future Park
Dog Park
Public Safety Facilities
Fire Station
Future Fire Station
Sheriff’s Station
Sheriff’s Sub-Station
San Bernardino Government Facilities
Rancho Cucamonga Courthouse
West Valley Detention Center
City Facilities
Animal Care and Adoption Center
Archibald Library
Central Park: Senior and Community Centers
City Corporate Yard
Civic Center
Epicenter/Adult Sports Complex
Lions Center East and West
RC Family Resource Center
RC Sports Center
Victoria Gardens Cultural Center (Theater/Library)
E
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
J
H
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F
PF
S
C
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W
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d
Note: Location of future parks are not fixed and may be adjusted to accommodate future planning needs.School Districts
Alta Loma School District
Central School District
Cucamonga School District
Etiwanda School District
School Types
Elementary School
Junior High/Middle School
High School
Chaffey Community CollegeCampus AveSan Bernardino Freeway
Burli ngt on Nort hern San ta Fe R ailway
Metroli nk
Arrow Hwy
16th St Cherry AveEast AveVineyard AveSan Bernardino Freeway
Foothill Blvd
24TH ST
Base Line Ave
20th St
Milliken AveHermosa AveHaven AveEtiwanda AveArchibald AveSan Bernardino Av e
Base Line Rd
C I T Y O F
U P L A N D
C I T Y O F
O N T A R I O
C I T Y O F
F O N T A N AArchibald AveHaven AveCherry AveFoothill BlvdMilliken AveFoothill BlvdCarnelian StArrow Hwy Arrow Hwy
Church St
Base Line Rd
T e r r a V i s t a P k w y
6th St Rochester AveRochester AveOntario FreewayState Route 210 FreewaySapphire StHaven AveHermosa AveHellman AveHillside Rd
Hellman AveBanyan St
Wilson Ave
Banyon St
East AveS A N B E R N A R D I N O N A T I O N A L F O R E S T
C I T Y O F
F O N T A N A
San
Antonio
Heights
S a n G a b r i e l M o u n t a i n s
Deer
Canyon
Day
Canyon
East
Etiwanda
Canyon San
Sevaine
Canyon
County
Canyon
ChaffeyCollege
Banyan St
Carnelian St19th St
Hillside Rd
Day Creek BlvdDEM ENS CREEK C H AN N ELCUCAMONGACREEK Vineyard AveDAY CREEK CHANNELE
TI
WA
N
D
A
CREEKCHANNELSAN SEVAINE WASHDAY CREEK CHANNELDEERDEER CREEK CHANNELCANYONETIWANDACREEKCHANNELAlmond St
Amethyst AveBeryl StArchibald AveC h u r c h S t
Wilson Ave
Lemon Ave
Victoria StDay Creek BlvdWardman Bullock RdPowerline Rd
Metrolink Station Etiwanda AveEtiwanda AveVictoriaGardens
4th St
Jersey Blvd9th St Hermosa AveTurquoise AvThe Epicenter
Vineyard Ave4th St4th St
S P H E R E O F I N F L U E N C E
Alta Loma Extension Area
Alta Loma
Etiwanda
Central
Cucamonga
Schools and School Districts00.5 1 1.5 20.25
Miles
Sources: Etiwanda School District; Alta Loma School District; Cucamonga School District, and
Central School District.
Figure PF-2:
ANCHOUCAMONGACR
School Districts
Alta Loma School District
Central School District
Cucamonga School District
Etiwanda School District
School Types
Elementary School
Junior High/Middle School
High School
Chaffey Comm unity College
Public Facilities and Infrastructure
R A N C H O C U C A M O N G A G E N E R A L P L A N PF-11
Base Layers
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Waterways
Freeway
Roads
Railroads
FIGURE PF-2 SCHOOL FACILITIES
E
J
HS
CC
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Waterways
Freeway
Roads
Railroads
Sources: Etiwanda School District, Alta
Loma School District, Cucamonga
School District, and Central School
District
194 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 195
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 6: PUBLIC FACILITIES & SERVICES
ANIMAL CARE AND SERVICES
The Rancho Cucamonga Animal Care and Adoption Center is managed by
the Animal Care and Services Department and provides the community
with services specific to animals. The Department’s goal is to build a
community in which every adoptable pet finds a home. The Department
also provides public health and safety programs oriented toward animal
care and community service. Some of the services provided include
homeless animal adoptions; services for lost animals, medical care, and
foster care for sick, injured, or young animals; low-cost vaccination clinics;
spay and neuter services; licensing; microchipping; and public awareness
and education programs on animal care.
In addition to pets, the Department reaches out to increase public
awareness regarding wild animals. Development in the foothills can
impact natural open space, displacing animals that are involuntarily forced
to live closer to urban development. The Department looks to minimize
wildlife accidents on roads and deter raccoons, opossums, skunks, mice
and rats, mountain lions, birds, and coyotes from urban areas. Department
programs emphasize education over extermination.
INFRASTRUCTURE
Rancho Cucamonga requires a sophisticated system of public facilities and
infrastructure to keep the City running. Water distribution and wastewater
facilities are necessary for the daily needs of residential and non-residential
uses. Integrated waste management and flood control facilities help ensure
the health and safety of the community. The City depends upon state-of-
the-art telecommunications infrastructure for fast and efficient methods of
obtaining and transmitting information and data. Maintaining and adding
new infrastructure systems are costly but vital to the long-term health and
prosperity of the community. The City of Rancho Cucamonga is committed
to providing the most affordable options for ensuring a high-quality
infrastructure system.
WATER FACILITIES
Water service in most of the city is provided by the Cucamonga Valley
Water District (CVWD), a special district created as a separate entity
from the City, and with the sole purpose of providing high-quality, safe,
and reliable water services. In addition to Rancho Cucamonga, CVWD
serves portions of the cities of Upland, Ontario, and Fontana, and some
unincorporated areas of San Bernardino County. CVWD continues to refine
and improve its water system maintenance and operation procedures
to ensure reliability. Its maintenance practices help reduce water loss
from leaks in the distribution system, which contributes to the amount of
available potable water in the city. Areas in the city south and east of I-15 is
Rancho Cucamonga Animal Center
served by the San Gabriel Valley Water Company: Fontana Water Company
Division. The Fontana Water Company also provides water to Fontana, and
parts of Rialto and portions of the unincorporated area of San Bernardino
County.
WATER TREATMENT
With a large portion of water coming from local sources that include
canyon surface waters and groundwater, CVWD has developed three
water treatment facilities so that water quality meets all Federal and State
requirements. Water that is imported from the Metropolitan Water District
is treated at the Lloyd W. Michael Water Treatment Plant. The treated
water flows into storage reservoirs and then into the distribution system.
Groundwater and surface water is treated at the Arthur H. Bridge and Royer
Nesbit Water Treatment Plants. After treatment, the water is stored in
enclosed reservoirs ready for distribution to consumers.
WATER QUALITY
The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and the
State Water Resources Control Board are the agencies responsible for
establishing drinking water quality standards. To ensure that drinking
water is safe for consumption, the EPA sets Federal regulations and the
State Water Board establishes State regulations that limit the amounts of
certain contaminants in water provided by public water systems. CVWD
mails an annual Water Quality Report to customers.
WASTEWATER
Wastewater conveyance (pipes and pump stations) is handled by CVWD,
and wastewater is processed by CVWD and the Inland Empire Utilities
Agency (IEUA). CVWD oversees the facilities and infrastructure that
transport wastewater to treatment plants operated by the IEUA. At IEUA
treatment plants, wastewater is subject to tertiary-level water treatment,
an advanced process that produces effluent suitable for re-use. The IEUA
operates the wastewater Regional Plant No. 4 located at the intersection of
6th Street and Etiwanda Avenue in Rancho Cucamonga.
RECYCLED WATER
CVWD and IEUA have been working to increase the supply of recycled
water through the Regional Water Recycling Project. Recycled water is
former wastewater that has been treated to remove solids and certain
impurities and is available for non-potable uses like landscaping and
construction. CVWD has been upgrading infrastructure to further
distribute recycled water throughout its service area. Recycled water is a
new source of water for CVWD and is a sustainable method of efficiently
re-using water.
Recycled water
196 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 197
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 6: PUBLIC FACILITIES & SERVICES
STORM DRAINAGE AND FLOOD
CONTROL
Rancho Cucamonga’s storm drainage and flood control system provides
both regional and local drainage and provides debris basins and spreading
grounds designed to reduce mud flows. The City, through its Engineering
Services and Public Works Services Departments, is responsible for the
localized facilities. The San Bernardino County Flood Control District is
responsible for regional flood control facilities. Together, the City and the
San Bernardino County Flood Control District coordinate the preparation of
regional drainage plans.
The City’s drainage plans provide a drainage system consisting of regional
mainline, secondary regional, and master plan facilities that will adequately
convey a 100-year storm event based upon certain drainage criteria. The
plans provide for the establishment of a drainage system hierarchy as
shown in Table PF-2.
STORMWATER QUALITY
The Federal Water Pollution Control Act (the “Clean Water Act”) prohibits
the discharge of any pollutant to navigable waters from a point source
unless the discharge is authorized by a National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System (NPDES) permit. With the adoption of the Water
Quality Act of 1987, the Clean Water Act was amended to expressly require
NPDES permits for discharges from municipal stormwater systems. In
addition, the Porter-Cologne Water Quality Control Act requires discharges
of pollutants to jurisdictional water of the State to obtain water discharge
requirements in the form of an NPDES permit.
In Rancho Cucamonga, NPDES permits for municipal stormwater
discharges are issued by the California Regional Water Quality Control
Board, Santa Ana Region (RWQCB) as part of its Stormwater Program. The
Santa Ana Region issues permits to three counties—Orange, Riverside,
and San Bernardino—and all incorporated cities within those counties.
The City is a co-permittee under the regional NPDES permit for municipal
stormwater discharges in San Bernardino County.
INTEGRATED WASTE MANAGEMENT
Integrated Waste Management contributes to Healthy RC goals by
focusing on reducing materials that enter the landfill through encouraging
waste reduction, re-use, recycling, and composting. Minimizing the
volume of trash that enters landfills conserves resources and protects the
environment from the negative impacts associated with waste disposal.
As landfill space diminishes, minimizing trash volumes become even
more necessary to reduce demand on nonrenewable resources. Using
recycled products also lowers energy consumption, as manufacturing new
Flooding control efforts
TABLE PF-2 DRAINAGE FACILITY TYPES
FACILITY TYPE OWNER/OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS
Regional Mainline
Facilities
San Bernardino County
Flood Control District
• Open channels with a flow in excess of 3,000 cubic feet per
second
• Debris basins or dams at the upstream end of Regional
Mainline Facilities
• Spreading grounds, percolation basins and flood peak
attenuation facilities on or adjacent to Mainline Regional
channels
Secondary Regional
Facilities
San Bernardino County
Flood Control District
• Smaller area than that of the Regional Mainline Facility
• Open channels with a minimum flow of 750 cubic feet per
second
• Flood peak attenuation facilities adjacent to Regional
Mainline Facilities
• Interceptor channels collecting debris laden mountain
runoff
Master Plan
Facilities
City of Rancho Cucamonga • Serve a minimum drainage area of 80 acres
• Consist of reinforced concrete pipe (RCP) with a minimum
diameter of 48 inches
• Facility may consist of RCP or open channel
Local Drainage
Facilities
City of Rancho Cucamonga • Serve a local drainage area or combination of local
drainage areas not meeting the minimum criteria for a
Master Plan Facility
• Consist of a RCP with a minimum main line diameter of 24
inches
• May consist of RCP or open channel
• Local drainage does not include private on-site systems
Interim Drainage
Facilities
N/A • Optional Interim Regional and Master Planned retention
basins to be used prior to the construction of the ultimate
Regional and/or Master Planned Facilities
198 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 199
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 6: PUBLIC FACILITIES & SERVICES
products from recycled materials often uses significantly less energy than
manufacturing from raw materials. Reducing the amount of waste going to
landfills also helps curb global warming, as waste in landfills decomposes
anaerobically and produces methane, which has approximately 23 times
more greenhouse gas effects than CO2.
Solid waste collection, transport, and disposal are handled by a contracted
private firm that hauls collected materials to several regional landfills
and materials recovery facilities. For household waste disposal, Rancho
Cucamonga utilizes a three-container system for recycling, organics
collection, and waste disposal. Black bins allow for the collection of pet
waste, diapers, tissues, plastic wrap, and non-recyclable items, a blue bin
allows for recyclable materials including paper, cartons, metal cans and
trays, glass bottles and jars, and plastic container items, and the green bin
allows for landscape waste such as grass clippings, brush, pruning, leaves,
tree trimmings, twigs, weeds.
The City also implements various programs with local businesses and
public agencies to increase recycling efforts. See Table PF-3 for additional
recycling programs.
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
Telecommunications is the transmission of communication over a long
distance. Telecommunications consists of technologies such as fiber
optics, electric wave transmission lines, and wireless transmissions, with
the methods of transmission evolving rapidly as science and technology
advance. As we experienced during the pandemic, internet access is
essential to many businesses, schools, and daily life. The City supports
the use of continually evolving telecommunications technology to help
improve local businesses and improve the quality of life for residents.
FIBER OPTIC MASTER PLAN
The City partners with a commercial service provider to deliver gigabit-
speed internet as part of the Fiber Optic Master Plan. The City constructs,
owns and maintains the physical broadband infrastructure which is
managed by the Rancho Cucamonga Municipal Utility. The availability of
reliable high-speed internet is essential to businesses, schools, and homes.
TABLE PF-3 RECYCLING PROGRAMS
PROGRAM TYPES PROGRAMS
Composting • Residential Curbside Green Waste Collection
• Commercial Self-Haul Green Waste
• Food Waste Composting
Facility Recovery • Material Recovery Facility
• Landfill
• Composting Facility
Household Hazardous Waste • Permanent Facility
• Education Programs
Policy Incentives • Product and Landfill Bans
• Economic Incentives
• Ordinances
Public Education • Electronic (radio, television, web, telephone hotlines)
• Print (brochures, flyers, guides, news articles)
• Outreach (technical assistance, presentations, awards, fairs, field
trips)
Recycling • Residential Curbside
• Residential Buy-Back
• Commercial On-Site Pickup
• School Recycling Programs
• Government Recycling Programs
• Special Seasonal Collection (regular)
• Other Recycling
Source Reduction • Water Efficient Landscaping
• Backyard and On-Site Composting/Mulching
• Business Waste Reduction Program
• Procurement
• Government Source Reduction Programs
• Material Exchange, Thrift Shops
Special Waste Materials • White Goods
• Scrap Metal
• Wood Waste
• Concrete/Asphalt/Rubble
Source: California Integrated Waste Management Board, 2008.
200 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 201
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 6: PUBLIC FACILITIES & SERVICES
GOALS AND POLICIES
GOAL PF-1 STATE-OF-THE-ART FACILITIES. Residents
enjoy state-of-the-art public and community facilities that
support existing programs, accommodate future needs,
and are accessible to all members of the community.
PF-1.1 New Building Standards. Continue to implement high-quality
standards for new public facilities and improvements to
existing buildings.
PF-1.2 Underserved Neighborhoods. Prioritize new community
facilities in underserved neighborhoods and centers.
PF-1.3 Facility Collaboration. Maximize public facility use by sharing
with nonprofit organizations, school districts, and community
organizations. Look for opportunities to create joint-use
community space at facilities owned by private organizations
such as faith-based groups and service clubs.
PF-1.4 Capital Improvements Program. Coordinate, plan, and
manage a comprehensive capital improvements program
for expansion and improvement of critical facilities and
infrastructure in response to the needs of a growing
community.
GOAL PF-2 EDUCATION. All residents have access to high-
quality educational opportunities.
PF-2.1 Schools. Consider the needs of the school districts that serve
Rancho Cucamonga in future planning and development
activities.
PF-2.2 Colleges. Partner with local public and private schools and
Chaffey Community College to maintain effective educational,
vocational, and workforce programs for all residents.
GOAL PF-3 LIBRARIES. High-quality library resources
are provided to meet the educational, cultural, civic, and
general business needs of all residents.
PF-3.1 Library. Continue to improve the local libraries system,
complete with community facilities that provide
knowledgeable, service-oriented staff and offer access to
information, books, and other materials in a variety of formats,
including emerging technologies. Consider future options for
providing library services that are flexible and will maximize
library services while keeping costs affordable.
GOAL PF-4 ANIMAL CARE. Animal care and services are
provided, including facilitation of adoptions, promotion of
animal health and safety, and animal awareness education.
PF-4.1 Animal Care. Continue to maintain and improve the Animal
Care and Adoption Center facility.
GOAL PF-5 WATER-RELATED INFRASTRUCTURE. Water
and wastewater infrastructure facilities are available to
support future growth needs and existing development.
PF-5.1 Water Treatment. Support the efforts of the CVWD and San
Bernardino County agencies to provide and expand water
treatment facilities to treat local water sources from canyon
surface waters and groundwater.
PF-5.2 Wastewater Treatment. Consult with the Inland Empire
Utilities Agency and the Cucamonga Valley Water District
(CVWD) to ensure that the treatment facility has sufficient
capacity to meet future wastewater treatment needs.
PF-5.3 Recycled Water. Work with the CVWD to expand the recycled
water program to include existing private development.
GOAL PF-6 SOLID WASTE. The volume of solid waste that
enters regional landfills is minimized and the amount of
recycling increased
PF-6.1 Recycling. Encourage Recycling and Organics collection and
processing in all sectors of the community to divert items from
entering landfills.
PF-6.2 Refuse Facilities. Consult with public agencies and private
contractors to ensure adequate organics processing facilities
are available.
GOAL PF-7 UTILITY INFRASTRUCTURE. Protect and expand
utility infrastructure in a sustainable and innovative
manner to serve the current and future needs of the
community while ensuring that natural and environmental
resources are available for future generations.
PF-7.1 Communications. Expand access to high quality established
and emerging communications technologies for individuals,
businesses, educational institutions, and government
functions.
PF-7.2 High Speed Internet. Prioritize extending high speed internet
into underserved lower income neighborhoods.
202 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 203
VOLUME 2 • CHAPTER 6: PUBLIC FACILITIES & SERVICES
PF-7.3 Utility Equipment. To the extent possible, ensure that utility
boxes, above-ground equipment, and utility entrances to
buildings are located at the rear or side of the building, not
the front. Ensure that utility boxes and other above-ground
equipment do not block or impair the safe and effective use of
trails, sidewalks, and streets.
PF-7.4 Planned Streets Segments and Utility Facilities. When
planned street segments, as shown in the Focus Areas and
Mobility & Access chapters, would unreasonably interfere with
the primary utility function on utility owned parcels, allow
the final location and design of those street segments to
accommodate the current and prospective utility needs of the
community to the greatest extent possible.
PF-7.5 Secondary (Non-Utility) Uses of Utility Facilities and Sites.
Ensure compatibility of secondary uses on utility owned
parcels that are not related to the primary utility function of
utility owned parcels with adjacent land uses and the utility
needs of the community.
PF-7.6 Phasing of Public Facilities. Require new parks, open
spaces, infrastructure, and other facilities be funded by and/
or provided by new development as necessary so as to ensure
services can be provided to new development.
Chaffey Community College
Rancho Cucamonga Sports Center
Rancho Cucamonga Animal Center
Cucamonga Valley Water District Plant
Event at the Victoria Gardens Cultural Center
Volume 3
ENVIRONMENTAL
PERFORMANCE
205
IN THIS VOLUME
RESOURCE CONSERVATION
Resource Conservation Is 208
State Legal Requirements 209
Heart of the Matter 2108
Overview of This Chapter 2108
Health Effects 2119
Conservation of Land & Historic Resources 212
Water Resources 218
Air Resources 220
Climate 221
Goals & Policies 224
204 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA
Conservation is at the crossroads of stewardship and equity This
Volume combines conservation of land with consideration of the
natural resources that affect our health and well-being Safety is an
essential human need, and changes to the climate, Santa Ana winds,
and the near year-round fire season make safety planning essential
Protecting people from less immediate danger such as poor air quality,
flooding, and water quality impacts is equally important The people
most often affected by air quality impacts are those with the least
resources This Volume commits the City by design and by policy to
ensuring that new development does not make air or water quality
impacts worse in adjacent neighborhoods, or the city as a whole
As new residents move in and existing residents move downtown the
noises of city life will increase Noises like sirens, train horns, garbage
trucks, and leaf blowers will be balanced by good noise such as children
laughing, outdoor music, and markets The city is no longer a collection
of homes surrounded by vineyards and farms, but rather a bustling
center of commerce, employment, and transit This Volume includes
recognition that not everywhere can be quiet all the time and makes
allowance for people to make a little noise while they are having fun
206 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA
FIGURES & TABLES
207
IN THIS VOLUME (CONT’D)
SAFETY
Safety Is 232
State Legal Requirements 233
Heart of the Matter 234
Overview of This Chapter 235
Seismic Hazards 236
Wildfire 237
Flood Hazards 240
Climate Adaptation 241
Human Caused Hazards 247
Goals & Policies 247
NOISE
Noise Is 252
State Legal Requirements 252
Heart of the Matter 253
Overview of This Chapter 254
Noise Solutions 254
Noise Standards 255
Noise Contours 256
Aircraft Noise Levels 259
Traffic Noise Levels 259
Railroad Noise & Vibration Levels 259
Stationary Sources of Noise 260
Construction Noise 261
Vibration 261
Goals & Policies 263
RESOURCE CONSERVATION
Figure RC-1 Conservation Areas 215
Figure RC-2 Habitat 217
Figure RC-3 Water Resources 219
Figure RC-4 2018 Greenhouse Gas Generation by the City 223
Table RC-1 State of California GHG Emission Reduction Goals and Targets 221
SAFETY
Figure S-1 Rancho Cucamonga Special Study Fault Zones 238
Figure S-2 Potential Liquefaction and Earthquake-Induced Landslides 239
Figure S-3 Historic Wildfire Perimeters 242
Figure S-4 Wildland Urban Interface Fire Area (WUIFA) 243
Figure S-5 FEMA Flood Hazard Zones 244
Figure S-6 Dam Inundation Zones 245
NOISE
Figure N-1 Typical Environmental Noise Levels (dBA) 257
Figure N-2 Noise Contours 258
Table N-1 Noise Compatibility Standards for People 256
Table N-2 Human Response to Different Levels of Ground Noise and Vibration 262
208 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 209
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 1: RESOURCE CONSERVATION
RESOURCE CONSERVATION IS…
the act of ensuring that the development and operation of the City does
not undermine the health of its residents People are part of nature and
time spent in the natural environment is known to reduce stress and
improve the wellbeing of people In addition to natural resources, such as
air and water, this Chapter also includes policies that respects the City’s
history The discussion and policies that follow illustrate the commitment
made by the City to resource conservation and the importance of the
natural environment
Our history defines how the city developed and provides a foundation for
improvement World-class cities embrace their history and incorporate
elements of the past into the future The act of re-purposing buildings for
new use is as old as construction and can be more environmentally sound
than new construction There is something about a classic building or
landscape that has withstood time to remain part of the neighborhood
Perhaps old buildings or things like Historic Route 66 are touchstones
reminding people that even with change some vestige of the past remains
This General Plan celebrates the City’s long history, recognizes all the
historic and natural elements that comprise our neighborhoods and sees
these things as assets to the community worthy of recognition
Resource Conservation
Air and water are essential for life and should be accessible to everyone
regardless of their economic status or location in the city Some land
uses can impact these resources, and often affect residents far from the
buildings themselves Regulations can only go so far to protect them so
this General Plan requires an assessment of the community benefit to be
realized by the land use before they can be approved
STATE LEGAL REQUIREMENTS
California law requires that a General Plan include a conservation chapter
that addresses the use of natural resources, including water and its
hydraulic force, forests, soils, rivers and other waters, wildlife, minerals, and
other natural resources This Chapter considers the effect of development
as described in the Land Use and Community Character Chapter and is the
foundation for implementation methods designed to protect water quality
and prevent flooding This Chapter was prepared to meet the requirements
of Government Code Section 65302(d) and identifies water courses, flood
corridors, riparian habitats, and land that may accommodate floodwater for
purposes of groundwater recharge and stormwater management
This Chapter also addresses historic and cultural, and tribal cultural
resources In this context, historic and cultural resources consider the built
environment since settling of the area Tribal cultural resources are those of
first residents of the area
The exposure of residents to unclean air can be considered an
environmental justice issue since the areas near major transportation
routes are often lower income and are disproportionately affected by
emissions from busy roadways and rail lines The city is in the South Coast
Air Basin (SCAB), where levels of airborne particulate matter (PM) from
emissions and wildfires, and ozone related to both emissions and sunlight,
exceed Federal and State air quality standards Some types of industrial
development concentrate truck traffic and their emissions can affect the
health of nearby residents
“I would like Rancho [Cucamonga] to be known for having the ideal
balance between nature and infrastructure.”
- Community Member (Public input received from the PlanRC Visioning Survey,
Spring 2020)
“A more
environmentally
friendly and energy
efficient city should
be our goal.”
– Community Member
(Public input received from
the PlanRC Survey #2,
Summer 2020)
210 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 211
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 1: RESOURCE CONSERVATION
HEART OF THE MATTER
Although the entire city was once an agricultural area, few large open areas
remain that would support commercial agricultural production today
While some agricultural uses are encouraged, and are allowed within all
General Plan designations, the city today is too developed to support much
in the way of large-scale agriculture While this may change with time
and technologies such as aeroponics, hydroponics, and indoor growing,
agriculture is not a dominant land use in the city
We know people thrive in a clean natural environment with fresh food and
healthy choices The less developed areas of the city see these benefits
daily, while the more developed areas rely upon formal landscaping and
small-lot gardens Still other areas of the city lack these resources and it
is important direction of this plan to improve the natural environment in
these areas This General Plan includes policies that support urban gardens,
edible landscape, and similar close-to-consumer production of agricultural
goods
The air we breathe affects health and is often a visible measure of our
quality of life In general air quality has been improving since the 1970’s, but
there is still a long way to go The city has air quality deficiencies that are
partly a function of geography, and partly from trains, planes, automobiles,
and trucks During some weather conditions our air quality can adversely
affect the health of children, senior citizens, and residents with respiratory
health issues Driving less, planting more, and generally becoming less
dependent upon fossil fuels will help with some, but not all, of the air
quality issues as the city is in a larger region and affected by emissions
originating in other areas For some projects, particularly those near busy
roads, physical filtration may be the only way of ensuring healthy indoor air
quality
OVERVIEW OF THIS CHAPTER
The Resource Conservation Chapter ensures that development is done
with care for the local and global resources that make this City special The
stewardship of natural resources is an important responsibility, and this
Chapter ensures their consideration with every action
The following overarching resource conservation goals serve to guide and
direct long-term planning in the City of Rancho Cucamonga:
+Goal RC-1 Visual Resources. A beautiful city with stunning views of the
San Gabriel Mountains and the Inland Empire
+Goal RC-2 Water Resources. Reliable, readily available, and
sustainable water supplies for the community and natural
environment
+Goal RC-3 Habitat Conservation. Wildlife habitats that support
various plants, mammals, and other wildlife species
+Goal RC-4 Cultural Resources. A community rich with historic and
cultural resources
+Goal RC-5 Local Air Quality. Healthy air quality for all residents
+Goal RC-6 Climate Change. A resilient community that reduces its
contributions to a changing climate and is prepared for the health and
safety risks of climate change
+Goal RC-7 Energy. An energy efficient community that relies primarily
on renewable and non-polluting energy sources
Goal RC-1 reinforces the commitment made by the City to ensure that
the grandeur of the views from the city are not overshadowed by new
development Goals RC-2 through RC-7 confirm the City’s role as a world-
class city in addressing both local and global issues such as air quality and
climate change
HEALTH EFFECTS
High particulate matter (PM) and ground-level ozone concentrations
usually come from cars, trucks, and trains, but can also come from new
industry High particulate matter can result in adverse health effects for
residents, including lung inflammation, reduced lung function, coughing,
wheezing, chest pain, burning in the chest, and shortness of breath
These effects are especially severe in children, older adults, and people
with asthma or other existing lung conditions People in the city who live
near heavily traveled roads and railroad tracks are exposed to pollutants
at a greater level than other locations in the city Land uses that generate
a similar pollutant should need to demonstrate a community benefit
that exceeds their damage to the
community These benefits should
be seen in the areas of the city
most affected by the increase in
trucks or building emissions and
discussed with those neighborhoods
before approving the development
The community benefit should
be included in a plan, publicly
discussed, and adopted as part of
any project Anything less would be
a disservice to the residents of this
world-class city
THE GREENHOUSE EFFECT
212 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 213
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 1: RESOURCE CONSERVATION
Climate change associated with greenhouse gases, may worsen air quality
in the city with rising temperatures that will result in more ground-level
ozone formation and result in more ozone accumulating in the air. A larger
number of extreme heat days and heat wave events may result in more
days when air quality standards are exceeded. Another impact of climate
change is the potential for more frequent regional wildfire-events that will
produce substantial amounts of smoke that contains unhealthy particulate
matter.
Greenhouse gases contribute to climate change, which affects everyone.
The State, and much of the world, is actively trying to reduce greenhouse
gases to slow climate change. As the climate continues to change, we can
anticipate more severe weather, longer droughts, hotter heat waves, and
more severe storms.
CONSERVATION OF LAND &
HISTORIC RESOURCES
HISTORIC RESOURCES
As Rancho Cucamonga developed out of vineyards and citrus groves into
the existing residential neighborhoods and industrial and commercial
centers, some of the City’s long-standing historical buildings have
been torn down. Other structures have been lost to disrepair, neglect,
redevelopment, and fire. Recognizing that economic prosperity and
growth can sometimes overrun the historic fabric of the community,
historic preservation groups and the City have made efforts to protect
the historical buildings and landmarks that remain. This General Plan
reinforces this commitment to recognizing, protecting, and maintaining
Rancho Cucamonga’s past. While 50 years old is considered the starting
point for consideration of historic structures, there is no age requirement
for being deemed historic and even newer buildings or areas can be
historic if considered so by the community. Several neighborhoods within
the city will be turning 50 soon, and this may create challenges for both
new construction and remodeling certain buildings within these older
neighborhoods. There is no one set of policies or procedures that can be
applied uniformly as each project is unique. Certainly not all that is old
is worth preserving, but neither should it all be replaced. A balance and
respect for the history of the City is the intent. Policies in this plan are
designed to allow adaptive reuse of historic structures so that they can
remain a part of the city. This is reflected in the Land Use and Community
Character Chapter, as well as the context for this General Plan.
Foothill Boulevard is a unique historic route for the City of Rancho
Cucamonga, Southern California, and the western United States.
Officially, the numerical designation 66 was assigned to the Chicago-to-
Los Angeles route in the summer of 1926. From the outset, public road
planners intended Route 66 to connect the main streets of rural and urban
communities along its course for the most practical of reasons: most small
towns had no prior access to a major national thoroughfare. Historic Route
66 runs east to west through Rancho Cucamonga and contains historic
resources potentially significant for their association with Route 66.
INDIGENOUS PEOPLE OF RANCHO
CUCAMONGA
The City of Rancho Cucamonga acknowledges the history of this area along
with the enduring culture and traditions of the Kizh people. It is an honor
to share this beautiful place with the original stewards of the land. One
of Rancho Cucamonga’s core values is equitable prosperity for all people
and, to that end, we hereby formally recommit to being inclusive, valuing
cultural diversity, and continuing to build a community that welcomes all
people. Those who were here originally and contributed to the present will
always be acknowledged, never forgotten, and forever valued by the City of
Rancho Cucamonga.
Gabrielino
Ethnographic accounts of Native Americans indicate that the Gabrielino
(also known as Tongva) once occupied the region that encompasses the
City. The term “Gabrielino” came from the group’s association with Mission
San Gabriel Arcángel, established in 1771. The Gabrielino are believed to
have been one of the most populous and wealthy Native American tribes in
southern California prior to European.
Serrano
The City is also located adjacent to territory known to have been occupied
by the Serrano group of Native Americans at the time of contact with
Europeans, around 1769. The Serrano speakers in the Mojave Desert who
lived along the Mojave River were known as Vanyume. In 1819, an asistencia
(mission outpost) was established near present-day Redlands and was used
to help relocate many Serrano to Mission San Gabriel. Today, most Serrano
live either on the Morongo or San Manuel reservations.
Historic Cucamonga Service Station
214 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 215
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 1: RESOURCE CONSERVATION
CONSERVATION AREAS
As illustrated in Figure RC-1, Conservation Areas, there are several existing
and proposed conservation areas within the city The existing conservation
areas, which are managed by several different entities, have been
protected from development by the recordation of conservation deed
restrictions, with some further protected by the preparation and adoption
of conservation management plans
These conservations areas protect habitats such as alluvial fan sage scrub,
sycamore alluvial woodland, California walnut woodland, and freshwater
marsh, providing important habitat and corridors for wildlife, ecosystem
services, and recreational resources for the public In total, these areas
encompass approximately 1,812 acres of habitat within the General Plan
Area and will remain critical to the survival of sensitive species and wildlife
occupying these habitats
As part of the Etiwanda Heights Neighborhood and Conservation Plan
(EHNCP), three new conservation areas are proposed, as identified in Figure
RC-1 The EHNCP created a regulatory and management framework for
securing, expanding, linking, and managing these areas, and systematically
transforming areas of threatened habitat and rural open space with a
few islands of partial conservation, to an area of permanently conserved,
well-managed habitat with a few small islands of rural living in harmony
with nature As growth and development occur it will be essential that
preservation remains a priority for sensitive land resources that have
significant native vegetation and/or habitat value
Habitat and vegetation types are shown in Figure RC-2, Habitat, and
naturally favor the northern edge of the city along the base of the
mountains The city also has natural and man-made drainages that provide
a means for wildlife to enter deep into the developed areas of the city This
General Plan continues the conservation and design attention provided
to these areas for protection of nature and the enrichment of the people
who enjoy the trails that provide entry into them The City is committed
to protecting natural drainages shown in Figure RC-1 and incorporating
them into conservation areas and project design, including by requiring the
clustering of development or enabling the transfer of development rights
to protect these important resources The drainages not only provide life
through running water, but they allow groundwater recharge and are part
of the larger water quality system that helps protect downstream waters
from pollutants that may be in the stormwater runoff
Transfer of Development Rights
Through the Etiwanda Heights Neighborhood and Conservation Plan and
City Hillside Ordinance, the City can allow property owners to transfer their
development rights for hillsides and future planning areas to preserve
natural resources, and to avoid geologic and seismic hazards This General
North Etiwanda Preserve
FIGURE RC-1 CONSERVATION AREAS
0 1 20.5 Miles °
Raimi + Associate s, 2020 | Sources: City of Ranc ho Cucamonga, 2020; SCAG, 2020; County of San Bernardino, 2020; ECORP Consulting, Inc 2020; USGS National Hydrography Dataset
Ontario I nternational Airport
Ontario
Upland
§¨¦210
§¨¦10
§¨¦15
4th St.
8th St.
6th St.
Arrow Rout e
Foothill Blvd.
Church St.
Base Line Rd.
19th St.
Banyan St.
Hillside Rd.
Snowdrop Rd.
Wilson Ave.Terra V is t a P kwy.
Victoria Park Ln.
Jersey Blvd.Sapphire St.Carnelian St.Beryl St.Hellman Ave.Amethyst Ave.Archibald Ave.Hermosa Ave.Haven Ave.Milliken Ave.Rochester Ave.Day Creek Blvd.Etiwanda Ave.East Ave.Highland Ave.Buffalo Ave.Baker Ave.Vineyard Ave.C h u r c h S t.WardmanBullockRd.Fontana
Unincorporated
San Bernardino County
Unincorporated
San Bernardino County
Ranc ho Cucamonga City Boundary
Sphere of Influe nce
Adjacent City Limits
!(Met rolinkSta tion
Met rolink
Parks
Conservation Areas
EHNCP Recco mende d Pres erves
Artificial Drainage Path
Canals and Ditchs
Pipeline
Streams a nd Rivers
Waterways & Regional Water Bodies
Conservation Areas
EHNCP Recommended Preserves
Artificial Drainage Path
Canals & Ditches
Pipeline
Streams & Rivers
Waterways & Regional Water Bodies
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Adjacent City Limits
Rancho Cucamonga Station
Metrolink
Parks
Raimi + Associates, 2020 | Sources: City
of Rancho Cucamonga, 2020; SCAG,
2020; County of San Bernardino, 2020;
ECORP Consulting, Inc, 2020
216 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 217
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 1: RESOURCE CONSERVATION
Plan includes policies that would extend the potential for a transfer of
development rights throughout the Sphere of Influence (See Figure RC-1)
to encourage conservation and a more compact urban form
Grading and the Natural Form
Modern construction is efficient at moving soil and building on flat
surfaces While people benefit from being able to move around easily on
these flatter surfaces, we tend to lose topography and the natural beauty
found in our hillsides and slopes Construction also removes geographic
features and elements of the landscape that have served as landmarks
for generations The irony is that after the grading, significant resources
are spent in replanting and contouring to shadow the original landform
This General Plan requires that grading in hillside or slope areas result in
a naturally appearing form and discourages the use of retaining walls or
terracing that would destroy the natural beauty of the hills and change the
character of these areas forever
Protected Species
Habitat for several protected plant and animal species are known to occur
within the General Plan Area This General Plan includes policies to avoid
or lessen impacts to these species and their habitats [See Figure RC-2 ]
Regional connectivity between habitats is essential to the wellbeing of
local wildlife The northern periphery of the city plays an important role
in connecting two expansive areas of the Angeles and San Bernardino
National Forests This mountainous area and its associated foothills include
corridors, drainages, and open areas attractive to wildlife With the existing
and proposed conservation areas and supporting policies for hillside
development and transfer of development rights, any future development
in the northern portion of the city will consider and protect the regional
flow of wildlife The undeveloped Day Creek utility and flood control open
space corridor may facilitate wildlife movement from the mountains
north of the city south through the southern end of the city providing a
throughfare for wildlife
Urban Forest
The urban forest and trees provide many great economic and
environmental benefits to planned communities Trees provide a wonderful
aesthetic to the city and are also essential to physical and mental health
Not only our health, but that of migratory birds, raptors, songbirds, and
mammals Trees reduce building cooling costs and make it more inviting
to walk along streets and pathways Water shed trees protect water quality
and help prevent flooding, help reduce climate change associated with
greenhouse gases, and are our best natural filter for particulate pollution
Our urban forest also helps to mitigate summer air temperatures As the
climate changes, it will be important to replant trees with tree species that
can handle the new conditions
FIGURE RC-2 HABITAT
Raimi + Associates, 2020 | Sources: City
of Rancho Cucamonga, 2020; SCAG,
2020; County of San Bernardino, 2020;
ECORP Consulting, Inc, 2020
Alluvial
Chaparral
Mixed Scrub
Mule Fat Thicket
Non-native Grassland
Orchard - Agriculture
Ornamental
Ornamental - Eucalyptus Groves
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Adjacent City Limits
Rancho Cucamonga Station
Metrolink
Parks
Riparian
Ruderal
Scale Broom Scrub
Open Water
Channel
Disturbed
Developed - Ornamental
Developed
Riversidean Alluvial Fan Sage Scrub
is a key vegetation community that
supports biodiversity
218 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 219
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 1: RESOURCE CONSERVATION
WATER RESOURCES
WATER QUANTITY
The city relies primarily upon the Cucamonga Valley Water District to
provide water for development A close working relationship between the
City and the District is needed to ensure that our growth does not exceed
their ability to provide service In addition to a collaborative development
process, the City also encourages water conservation and actively reviews
policies to ensure that water is used efficiently in all development
The City is also fortunate to contribute to groundwater recharge Figure RC-
3, Water Resources, shows several flood control basins and natural channels
throughout the city that are designed to allow for recharge of groundwater
through rainfall This General Plan continues to conserve these areas
and includes additional policies to preserve natural drainages One key
component of stormwater management as implemented by the City is
that development is required to retain some stormwater on-site
SURFACE WATER QUALITY
Unchecked, stormwater runoff from the city can pollute local waterways
and even groundwater, causing contamination that can last for
generations Current stormwater retention and filtration requirements
address this for new development, however large areas of the city have
already been built and the stormwater capture requirements only take
effect once additional construction is proposed As a result, the city relies
on stormwater basins to capture debris and slow the speed of runoff to
reduce erosion Many water quality issues can be addressed by providing
information to residents on the importance of keeping pollutants out of
the stormwater system This General Plan continues and expands the City’s
public service announcements, advertisements, or signage that reminds
people of the connection between water features in the city
Groundwater Basins
Chino Basin
Cucamonga Basin
Recharge Basins and Spreading Grounds
Recharge Basin
Spreading Grounds
Watersheds
FIGURE RC-3 WATER RESOURCES
Campus AveSan Bernardino Freeway
Bu rling ton No rt h ern S an ta Fe R ai lway
M etr ol ink
Arrow Hw y Cherry AveEast AveVineyard AveS an B er na rdin o F re e wa y
Foo thill Blv d
Base Lin e Av e
Milliken AveHermosa AveHaven AveEtiwanda AveArchibald AveSan B er nardin o Av e
Bas e Lin e Rd
C I T Y O F
U P L A N D
C I T Y O F
O N T A R I O
C I T Y O F
F O N T A N AArchibald AveHaven AveCherry AveFoo thill B lv dMilliken AveFoo thil l BlvdCarnelian StAr row Hw y Arrow Hw y
Church St
Base Lin e Rd
T e r r a V i s t a P k w y
6th St Rochester AveRochester AveOntario FreewayState Rou te 210 Fre ew aySapphire StHaven AveHermosa AveHellman AveHillsid e Rd
Hellman AveBanyan St
Wilson Ave
Banyon St
East AveS A N B E R N A R D I N O N A T I O N A L F O R E S T
C I T Y O F
F O N T A N A
S a n G a b r i e l M o u n t a i n s
Deer
Canyon
Day
Canyon
East
Etiwanda
Canyon San
Sevai ne
Canyo n
County
Canyo n
ChaffeyCollege
Ba nyan St
Carnelian St19th St
Hillsid e Rd
Day Creek BlvdDEM EN S CR EEK CH A N N ELCUCAMONGACREEK Vineyard AveDAY CREEK CHANNELE
T
I
WA
N
D
A
CREEKCHANNELSAN SEVAINE WASHDAY CREEK CHANNELDEERDEER CREEK CHANNELCANYONETIWANDACREEKCHANNELAl mo nd St
Amethyst AveBeryl StArchibald AveC h u r c h S t
Wilson Ave
Lemon Ave
Victo ria StDay Creek BlvdWardman Bullock RdPowerlin e Rd
RanchoCucamonga
Station Etiwanda AveEtiwanda AveVictoriaGardens
4th S t
Jerse y Blvd9th St Hermosa AveTurquoise AvThe Epicenter
Vineyard AveS P H E R E O F I N F L U E N C E
Source: Rancho Cucamo nga, 2001 and S an Bern ardino County As sessor, 2009.
City Boundar y
Sphere of Inf luence
Watersheds
Spreading Grounds
Recharge Basins
Groudwater Basins
Chino Basin
Cucamonga Basin
Cuca monga
Groundwater
Basin
Chino
Groundwater
Basin
Uppper Cucamonga
Canyon Watershed
Deer Canyon
Watershed
Day Canyon
Watershed
Lower Cucamonga
Canyon Watershed
San Sevaine
Watershed
San
Sevain
Basin
Victoria
Basin
Lower Dr y
Cree k Basin
Alta Loma
Basin
Edwards Cre ek
BasinTurner
Basin
Eiwa nda
Spreading
Grounds
San Sevain e
CreekSpreading
Groun ds
Cucamon ga
Spreading
Groun ds
Cucamonga
Spre ading
Grounds
0 1 20.5 Mile sCampus AveSan Bernardino Freeway
Bu rl ing ton No rth er n San ta Fe R ai lway
Metrol ink
Arrow Hw y Cherry AveEast AveVineyard AveSan B er na r din o F re ew a y
Foo thill Blvd
Base Lin e Ave
Milliken AveHermosa AveHaven AveEtiwanda AveArchibald AveSan Bernardin o Av e
Ba se Lin e Rd
C I T Y O F
U P L A N D
C I T Y O F
O N T A R I O
C I T Y O F
F O N T A N AArchibald AveHaven AveCherry AveFoo thil l B lvdMilliken AveFoo thill B lvdCarnelian StArrow Hw y Arrow Hw y
Ch urch St
Base Lin e Rd
T e r r a V i s t a P k w y
6th St Rochester AveRochester AveOntario FreewayState R ou te 210 Freew aySapphire StHaven AveHermosa AveHellman AveHillsid e Rd
Hellman AveBany an St
Wilson Ave
Bany on St
East AveS A N B E R N A R D I N O N A T I O N A L F O R E S T
C I T Y O F
F O N T A N A
S a n G a b r i e l M o u n t a i n s
Deer
Can yon
Day
Canyon
East
Etiwanda
Canyon San
Sevaine
Canyon
County
Canyon
ChaffeyCollege
Banyan St
Carnelian St19 th St
Hi llsid e Rd
Day Creek BlvdDEM ENS CR EEK CHA NN ELCUCAMONGACREEK Vineyard AveDAY CREEK CHANNELE
T
I
WA
N
D
A
CREE
KCHANNELSAN SEVAINE WASHDAY CREEK CHANNELDEERDEER CREEK CHANNELCANYONETIWANDACREEKCHANNELAlmo nd St
Amethyst AveBeryl StArchibald AveC h u r c h S t
Wilson Ave
Lemon Ave
Victo ria StDay Creek BlvdWardman Bullock RdPowerline Rd
RanchoCucamonga
Station Etiwanda AveEtiwanda AveVictoriaGardens
4th St
Jersey B lvd9th St Hermosa AveTurquoise AvThe Epice nter
Vineyard AveS P H E R E O F I N F L U E N C E
Source: Rancho Cucamonga, 200 1 and S an Bernardino County Assessor, 2009.
City Boundar y
Sphere of Influence
Watersheds
Spreading Grounds
Recharge Basins
Groudwater Basins
Chino Basin
Cucamonga Basin
Cucamonga
Groundw ate r
Basin
Chino
Groundw ate r
Basin
Uppper Cucamonga
Canyon Watershed
Deer Canyon
Watershed
Day Canyon
Watershed
Lower Cucamonga
Canyon Watershed
San Sevaine
Watershed
San
Sevain
Basin
Victoria
Basin
Lower Dry
Cree k Basin
Alta Loma
Basin
Edwar ds Cre ek
BasinTurner
Basin
Eiwa nda
Spreading
Groun ds
San Sevaine
CreekSpreading
Groun ds
Cucamonga
Spre ading
Grounds
Cucamonga
Spreading
Groun ds
0 1 20.5 Miles
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Waterways
City of Rancho Cucamonga, 2020
| Sources: Caltrans Department of
Water Resources, 1997 and California
Resources Agency, 2006Campus AveSan Bernardino Freeway
Bu rl ing ton No rth er n San ta Fe R ai lway
Metrol ink
Arrow Hw y Cherry AveEast AveVineyard AveSan B er na r din o F re ew a y
Foo thill Blvd
Base Lin e Ave
Milliken AveHermosa AveHaven AveEtiwanda AveArchibald AveSan Bernardin o Av e
Ba se Lin e Rd
C I T Y O F
U P L A N D
C I T Y O F
O N T A R I O
C I T Y O F
F O N T A N AArchibald AveHaven AveCherry AveFoo thil l B lvdMilliken AveFoo thill B lvdCarnelian StArrow Hw y Arrow Hw y
Ch urch St
Base Lin e Rd
T e r r a V i s t a P k w y
6th St Rochester AveRochester AveOntario FreewayState R ou te 210 Freew aySapphire StHaven AveHermosa AveHellman AveHillsid e Rd
Hellman AveBany an St
Wilson Ave
Bany on St
East AveS A N B E R N A R D I N O N A T I O N A L F O R E S T
C I T Y O F
F O N T A N A
S a n G a b r i e l M o u n t a i n s
Deer
Can yon
Day
Canyon
East
Etiwanda
Canyon San
Sevaine
Canyon
County
Canyon
ChaffeyCollege
Banyan St
Carnelian St19 th St
Hi llsid e Rd
Day Creek BlvdDEM ENS CR EEK CHA NN ELCUCAMONGACREEK Vineyard AveDAY CREEK CHANNELE
TI
WA
N
D
A
CREEKCHANNELSAN SEVAINE WASHDAY CREEK CHANNELDEERDEER CREEK CHANNELCANYONETIWANDACREEKCHANNELAlmo nd St
Amethyst AveBeryl StArchibald AveC h u r c h S t
Wilson Ave
Lemon Ave
Victo ria StDay Creek BlvdWardman Bullock RdPowerline Rd
RanchoCucamonga
Station Etiwanda AveEtiwanda AveVictoriaGardens
4th St
Jersey B lvd9th St Hermosa AveTurquoise AvThe Epice nter
Vineyard AveS P H E R E O F I N F L U E N C E
Source: Rancho Cucamonga, 200 1 and S an Bernardino County Assessor, 2009.
City Boundar y
Sphere of Influence
Watersheds
Spreading Grounds
Recharge Basins
Groudwater Basins
Chino Basin
Cucamonga Basin
Cucamonga
Groundw ate r
Basin
Chino
Groundw ate r
Basin
Uppper Cucamonga
Canyon Watershed
Deer Canyon
Watershed
Day Canyon
Watershed
Lower Cucamonga
Canyon Watershed
San Sevaine
Watershed
San
Sevain
Basin
Victoria
Basin
Lower Dry
Cree k Basin
Alta Loma
Basin
Edwar ds Cre ek
BasinTurner
Basin
Eiwa nda
Spreading
Groun ds
San Sevaine
CreekSpreading
Groun ds
Cucamonga
Spre ading
Grounds
Cucamonga
Spreading
Groun ds
0 1 20.5 Miles
Open water catch basin
Upper Cucamonga storm drain
220 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 221
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 1: RESOURCE CONSERVATION
CLIMATE
GREENHOUSE GASES
In 2016, the State passed Senate Bill (SB) 32, which sets a statewide goal
of reducing emissions 40 percent below 1990 emission levels by the year
2030 The State has also set long-term goals for an 80 percent reduction by
the year 2050, and recently, Executive Order B-55-18 set a steeper goal for
the State to achieve economy-wide carbon neutrality by 2045 The goal of
carbon neutrality by 2045 is in addition to other statewide goals, meaning
not only should emissions be reduced to 80 percent below 1990 levels by
2050, but that, by no later than 2045, the remaining emissions should be
offset by equivalent net removals of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2-eq)
from the atmosphere, including through sequestration in forests, soils, and
other natural landscapes The State’s current goals and targets are listed in
Table RC-1 below
TABLE RC-1 STATE OF CALIFORNIA GHG EMISSIONS REDUCTION
GOALS AND TARGETS
Target
Year Goal/Target Authority
2020 Reduce GHG emissions to 1990 levels Assembly Bill 32 (2006)
2030 Reduce GHG emissions 40 percent
below 1990 levels Senate Bill 32 (2016)
2045 Net carbon neutral emissions Executive Order B-55-18
(2018)
2050 Reduce GHG emissions 80 percent
below 1990 levels
Executive Order S-03-05
(2005)
In support of these newer GHG reduction targets and carbon neutrality
goals, the State has funded and pursued research, program development
and implementation, rulemaking, and incentives The State’s Building
Energy Efficiency Standards, Green Building Code, and Appliance
Efficiency Regulations have been and are expected to be updated every
three years to meet the State’s goals for zero net energy buildings as
outlined in the State’s Energy Efficiency Strategic Plan, further developed
in Action Plans In addition, the State has set zero emissions goals for
the transportation sector, zero carbon goals for the energy sector, and
related goals to support reductions in the waste sector and from climate
pollutants
GREENHOUSE EFFECT
The release of gases, such as carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), and
nitrous oxide (N2O), creates a blanket around the earth that allows light to
pass through but traps heat at the surface preventing its escape into space
AIR RESOURCES
MOBILE EMISSIONS
Vehicles are the largest source of the pollutants that react in the air to
form ozone Several major freeways and roadways that run through
Rancho Cucamonga, including Interstate 15 (I-15), State Route 210 (SR-
210), and Foothill Boulevard, are major thoroughfares contributing to the
poor air quality experienced by many residents of Rancho Cucamonga
This includes notably high levels of diesel particulate matter (diesel PM),
especially in areas of the city within 500 feet of these freeways and major
roadways This increased exposure to toxic air contaminants (TACs) places
city residents, and especially any sensitive individuals in these areas, at
higher risk for experiencing adverse cancer and noncancer health effects
Reducing the need to use a vehicle by siting goods and services near
homes, and providing attractive, safe, and convenient ways to walk, bike,
rollerblade or use other means of getting there without the need of an
internal combustion engine, is the most effective way of improving local air
quality While there will always be a need for some trips, the expectation of
this General Plan is that residents will have the multiple options for getting
around Policies in other chapters that require connectivity between
neighborhoods, completion of road grids, trails, and paths, will all help to
address both air quality and greenhouse gas emissions
STATIONARY EMISSIONS
Large stationary sources emitting more than ten tons of at least one
health-impacting pollutant per year within the City are rare and regulated
by the South Coast Air Quality Management District (SCAQMD) New
industrial development that would be a large emitter of pollutants is
unlikely to be permitted within the city
COMMUNITY BENEFIT PLAN
Large industrial projects require high volumes of trucks that are known to
cause damage to local roadways, cause air pollution that affects the health
and wellbeing of nearby residents through air pollution and an increase
in noise Unfortunately, the trend of these types of industry is to hire fewer
workers and low paying wages, resulting in little social or fiscal benefit to
the City This General Plan requires larger industrial projects that generate
significant truck traffic to demonstrate community benefit outside of their
project boundaries This can include improvements to neighborhoods
most affected by the increase in truck traffic, reconstruction of roadways
affected by the increase in traffic, or other offset features that allow the
City to balance the negative impacts of the project with positive long-term
benefits to the community
Pacific Electric Inland Empire Trail
Metric tons of carbon
dioxide equivalent or
MTCO2e is the unit of
measurement in this tool.
The unit “CO2e” represents
an amount of a GHG whose
atmospheric impact has been
standardized to that of one
unit mass of carbon dioxide
(CO2), based on the global
warming potential (GWP)
of the gas. A metric ton is
equal to 1 kilogram or 2,204.6
pounds.
222 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 223
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 1: RESOURCE CONSERVATION
These gases function similarly to the glass panes of a greenhouse, which
allow sunlight to pass into the building but trap heat inside, hence the
name for this process: the greenhouse effect While the greenhouse effect
is a naturally occurring process that is vital for the existence of life, human
activities have accelerated the generation of GHGs beyond natural levels
The overabundance of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere has led to an
unexpected warming of the earth and has the potential to severely impact
the earth’s climate system
In California, transportation, and the generation of electricity account
for over half of all greenhouse gas emissions Figure RC-4 shows the
greenhouse gas emissions by sector in the city The greenhouse gas
generation for the City is like that of the State with transportation and
building energy contributing most of the impact It is important then, to
realize that a reduction in trips and more efficient buildings will result in
the largest reduction in greenhouse gas emissions
The development envisioned by this General Plan is intended to reduce
the need to drive by improving access by sidewalk, pathway, and trail, and
by, arranging land uses close to where people live to give them options for
moving around with or without their vehicle To a certain extent changes in
vehicle technology, more energy efficient homes, education, and changes
to the building code to encourage solar panels, will reduce greenhouse
gas emissions In addition to these technologies there are some low-tech
methods of addressing this issue These can include maintaining an urban
forest of trees, parks, and landscaping, connecting pedestrian paths and
bikeways throughout the city to encourage active transportation, giving
priority to transit, and encouraging a more compact urban form, all of
which are embedded in this General Plan
This plan also allows for the City to create a program that would allow new
development in one part of the city to offset some of its greenhouse gas
emission by improving areas of the city where additional pedestrian trails,
trees, and other modernization would reduce greenhouse gas emission
This is a smaller and local version of the statewide cap and trade program
available to large industries
CLIMATE ACTION PLAN
The State of California Scoping Plan includes guidance for local jurisdictions
to reduce GHG emissions through local planning and permitting The
State recommends that local governments evaluate and adopt robust
and quantitative locally-appropriate GHG reduction goals that align
with the statewide per capita targets of no more than six metric tons
of carbon dioxide equivalent (MTCO2e) per capita by 2030 and no more
than two MTCO2e per capita by 2050 Recognizing that not all statewide
emissions can be reduced at the local level, the guidance also states that
it is appropriate for local jurisdictions to derive evidence-based local per
capita goals based on local emissions sectors and population projections
Local GHG reduction strategies to achieve the statewide targets can be
implemented through standalone documents such Climate Action Plans
(CAPs) or can be integrated into other planning documents with policies
that include GHG emissions reduction targets The City has prepared a CAP
as a companion to this General Plan The updated CAP will contain locally
set GHG goals and can serve as a performance metric for later projects
Additionally, a qualified climate action plan can help streamline project-
level environmental review
CLIMATE CHANGE
Since the early 1990s, scientific consensus holds that the world’s population is releasing GHGs faster than the
earth’s natural systems can absorb them These gases are released as byproducts of fossil fuel combustion, waste
disposal, industrial processes, land-use changes, and other human activities While often used interchangeably,
there is a difference between the terms “climate change” and “global warming ” According to the National
Academy of Sciences, climate change refers to any significant, measurable change of climate lasting for an
extended period that can be caused by both natural factors and human activities Global warming, on the other
hand, is an average increase in the temperature of the atmosphere caused by increased GHG emissions The use of
the term “climate change” is more accurate because it encompasses all changes to climate, not just temperature
FIGURE RC-4 2018 GREENHOUSE GAS GENERATION BY THE CITY
On-Road Transportation 56%
Building Energy 39%
Solid Waste 3%
Off-Road Transportation 1%
Water 1%
Agriculture <1%
Wastewater <1%56%39%
3%
Green Technology is
technology that is intended to
mitigate or reverse the effects
of human activity on the
environment.
View toward the San Gabriel Mountains
224 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 225
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 1: RESOURCE CONSERVATION
GOALS AND POLICIES
GOAL RC-1 VISUAL RESOURCES. A beautiful city with stunning
views of the San Gabriel Mountains and the Inland Empire.
RC-1.1 View Corridors. Protect and preserve existing signature public
views of the mountains and the valleys along roadways, open
space corridors, and at other key locations
RC-1.2 Orient toward View Corridors. Encourage new development
to orient views toward view corridors, valley and mountains
RC-1.3 Transfer of Development Rights. Allow the transfer of
development rights from conservation areas to select
development areas throughout the city and Sphere of
Influence to protect hillsides, natural resources, and views and
to avoid hazards and further the City’s conservation goals
RC-1.4 Dark Sky. Limit light pollution from outdoor sources, especially
in the rural, neighborhood, hillside, and open spaces to
maintain darkness for night sky viewing
RC-1.5 Transit Corridor Views. Require that new development along
major transit routes and travel corridors include 360-project
design and landscape or design screening of outdoor activity,
and storage, including views from the transit routes and travel
corridors
RC-1.6 Hillside Grading. Grading of hillsides shall be minimized,
following natural landform to the maximum extent possible
Retaining walls shall be discouraged and if necessary screened
from view
RC-1.7 Preservation of Natural Land Features. Preserve significant
natural features and incorporate into all developments
Such features may include ridges, rock outcroppings,
natural drainage courses, wetland and riparian areas, steep
topography, important or landmark trees and views
GOAL RC-2 WATER RESOURCES. Reliable, readily available,
and sustainable water supplies for the community and natural
environment.
RC-2.1 Water Supplies. Protect lands critical to replenishment of
groundwater supplies and local surface waters (Figure RC-3)
RC-2.2 Groundwater Recharge. Preserve and enhance the existing
system of stormwater capture for groundwater recharge
RC-2.3 Riparian Resources. Promote the retention and protection
of natural stream courses from encroachment, erosion, and
polluted urban runoff
RC-2.4 Waterways as Amenities. When considering new
development applications and infrastructure improvements
where waterways are on-site, adjacent, or nearby, incorporate
the waterway into the design as a feature
RC-2.5 Water Conservation. Require the use of cost-effective
methods to conserve water in new developments and promote
appropriate water conservation and efficiency measures for
existing businesses and residences
RC-2.6 Irrigation. Encourage the conversion of water-intensive turf/
landscape areas to landscaping that uses climate- and wildfire-
appropriate native or non-invasive plants, efficient irrigation
systems, greywater, and water efficient site maintenance
RC-2.7 Greywater. Allow and encourage the use of greywater to meet
or offset on-site non-potable water demand
GOAL RC-3 HABITAT CONSERVATION. Wildlife habitats that
support various plants, mammals, and other wildlife species.
RC-3.1 Sensitive Habitat. Encourage the preservation of the integrity
of sensitive land resources that have significant native
vegetation and/or habitat value such as riparian habitat areas,
creek corridors, Riversidean Alluvial Fan Sage Scrub (RAFSS),
wetlands, and sensitive wildlife habitat that supports biological
resources
RC-3.2 Biological Preserves. Allow and encourage the expansion
of sensitive biological preserve areas (e g , North Etiwanda
Preserve, Day Creek Preserve, and San Sevaine Preserve) and
other important habitat areas with an emphasis on wildlife
connectivity between habitats and connectivity to the national
forest
RC-3.3 Wildlife Corridors. Encourage the creation, maintenance, and
protection of open space areas that provide strategic wildlife
corridors and vital connectivity between habitat areas
RC-3.4 Landscape Design. Encourage new development to
incorporate native vegetation materials into landscape plans
and prohibit the use of species known to be invasive according
to the California Invasive Plant Inventory
RC-3.5 Buffers from New Development. Require new developments
adjacent to identified plant and wildlife habitat areas to
establish and maintain a protective buffer
RC-3.6 Grading and Vegetation Removal. Limit grading and
vegetation removal of new development activities to the
minimum extent necessary for construction and to reduce
erosion and sedimentation
226 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 227
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 1: RESOURCE CONSERVATION
construction and operation of large stationary and mobile
sources
RC-5.4 Health Risk Assessment. Consider the health impacts
of development of sensitive receptors within 500 feet of a
freeway, rail line, arterial, collector or transit corridor sources
using health risk assessments to understand potential impacts
RC-5.5 Impacts to Air Quality. Ensure new development does not
disproportionately burden residents, due to age, culture,
ethnicity, gender, race, socioeconomic status, or geographic
location, with health effects from air pollution Prioritize
resource allocation, investments, and decision making
that improves air quality for residents disproportionately
burdened by air pollution because of historical land use
planning decisions and overarching institutional and structural
inequities
RC-5.6 Community Benefit Plan. Require that any land use
generating or accommodating more than 100 trucks per day,
more than 40 trucks with operating transport refrigeration
units (TRUs) per day, or where TRU unit operations exceed
300 hours per week, provide a community benefit plan
demonstrating an offset to community impacts of the truck
traffic
RC-5.7 New Sensitive Receptors Near Existing Industrial Uses.
Avoid placing homes, schools, hospitals, and childcare facilities
within 1,000 feet of a land use that accommodates more
than 100 trucks per day, more than 40 trucks with operating
transport refrigeration units (TRUs) per day, or where TRU unit
operations exceed 300 hours per week
RC-5.8 New Localized Air Pollution Sources Near Existing Sensitive
Receptors. Avoid placing land uses that accommodate more
than 100 trucks per day, more than 40 trucks with operating
transport refrigeration units (TRUs) per day, or where TRU unit
operations exceed 300 hours per week within 1,000 feet of
homes, schools, hospitals, and childcare facilities
RC-5.9 Truck Hook-Ups at New Industrial or Commercial
Developments. Require new industrial or commercial
developments at which heavy-duty diesel trucks idle on-site
to install electric truck hook-ups in docks, bays, and parking
areas
RC-5.10 Clean and Green Industry. Prioritize non-polluting industries
and companies using zero or low air pollution technologies
RC-5.11 Dust and Odor. Require new construction to include measures
to minimize dust and odor during construction and operation
RC-3.7 Urban Forestry Plan. Minimize damage associated with wind-
and fire-related hazards and risks and address climate change
and urban heat island effects through the development of an
urban forestry plan that addresses and proper and appropriate
landscaping, plant and tree selection and replacement,
planting and vegetation management techniques
GOAL RC-4 CULTURAL RESOURCES. A community rich with
historic and cultural resources.
RC-4.1 Disturbance of Human Remains. In areas where there is a
high chance that human remains may be present, the City
will require proposed projects to conduct a survey to establish
occurrence of human remains, and measures to prevent
impacts to human remains if found
RC-4.2 Discovery of Human Remains. Require that any human
remains discovered during implementation of public and
private projects within the city be treated with respect and
dignity and fully comply with the California Native American
Graves Protection and Repatriation Act and other appropriate
laws
RC-4.3 Protected Sites. Require sites with significant cultural
resources to be protected
RC-4.4 Preservation of Historic Resources. Encourage the
preservation of historic resources, buildings, and landscapes
RC-4.5 Historic Buildings. Encourage the feasible rehabilitation and
adaptive reuse of older buildings
RC-4.6 Paleontological Resources. Require any paleontological
artifacts found within the city or the Sphere of Influence to be
preserved, reported, and offered for curation at local museums
or research facilities
GOAL RC-5 LOCAL AIR QUALITY. Healthy air quality for all
residents.
RC-5.1 Pollutant Sources. Minimize increases of new air pollutant
emissions in the city and encourage the use of advance control
technologies and clean manufacturing techniques
RC-5.2 Air Quality Land Use Compatibility. Avoid siting of homes,
schools, hospitals, and childcare facilities and land uses within
500 feet of land uses that are considered large emitters
RC-5.3 Barriers and Buffers. Require design features such as site
and building orientation, trees or other landscaped barriers,
artificial barriers, ventilation and filtration, construction, and
operational practices to reduce air quality impacts during
228 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 229
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 1: RESOURCE CONSERVATION
GOAL RC-6 CLIMATE CHANGE. A resilient community that
reduces its contributions to a changing climate and is prepared for
the health and safety risks of climate change.
RC-6.1 Climate Action Plan. Maintain and implement a Climate
Action Plan (CAP) that provides best management practices
for reducing greenhouse gas emissions
RC-6.2 Renewable Energy. Encourage renewable energy installations
and facilitate green technology and business
RC-6.3 Reduce Energy Consumption. Encourage a reduction in
community-wide energy consumption
RC-6.4 Urban Forest. Protect the city’s healthy trees and plant new
ones to provide shade, carbon sequestration, and purify the air
RC-6.5 GHG Reduction Goal. Reduce emissions to 80 percent below
1990 levels by 2050 and achieve carbon neutrality by 2045
RC-6.6 Co-Benefits. Prioritize the development and implementation
of GHG reduction measures that also achieve economic, health,
social, environmental, and other co-benefits for the City and its
residents and businesses
RC-6.7 Structural Equity. Encourage GHG reduction and climate
adaptation measures such as trail completion, equipment
upgrade, sidewalk connectivity, tree planting, and buffers be
included in the City’s Capital Improvement Program (CIP) to
improve areas of the city where these features are lacking
RC-6.8 Reduce Vehicle Trips. Require Transportation Demand
Management (TDM) strategies, such as employer provided
transit pass/parking credit, bicycle parking, bike lockers, high-
speed communications infrastructure for telecommuting,
and carpooling incentives, for large office, commercial, and
industrial uses
RC-6.9 Access. Require pedestrian, vehicle, and transit connectivity
of streets, trails, and sidewalks, as well as between
complementary adjacent land uses
RC-6.10 Green Building. Encourage the construction of buildings that
are certified Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design
(LEED) or equivalent, emphasizing technologies that reduce
GHG emissions
RC-6.11 Climate-Appropriate Building Types. Encourage alternative
building types that are more sensitive to and designed for
passive heating and cooling within the arid environment found
in Rancho Cucamonga
RC-6.12 Reduced Water Supplies. When reviewing development
proposals, consider the possibility of constrained future water
supplies and require enhanced water conservation measures
RC-6.13 Designing for Warming Temperatures. When reviewing
development proposals, encourage applicants and designers
to consider warming temperatures in the design of cooling
systems
RC-6.14 Designing for Changing Precipitation Patterns. When
reviewing development proposals, encourage applicants
to consider stormwater control strategies and systems
for sensitivity to changes in precipitation regimes and
consider adjusting those strategies to accommodate future
precipitation regimes
RC-6.15 Heat Island Reductions. Require heat island reduction
strategies in new developments such as light-colored
paving, permeable paving, right-sized parking requirements,
vegetative cover and planting, substantial tree canopy
coverage, and south and west side tree planting
RC-6.16 Public Realm Shading. Strive to improve shading in public
spaces, such as bus stops, sidewalks and public parks and
plazas, through the use of trees, shelters, awnings, gazebos,
fabric shading and other creative cooling strategies
RC-6.17 Offsite GHG Mitigation. Allow the use of creative mitigation
efforts such as offsite mitigation and in lieu fee programs as
mechanisms for reducing project-specific GHG emissions
RC-6.18 Water Sources with Low GHG Emissions. Encourage local
and regional water utilities to obtain water from sources with
low or no GHG emissions
GOAL RC-7 ENERGY. An energy efficient community that relies
primarily on renewable and non-polluting energy sources.
RC-7.1 Electric Vehicle (EV) Charging on City Property. As funding
is available, encourage the installation of publicly available
electric vehicle charging stations at City-owned buildings,
facilities, property, and in the public right-of-way
RC-7.2 New EV Charging. Require new multifamily residential,
commercial, office, and industrial development to include
charging stations, or include the wiring for them
RC-7.3 EV Charging Retrofits. Encourage existing development to
retrofit to include charging stations
RC-7.4 New Off-Road Equipment. When feasible, require that off-
road equipment such as forklifts and yard tugs necessary
for the operations of all new commercial and industrial
developments be electric or fueled using clean fuel sources
RC-7.5 Municipal Vehicle Fleet. Reduce fossil fuel consumption of the
City’s vehicle fleet by increasing the number of electric or zero
emissions vehicles
230 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 231
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 1: RESOURCE CONSERVATION
RC-7.6 Efficiency Retrofits. Encourage existing private property
owners to implement energy efficiency retrofits during
substantial improvement as defined by the California Building
Code
RC-7.7 Sustainable Design. Encourage sustainable building and site
design that meets the standards of Leadership in Energy and
Environmental Design (LEED), Sustainable Sites, Living Building
Challenge, or similar certification
RC-7.8 Farmers Market, Fork to Table. Support microscale agriculture
and farmers markets, and similar methods of encouraging locally
grown and consumed produce
RC-7.9 Passive Solar Design. Require new buildings to incorporate
energy efficient building and site design strategies for the arid
environment that include appropriate solar orientation, thermal
mass, use of natural daylight and ventilation, and shading
RC-7.10 Alternative Energy. Continue to promote the incorporation of
alternative energy generation (e g , solar, wind, biomass) in public
and private development
RC-7.11 Community Development Subdivisions. When reviewing
applications for new subdivisions, require residences be oriented
along an east-west access, minimizing western sun exposure, to
maximize energy efficiency
RC-7.12 Solar Access. Prohibit new development and renovations
that impair adjacent buildings’ solar access, unless it can be
demonstrated that the shading benefits substantially offset the
impacts of solar energy generation potential
RC-7.13 Energy-Efficient Infrastructure. Whenever possible, use
energy-efficient models and technology when replacing or
providing new city infrastructure such as streetlights, traffic
signals, water conveyance pumps, or other public infrastructure
RC-7.14 Energy Storage Facilities. The City of Rancho Cucamonga
supports the development of energy storage facilities on
property owned or controlled by Southern California Edison
and will cooperate with Southern California Edison on the
development of such facilities in a manner that balances the
interests of the community with the need for clean, reliable
energy
RC-7.15 Utility Preservation. Public and private development within the
City, including multi-purpose trails, shall not interfere with safe
and reliable transmission, storage, and generation of electricity
With the exception of utility infrastructure and other public
improvements that do not interfere with such infrastructure,
permanent structures are not allowed within utility corridors
Electric Vehicle Charging Station Solar panels in Central Park
Opening Day at Los Amigos Park Pacific Electric Inland Empire Trail
Drought tolerant landscapeWind energy
232 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 233
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 2: SAFETY
SAFETY IS…
recognizing that natural and human-caused hazards have the potential
to harm people and things, the economic impact to people is another
form of harm It is prudent to plan for emergencies and uncertainty that
can threaten the safety and security of residents and businesses Three
earthquake faults either bisect the City or pass-through areas nearby, and
the city is adjacent to the Angeles and San Bernardino National Forests
which increases the potential wildfire Combined with these threats are the
Santa Ana wind conditions that can cause damage even without wildfire
Making matters worse is climate change that could increase the intensity
of these threats by resulting in drier and hotter weather Wetter and more
intense winter storms could inundate parts of the city that have never
experienced flooding or result in slope instability causing landslides or
mudslides
This Chapter identifies hazards that would affect the city and supports
plans to deal with the hazard While it is not possible to prevent these
hazards, the fact that this City has plans, and will allocate the resources to
deal with the hazard, will provide comfort to the people affected by them
Safety
STATE LEGAL REQUIREMENTS
State law requires that the General Plan include an element that identifies
hazards such as flooding, wildfire, and ground disturbance (Government
Code Section 65302 (g)) This Chapter meets the legal requirements
for a Safety Element and includes policies intended to reduce injury to
people and damage to the city Relevant issues addressed in this Chapter
include seismic and geologic hazards (seismically induced surface rupture,
ground shaking, ground failure, slope instability leading to mudslides and
landslides, and liquefaction), flooding (includes dam failure), wildland and
urban fires, evacuation routes, climate adaptation, and human-caused
hazards Other issues required under this government code section do not
apply to the city and are not addressed The Chapter is also in alignment
with other chapters, as required by State law, including: (1) Housing, (2)
Land Use, (3) Mobility, and (4) Open Space and Conservation Rancho
Cucamonga has also developed and adopted a Local Hazard Mitigation
Plan (LHMP), an Emergency Operations Plan (EOP), a Community Wildfire
Protection Plan (CWPP), and an Evacuation Assessment, all of which allow
the City to become eligible for federal grant funding to mitigate many of
these natural hazards
The Local Hazard Mitigation Plan (LHMP) serves to reduce injury, loss of life, property damage,
and loss of services from natural disasters. This LHMP provides a comprehensive analysis of the
natural and human-caused hazards that threaten the city, with a focus on mitigation, allowing
the City to remain eligible to receive additional federal and state funding to assist with emergency
response and recovery, as permitted by the federal Disaster Mitigation Act of 2000 and California
Government Code Sections 8685.9 and 65302.6; and it complements the efforts undertaken by the
Safety Element.
The LHMP complies with all requirements set forth under the federal Disaster Mitigation Act of 2000
and received approval from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) in 2021. Sections
of this Chapter are supplemented by the LHMP, incorporated by reference in this Chapter, as
allowed by California Government Code Section 65302(g).
“Public safety needs
to keep up with
population growth;
people want to move
to a safe community.”
– Community Member
(Public input received during
Forum On Our Future,
July 2020)
234 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 235
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 2: SAFETY
HEART OF THE MATTER
The people of this City will continue to be vulnerable to hazards Based on
current mapping and understanding, areas of greatest concern include
portions of the city north of State Route 210 and properties adjacent to
flood management infrastructure Evacuation of these areas would be
improved through better roadway connectivity as addressed in the Mobility
and Access Chapter Policies in this General Plan address new development
near hazard areas It is also important that existing and new infrastructure
be ready for hazards and be designed for climate change resilience
Key concerns include the following:
+Areas along the northern portion of the city are located within Special
Study Zones due to active or potentially active earthquake faults A
better understanding of the location of these faults and historic seismic
activity will allow the City to mitigate potential seismic hazards
+Developed and undeveloped properties within the northern portion of
the city are vulnerable to wildfire risks due to their proximity to forested
lands and land adapted to periodic wildfire events New and existing
development should effectively manage vegetative fuel loads and
maintain adequate fuel modification zones to reduce wildfire potential
and spread
+Areas of the city north of State Route 210 should be evaluated and
analyzed for evacuation purposes to ensure that the circulation
network is adequately designed and maintained for daily and
emergency purposes
+Investments in community amenities and infrastructure should
anticipate changes in future conditions resulting from extreme
weather events and climatic conditions that diminish these assets’
effectiveness
+Future developments and community investments should prioritize
locations in reduced hazard areas, which will ensure safer future
operations and risk reduction
To better address the potential harm that could result in injury, loss of life,
property damage, and monetary loss, Rancho Cucamonga has developed
a comprehensive suite of plans and analyses that address these concerns
Each plan plays a critical role in protecting residents and businesses and
ensuring continuity of operations and governance For greater detail and
understanding of the issues affecting Rancho Cucamonga along with plans
to address those concerns, refer to the following documents:
+Natural Hazards Existing Conditions Report (2020)
+Rancho Cucamonga Local Hazard Mitigation Plan Update (2021)
+PlanRC Evacuation Assessment (2021)
+Rancho Cucamonga Emergency Operations Plan (2021)
+Rancho Cucamonga Community Wildfire Protection Plan (2021)
OVERVIEW OF THIS CHAPTER
Safety is a fundamental human need, and this Chapter ensures that people
who live in the city, as well as those who will live here in the future, are
protected Constant training for disaster and vigilance for changing threats
continues in the city, as will review of new development and the potential
for threats
The following safety goals serve to guide and direct long-term planning in
the City of Rancho Cucamonga:
• Goal S-1 Leadership. A city that is recognized for its leadership role
in resilience and preparedness
• Goal S-2 Seismic and Geologic Hazards. A built environment that
minimizes risks from seismic and geologic hazards
• Goal S-3 Wildfire Hazards. A community where wildfire impacts
are minimized or reduced through investments in planning and
resilience
• Goal S-4 Flood Hazards. A community where developed areas are
not impacted by flooding and inundation hazards
• Goal S-5 Emerging Hazards. A built environment that incorporates
new data and understanding about changing hazard conditions
and climate stressors
• Goal S-6 Human Caused Hazards. A community with minimal risk
from airport hazards and hazardous materials
Goal S-1 affirms the leadership role of the City in the region for hazards
planning Goals S-2 through S-6 ensures that new development is aware
of existing hazards and plans for changes anticipated over time The
overarching goal is to maximize training and preparation for unforeseen
events and ensure that new development does not put people in harm’s
way
The PlanRC Evacuation Assessment identifies the routes predominantly used by the City during
emergency incidents that require evacuation. As part of this assessment, the City has identified the
scenarios that are most likely to involve evacuation efforts and areas of the city that have limited
evacuation routes and/or constraints in conformance with the requirements of Government Code
Section 65302 (g) 5 [SB 99] and 65302.15 (AB 747).
236 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 237
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 2: SAFETY
SEISMIC HAZARDS
Rancho Cucamonga is susceptible to earthquakes and other seismically
induced effects Seismic hazards can be categorized as primary or
secondary, as indicated below Primary seismic hazards refer to seismic
shaking and fault rupture Secondary seismic hazards refer to liquefaction
and earthquake-induced landslides
SEISMIC SHAKING (PRIMARY)
Seismic shaking is the movement of the Earth’s surface during an
earthquake, which is generally the primary cause of earthquake damage
Generally, the greater the earthquake magnitude and proximity to the
epicenter, the greater the potential for damage and/or loss The intensity
of seismic shaking directly relates to the amount of energy released by
the seismic event, which is dictated by the depth of the fault movement
and the length of the fault that has moved Shaking intensity is typically
dictated by the proximity to the location of the seismic event The closer to
the epicenter (point of origin for an earthquake), the greater the shaking
felt Seismic shaking is of particular concern to Rancho Cucamonga due to
the proximity to active faults like the Cucamonga Fault, Red Hill-Etiwanda
Avenue fault (both located within the city), the San Andreas Fault (15 5
miles northeast of the city), and the San Jacinto Fault (14 miles northeast
of the city) Both the San Andreas and San Jacinto faults can generate
earthquakes with magnitudes greater than 7 0 on the Richter scale
FAULT RUPTURE (PRIMARY)
Earth is covered in tectonic plates in constant movement, shifting and
moving closer together, or further apart, or even past one another This
movement past one another commonly causes friction, resulting in
plates that “stick ” An earthquake is the release of built-up pressure from
sticking plates, releasing the build-up of energy These rapid movements
can potentially cause earthquake fault rupture Fault rupture is hazardous
if structures are built on top of faults or if infrastructure crosses faults If
fault rupture occurs, structures within the area of movement could be
damaged Areas of known fault rupture hazard in California are identified in
Alquist-Priolo Special Study Zones For Rancho Cucamonga, two faults are
identified within these zones (Cucamonga Fault and Etiwanda Fault Scarp),
as depicted in Figure S-1, Rancho Cucamonga Special Study Fault Zones
The City has designated a fault hazard zone for the Red Hill Fault, which
requires the same level of analysis required by the California Geological
Survey in compliance with the Alquist Priolo Earthquake Zoning Act
LIQUEFACTION (SECONDARY)
Liquefaction is a phenomenon that occurs when seismic shaking causes
saturated soils to lose strength and behave like a liquid This behavior
poses significant difficulties for any building or structure in areas where
liquefaction can occur Additionally, underground structures, pipelines, or
storage facilities are also vulnerable to liquefaction Within the city, small
areas near Hellman Avenue and Base Line Road, and west of Vineyard
Avenue and south of Base Line Road (Figure S-2) are identified as having
liquefaction potential requiring additional analysis and potential mitigation
EARTHQUAKE-INDUCED LANDSLIDE
(SECONDARY)
Earthquake-induced landslide areas are defined as steep topography areas
and weak geologic formations that become unstable during an intense
seismic event These areas are predominantly located in the undeveloped
northern portions of the city, as shown in Figure S-2, Potential Liquefaction
and Earthquake-Induced Landslides Additional analysis and potential
mitigation may be required for lands within these areas For additional
details on slope stability issues and concerns, please refer to the Rancho
Cucamonga Local Hazard Mitigation Plan Update
WILDFIRE
The most common type of natural hazards in California are wildfires, which
can burn large areas of undeveloped or natural land quickly They often
begin as smaller fires caused by lightning strikes, downed power lines, or
unattended campfires Small fires quickly become large fires when low
humidity, high temperatures, and strong winds combine to create critical
weather conditions Santa Ana winds can carry burning embers over a
mile, starting new fires well ahead of the main body of a wildfire Periods
of prolonged drought increase wildfire events at times when water for
firefighting is scarcer Typically, wildfires pose minimal threat to people and
buildings in urban areas but increasing human encroachment into natural
areas increases the likelihood of injury to people and animals, along with
damage to structures and the environment This encroachment occurs in
areas identified as the wildland-urban interface which are locations where
development meets undeveloped land with vegetation susceptible to
wildland fires These are the areas classified by Cal FIRE as high and very
high fire hazard severity zones While Rancho Cucamonga is primarily
an urban environment, its geographical location and proximity to the
chaparral ecosystem that dominates the foothills of the Angeles and San
Bernardino National Forests increases the likelihood of wildfires in and near
Rancho Cucamonga All these factors increase the opportunity for wildfires
to ignite, grow, and spread into the city
Seismically damaged road Landslide
238 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 239
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 2: SAFETY
Fault Hazard Zones
Alquist-Priolo Faults
Alquist-Priolo Special Study Zone
Red Hill Fault
Red Hill Fault Special Study Zone
Secondary Seismic Hazards
Liquefaction Hazard Zone
Earthquake-Induced Landslide Hazard Zone
!(
0 1 20.5 Miles °
Atlas Planning Solutions, 2020 |
Sources: City of Rancho Cucamonga, 2020;
SCAG, 2020; County of San Bernardino, 2020;
California Geological Survey, 2021
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San Bernardino County
Unincorporated
San Bernardino County
Adjacent City Limits
Parks
Waterways
Rancho Cucamonga Station
Metrolink
!(
Sphere of Influence
City Boundary
E tiw anda A venue FaultCucamonga Fault
R ed H ill FaultFault Hazard Zones
Alquist-Priolo Special Study Zone
Red Hill Fault Special Study Zone
Red Hill Fault
Alquist-Priolo Faults
FIGURE S-1 RANCHO CUCAMONGA SPECIAL STUDY FAULT ZONES FIGURE S-2 POTENTIAL LIQUEFACTION AND EARTHQUAKE-INDUCED LANDSLIDES
0 1 20.5 Miles °
Atlas Planning Solutions, 2020 |
Sources: City of Rancho Cucamonga, 2020;
SCAG, 2020; County of San Bernardino, 2020;
California Geological Survey, 2021
Ontario International Airport
Ontario
Upland
§¨¦210
§¨¦10
§¨¦15
4th St.
8th St.
6th St.
Arrow Route
Foothill Blvd.
Church St.
Base Line Rd.
19th St.
Banyan St.
Hillside Rd.
Snowdrop Rd.
Wilson Ave.Terra V is t a P kwy.
Victoria Park Ln.
Jersey Blvd.Sapphire St.Carnelian St.Beryl St.Hellman Ave.Amethyst Ave.Archibald Ave.Hermosa Ave.Haven Ave.Milliken Ave.Rochester Ave.Day Creek Blvd.Etiwanda Ave.East Ave.Highland Ave.Buffalo Ave.Baker Ave.Vineyard Ave.C h u r c h S t.WardmanBullockRd.Fontana
Unincorporated
San Bernardino County
Unincorporated
San Bernardino County
Adjacent City Limits
Parks
Waterways
Rancho Cucamonga Station
Metrolink
!(
Sphere of Influence
City BoundarySecondary Seismic Hazards
Earthquake-Induced Landslide
Hazard Zone
Liquefaction Hazard Zone
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Adjacent City Limits
Rancho Cucamonga Station
Metrolink
Parks
Waterways
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Adjacent City Limits
Rancho Cucamonga Station
Metrolink
Parks
Waterways
Atlas Planning Solutions, 2020 |
Sources: City of Rancho Cucamonga,
2020; SCAG, 2020; County of San
Bernardino, 2020; California Geological
Survey, 2021
Atlas Planning Solutions, 2020 |
Sources: City of Rancho Cucamonga,
2020; SCAG, 2020; County of San
Bernardino, 2020; California Geological
Survey, 2021
240 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 241
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 2: SAFETY
year floodplains within the city are located within undeveloped areas or
flood control basins and channels that convey waters through the city
While these flood control facilities are intended to retain and manage
floodwaters, there is the potential for inundation of portions of the city
if failure occurs Figure S-6, Dam Inundation Zones, identifies the areas
where inundation could occur if a flood control facility were to fail, causing
downstream impacts
Both the FEMA flood zones and dam inundation zones depicted in this
Chapter are the known locations of potential flooding currently available to
the City If new data and information becomes available, the City will take it
into consideration, where necessary
CLIMATE ADAPTATION
Climate change is anticipated to result in increased average temperatures
and precipitation pattern variability globally These changes translate
into specific impacts to the city that may include increased frequency
and intensity of wildfires, severe weather events, flooding, landslides,
and reduced water availability associated with droughts Other impacts
anticipated from climate change include food insecurity, increases
in vector-borne diseases, degradation of air quality, reduced ability to
enjoy outdoors, and potential economic impacts due to uncertainty and
changing conditions For additional discussion on climate change impacts
refer to the Rancho Cucamonga Local Hazard Mitigation Plan Update
(hyperlink added upon adoption)
While many residents within the city could adapt to these types of changes,
vulnerable populations—including low-income communities, communities
of color, senior citizens, linguistically isolated populations, individuals with
disabilities or preexisting medical conditions, and individuals experiencing
homelessness—are anticipated to be disproportionately affected by these
effects
SEVERE WEATHER HAZARDS
Severe weather hazards in Rancho Cucamonga include drought, extreme
heat, and severe wind These hazards have affected plants and animals
and damaged properties and vehicles Future effects are anticipated due
to climate change, which can contribute to the frequency and intensity of
severe weather events Please refer to the Greenhouse Gas Emissions and
Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment Existing Conditions Report for
additional detail
Drought
A drought is a long period with substantially less precipitation than usual
The primary direct impact of a drought is the reduction of available water
A key component of effective fire response and suppression is the ability
to meet peak-load water supply requirements The City and Fire Protection
District require all developments to install adequate water conveyance
facilities to meet these requirements To ensure adequate water supplies
are available, all development applications are required to verify with the
appropriate water supplier (Cucamonga Valley Water District or Fontana
Water Company) that adequate water supplies are available to serve the
proposed development If this requirement is not met, the proposed
development cannot begin construction
Figure S-3, Historic Wildfire Perimeters, displays the perimeters for key
historic wildfires that have occurred within the city from 1970 through 2014
In 2003 the Grand Prix Fire and the Old Fire burned large portions of the
Angeles and San Bernardino National Forests The Old Fire burned over
91,000 acres destroying over 1,200 structures The Grand Prix Fire burned
over 69,000 acres and destroyed nearly 200 residences This fire impacted
the City, burning a large portion of the Wildland Urban Interface Areas
(WUIFAs) areas adjoining the national forest and destroying 15 homes in
the process
Figure S-4, Wildland Urban Interface Fire Area (WUIFA), depicts the Rancho
Cucamonga WUIFA along with the essential facilities located throughout
the city The WUIFA includes Cal FIRE Very High Fire Hazard Severity
Zones within the City’s Sphere of Influence (State Responsibility Area), the
City’s Local Responsibility Area, and other areas potentially threatened by
wildfires based on historical fire activity and prevalent vegetation types
Properties located within these areas must adhere to State and Rancho
Cucamonga Fire Protection District wildfire requirements
FLOOD HAZARDS
Floods occur when there is too much water on the ground to be held
within local water bodies, causing water to accumulate in naturally dry
areas They are often caused by heavy rainfall, though floods can also
occur after a long period of moderate rainfall or if unusually warm weather
causes mountain snow to melt faster than expected Worsening drought
conditions caused by climate change may exacerbate the effects of
flooding, as surfaces that normally absorb water can quickly dry out and
become less permeable
Rancho Cucamonga has a long history of flooding and is especially
vulnerable during the winter storm season Figure S-5, FEMA Flood
Hazard Zones, identifies the significant flood areas of concern, which
include both 100-year and 500-year FEMA floodplains These floodplain
designations depict areas of potential flooding based on the probability
of occurring in a given year The 100-year floodplain identifies areas that
have a 1% probability (1 in 100) of flooding The 500-year floodplain identifies
areas that have a 0 2% probability (1 in 500) of flooding Most of the 100-
Wildfire spreading along roadside
Efforts to manage flooding
“Specific care must
be taken in order
to adapt Rancho to
the specific climate
issues it will face in
the future including
drought, air
pollution, excessive
heat, and traffic.”
– Community Member
(Public input received from
the PlanRC Survey #2,
Summer 2020)
242 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 243
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 2: SAFETY
FIGURE S-4 WILDLAND URBAN INTERFACE FIRE AREA (WUIFA)FIGURE S-3 HISTORIC WILDFIRE PERIMETERS
0 1 20.5 Miles °
Atlas Planning Solutions, 2020 |
Sources: City of Rancho Cucamonga, 2020;
SCAG, 2020; County of San Bernardino, 2020;
California Board of Forestry and Fire Protection,
2021
Ontario International Airport
Ontario
Upland
§¨¦210
§¨¦10
§¨¦15
4th St.
8th St.
6th St.
Arrow Route
Foothill Blvd.
Church St.
Base Line Rd.
19th St.
Banyan St.
Hillside Rd.
Snowdrop Rd.
Wilson Ave.Terra V is t a P kwy.
Victoria Park Ln.
Jersey Blvd.Sapphire St.Carnelian St.Beryl St.Hellman Ave.Amethyst Ave.Archibald Ave.Hermosa Ave.Haven Ave.Milliken Ave.Rochester Ave.Day Creek Blvd.Etiwanda Ave.East Ave.Highland Ave.Buffalo Ave.Baker Ave.Vineyard Ave.C h u r c h S t.WardmanBullockRd.Fontana
Unincorporated
San Bernardino County
Unincorporated
San Bernardino County
Adjacent City Limits
Parks
Waterways
Rancho Cucamonga Station
Metrolink
!(
Sphere of Influence
City BoundaryHistoric Wildfire Perimeters
National Forest
(Federal Responsibility Area)
Cal Fire State Responsibility Areas
Wildland Urban Interface Fire Area
Essential Facilities
%2 Bridges
$City Facilities
$Fire Stations
Schools
Historic Wildfire Perimeters
1970 Meyers Fire
1980 Summit Fire
1985 Archibald Fire
1988 Texas Fire
2003 Grand Prix Fire
2008 Foxborough Fire
2008 San Antonio Fire
2014 Etiwanda Fire
Fire Hazard Severity Zones
National Forest (Federal Responsibility Area)
Cal Fire State Responsibility Areas
Wildland Urban Interface Fire Area
Essential Facilities
Bridges
Fire Stations
City Facilities
Schools
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Adjacent City Limits
Rancho Cucamonga Station
Railway
Parks
Waterways
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Adjacent City Limits
Rancho Cucamonga Station
Railway
Parks
Waterways
Atlas Planning Solutions, 2020 |
Sources: City of Rancho Cucamonga,
2020; SCAG, 2020; County of San
Bernardino, 2020; California Board of
Forestry and Fire Protection, 2021
0 1 20.5 Miles °
Atlas Planning Solutions, 2020 |
Sources: City of Rancho Cucamonga, 2020;
SCAG, 2020; County of San Bernardino, 2020;
California Board of Forestry and Fire Protection,
2021
Ontario International Airport
Ontario
Upland
§¨¦210
§¨¦10
§¨¦15
4th St.
8th St.
6th St.
Arrow Route
Foothill Blvd.
Church St.
Base Line Rd.
19th St.
Banyan St.
Hillside Rd.
Snowdrop Rd.
Wilson Ave.Terra V is t a P kwy.
Victoria Park Ln.
Jersey Blvd.Sapphire St.Carnelian St.Beryl St.Hellman Ave.Amethyst Ave.Archibald Ave.Hermosa Ave.Haven Ave.Milliken Ave.Rochester Ave.Day Creek Blvd.Etiwanda Ave.East Ave.Highland Ave.Buffalo Ave.Baker Ave.Vineyard Ave.C h u r c h S t.WardmanBullockRd.Fontana
Unincorporated
San Bernardino County
Unincorporated
San Bernardino County
Adjacent City Limits
Parks
Waterways
Rancho Cucamonga Station
Metrolink
!(
Sphere of Influence
City BoundaryHistoric Wildfire Perimeters
1970 Meyers Fire
1980 Summit Fire
1985 Archibald Fire
1988 Texas Fire
2003 Grand Prix Fire
2008 Foxborough Fire
2008 San Antonio Fire
2014 Etiwanda Fire
Atlas Planning Solutions, 2020 |
Sources: City of Rancho Cucamonga,
2020; SCAG, 2020; County of San
Bernardino, 2020; California Board of
Forestry and Fire Protection, 2021
244 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 245
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 2: SAFETY
Flood Hazard Zones
Flood Control Channels
Flood Control Basins & Dams
100 Year Flood Zone
500 Year Flood Zone
500 Year Flood Zone (Protected by Levee)
FIGURE S-5 FEMA FLOOD HAZARD ZONES
!(
0 1 20.5 Miles °
Atlas Planning Solutions, 2020 |
Sources: City of Rancho Cucamonga, 2020;
SCAG, 2020; County of San Bernardino, 2020;
Federal Emergency Management Agency,
2021
Ontario International Airport
Ontario
Upland
§¨¦210
§¨¦10
§¨¦15
4th St.
8th St.
6th St.
Arrow Route
Foothill Blvd.
Church St.
Base Line Rd.
19th St.
Banyan St.
Hillside Rd.
Snowdrop Rd.
Wilson Ave.Terr a V is t a P kwy.
Victoria Park Ln.
Jersey Blvd.Sapphire St.Carnelian St.Beryl St.Hellman Ave.Amethyst Ave.Archibald Ave.Hermosa Ave.Haven Ave.Milliken Ave.Rochester Ave.Day Creek Blvd.Etiwanda Ave.East Ave.Highland Ave.Buffalo Ave.Baker Ave.Vineyard Ave.C h u r c h St.WardmanBullockRd.Fontana
Unincorporated
San Bernardino County
Unincorporated
San Bernardino County
Adjacent City Limits
Parks
Waterways
Rancho Cucamonga Station
Metrolink
!(
Sphere of Influence
City BoundaryFlood Hazard Zones
Flood Control Channels
100 Year Flood Zone
500 Year Flood Zone
Flood Control Basins & Dams
500 Year Flood Zone
(Protected by Levee)
FIGURE S-6 DAM INUNDATION ZONES
!(
0 1 20.5 Miles °
Atlas Planning Solutions, 2020 |
Sources: City of Rancho Cucamonga, 2020;
SCAG, 2020; County of San Bernardino, 2020;
California Department of Water Resources,
2020
Ontario International Airport
Ontario
Upland
§¨¦210
§¨¦10
§¨¦15
4th St.
8th St.
6th St.
Arrow Route
Foothill Blvd.
Church St.
Base Line Rd.
19th St.
Banyan St.
Hillside Rd.
Snowdrop Rd.
Wilson Ave.Terra V is t a P kwy.
Victoria Park Ln.
Jersey Blvd.Sapphire St.Carnelian St.Beryl St.Hellman Ave.Amethyst Ave.Archibald Ave.Hermosa Ave.Haven Ave.Milliken Ave.Rochester Ave.Day Creek Blvd.Etiwanda Ave.East Ave.Highland Ave.Buffalo Ave.Baker Ave.Vineyard Ave.C h u r c h St.WardmanBullockRd.Fontana
Unincorporated
San Bernardino County
Unincorporated
San Bernardino County
Adjacent City Limits
Parks
Waterways
Rancho Cucamonga Station
Metrolink
!(
Sphere of Influence
City BoundaryDam Inundation Zones
San Sevaine #5
Etiwanda Basin
Hickory Basin
Demens Creek
Day Creek
Deer Canyon
Alta Loma Basins #1 & #2
Cucamonga Creek
Dam Inundation Zones
Hickory Basin
San Sevaine #5
Etiwanda Basin
Demens Creek
Day Creek
Deer Canyon
Alta Loma Basins #1 & #2
Cucamonga Creek
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Adjacent City Limits
Rancho Cucamonga Station
Metrolink
Parks
Waterways
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Adjacent City Limits
Rancho Cucamonga Station
Metrolink
Parks
Waterways
Atlas Planning Solutions, 2020 |
Sources: City of Rancho Cucamonga,
2020; SCAG, 2020; County of San
Bernardino, 2020; California
Department of Water Resources, 2020
Atlas Planning Solutions, 2020 |
Sources: City of Rancho Cucamonga,
2020; SCAG, 2020; County of San
Bernardino, 2020; Federal Emergency
Management Agency, 2019
246 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 247
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 2: SAFETY
HUMAN CAUSED HAZARDS
Rancho Cucamonga is located along major ground and air transportation
corridors As a result, a variety of human-caused hazards associated with
air and ground transportation could impact the community Proximity to
airports requires consideration for land uses and development patterns to
ensure airport operations will not conflict with surrounding uses Since the
city is located approximately 3 2 miles north of the Ontario International
Airport and 4 5 miles east of Cable Municipal Airport in the City of Upland,
portions of Rancho Cucamonga may be affected by these facilities The
southwestern portion of the city is located within the Ontario International
Airport Influence Area, which will require compliance with applicable
regulations of the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and consideration
of the Airport Land Use Compatibility Plan
The release of hazardous materials is another type of human-caused hazard
that could impact residents and businesses Numerous types of hazardous
materials and chemicals are transported and used throughout homes and
businesses within the city A majority of the transportation routes used to
transport these materials include major roadways, freeways, and rail lines
Interstate 15 (I-15) and State Route 210 (SR-210) are located within Rancho
Cucamonga and Interstate 10 (I-10) is less than a mile south of the city limit
GOALS AND POLICIES
GOAL S-1 Leadership. A city that is recognized for its leadership
role in resilience and preparedness.
S-1.1 City Staff Readiness. Ensure City staff and departments
demonstrate a readiness to respond to emergency incidents
and events
S-1.2 Culture of Preparedness. Promote a culture of preparedness
for businesses and residents that empowers them to increase
their resilience to hazard related events and a changing
climate
S-1.3 Evacuation Capacity. Require new developments,
redevelopments, and major remodels to enhance the City’s
evacuation network and facilities and comply with the City’s
Evacuation Assessment
S-1.4 WUIFA Access Points. Require all new developments and
redevelopments within the WUIFA to provide a minimum of
two points of access by means of public roads that can be used
for emergency vehicle response and evacuation purposes
S-1.5 Enhanced Circulation. In areas of the city with limited access
routes and circulation challenges, require additional roads
supplies Water reduction is particularly concerning in agricultural areas
and natural environments, but it can also affect landscaping in urban
areas or affect human health in extreme cases Droughts are generally
regional events; however, some communities experience “long-distance
drought” if the water source areas—potentially hundreds of miles away—
are experiencing drought Rancho Cucamonga currently receives nearly
half of its water supply from imported sources that have historically been
impacted by drought conditions
Extreme Heat
Extreme heat is a period when temperatures are abnormally high relative
to the normal temperature range Extreme heat events include:
+Extreme Heat Days: a day during which the maximum temperature
surpasses 98 percent of all historic high temperatures for the area,
+Warm Nights: a day between April and October when the minimum
temperature exceeds 98 percent of all historic minimum daytime
temperatures,
+Extreme Heat Waves: a successive series of extreme heat days and
warm nights where extreme temperatures do not abate; typically, four
successive extreme heat days and warm nights
According to Cal-Adapt, an extreme heat day for Rancho Cucamonga is
when the temperature exceeds 103 9° F, and a warm night exceeds 68 7°F
Between 2006 and 2019, the city experienced an average of eight extreme
heat days annually, which are projected to increase between 21 and 35 days
by the end of the century
Severe Wind
Wind is simply the movement of air caused by differences in atmospheric
pressure and temperature High-pressure air will naturally move to areas of
low pressure During certain times of the year, these conditions can cause
high-speed winds (Santa Ana Winds), which are fast and forceful enough
to be dangerous to people, damaging to structures (public facilities,
infrastructure, homes, and utilities), and could result in uprooted or
damaged trees Severe wind events can also cause the initiation of Public
Safety Power Shutoff (PSPS) events by utility providers (Southern California
Edison) that distribute electricity to the city These events de-energize
power grids in high fire risk areas during wind events to reduce the
potential of wildfire ignition and spread A significant Santa Ana wind event
that impacted Rancho Cucamonga in 2020 had wind gusts of more than
70 miles per hour When strong winds combine with warm temperatures
and very low humidity, the potential for extreme fire conditions increases
Usually during these conditions, the National Weather Service issues, a
red flag warning The 2014 Etiwanda Fire occurred under these types of
conditions, with wind gusts that reached 80 miles per hour
Fallen tree from severe winds Hazardous materials clean up
248 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 249
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 2: SAFETY
and improvements to ensure adequate emergency vehicle
response and evacuation
S-1.6 Evacuation Road Widths. Require any roads used for
evacuation purposes to provide at least 26 feet of unobstructed
pavement width
S-1.7 Maintenance of Plans. Maintain and regularly update the
City’s Local Hazard Mitigation Plan (LHMP) as an integrated
component of the General Plan, in coordination with the
Community Wildfire Protection Plan (CWPP), the Emergency
Operations Plan (EOP), the Evacuation Plan, and Standardized
Emergency Management System (SEMS) compliant disaster
plans to maintain eligibility for grant funding
S-1.8 Regional Coordination. Ensure regional coordination
continues with neighboring jurisdictions, County, State,
and Federal agencies on emergency management and risk
reduction planning and activities
S-1.9 Mutual Aid. Ensure mutual aid agreements with Federal, State,
local agencies, and the private sector establish responsibility
boundaries, joint response services, and multi-alarm and
station coverage capabilities
GOAL S-2 Seismic and Geologic Hazards. A built environment
that minimizes risks from seismic and geologic hazards.
S-2.1 Fault Setbacks. Require minimum setbacks for structures
proposed for human occupancy within State and City Special
Study Zones Setbacks will be based on minimum standards
established under State law and recommendations of a
Certified Engineering Geologist and/or Geo-technical Engineer
S-2.2 Building Functionality. Require enhanced siting, design, and
construction standards that focus on building functionality for
new critical public facilities and key essential (private) facilities
after a seismic event
S-2.3 Seismically Vulnerable Buildings. Prioritize the retrofit by
private property owners of seismically vulnerable buildings
(including but not limited to unreinforced masonry, soft-story
construction, and non-ductile concrete) as better information
and understanding becomes available
S-2.4 Transfer of Development Rights. Allow the transfer of
development rights from areas of significant seismic and
geologic hazards to select development areas throughout the
City and Sphere of Influence
S-2.5 Hillside Hazards. Prioritize regulations and strategies that
reduce geologic hazard risk to properties and loss of life
GOAL S-3 Wildfire Hazards. A community where wildfire impacts
are minimized or reduced through investments in planning and
resilience.
S-3.1 Fire Risk Reduction. Apply all state and local codes and
regulations (fire safe design, adherence to Standard 49-1) to
new development, redevelopment, and major remodels in the
WUIFA
S-3.2 Fire Protection Plans. All new development, redevelopment,
and major remodels in the WUIFA will require the preparation
of Fire Protection Plans (FPPs) to reduce fire threat, in
accordance with Fire District policies and procedures
S-3.3 Vegetation Management. Owners of properties and public/
private roads within and adjacent to the WUIFA are required to
conduct brush clearance and fuel modification to reduce fire
ignition potential and spread
S-3.4 Buffer Zones. Require development projects to incorporate
buffer zones as deemed necessary by the City’s Fire Marshal for
fire safety and fuel modification
S-3.5 Water Supply. All developments will meet fire flow
requirements identified in the Fire Code
S-3.6 Coordination with Agencies. Coordinate with State, regional,
and local agencies and service providers on fire risk reduction
planning and activities
S-3.7 Wildfire Awareness. Assist residents and property owners
with being better informed on fire hazards and risk reduction
activities in the WUIFA
S-3.8 New Essential Facilities (WUIFA). Prohibit the siting of new
essential public facilities (including, but not limited to, hospitals
and health care facilities, emergency shelters, emergency
command centers, and emergency communications facilities)
within the WUIFA, unless appropriate construction methods or
strategies are incorporated to minimize impacts
GOAL S-4 Flood Hazards. A community where developed areas
are not impacted by flooding and inundation hazards.
S-4.1 New Essential Facilities (Flood). Prohibit the siting and
construction of new essential public facilities within flood
hazard zones, when feasible If an essential facility must be
located within a flood hazard zone, incorporate flood mitigation
to the greatest extent practicable
S-4.2 Flood Risk in New Development. Require all new
development to minimize flood risk with siting and design
measures, such as grading that prevents adverse drainage
A fire protection plan (FPP)
approved by the fire code
official, is required for all
new development within the
WUIFA. FPPs are required to
include mitigation strategies
that take into consideration
location, topography,
geology, flammable
vegetation, sensitive
habitats/species, and climate
of the proposed site. FPPs
must address water supply,
access, building ignition and
fire resistance, fire protection
systems and equipment,
defensible space, vegetation
management, clearance
around buildings and
structures, and long-term
maintenance. All required
FPPs must be consistent
with the requirements of
the California Building
and Residential Codes,
The California Fire Code as
adopted by the Fire District,
and the City of Rancho
Cucamonga Municipal Code.
Emergency response to wildfire activity
250 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 251
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 2: SAFETY
impacts to adjacent properties, on-site retention of runoff, and
minimization of structures located in floodplains
S-4.3 500-Year Floodplain. Promote the compliance of 100-year
floodplain requirements on properties located within the 500-
year floodplain designation
S-4.4 Flood Infrastructure. Require new development to implement
and enhance the Storm Drain Master Plan by constructing
stormwater management infrastructure downstream of the
proposed site
S-4.5 Property Enhancements. Require development within
properties located adjacent, or near flood zones and areas of
frequent flooding to reduce or minimize run-off and increase
retention on-site
S-4.6 Regional Coordination. Promote regional flood management
and mitigation projects with other agencies (San Bernardino
County Flood Control, Army Corps of Engineers, and adjacent
jurisdictions) to address flood hazards holistically
S-4.7 Dam Operators. Coordinate with agencies operating or
managing dam facilities that can inundate the city, on
operations, maintenance, and training activities and provide
the latest Emergency Action Plans annually
GOAL S-5 Emerging Hazards. A built environment that
incorporates new data and understanding about changing hazard
conditions and climate stressors.
S-5.1 Future Conditions. Ensure future climatic conditions
and public health emergencies are considered as part of
community resilience and investment efforts
S-5.2 Urban Forestry Plan. Minimize damage associated with wind-
related hazards and address climate change and urban heat
island effects through the development of an urban forestry
plan and proper landscaping planting and management
techniques
S-5.3 Soil Transport. Require that properties with high wind-blown
soil erosion potential such as agricultural operations and
construction sites prevent soil transport and dust generation
wherever possible
S-5.4 Extreme Heat Vulnerabilities. Require that new
developments, major remodels, and redevelopments address
urban heat island issues and reduce urban heat island effects
for the proposed project site and adjacent properties
S-5.5 Resilience Resources. Require new developments and
redevelopments to incorporate resilience amenities such as,
but not limited to community cooling centers, emergency
supplies, and backup power that can be used by residents and
businesses within a 1/4-mile radius of the location
S-5.6 Underground Utilities. Promote the under-grounding
of utilities for new development, major remodels, and
redevelopment
S-5.7 Future Adaptation. Future climate adaptation-oriented
projects will incorporate natural infrastructure to the greatest
extent practicable
S-5.8 Climate Resiliency. Address climate resiliency and inequities
through the planning and development process
S-5.9 Address High Winds. Require buildings and developments
exposed to high wind conditions to incorporate design
elements and features that minimize or reduce damage to
people, structures, and the community
GOAL S-6 Human Caused Hazards. A community with minimal
risk from airport hazards and hazardous materials.
S-6.1 Planned Development. Promote development patterns that
integrate Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design
(CPTED) principles that reduce the potential for human-caused
hazards
S-6.2 Neighboring Properties. Encourage properties that store,
generate, or dispose of hazardous materials to locate such
operations as far away as possible from areas of neighboring
properties where people congregate
S-6.3 Site Remediation. Encourage and facilitate the adequate and
timely cleanup of existing and future contaminated sites and
the compatibility of future land uses
S-6.4 Airport Planning. Protect Rancho Cucamonga interests
regarding land use and safety by participating in the airport
land use planning process for Ontario International Airport
S-6.5 Height Restrictions. Require proposed developments
within the Ontario Airport Influence Area meet the height
requirements associated with FAR Part 77 standards
S-6.6 Development Near Airport. New development within the
Ontario Airport Influence Area shall be consistent with the
approved Airspace Protection Zones identified in the latest
version of the Airport Land Use Compatibility Plan
S-6.7 Railroad Safety. Minimize potential safety issues and land
use conflicts when considering development adjacent to the
railroad right-of-way
Bioswales help reduce stormwater
runoff
Work to underground utility poles and
wires
252 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 253
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 3: NOISE
NOISE IS...
energy overflow from the activities of people in a vibrant city Certainly,
noise can be unwelcome at times, but a world-class city never sleeps, and
people make noise going about their daily routine At the technical level,
noise is simply unwanted sound The sound of a concert for example, may
be welcomed by the attendees, but perhaps not so much for those who
cannot attend Similarly, essential activities like street sweeping, must occur
when few people are about, meaning that the noise may offend those who
are trying to sleep Urban places are noisy because they are full of life The
purpose of this Chapter is to ensure that noise is managed effectively and
that there are still quiet places to sleep, relax, and recharge
STATE LEGAL REQUIREMENTS
California law requires that a General Plan include an element that
addresses noise This Chapter was prepared to meet the requirements
of Government Code Section 65302(f)) and addresses both noise and
vibration As required, this Chapter identifies noise in the community
from a variety of sources and supports a pattern of land uses designed to
minimize exposure of residents to excessive noise This Chapter includes
possible solutions to address existing and foreseeable noise problems and
establishes areas where more noise may be acceptable
Noise
HEART OF THE MATTER
People are noisy We move about, use equipment, build things, talk,
sing, shout, and laugh People play music, cheer for sports, have dogs,
and generally make themselves known These are sounds of life and are
welcome in most instances Anyone with children, or experience near a
school during recess, understands To most, these are good sounds and
would not be considered noise in the right context
Where noise becomes an issue is when it regularly disturbs sleep,
discourages the enjoyment of the outdoors, and affects the daily routine of
people When this occurs, it is essential to lower the level of noise Ideally,
this is done with project design that keeps people away from noisy areas
However, sometimes it is both prudent, and desirable, to live near noise For
example, living near transit gives people the opportunity to ride rather than
drive to their destination, yet trains are noisy Another example would be
living in an area with lively restaurants and outdoor music Wonderful, yet
at times also noisy In these instances, the level of noise can be lowered by
building and site design so that people can both sleep and play
The most difficult noise to reduce is from transportation Cars, trucks, and
trains all generate noise that affect those who live close by and can often
be heard by people who live far from the source Walls and other physical
distancing are effective; however, they are often impractical as they must
be solid to be effective Accompanying transportation noise is vibration that
shows up as annoying window rattling, and unwelcome motion by people
Vibration can be unsettling to people, and in extreme instances cause
physical damage to buildings
As the city develops, the combination of demolition and new construction
will add to the background noise and vibration of the city While normal,
this can be unsettling to those who already live here While some of the
noise can be managed by limiting when and where construction can occur,
building things makes noise, and not all of it can be contained In these
instances, talking with the neighborhood, and limiting the timing of some
construction activities may be the only way of getting things built
Finally, it is important to differentiate between the ‘good noises’ associated
with a vibrant city full of life, and ‘bad noises’ that occur infrequently as a
part of that life Noise levels in the City of Rancho Cucamonga will increase
as more people move in and live their lives There will be more children
laughing, more music playing, and more people singing along There will
also be more garbage trucks, street sweeping, trains, leaf blowers, and car
alarms Regulations can only go so far in reducing noise levels, the rest is
understanding that life in a city is noisy, and provided we still have quiet
spaces to sleep and relax, we should embrace the good noise
254 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 255
VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 3: NOISE
OVERVIEW OF THIS CHAPTER
While more noise may be inevitable in a growing city, there are things that
can be done with design to provide quite places for people to relax Design
is also important in providing places for people to make noise, and as noise-
friendly places are often near people, their need for peace and quiet need
to be addressed
The following noise goal serves to guide and direct long-term planning in
the City of Rancho Cucamonga:
+Goal N-1 Noise. A city with appropriate noise and vibration levels that
support a range of places from quiet neighborhoods to active, exciting
districts
As the city grows and more people live closer together, the excitement
and energy that this brings needs to be balanced with the very real need
for quiet space The approach to noise in this Chapter is to differentiate
between the good noise and the annoying noise Letting people know that
an area will have good noise gives them a choice to live nearby and limiting
the annoying noise will help with their quality of life
NOISE SOLUTIONS
The problem with noise is that most of the solutions to reducing it exclude
people Noise is a line-of-sight energy meaning that if you can see the noise
source, you can likely hear it Noise dissipates over distance, but in a city,
increasing distances between noise sources and people is not practical The
‘standard’ solution has been to add noise walls between the noise source
and the people Regardless of how attractive or not they may be, the issue
with noise walls is that they also prevent access and obstruct views into and
out of neighborhoods From a design perspective this is less than ideal, and
from a circulation perspective walls inhibit connecting trails sidewalks and
people to the parts of the city they need to reach
This General Plan acknowledges that some areas of the city are going to be
noisier than others because of the types of activities that happen there It is
unreasonable to expect that a walk along a busy roadway would be quiet,
but entirely reasonable to expect quiet walk through a neighborhood
These are different locations, with different levels of activity and therefore
require different noise regulations Accepting a higher exterior noise level
in the corridors and centers of the city would eliminate the need for noise
walls along busy roads Ensuring that noise generating land uses are not
allowed in neighborhoods, would ensure that noise walls were unnecessary
Not all outdoor space is used in the same fashion, therefore it is acceptable
to allow secondary outdoor space like parking lots, front lawns, and other
features that face a busy road to have higher acceptable noise levels than
primary open space like back yards, or recreation areas People tend to
spend very little time in the secondary open space areas so a higher noise
level there should be acceptable
Technically
Sound intensity is measured and expressed by decibels (dB), with an
adjustment referred to as the A-weighted measure (dBA) to correct for
the relative frequency response of the human ear Decibels are measured
on a logarithmic scale, representing points on a sharply rising curve For
example, a noise level of 10 decibels is 10 times more intense than one
decibel, 20 decibels represent a noise 100 times more intense, and 30
decibels reflects a noise condition 1,000 times more intense A sound as soft
as human breathing is about 10 times greater than a zero-decibel level The
decibel system of measuring sound gives a rough connection between the
physical intensity of sound and its perceived loudness to the human ear
A 10-decibel increase in sound level is perceived by the human ear as only
doubling of the loudness of the sound Usually, changes in noise that are
less than 3 dBA are not noticed by people Ambient sounds in the urban
environment generally range from 30 dBA (very quiet) to 100 dBA (very
loud), as indicated in Figure N-1, Typical Sound Levels Context is everything
with noise, and people are more sensitive to noise during the evening, so
noise regulations adjust limits to account for this
NOISE STANDARDS
The State of California’s noise insulation standards are codified in the
California Code of Regulations, Title 24, Building Standards Administrative
Code, Part 2, California Building Code These noise standards are applied
to new construction for the purpose of providing suitable interior noise
environments Noise studies must be prepared when a project seeks to
place people near major transportation noise sources, and where such
noise sources create an exterior noise level of 60 dBA CNEL or higher A
project must demonstrate that structures have been designed to limit
interior noise in habitable rooms to meet the Noise Compatibility Standards
set forth in Table N-1, Noise Compatibility Standards for People
Table N-1 provides the City with a tool to gauge the compatibility of land
uses relative to existing and future noise levels The noise standards can
be modified for areas that already have higher noise, and for activities like
festivals, markets, and outdoor performances Generally, there is more
flexibility for outdoor noise than indoor, and design features such as berms,
walls, windows, and setbacks will all be factored into the project
Ambient Noise = The existing
level of noise at a given
location. Often averaged over
a period of time.
Outdoor Festival at Victoria Gardens
Cultural Center
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VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 3: NOISE
Type of Development Exterior Noise
Standard (CNEL)
Interior Noise
Standard (CNEL)
Low Density Residential (single-
family, duplex, mobile-home)60b 45
Medium or High Density
Residential (Multifamily,
Apartments)
65c 45d
Lodging (Motels/Hotels)65 45d
Mixed Use/Infill Development 70 45d
Schools, Libraries, Community
Centers, Religious Institutions,
Hospitals, Nursing Homes
70 45
Auditoriums, Concert Halls,
Amphitheaters 70 N/A
Playgrounds, Neighborhood
Parks 70 N/A
Outdoor Recreation (Commercial
and Public)75 N/A
Commercial (Office/Retail)70 60
Industrial, Manufacturing, and
Utilities 75 70
NOISE CONTOURS
Figure N-2, Noise Contours, shows the projected noise contours for the
transportation noise sources in the city These contours are calculated
using predicted traffic data for the city roadways and do not factor in
topography, other buildings, or noise attenuation As such, the contours
may not predict noise, but are used as a general guide to ensure that noise
is considered with new projects
40 dBA•Quiet Urban Nighttime; Loading Dock Average at 50’
50 dBA•Quiet Urban Daytime
60 dBA•Heavy Traffic at 300’; Campfire at 6’
65 dBA•Normal Speech at 3’; Rail Transit Station at 50’
72 dBA•HVAC Equipment at 3’; Drive-Thru Speaker Box at 4’
74 dBA•Kid’s Sports Event at Field Boundary
75 dBA•Noisy Urban Area (Daytime); Loading Dock Maximum at 50’; Idling City Bus at 50’
80 dBA•Rail Transit At-Grade (50 mph) at 50’; Backhoe/Loader at 50’
87 dBA•High School Finals Game In Stands
85 dBA•Diesel Truck (50 mph) at 50’; Dozer at 50’; Drill Rig at 50’
90 dBA•Rail Transit Horn at 50’; Hoe Ram/Jackhammer at 50’
110 dBA•Rock Band; Freight/Commuter Rail Horn at 50’
105 dBA•Baby Crying at 18”
101 dBA•Impact Pile Driver at 50’
35 dBA•Quiet Suburban Nighttime
25 dBA•Quiet Rural Nighttime
20
25
40
45
30
35
60
65
50
55
80
85
70
75
100
105
90
95
110
dBA
FIGURE N-1 TYPICAL ENVIRONMENTAL NOISE LEVELS (dBA)TABLE N-1 NOISE COMPATIBILITY STANDARDS FOR PEOPLECNEL = Community Noise
Equivalent Level, a weighted
average of noise level over
time.
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VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 3: NOISE
AIRCRAFT NOISE LEVELS
The closest airport to Rancho Cucamonga is the Ontario International
Airport (ONT), located approximately one mile south of the city’s southern
border According to the latest noise contour (4th Quarter 2009 by Los
Angeles World Airports), Rancho Cucamonga’s southern planning
boundary is approximately 1 mile north of the Ontario International
Airport’s 65 dBA CNEL noise contour Therefore, while aircraft overflight will
be heard, the noise generated does not result in the need to adjust land
uses or activities in the city
TRAFFIC NOISE LEVELS
Several major roadways run through the city that contribute a notable
amount of noise to the ambient environment These roadways include the
Interstate 15 and State Route 210 freeways, as well as Foothill Boulevard and
Base Line Road, which are major local roadways Additionally, the Interstate
10 freeway lies approximately 0 7 miles south of the city and vehicles
traveling along this route may also noticeably contribute to the City’s
ambient noise during quieter periods, such as evenings
More traffic on a roadway does not necessarily equate to more noise
Traffic noise is usually related to tire friction on the roadway which is higher
when the speeds increase While motors and vehicle exhaust systems also
contribute noise, studies show that above 25 miles per hour both electric
vehicles and internal combustion vehicles generate similar road noise As
a result, traffic calming on streets that slows traffic has the side benefit
of reducing noise from vehicle tires There may still be noise from loud
exhaust, stereos, and driving style, but the slower the vehicle, the quieter
the tire noise
RAILROAD NOISE AND
VIBRATION LEVELS
Passenger trains and BNSF freight trains run along a corridor (eastbound
and westbound) located just north of East 8th Street During normal service
conditions a total of 38 trains pass through the City of Rancho Cucamonga
each weekday, with an additional late-night train on Fridays Noise levels
along these railways are dependent on several factors, including the
location of railroad crossings, where noise levels are greater due to train
signal horns Where horn use is more frequent, levels are as high as 81 7
dBA at 50 feet from the center of the tracks CNEL noise levels along other
portions of the track, segments at least 1,000 feet from any crossings, are as
low as 64 5 dBA at 50 feet from the tracks
FIGURE N-2 NOISE CONTOURS
Noise Contours
75 dBA CNEL
70 dBA CNEL
65 dBA CNEL
60 dBA CNEL
55 dBA CNEL
City Boundary
Sphere of Influence
Roads
Railroads
Sources: City of Rancho Cucamonga,
2020; Esri, 2021; Ascent, 2021
Aircraft overflight from Ontario
International Airport
High-speed rail
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VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 3: NOISE
Housing is encouraged near transit hubs to reduce vehicle miles traveled
and activate the office, commercial and public space around the hubs
This will result in more people who will be affected by the noise of the train
horn as it signals the trains approach to the crossing The Federal Railroad
Administration allows the City to request establishment of a full or partial
quiet zone A partial quiet zone would likely apply to the City’s nighttime
hours of 10:00 PM to 7:00 AM While a quiet zone will not eliminate the train
noise, and not all crossings may qualify, a full or partial quiet zone would
benefit the surrounding development
As the proposed high-speed rail from Rancho Cucamonga to Las Vegas will
run within the existing right of way in the city, it is not expected to generate
noise beyond that of the existing rail operations Within town, the number
of crossings will keep speeds, and therefore noise levels, about the same as
existing trains The higher speeds possible for the rail line, and the higher
noise levels, will occur outside of the city It is possible that the addition of
the high-speed rail that more trains will run which could increase noise
levels in the city
STATIONARY SOURCES OF
NOISE
Industrial operations comprise the primary stationary noise sources that
contribute to local community noise levels These stationary sources (e g ,
loading areas, large mechanical equipment, fabrication) are often located
in commercially and industrially zoned areas and may be isolated from
people, but not always Other noise sources that affect people, include
commercial land uses or those often associated with and/or secondary
to residential development including, but not limited to, nightclubs,
outdoor dining areas, gas stations, car washes, drive-thrus, fire stations, air
conditioning units, swimming pool pumps, school playgrounds, athletic
and music events, and public parks
Certain land uses generate noise as a normal part of business Whether
by the business or industrial process, shipping by truck or rain, or simply
having several people working in the same area Over time it will be
important for the City to protect the existing noise generating uses from
projects that will add people nearby As the stationary noise source will
have been built first, it will be the responsibility of a new project where
people will live and work, to demonstrate that the existing noise will not
affect them This is important because encroachment of people into
existing noise environments often shortens the longevity of the noise
generating land use This is often seen when houses encroach into airport
noise contours and the resulting noise complaints curtailing airport
operations
For future noise generating uses, a project that cannot contain its
noise within the property boundaries will need to include physical and
operational features designed to address their noise Ideally, measures
designed to address the noise would be integrated into the overall project
design and not added as an afterthought
CONSTRUCTION NOISE
As the city develops, infill and rebuilding of sites will occur more frequently
The construction process can be noisy and affect people who live and
work nearby Construction is part of any city and while it can be considered
temporary, construction can also last for several years if the project is large
Regardless of duration, construction noise impacts are real and will need to
be considered along with the project Simple things like setting reasonable
construction times, ensuring that mufflers and noise suppression features
of equipment are working, can help limit the noise intrusion into the
neighborhood The most important aspect will be to work with the affected
neighborhood to explain the project and listen to their ideas about how
best to address noise
VIBRATION
Sources of vibration include natural phenomena (e g , earthquakes, volcanic
eruptions, sea waves, landslides) and those introduced by human activity
(e g , explosions, machinery, traffic, trains, construction equipment)
Vibration sources may be continuous, (e g , operating factory machinery)
or transient in nature (e g , construction) Vibration levels can be depicted
in terms of amplitude and frequency, relative to displacement, velocity, or
acceleration
Typical outdoor sources of perceptible ground vibration are construction
equipment, steel-wheeled trains, and traffic on rough roads If a roadway
is smooth, the ground vibration is rarely perceptible The range of interest
is from approximately 50 VdB, which is the typical background vibration-
velocity level, to 100 VdB, which is the general threshold where minor
damage can occur in fragile buildings Construction activities can generate
enough ground vibrations to pose a risk to nearby structures Constant
or transient vibrations can weaken structures, crack facades, and disturb
occupants
Indoor sources of vibration can come from heating, ventilation, and air
conditioning (HVAC) equipment, and manufacturing processes Even the
fan on a personal computer can cause a small vibration Most of the interior
sources can be screened, or isolated to avoid affecting people who live and
work near the source
Vibration is the periodic
oscillation of a medium or
object with respect to a given
reference point.
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VOLUME 3 • CHAPTER 3: NOISE
Usually vibration is an annoyance, but with fragile buildings, addressing
vibration impacts is important Vibration amplitudes are commonly
expressed in peak particle velocity (PPV) or root-mean-square (RMS)
vibration velocity PPV and RMS vibration velocity are normally described
in inches per second (in/sec) or in millimeters per second PPV is defined
as the maximum instantaneous positive or negative peak of a vibration
signal PPV is typically used in the monitoring of transient and impact
vibration and has been found to correlate well to the stresses experienced
by buildings
Although PPV is appropriate for evaluating the potential for building
damage, it is not always suitable for evaluating human response It takes
some time for the human body to respond to vibration signals In a sense,
the human body responds to average vibration amplitude As with airborne
sound, the RMS velocity is often expressed in decibel notation as vibration
decibels (VdB) The typical background vibration-velocity level in residential
areas is approximately 50 VdB Ground vibration is normally perceptible to
humans at approximately 65 VdB For most people, a vibration-velocity level
of 75 VdB is the approximate dividing line between barely perceptible and
distinctly perceptible levels
One of the impacts of construction is vibration that can be felt by people
Vibration can be a short-term sensation like when a heavy truck passes,
however if several trucks were to pass by, or machinery nearby creates a
constant vibration, the vibration can have negative effects on people What
starts as a minor irritation in people from vibration, over time turn into
feelings of unease, disruption of sleep, and result in a constant annoyance
that reduces the enjoyment of their home Vibration can also disrupt
delicate procedures such as surgery and manufacturing
Vibrations generated by construction activity can be transient, random, or
continuous Transient construction vibrations are generated by blasting,
impact pile driving, and wrecking balls Continuous vibrations result from
vibratory pile drivers, large pumps, and compressors Random vibration
can result from jackhammers, pavement breakers, and heavy construction
equipment Table N-2 describes the general human response to different
ground vibration-velocity levels
GOALS AND POLICIES
GOAL N-1 NOISE. A city with appropriate noise and vibration levels
that support a range of places from quiet neighborhoods to active,
exciting districts.
N-1.1 Noise Levels. Require new development to meet the noise
compatibility standards identified in Table N-1
N-1.2 Noise Barriers, Buffers and Sound Walls. Require the use of
integrated design-related noise reduction measures for both
interior and exterior areas prior to the use of noise barriers,
buffers, or walls to reduce noise levels generated by or affected
by new development
N-1.3 Non-Architectural Noise Attenuation. Non-architectural
noise attenuation measures such as sound walls, setbacks,
barriers, and berms shall be discouraged in pedestrian priority
areas (or other urban areas or areas where pedestrian access is
important)
N-1.4 New Development Near Major Noise Sources. Require
development proposing to add people in areas where they may
be exposed to major noise sources (e g , roadways, rail lines,
aircraft, industrial or other non-transportation noise sources)
to conduct a project level noise analysis and implement
recommended noise reduction measures
N-1.5 Urban and Suburban Development Near Transit. Allow
development located in infill areas, near transit hubs, or along
major roadways an exemption from exterior noise standards
for secondary open space areas (such as front yards, parking
lots, stoops, porches, or balconies), if noise standards can be
met for primary open space
N-1.6 Rail Crossing Quiet Zones. Allow the establishment of a full or
partial at-grade rail crossing or quiet zone near transit hubs or
residential development
N-1.7 Entertainment. Establish different standards for exterior noise
consistent with the place type
N-1.8 Vibration Impact Assessment. Require new development
to reduce vibration to 85 VdB or below within 200 feet of an
existing structure
TABLE N-2 HUMAN RESPONSE TO DIFFERENT LEVELS OF GROUND NOISE AND VIBRATION
Vibration-Velocity Level Human Reactions
65 VdB Approximate threshold of perception
75 VdB Approximate dividing line between barely perceptible and distinctly perceptible
Many people find that transportation-related vibration at this level is unacceptable
85 VdB Vibration acceptable only if there are an infrequent number of events per day
Notes: VdB = vibration decibels referenced to 1 micro inch per second and based on the root-mean-square (RMS) velocity
amplitude
Source: FTA 2018
Volume 4
IMPLEMENTATION
STRATEGY
265
IN THIS VOLUME
GENERAL PLAN WORK PLAN
A Work Plan Is 268
Heart of the Matter 269
Work Plan 269
PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
A Placemaking Toolkit Is 306
Heart of the Matter 307
How to Use The Toolkit 308
Part 1 Activating the Public Realm 310
Part 2 Rebalancing Streets & Public Spaces 324
Part 3 Completing the Community Fabric 362
ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE STRATEGY
Senate Bill 1000 394
Heart of the Matter 395
General Plan Policies and Implementation Strategies 395
264 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA
Every big idea has a small action that is needed to make it real The
implementation strategy is a series of actions large and small that are
essential to realizing the goals and policies of this General Plan In some
cases, the action may simply be carrying on those things that the City
is already doing, while for others a change in the regulation is needed
This volume includes a Work Plan that covers operations of the City and
provides staff with standard conditions of approval as a starting point
for project evaluation, and a Placemaking Toolkit that helps the City and
landowners meet the land use and community character expectations
267266 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA
FIGURES & TABLES
GENERAL PLAN WORK PLAN
Table WP-1 Funding 271
Table WP-2 Improvements 272
Table WP-3 Process & Information 273
Table WP-4 Rules & Coordination 277
Table WP-5 Focus Area Implementation 283
PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
Figure PT-1 Typical Frontage Anatomy 314
Figure PT-2 Commercial Frontage - Mixed-Use Centers & Districts 318
Figure PT -3 Commercial Frontage - Neighborhood Centers & Edges 320
Figure PT-4 Office & Industrial Frontage - Mixed Use Districts & Corridors 322
Figure PT-5 Mixed-Use - Residential Ground floor 324
Figure PT-6 Street Right-of-Way Composition 327
Figure PT-7 Example Scenario: Haven Avenue Transformation 352
Figure PT-8 Commercial Street with Diagonal Parking 358
Figure PT-9 Residential Street with Bike Lane & Parallel Parking 359
Figure PT-10 Case Study #1 Site Context & Edge Conditions 366
Figure PT-11 Case Study #1 New Points of Connection 368
Figure PT-12 Case Study #1 Streets Connect Through Site 370
Figure PT-13 Case Study #1 Flexibility of Street Alignment 371
Figure PT-14 Case Study #1 Walkable Blocks 372
Figure PT-15 Case Study #1 Alleys within Blocks 374
Figure PT-16 Case Study #1 Developed Site 376
Figure PT-17 Case Study #1 View from the Northeast 377
Figure PT-18 Case Study #2 Site Context & Edge Conditions 380
Figure PT-19 Case Study #2 New Points of Connection 382
Figure PT-20 Case Study #2 Streets Connect Through Site 384
Figure PT-21 Case Study #2 Walkable Blocks 385
Figure PT-22 Case Study #2 Alleys within Blocks 386
Figure PT-23 Case Study #2 Developed Site 388
Figure PT-24 Case Study #2 View from the Northeast 389
Table PT-1 Retail & Commercial Frontages 319
Table PT-2 Office & Industrial Frontages 323
Table PT-3 Residential Frontages 325
ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE STRATEGY
Table EJ-1 Land Use & Community Character 395
Table EJ-2 Open Space 399
Table EJ-3 Mobility & Access 401
Table EJ-4 Housing 403
Table EJ-5 Public Facilities & Services 404
Table EJ-6 Resource Conservation 406
Table EJ-7 Safety 410
Table EJ-8 Noise 414
Table EJ-9 Implementation Strategies 415
268 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 269
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 1: GENERAL PLAN WORK PLAN
A WORK PLAN IS…
a guide for City staff, decision makers, developers and the public that lays
out specific actions and steps required to achieve the goals set forth in
this General Plan It is also a flexible framework within which more precise
measures are addressed Many of the measures, such as an update to
the Development Code, or revised engineering standards, affect codes
that are already in use but need to be updated to realize the vision of this
General Plan In some cases, there are no existing implementing measures
requiring new ones to be developed and included in this work plan
In addition to the work plan, a Placemaking Toolkit has been designed to
help City staff, developers, and property owners understand and participate
in achieving the vision The Placemaking Toolkit provides detailed
information on a set of implementation strategies, or “tools,” along with
potential applications and further resources to help ensure that Rancho
Cucamonga grows well into the 21st century
General Plan Work Plan
HEART OF THE MATTER
Because City resources are finite it is essential that a work plan be adopted
that prioritizes how the City implements the General Plan Not everything
can be done at once, and some actions are dependent upon others having
been completed The intent of this work plan is to provide a general idea
of which things should be done first For many of the implementation
actions, community input is essential, and it is likely that several drafts will
be required before it is acceptable A world class city is always evolving to
respond to new challenges therefore this list is far from comprehensive
The list will be used regularly for budgeting and strategic planning
purposes It will be reviewed as part of the annual reporting on the
progress of the General Plan It is almost certain that through conversations
between the people most affected by the implementation strategy and
those working to complete the task that new methods of achieving the
vision of General Plan will be developed As such, this list supports the
General Plan, but is expected to be amended regularly
WORK PLAN
The General Plan work plan is only one part of the implementation strategy
for the City There are other essential strategies, such as the Climate Action
Plan, updated Development Code, and the Placemaking Toolkit, that help
implement, but are not included in, the General Plan so that they can be
more flexible and easier to update than the overall General Plan
The work plan is organized into the follow topics:
+Funding
+Improvements
+Process & Information
+Rules & Coordination
+Focus Area Implementation
+Standard Conditions of Approval
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VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 1: GENERAL PLAN WORK PLAN
Each work plan topic includes an implementation matrix that contains
individual measures, included in the Action Item column Each measure
includes a responsible department (Work Group Lead) as well as an
estimated priority for timing The availability of budget, the extent of public
outreach, and changing priorities may affect the timing of adoption The
priorities, shown in the Timing column, are:
Ongoing Represents a constant attention to the issue
Short-Term A measure that should be adopted within 1 – 3 years from
adoption of the General Plan
Mid-Term A measure that might be adopted 5 – 10 years after
adoption of the General Plan
Late-Term A measure that might be adopted more than 10 years after
adoption of the General Plan
The work plan will require the coordination of many skill sets, departments,
and often other agencies The Work Group Lead represents the
department or department group most likely to take a leadership role in
the measure The leadership may shift to a new department depending on
circumstances needed for the issue, and resources available at the time
Just as the implementation may involve more than one department of the
City, partnerships with other agencies in the region are also essential The
City will continue to work with existing partners and seek to develop new
partnerships as appropriate to City’s leadership role in the region
FUNDING
These measures are actions for the City to update fees or seek grants to implement policies in the General Plan
TABLE WP-1 FUNDING
Action Item Work Group Lead Timing
Funding Opportunities Through Special Districts: Investigate
the use of special districts for assistance in providing affordable
housing, transportation improvements, parking, and shared
amenities
Community Development Short-Term
Transportation System Funding Opportunities: Monitor new
methods, pilot, or test various solutions to the conventional gas
tax and toll roads for more equitable system-wide approach to
funding transportation improvements Some examples include
volume-based pricing, smart metering, congestion pricing, and
curb pricing
Community Development Short-Term
Greenhouse Gas Reduction Funding Opportunities: In the short- and mid-term, explore and identify potential
funding sources or incentives for the following greenhouse gas reduction activities:
+Evaluate the feasibility of a local or regional Vehicle Miles
Traveled (VMT) impact fee program, bank, improvement
program or exchange
Community Development Short-Term
+Identify funding for and create an Urban Forestry Master Plan Community Development Short-Term
+Investigate including tree planting in the capital improvement
program and development fee structure as an offset for
new development impacts to greenhouse gases and on the
environment in accordance with the urban forestry master
plan
Community Development Short-Term
+Investigate possible incentives for existing non-residential
developments to install electric hook-ups for trucks in docks,
bays, and parking areas to reduce heavy-duty truck idling on-
site
Community Development Mid-Term
+Investigate incentives for existing public and private
developments to improve energy efficiency Community Development Mid-Term
Hazard Retrofit Funding Opportunities: Investigate potential funding sources for risk reduction activities that
may include:
+The creation of a Geologic Hazard Abatement District that can
be used to generate funds to mitigate geologic hazards Community Development Mid-Term
+Potential funding opportunities for voluntary improvements/
retrofits on private properties Community Development Ongoing
+Possible incentive programs to encourage property owners
to retrofit their homes/businesses against climate-related
hazards such as extreme weather, flooding, wildfire, etc
Community Development Mid-Term
+New funding sources for vegetation management activities for
properties located within the WUIFA Public Safety Ongoing
272 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 273
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 1: GENERAL PLAN WORK PLAN
IMPROVEMENTS
These implementation measures are specific improvements necessary for achieving the vision of this General Plan
TABLE WP-2 IMPROVEMENTS
Action Item Work Group Lead Timing
Public Access Internet: Develop methods for accelerating the
provision of municipal internet in disadvantaged communities Community Development Short-Term
Railroad Crossings: Investigate the feasibility and funding of
railroad quiet zones, improvements to current at-grade crossings,
and grade separated crossing(s)
Community Development Late-Term
Trail Network: Continue to expand and improve the trail network as feasible to:
+Build a well-connected, off-street trail system along the
existing Pacific Electric Trail (PET), flood channels and utility
corridors
Community Development Ongoing
+Create north-south trail connections along the utility
channels and easements to create a connected trail system,
including Deer Creek channel, Day Creek/Southern California
Edison easement, and other utility corridors connecting to
Ontario
Community Development Mid-Term
Critical Facilities and Infrastructure: Periodically review and update the City critical facilities and infrastructure
inventory used to support and implement the EOP, LHMP, and CIP The inventory should be updated to include
the following:
+Critical facilities/infrastructure located in high-risk areas
where relocation may be a possible mitigation strategy Community Development Short-Term
+Potentially substandard structures/infrastructure for future
retrofit and rehabilitation Community Development Mid-Term
+Future funding opportunities for critical facility/ infrastructure
improvements, retrofits/relocations Community Development Mid-Term
+Roadways designated as key evacuation routes are prioritized
during the CIP planning process Community Development Ongoing
+Seismically vulnerable structures and infrastructure to
integrate into the City’s Capital Improvements Program Community Development Short-Term
PROCESS & INFORMATION
These measures are actions for the City to undertake to improve, amend, or expand its procedures or inform future
actions
TABLE WP-3 PROCESS & INFORMATION
Action Item Work Group Lead Timing
Equity and Environmental Justice: The City will continue to maintain equitable civic engagement in the
decision-making process and will continue to improve communication regarding new development projects and
potential health impacts as follows:
+Review and update, as appropriate, procedures to provide
translation and interpretation services at public meetings on
issues affecting populations whose primary language is not
English
Civic and Cultural Services Ongoing
+Review and update, as appropriate, the variety of electronic
and personal techniques for outreach Civic and Cultural Services Ongoing
+Continue to update the “Improve the Healthy Communities”
program Civic and Cultural Services Ongoing
+Create a development checklist or disclosure tool to inform
the public, especially low-income and minority populations,
on the potential health impacts of new development
Civic and Cultural Services Short-Term
+Identify resources for the existing sensitive receptors
experiencing adverse air quality issues to incorporate
measures to improve air quality, such as landscaping, barriers,
ventilation systems, air filters/cleaners, and other measures
Community Development Mid-Term
+Establish procedures and tools to consider the health needs
of projects with sensitive receptors such as through a healthy
needs assessment, the Healthy Development Measurement
Tool (HDMT) or other tools
Community Development Short-Term
Healthy Development Checklist. Continue to update with
current best practices and use the Healthy Development
checklist, or similar assessment tool, to assess the overall health
performance and supportiveness of new development projects
Community Development Ongoing
Mobility and Access Plans, Programs and Activities: The City currently maintains and updates a variety of plans,
programs and activities to improve mobility and access in the community These plans, programs and activities
are regularly used and require ongoing management and/or periodic update to ensure compliance with local,
State, and federal requirements, consistency amongst these efforts, and incorporation of the most up to date
information as follows:
+Maintain a list of Transportation Demand Management (TDM)
strategies for employers and new developments Community Development Short-Term
+Develop a system to measure roadway segments, intersection
traffic volumes, and measure vehicle level of service along key
corridors
Community Development Short-Term
274 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 275
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 1: GENERAL PLAN WORK PLAN
Action Item Work Group Lead Timing
+Include bicycle, pedestrian, and truck counts along with
vehicle counts in the City’s operations management system
and make available to the public
Community Development Short-Term
+Update routes in the Safe Routes to School (SRTS) program
and develop a prioritization process for infrastructure
enhancements
Community Development Short-Term
+Update and implement the Trail Implementation Plan to
improve equestrian access and crossings on the trails as
appropriate
Community Development Ongoing
+Develop a strategy or action plan that prioritizes systems-
based approach to preventing traffic fatalities, focusing on
the built environment, systems, and policies that influence
behavior, as well as messaging that emphasizes that traffic
losses are preventable
Community Development Short-Term
+As new transportation technologies and mobility services,
including autonomous vehicles, electric vehicles, electric
bicycles and scooters, and transportation network companies
(e g , Uber and Lyft) are used by the public, review and update
City policies and plans to maximize the benefit to the public
of such technologies and services without adversely affecting
the City’s transportation network Updates to the City’s
policies and plans may cover topics such as electric vehicle
charging stations, curb space management, changes in
parking supply requirements, shared parking, electric scooter
use policies, etc
Community Development Ongoing
+Coordinate with SBCTA and Omnitrans to review and consider
alternatives to conventional bus systems, such as smaller
shuttle buses (micro-transit), on-demand transit services, or
transportation networking company services that connect
neighborhood centers to local activity centers with greater
cost efficiency
Community Development Short-Term
Cultural and Recreational Programming:
+Encourage non-exclusive, cross-generational cultural and
recreational activities and programming that are accessible to
people of all ages, backgrounds and abilities
Civic and Cultural Services Ongoing
+Prepare and implement an Arts Master Plan Civic and Cultural Services Short-Term
+Prepare and implement a Park’s Master Plan using walk time
as one metric in placement of new parks Civic and Cultural Services Short-Term
Animal Care Programs: Increase awareness of animal adoptions
and raise funds for animal care and services, continue to host and
participate in special events, promotions, and fairs
Public Safety Short-Term
Action Item Work Group Lead Timing
Climate Change Vulnerability and Sustainability Activities and Programs: The City currently provides
information for and conducts a variety of programs to address climate change and sustainability in the
community These programs and activities will be continued, and new programs developed including:
+Energy- or climate change-themed publications and
workshops Civic and Cultural Services Mid-Term
+Energy audits for residents Community Development Mid-Term
+Urban Heat Island analysis that integrates into the Urban
Forestry Master Plan and Parks Master Plan and identifies
priority projects within the City that will mitigate the effects of
future extreme heat events
Community Development Short-Term
+Information for the community regarding the benefits of solid
waste diversion, recycling, and composting, and programs
that make it easy for all people in Rancho Cucamonga to work
toward and achieve City waste reduction objectives
Community Development Ongoing
Hazards-Related Plan Integration and Updates: The City currently maintains and updates a variety of plans,
programs and activities that address the risks associated with natural and human-caused hazards throughout
the City These plans, programs and activities are regularly used and require ongoing maintenance and periodic
update to ensure compliance with local, state, and Federal requirements To ensure greater consistency amongst
these plans and incorporate the most up to date information, future updates should accomplish the following:
+Updates to the EOP, Safety Element, and CWPP, should occur
concurrent with the LHMP update every five years Public Safety Mid-Term
+Maintain consistency between the Safety Element, LHMP,
EOP, CWPP, and Capital Improvements Program Public Safety Mid-Term
+Plan updates should incorporate climate change data and
information documented by staff during subsequent hazard
events that occur within the City
Public Safety Ongoing
+Maintain an emergency evacuation plan that is proactive,
integrates data-driven approach and core community values,
and plans for all residents equitably
Public Safety Ongoing
Emergency Preparedness Programs: The City currently conducts trainings and educational awareness to staff,
citizens, and businesses To ensure increased preparedness and resilience future opportunities to expand these
activities should:
+Continue to promote “Ready, Set, Go” and Firewise
Community programs for existing and new developments
within the WUIFA to educate residents about wildfire
prevention and preparedness
Public Safety Ongoing
+Implement a training program to improve staff
understanding of how vulnerable community members,
including senior citizens, low-income persons, and persons
with disabilities, may be impacted by changing climatic
conditions
Civic and Cultural Services Ongoing
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VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 1: GENERAL PLAN WORK PLAN
Action Item Work Group Lead Timing
+Disseminate information on dam inundation areas within the
City that could be impacted by a dam breach event Civic and Cultural Services Ongoing
+Identify key locations within the City for community-oriented
backup power locations to serve vulnerable populations
disproportionately affected by hazard events that affect
electrical infrastructure
Civic and Cultural Services Short-Term
+Conduct annual staff trainings on the Emergency Operations
Plan (EOP) and Annexes to ensure staff can effectively
respond to emergency situations
Public Safety Ongoing
+Develop or update strategic plans for public safety that
identify strategies for staffing, training, service delivery,
and critical infrastructure needs to enhance City services
These updates should identify potential improvements for
professional standards and operational readiness
Public Safety Ongoing
+Expand and enhance the Ready RC program to better meet
future community issues and challenges Increase and
expand the delivery of Ready RC programs and materials to
the community to increase preparedness and resilience
Public Safety Short-Term
+Expand and enhance the strategy for post-disaster recovery
that focuses on community resilience and sustainability Public Safety Short-Term
+Develop a cooling and heating plan to offset the health
effects of severe weather on lower income communities Administrative Services Ongoing
Fiscal Impact Analyses. Establish additional procedures
and tools to consider the financial benefits and impacts of
development at the project approval level based on anticipated
full life-cycle costs and value per acre
Community Development Ongoing
General Plan Maintenance To ensure that the General Plan remains current the City will conduct regular reviews
of the Plan and the standard conditions of approval
+Review and update, as appropriate, the Standard Conditions
of Approval Community Development Ongoing
+Provide an annual report of the implementation of the
General Plan Community Development Ongoing
RULES & COORDINATION
These are measures that would amend or update the City’s ordinances, codes, design guidelines, and other rules
and requirements
TABLE WP-4 RULES & COORDINATION
Action Item Work Group Lead Timing
Municipal Code and Ordinance Updates: The following updates and amendments to the City’s Development
Code, Subdivision Ordinance, and other sections of the Municipal Code will ensure compliance with local,
state, and Federal requirements, consistency with the General Plan, and incorporation of the most up to date
information as follows:
+Update the Development Code to incorporate form-based
standards for the focus areas of the General Plan Community Development Short-Term
+Develop design criteria and flexibility in standards to avoid
impacts to cultural, geographic, and natural resources, and to
provide a variety of development types
Community Development Short-Term
+Update the Development Code to incorporate development
standards for new development to be pedestrian-friendly,
promote safety, have access to transit facilities where feasible,
allow shared parking and encourage “park-once” strategies in
mixed use environments
Community Development Short-Term
+Develop standards to require all new developments and
redevelopments provide at least two access roads that can be
used for evacuation purposes
Community Development Short-Term
+Implement site planning measures in conjunction with
the designation of significant views to enhance the visual
environment
Community Development Short-Term
+Update the subdivision ordinance to incorporate standards
to implement policies on wildfire safety, pedestrian access,
preservation of natural grade, and allow for a variety of parcel
sizes
Community Development Short-Term
+Consider expanding the Transfer of Development Rights
ordinance to reduce development in high risk hazard areas
and to allow for the protection of historic buildings and
landscape, cultural resources
Community Development Short-Term
+Update requirements in the Municipal Code to mitigate
impacts associated with high wind conditions Community Development Short-Term
+Modify the condominium conversion ordinance to address
the potential for displacement of affordable housing during
the conversion of existing multi-family rental properties to
condominiums
Community Development Short-Term
+Develop measures to preserve and enhance important public
views along north-south roadways, open space corridors, and
at other key locations where there are significant views of
scenic resources
Community Development Short-Term
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VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 1: GENERAL PLAN WORK PLAN
Action Item Work Group Lead Timing
+Allow outdoor dining spaces within existing parking areas to
facilitate improved pedestrian connectivity, activate building
fronts, and provide public gathering spaces
Community Development Short-Term
+Include large site standards to systematically, strategically and
opportunistically reorganize the existing large block pattern
into a fine grain network of streets and open spaces to create
an urban fabric of accessible community gathering spaces
and active building fronts
Community Development Short-Term
Transit-Related Regional Coordination: The City currently coordinates and works with regional partners to
improve transit for the community and the region The City will continue to work in concert with regional partners
on the following:
+Development of High-Speed Rail to Las Vegas through
Rancho Cucamonga Community Development Short-Term
+Implementation of the Cucamonga Station Specific Plan Community Development Short-Term
+Support a future transit study to connect Rancho Cucamonga
with Ontario, Eastvale, and Corona Community Development Mid-Term
+Support a proposed Tunnel to LA/Ontario Airport Community Development Short-Term
+Bus Rapid Transit Connection projects along Foothill
Boulevard and Haven Avenue Community Development Short-Term
+Consult with Caltrans, SCAG’s Connect SoCal RTP/SCS,
SBCTA’s Nexus Study and Congestion Management Plan,
Omnitrans, San Bernardino County, the South Coast Air
Quality Management District, and neighboring cities
in support of a consistent and comprehensive regional
transportation system
Community Development Ongoing
Mobility and Access Standards and Regulations: Updates and amendments to transportation-related
standards and requirements will ensure compliance with local, State, and federal requirements, consistency with
the General Plan, and incorporation of the most up to date information as follows:
+Develop and maintain a list of locations within the City
where LOS E or LOS F are acceptable on auto-priority streets
where, due to right-of-way limitations or physical constraints,
roadway improvements are not appropriate
Community Development Short-Term
+Revise Engineering Design standards to include Complete
streets design elements Community Development Short-Term
+Identify the major arterial streets along new mixed-use
corridors and consider developing street sections that are
unique to each corridor
Community Development Short-Term
+Continue to review and implement the City of Rancho
Cucamonga VMT thresholds and screening criteria to reflect
the updated VMT analysis and utilize transportation impact
study guidelines for VMT analysis when analyzing proposed
new projects in the City
Community Development Short-Term
Action Item Work Group Lead Timing
+Complete and maintain the citywide Active Transportation
Plan Community Development Short-Term
+Maintain a current truck route map on the City’s website,
and a truck route signage system that identifies key goods
movement corridors and ensures goods movement needs are
adequately served while reducing impacts to other uses
Community Development Ongoing
+Establish restrictions on vehicle weight limit near sensitive
land uses such as schools and residential areas to discourage
cut-through truck traffic
Community Development Mid-Term
+Work with technological providers to ensure equitable
treatment of all users by the ride hailing and Transportation
Network Companies (TNC) services, easier options to use the
services for all users, a diverse dataset in Audiovisual (AV)
technology that correctly recognizes people of color, etc
Community Development Mid-Term
+Modify the roadway design standards to include innovative
and energy saving alternatives such as traffic circles, round
abouts, and similar designs
Community Development Short-Term
Shared Parking District: Investigate and consider a Shared
Parking District to facilitate parking sharing arrangements to
enable more and higher quality active uses without devoting
excessive and important land areas and budgets to parking
facilities
Community Development Short-Term
Climate Action Plan (CAP): Implement and update the Climate
Action Plan (CAP) goals, strategies, and measures to reduce
community-wide and municipal GHG emission reductions in the
categories of zero emission and clean fuels, efficient and carbon
free buildings, renewable energy and zero carbon electricity,
carbon sequestration, local food supply, efficient water use, waste
reductions, and sustainable transportation
Community Development Ongoing
Community Noise: Update the noise ordinance to recognize that a single noise standard is not appropriate in a
city with compact urban spaces and rural neighborhoods Adoption and operation of the revised noise ordinance
should include:
+CEQA thresholds that consider lower noise levels in rural
neighborhoods, as well as active urban areas where ambient
noise levels may be allowed to be higher
Community Development Short-Term
+Adopt noise and vibration standards that differentiate
between good noise associated with community and bad
noise associated with sleep disturbance and unreasonable
impacts to neighborhoods
Community Development Short-Term
280 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 281
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 1: GENERAL PLAN WORK PLAN
Action Item Work Group Lead Timing
+Construction noise thresholds and procedures to include
adjacent neighborhoods in the discussion of noise
attenuation for construction
Community Development Short-Term
+Regularly take community noise measurements and make
the measurements available to the public Community Development Short-Term
Air Quality-Related Measures and Regional Coordination: Improving air quality is a public health imperative as
it affects all residents Much of the air quality impact is associated with heavy trucks and industrial uses that are
often located near lower income neighborhoods This makes improving air quality both a public health and an
equity issue To address these issues the City will:
+Develop guidelines to avoid locating new development
with sensitive receptors within 500 feet of a freeway or high
volume roadway If avoidance is not feasible, development
with sensitive receptors may be located within 500 feet of a
major roadway only if the applicant first prepares a project-
specific health risk assessment (HRA) addressing potential
health risks to sensitive receptors from exposure to toxic air
contaminant (TAC) emissions The HRA shall be conducted
in accordance with guidance and approval from SCAQMD
Feasible measures shall be implemented to reduce health
risks from TAC exposure to levels determined by the HRA
Community Development Short-Term
+Develop and maintain a standard list of development
conditions that would reduce health risk impacts, such as
toxic air contaminant (TAC) emissions, when siting new
sensitive receptors within 1,000 feet of a major roadway
Community Development Short-Term
+Amend Municipal Code to require new development that
exceeds applicable air quality thresholds to notify nearby
residents and business of potential pollutants; consult with
the air quality management district, incorporate feasible best
management practices for substantially reducing or avoiding
air pollutant emissions during construction and operational
phases
Community Development Short-Term
+Update development code to require applicants to install air
filters with a Minimum Efficiency Reporting Value (MERV) of
13, or greater (as defined by ASHRAE standard 52 2 or Newer)
in all buildings proposed for sensitive uses (e g , residences,
schools, offices, medical facilities)
Community Development Short-Term
+Ensure dust control provisions in the City’s Development
Code meet SCAQMD standards as they are updated Community Development Short-Term
Action Item Work Group Lead Timing
+Coordinate air quality improvement activities with those of
neighboring local governments and other agencies, including
the Southern California Association of Governments (SCAG),
San Bernardino Council of Governments (SBCOG), and
SCAQMD to maximize the potential local and regional air
quality benefits of City activities
Community Development Ongoing
+Collaborate with SCAQMD to review and provide input on
regional air quality plans and to identify and implement best
management practices to meet and maintain State and
Federal ambient air quality standards
Community Development Ongoing
+Support programs and investments that increase ridesharing,
reduce pollutants generated by vehicle use, and meet the
transportation control measures recommended by SCAQMD
in the adopted Clean Air Plan
Civic and Cultural Services Ongoing
Resiliency-Related Regional Coordination: The City currently coordinates with neighboring cities, special
districts, and the County to address regional issues and collaborate on resilience, hazard mitigation, and disaster
response strategies and programs To ensure future coordination meets community needs, the City should
expand the following activities:
+Periodically coordinate and review operations and response
plans for any dams that have the potential to inundate
portions of Rancho Cucamonga
Public Safety Ongoing
+Promote the strengthening of infrastructure owned and
operated by other agencies/entities within the City Public Safety Ongoing
+Partner with utility providers, water purveyors, and other
public agencies to reduce wildland vegetation fuels Public Safety Ongoing
+Work with water purveyors to ensure adequate water supply,
long term maintenance, anticipated future supplies, and fire
flow is provided throughout the City
Public Safety Ongoing
+Coordinate with Southern California Edison on electrical
infrastructure that may be impacted by wildfires and/or
Public Safety Power Shutoff events
Public Safety Ongoing
Hazards-Related Standards and Regulations: The following updates and amendments to risk reduction and
hazards mitigation-related standards and requirements will ensure compliance with local, state, and Federal
requirements, consistency with the General Plan, and incorporation of the most up to date information:
+Adopt design standards that ensure new development
provides adequate public safety and blends with natural
surroundings to protect development and open space areas
from fire hazards
Community Development Short-Term
+Enact a geologic disaster recovery ordinance for use following
severe storms that cause extensive landslide or erosion
damage
Community Development Short-Term
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VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 1: GENERAL PLAN WORK PLAN
Action Item Work Group Lead Timing
+Determine the viability of requiring enhanced building
standards for new developments, redevelopments, and major
remodels to ensure building functionality after a seismic
event
Community Development Short-Term
WUIFA Requirements: The City’s WUIFA currently regulates all properties in compliance with California Fire Safe
Regulations To ensure continued compliance and reduce future vulnerabilities to wildfire, the City shall:
+Require brush clearance activities on private properties within
the WUIFA prior to the start of the fire season Public Safety Ongoing
+Update the municipal code to require annual brush clearance
and vegetation management on all public and private
roadways within the WUIFA
Public Safety Ongoing
+Periodically review and update WUIFA appropriate
landscaping options and make available to the public Public Safety Ongoing
+Periodically review and adopt the latest codes adopted by the
Building Standards Commission to address wildfire Public Safety Ongoing
+Develop an existing non-conforming uses risk reduction
program that identifies compliance gaps within the WUIFA
and ensures properties are brought up to code in a timely
manner
Public Safety Short-Term
Urban Forestry Plan: Prepare an Urban Forestry Master Plan that achieves the following:
+Provides information on proper tree pruning practices to the
public Community Development Short-Term
+Incorporates the management and enhancement of native
trees Community Development Short-Term
+Minimizes damage associated with wind- and fire-related
hazards and risks and address climate change and urban heat
island effects
Community Development Short-Term
+Manages the removal and replacement of trees that are
diseased, damaged, or considered vulnerable to high wind
and/or wildfire conditions
Community Development Short-Term
+Provides landscaping recommendations and requirements
for new developments, redevelopment, and major remodels Community Development Short-Term
+Reflects the results of the Urban Heat Island Analysis Community Development Short-Term
FOCUS AREA IMPLEMENTATION
These measures are actions to implement the policies and strategic recommendations of the Focus Areas These
actions should be coordinated with private investment for near-term improvement to help “jump-start” overall
implementation of the General Plan
TABLE WP-5 FOCUS AREA IMPLEMENTATION
Action Item Work Group Lead Timing
Street Connectivity: Facilitate new street connections and intersections for the following as development/
redevelopment occurs
+Extend Civic Center Drive to the west, bridging over the Deer
Creek Channel and connecting north to Foothill Boulevard
and west to Hermosa Avenue via Devon Street
Community Development Mid-Term
+Create a new signalized crossing of Foothill to connect
directly into Terra Vista Town Center, which may in the future
also be updated to a mixed-use center environment
Community Development Short-Term
+Realign Red Hill Country Club Drive to create a safer and more
functional intersection with Foothill Boulevard Extend Red
Hill Country Club Drive southward to a small new park at San
Bernardino Road
Community Development Short-Term
+Extend Roberds Street—and possibly create a new north-
south street parallel to and east of Amethyst Avenue—
to provide improved connection between the historic
retail businesses and the newer shopping centers and
opportunities for infill housing in the Town Center
Community Development Short-Term
+Facilitate the development of new and enhanced connections
from the Southeast Area to other parts of the city to provide
additional north-south and east-west capacity
Community Development Mid-Term
+Complete the at-grade spur track crossing of 6th Street west
of Etiwanda Avenue Community Development Mid-Term
+Complete Wilson Avenue and create a network of new
neighborhood streets to improve and distribute traffic in the
Etiwanda Town Center area
Community Development Mid-Term
+Extend 7th Street, 9th Street, and Feron Boulevard to create a
more complete street network that improves connectivity
and access to and from the Cucamonga Town Center to
neighboring destinations
Community Development Long-Term
Parks Master Plan: Prepare a Parks Master Plan to plan for new open space and trail network in the Focus Areas
that considers opportunities as follows:
+Create a small neighborhood green on vacant land at the
junction of the 8th Street Trail and Archibald Avenue and allow
it to be fronted by housing
Community Development Short-Term
+Create a new neighborhood park at Roberds Street and Base
Line Road to accommodate a variety of community activities Community Development Short-Term
284 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 285
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 1: GENERAL PLAN WORK PLAN
Action Item Work Group Lead Timing
+Create a community park at the intersection of the Pacific
Electric Trail and Amethyst Avenue Community Development Short-Term
+Provide new trailhead connections to the Deer Creek Corridor
– both south and north of Foothill Boulevard – to provide trail
access between the Civic Center area and neighborhoods to
the north and south, and to connect to the Pacific Electric
Trail
Community Development Short-Term
+Expand the trail network by creating a new multipurpose trail
in the historic 8th Street right-of-way adjacent to the planned
High Speed Rail line
Community Development Short-Term
+Reconfigure the existing trailhead parking lot and access
way to the Pacific Electric Trail to integrate it better into
the gateway center environment, while ensuring adequate
parking for visitors and trail users Visually enhance the
existing bridge to be a more appropriate “gateway statement”
for the city
Community Development Short-Term
+Coordinate with Southern California Edison and the San
Bernardino County Flood Control district to improve the
large open spaces along Day Creek Channel as a usable
recreational open space and a multipurpose trail
Community Development Short-Term
+Engage discussions with the school districts regarding the
use of school grounds as public park space See https://www
tpl org/community-schoolyards
Community Development Mid-Term
Shopping Center Improvements and Infill: Facilitate
improvements and infill to existing shopping centers to improve
and activate the shopping centers with temporary tactical or
permanent enhancements within existing parking lots and along
existing building fronts
Community Development Ongoing
Public/Private Partnerships: Manage improvements in
the Cucamonga Town Center area through a public/private
partnership between the City and local businesses and property
owners Management priorities would include managing
shared parking facilities, coordinating streetscape and site
improvements, planning and promoting special events, and
managing complete or partial street closures related to special
events
Community Development Short-Term
Historic Preservation: Preserve historic Route 66 establishments,
including the Sycamore Inn, Magic Lamp, and Red Hill Cafe,
and enhance their street fronts with improvements to Foothill
Boulevard
Community Development Mid-Term
STANDARD CONDITIONS OF APPROVAL
The following standard conditions of approval address environmental
issues associated with development identified in the General Plan EIR
In some instances, the standard conditions will apply to a development
application In other cases, the City may incorporate the standard or
requirement into an existing or new ordinance that would apply to all
projects While the conditions may not apply in all instances, or to all
projects, the intent of this standardized list is to provide a starting point for
project evaluation by the City Staff This standardized list is organized and
numbered (shown in bold text) consistent with the organization of the EIR
The City will regularly revise this list to stay current with industry practices
Aesthetics
+5.1-1: A detailed on-site lighting plan, including a photometric diagram,
shall be submitted by project applicants and reviewed and approved by
the Planning Director and Police Department prior to the issuance of
building permits Such plan shall indicate style, illumination, location,
height, and method of shielding so as not to adversely affect adjacent
properties
+5.1-2: Solar access easements shall be dedicated for the purpose of
assuming that each lot or dwelling unit shall have the right to receive
sunlight across adjacent lots or units for use of a solar energy system
The easements may be contained in a Declaration of Restrictions
for the subdivision which shall be recorded concurrently with the
recordation of the final map or issuance of permits, whichever
comes first The easements shall prohibit the casting of shadows by
vegetation, structures, fixtures, or any other object, except for utility
wires and similar objects, pursuant to Development Code Section
17 08 060-G-2
Air Quality
+5.3-1: The City shall ensure that discretionary development will
incorporate best management practices (BMPs) to reduce emissions
to be less than applicable thresholds These BMPs include but are
not limited to the most recent South Coast AQMD recommendations
for construction BMPs (per South Coast AQMD’s CEQA Air Quality
Handbook, South Coast AQMD’s Mitigation Monitoring and Reporting
Plan for the 2016 AQMP, and SCAG’s Mitigation Monitoring and
Reporting Plan for the 2020-2045 RTP/SCS, or as otherwise identified
by South Coast AQMD)
+5.3-2: Applicants for future discretionary development projects that
would generate construction-related emissions that exceed applicable
thresholds, will include, but are not limited to, the mitigation measures
recommended by South Coast AQMD (in its CEQA Air Quality
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Handbook or otherwise), to the extent feasible and applicable to the
project The types of measures shall include but are not limited to:
maintaining equipment per manufacturer specifications; lengthening
construction duration to minimize number of vehicle and equipment
operating at the same time; requiring use of construction equipment
rated by the EPA as having Tier 3 (model year 2006 or newer) or Tier
4 (model year 2008 or newer) emissions limits, applicable for engines
between 50 and 750 horsepower; and using electric-powered or other
alternative-fueled equipment in place of diesel-powered equipment
(whenever feasible) Tier 3 equipment can achieve average emissions
reductions of 57 percent for NOx, 84 percent for VOC, and 50 percent
for particulate matter compared to Tier 1 equipment Tier 4 equipment
can achieve average emissions reductions of 71 percent for NOx, 86
percent for VOC, and 96 percent for particulate matter compared to
Tier 1 equipment
+5.3-3: The City shall ensure that discretionary development that will
generate fugitive dust emissions during construction activities will, to
the extent feasible, incorporate BMPs that exceed South Coast AQMD’s
Rule 403 requirements to reduce emissions to be less than applicable
thresholds
+5.3-4: Applicants for future discretionary development projects which
will generate construction-related fugitive dust emissions that exceed
applicable thresholds will include, but are not limited to, the mitigation
measures recommended by South Coast AQMD’s CEQA Air Quality
Handbook, to the extent feasible and applicable:
• The area disturbed by clearing, grading, earth moving, or excavation
operations shall be minimized to prevent excess amounts of dust
• Pre-grading/excavation activities shall include watering the area
to be graded or excavated before commencement of grading or
excavation operations Application of watering (preferably reclaimed,
if available) should penetrate sufficiently to minimize fugitive dust
during grading activities This measure can achieve PM10 reductions
of 61 percent through application of water every three hours to
disturbed areas
• Fugitive dust produced during grading, excavation, and
construction activities shall be controlled by the following activities:
• All trucks shall be required to cover their loads as required by
California Vehicle Section 23114 Covering loads and maintaining
a freeboard height of 12 inches can reduce PM10 emissions by 91
percent
• All graded and excavated material, exposed soil areas, and active
portions of the construction site, including unpaved on-site
roadways, shall be treated to prevent fugitive dust Treatment
shall include, but not necessarily be limited to, periodic watering,
application of environmentally-safe soil stabilization materials,
and/or roll-compaction as appropriate Watering shall be
done as often as necessary and reclaimed water shall be used
whenever possible Application of water every three hours to
disturbed areas can reduce PM10 emissions by 61 percent
• Graded and/or excavated inactive areas of the construction site shall
be monitored at least weekly for dust stabilization Soil stabilization
methods, such as water and roll-compaction, and environmentally-
safe dust control materials, shall be periodically applied to portions
of the construction site that are inactive for over four days If no
further grading or excavation operations are planned for the
area, the area should be seeded and watered until grass growth
is evident, or periodically treated with environmentally-safe dust
suppressants, to prevent excessive fugitive dust Replacement of
ground cover in disturbed areas can reduce PM10 emissions by 5
percent
• Signs shall be posted on-site limiting traffic to 15 miles per hour
or less This measure can reduce associated PM10 emissions by 57
percent
• During periods of high winds (i e , wind speed sufficient to cause
fugitive dust to impact adjacent properties), all clearing, grading,
earth-moving, and excavation operations shall be curtailed to
the degree necessary to prevent fugitive dust created by on-site
activities and operations from being a nuisance or hazard off-site
or on-site The site superintendent/supervisor shall use his/her
discretion in conjunction with South Coast AQMD when winds are
excessive
• Adjacent streets and roads shall be swept at least once per day,
preferably at the end of the day, if visible soil material is carried over
to adjacent streets and roads
• Personnel involved in grading operations, including contractors and
subcontractors, should be advised to wear respiratory protection
in accordance with California Division of Occupational Safety and
Health regulations
Biological Resources
+5.4-1: Special status plant and wildlife species have the potential to
occur within the proposed project Area Any project that involves the
removal of habitat must consider if any special status species (e g ,
Threatened or Endangered species, CNPS List 1B and 2 plants, or
species protected under Section 15380 of CEQA) are potentially present
on the project site and if the project impacts could be considered
significant by the City If potential habitat is present in an area, focused
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surveys shall be conducted prior to construction activities in order to
document the presence or absence of a species on the project site
Botanical surveys shall be conducted during the appropriate blooming
period for a species If no special status species are found on the
project site, no additional action is warranted If special status species
are found, appropriate mitigation would be required in coordination
with the City, consistent with its performance criteria of mitigating
lost habitat at a ratio no less than one to one (one acre restored for
every acre impacted) However, mitigation shall be consistent with the
requirements of any required resource agency permits In the case of a
discrepancy between resource agency permits and this condition, the
more stringent of the two shall govern
+5.4-2: Any project that impacts a Federally listed species, based on a
biological survey or other analysis of the project, shall be required to
secure take authorization through Section 7 or Section 10 of the Federal
Endangered Species Act (FESA) prior to project implementation
Compensation for impacts to the listed species and their habitat shall
be mitigated at a ratio no less than one to one (one acre restored for
every acre impacted) However, mitigation shall be consistent with the
requirements of any required resource agency permits In the case of
a discrepancy between resource agency permits and this condition,
the more stringent of the two shall govern Project applicants shall
be required to plan, implement, monitor, and maintain the mitigated
habitat according to the requirements of the Biological Opinion
(Section 7) or Habitat Conservation Plan (Section 10) for the project
Prior to issuance of the first action and/or permit which would allow
for site disturbance (e g , grading permit), a detailed mitigation plan
shall be prepared by a qualified biologist for approval by the City
of Rancho Cucamonga and the USFWS, and shall include: (1) the
responsibilities and qualifications of the personnel to implement and
supervise the plan; (2) site selection; (3) site preparation and planting
implementation; (4) a schedule; (5) maintenance plan/guidelines; (6) a
monitoring plan; and (7) long-term preservation requirements
+5.4-3: Any project that impacts a State-listed Threatened or
Endangered species shall be required to obtain take authorization
(through an Incidental Take Permit) pursuant to the California
Endangered Species Act (CESA) and Section 2081 of the California
Fish and Game Code If the species is also listed under the FESA, a
consistency finding per Section 2080 1 of CESA is issued when a project
receives the USFWS Biological Opinion Compensation for impacts to
the listed species and their habitat shall be mitigated at a ratio no less
than one to one (one acre restored for every acre impacted) However,
mitigation shall be consistent with the requirements of any required
resource agency permits In the case of a discrepancy between
resource agency permits and this condition, the more stringent of
the two shall govern Project applicants shall be required to plan,
implement, monitor, and maintain the mitigated habitat according
to the requirements of the 2080 CESA process Prior to issuance of
the first action and/or permit which would allow for site disturbance
(e g , grading permit), a detailed mitigation plan shall be prepared by a
qualified biologist for approval by the City of Rancho Cucamonga and
the California Department of Fish and Wildlife and shall include: (1) the
responsibilities and qualifications of the personnel to implement and
supervise the plan; (2) site selection; (3)site preparation and planting
implementation; (4) a schedule; (5) a maintenance plan/guidelines; (6) a
monitoring plan; and (7) long-term preservation requirements
+5.4-4: To avoid conflicts with the Migratory Bird Treaty Act and
Bald/Golden Eagle Protection Act, construction activities involving
vegetation removal shall be conducted between September 16 and
March 14 If construction occurs inside the peak nesting season
(between March 15 and September 15), a preconstruction survey (or
possibly multiple surveys) by a qualified biologist is required prior to
construction activities to identify any active nesting locations If the
biologist does not find any active nests within the project site, the
construction work shall be allowed to proceed If the biologist finds
an active nest within the project site and determines that the nest
may be impacted, the biologist shall delineate an appropriate buffer
zone around the nest; the size of the buffer zone shall depend on the
affected species and the type of construction activity Any active nests
observed during the survey shall be mapped on an aerial photograph
Only construction activities (if any) that have been approved by a
biological monitor shall take place within the buffer zone until the nest
is vacated The biologist shall serve as a construction monitor when
construction activities take place near active nest areas to ensure
that no inadvertent impacts on these nests occur Results of the pre-
construction survey and any subsequent monitoring shall be provided
to the California Department of Fish and Wildlife and the City
+5.4-5: A jurisdictional delineation shall be conducted if a project
will impact jurisdictional resources Permits from the U S Army
Corps of Engineers (USACE) and Regional Water Quality Control
Board (RWQCB) shall be required for impacts on areas within these
agencies’ jurisdiction Acquisition and implementation of the permits
may require mitigation Compensation for impacts to jurisdictional
resources shall be mitigated at a ratio no less than one to one (one
acre restored for every acre impacted) However, mitigation shall be
consistent with the requirements of any required resource agency
permits In the case of a discrepancy between resource agency permits
and this condition, the more stringent of the two shall govern Project
applicants shall be required to plan, implement, monitor, and maintain
the mitigated jurisdictional resource according to the requirements of
USACE and RWQCB Prior to issuance of the first action and/or permit
that would allow for site disturbance (e g , grading permit), a detailed
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mitigation plan shall be prepared by a qualified biologist for approval
by the City of Rancho Cucamonga and the appropriate resource
agencies, and shall include: (1) the responsibilities and qualifications of
the personnel to implement and supervise the plan; (2) site selection;
(3) site preparation and planting implementation; (4) a schedule; (5)
maintenance plan/guidelines; (6) a monitoring plan; and (7) long-term
preservation requirements
+5.4-6: The Porter-Cologne Act and Sections 1600 to 1616 of the California
Fish and Game Code protect “waters of the State ” Agreements
(Streambed Alteration Agreements) from the California Department
of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) shall be required for impacts on areas in
CDFW’s jurisdiction Acquisition and implementation of the agreement
may require mitigation Compensation for impacts to CDFW resources
shall be mitigated at a ratio no less than one to one (one acre restored
for every acre impacted) However, mitigation shall be consistent with
the requirements of any required resource agency permits In the case
of a discrepancy between resource agency permits and this condition,
the more stringent of the two shall govern Project applicants shall be
required to plan, implement, monitor, and maintain the mitigation
areas according to CDFW requirements Prior to issuance of the first
action and/or permit which would allow for site disturbance (e g ,
grading permit), a detailed mitigation plan shall be prepared by a
qualified biologist for approval by the City of Rancho Cucamonga and
CDFW, and shall include: (1) the responsibilities and qualifications of
the personnel to implement and supervise the plan; (2) site selection;
(3) site preparation and planting implementation; (4) a schedule; (5)
maintenance plan/guidelines; (6) a monitoring plan; and (7) long-term
preservation requirements
+5.4-7: The City of Rancho Cucamonga requires a habitat connectivity/
wildlife corridor evaluation for development projects that may impact
existing connectivity areas and wildlife linkages identified in Figure 5 4-
6, Wildlife Movement Linkages Map of the General Plan The results of
the evaluation shall be incorporated into the project’s biological report
required under standard condition of approval 5 4-1 The evaluation
shall also identify project design features that would reduce potential
impacts and maintain habitat and wildlife movement To this end, the
City requires incorporation of the following measures, to the extent
practicable, for projects impacting wildlife movement corridors: Adhere
to low density zoning standards
• Encourage clustering of development
• Avoid known sensitive biological resources
• Provide shielded lighting adjacent to sensitive habitat areas
• Encourage development plans that maximize wildlife movement
• Provide buffers between development and wetland/riparian areas
• Protect wetland/riparian areas through regulatory agency
permitting process
• Encourage wildlife-passable fence designs (e g , 3-strand barbless
wire fence) on property boundaries
• Encourage preservation of native habitat on the undeveloped
remainder of developed parcels
• Minimize road/driveway development to help prevent loss of habitat
due to roadkill and habitat loss
• Use native, drought-resistant plant species in landscape design
• Encourage participation in local/regional recreational trail design
efforts
Cultural Resources
+5.5-1: For projects that contain a designated Historical Landmark,
the site shall be developed and maintained in accordance with
the applicable Historic Landmark Alteration Permit Any further
modifications to the site including, but not limited to, exterior
alterations and/or interior alterations which affect the exterior of
the buildings or structures, removal of landmark trees, demolition,
relocation, reconstruction of buildings or structures, or changes to the
site require a modification to the Certificate of Appropriateness subject
to Historic Preservation Commission review and approval
+5.5-2: If human remains or funerary objects are encountered during any
activities associated with the project, work in the immediate vicinity
(within a 100-foot buffer of the find) shall cease and the County Coroner
shall be contacted pursuant to State Health and Safety Code §7050 5
and that code enforced for the duration of the project
+5.5-3: If a building within the project area was constructed more
than 50 years ago, the City will require a determination of whether
the building, or site, could be considered historic If the project is
considered historic Chapter 17 18 Historic Preservation will apply
+5.5-4: Prior to any construction activities that may affect historical
resources (i e , structures 50 years or older), a historical resources
assessment shall be performed by an architectural historian or historian
who meets the Secretary of the Interior’s Professionally Qualified
Standards in architectural history or history This shall include a
records search to determine if any resources that may be potentially
affected by the project have been previously recorded, evaluated, and/
or designated in the National Register of Historic Places, California
Register of Historic Resources, or a local register Following the records
search, the qualified architectural historian shall conduct a survey in
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accordance with the California Office of Historic Preservation guidelines
to identify any previously unrecorded potential historical resources
that may be potentially affected by the proposed project Pursuant to
the definition of a historical resource under CEQA, potential historical
resources shall be evaluated under a developed historic context
+5.5-5: To ensure that projects requiring the relocation, rehabilitation,
or alternation of a historical resource do not impact the resource’s
significance, the Secretary of Interior’s Standards for the Treatments
of Historic Properties shall be used to the maximum extent possible
The application of the standards shall be overseen by a qualified
architectural historian or historic architect meeting the Professionally
Qualified Standards Prior to any construction activities that may
affect the historical resource, a report identifying and specifying the
treatment of character-defining features and construction activities
shall be provided to the City of Rancho Cucamonga for review and
approval
+5.5-6: If a proposed project would result in the demolition or
significant alteration of historical resource, such demolition cannot be
mitigated to a less than significant level However, recordation of the
resource prior to construction activities will assist in reducing adverse
impacts to the resource to the greatest extent possible Recordation
shall take the form of Historic American Buildings Survey, Historic
American Engineering Record, or Historic American Landscape
Survey documentation, and shall be performed by an architectural
historian or historian who meets the Professionally Qualified Standards
Documentation shall include an architectural and historical narrative;
medium- or large-format black and white photographs, negatives,
and prints; and supplementary information such as building plans
and elevations, and/or historical photographs Documentation shall be
reproduced on archival paper and placed in appropriate local, State, or
federal institutions The specific scope and details of documentation
are to be developed in coordination with the City of Rancho
Cucamonga Planning Department
+5.5-7: If cultural resources that are eligible for listing to the National
Register of Historic Places, California Register of Historic Resources,
or a local register are identified within or adjacent to the proposed
development, the construction limits shall be clearly flagged to ensure
impacts to eligible cultural resources are avoided or minimized to
the extent feasible Prior to implementing construction activities, a
qualified archaeologist shall verify that the flagging clearly delineates
the construction limits and eligible resources to be avoided Since
the location of some eligible cultural resources is confidential, these
resources shall be flagged as environmentally sensitive areas
+5.5-8: To determine the archaeological sensitivity for discretionary
projects within the city, an archaeological resources assessment shall
be performed under the supervision of an archaeologist that meets the
Secretary of the Interior’s Professionally Qualified Standards (PQS) in
either prehistoric or historic archaeology The assessments shall include
a California Historical Resources Information System (CHRIS) records
search and a search of the Sacred Lands File (SLF) maintained by the
Native American Heritage Commission (NAHC) The records searches
shall determine if the proposed project has been previously surveyed
for archaeological resources, identify and characterize the results of
previous cultural resource surveys, and disclose any cultural resources
that have been recorded and/or evaluated A Phase I pedestrian survey
shall be undertaken in areas that are undeveloped to locate any surface
cultural materials
• If potentially significant archaeological resources are identified
through an archaeological resources assessment, and impacts to
these resources cannot be avoided, a Phase II Testing and Evaluation
investigation shall be performed by an archaeologist who meets the
PQS prior to any construction-related ground-disturbing activities
to determine significance If resources determined significant or
unique through Phase II testing, and site avoidance is not possible,
appropriate site-specific mitigation measures shall be established
and undertaken These might include a Phase III data recovery
program that would be implemented by a qualified archaeologist
and shall be performed in accordance with the Office of Historic
Preservation’s Archaeological Resource Management Reports
(ARMR): Recommended Contents and Format (1990) and Guidelines
for Archaeological Research Designs (1991)
• If the archaeological assessment did not identify potentially
significant archaeological resources within the proposed project
area but indicated the area to be highly sensitive for archaeological
resources, a qualified archaeologist shall monitor all ground-
disturbing construction and pre-construction activities in areas
with previously undisturbed soil The archaeologist shall inform
all construction personnel prior to construction activities of the
proper procedures in the event of an archaeological discovery
The training shall be held in conjunction with the project’s initial
onsite safety meeting, and shall explain the importance and legal
basis for the protection of significant archaeological resources In
the event that archaeological resources (artifacts or features) are
exposed during ground-disturbing activities, construction activities
in the immediate vicinity of the discovery shall be halted while the
resources are evaluated for significance by an archaeologist who
meets the PQS If the discovery proves to be significant, it shall be
curated with a recognized scientific or educational repository
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• If the archaeological assessment did not identify potentially
significant archaeological resources, but indicates the area
to be of medium sensitivity for archaeological resources, an
archaeologist who meets the PQS shall be retained on an on-call
basis The archaeologist shall inform all construction personnel
prior to construction activities about the proper procedures in the
event of an archaeological discovery The training shall be held in
conjunction with the project’s initial on-site safety meeting, and
shall explain the importance and legal basis for the protection of
significant archaeological resources In the event that archaeological
resources (artifacts or features) are exposed during ground-
disturbing activities, construction activities in the immediate vicinity
of the discovery shall be halted while the on-call archaeologist
is contacted If the discovery proves to be significant, it shall be
curated with a recognized scientific or education repository
Geology and Soils
+5.7-1: Development of projects shall comply with the City’s
modifications to the Alquist-Priolo Earthquake Fault Zone Act that call
for geotechnical investigations for all proposed structures designed
for human occupancy within the expanded AP Zones, including a
zone along a splay of the Cucamonga Fault and another zone along
the scarp at Red Hill Also, geotechnical investigations are required for
essential and critical facilities along the buried/uncertain segment of
the Red Hill Fault, with a setback requirement of at least 50 feet
+5.7-2: All future building pads shall be seeded and irrigated for erosion
control Detailed plans shall be included in the landscape and irrigation
plans to be submitted for Planning Department approval prior to the
issuance of building permits
+5.7-3: A geological report shall be prepared for an individual project
by a qualified engineer or geologist and submitted at the time of
application for grading plan check
+5.7-4: The final grading plan, appropriate certifications and compaction
reports shall be completed, submitted, and approved by the Building
Official prior to the issuance of building permits
+5.7-5: A separate grading plan check submittal is required for all new
construction projects and for existing buildings where improvements
being proposed will generate 50 cubic yards or more of combined cut
and fill The grading plan shall be prepared, stamped, and signed by a
California registered Civil Engineer
+5.7-6: A geotechnical report shall be prepared by a qualified engineer
licensed by the State of California to perform such work
+5.7-7: If any paleontological resource (i e , plant or animal fossils) are
encountered before or during grading, the developer shall retain a
qualified paleontologist to monitor construction activities, and take
appropriate measures to protect or preserve them for study The
paleontologist shall submit a report of findings that will also provide
specific recommendations regarding further mitigation measures (i e ,
paleontological monitoring) that may be appropriate Where mitigation
monitoring is appropriate, the program must include, but not be
limited to, the following measures:
• Assign a paleontological monitor, trained, and equipped to allow the
rapid removal of fossils with minimal construction delay, to the site
full-time during the interval of earth-disturbing activities
• Should fossils be found within an area being cleared or graded,
divert earth-disturbing activities elsewhere until the monitor has
completed salvage If construction personnel make the discovery,
the grading contractor shall immediately divert construction and
notify the monitor of the find
• Prepare, identify, and curate all recovered fossils for documentation
in the summary report and transfer to an appropriate depository (i e ,
San Bernardino County Museum)
• Submit summary report to City of Rancho Cucamonga Transfer
collected specimens with a copy to the report to San Bernardino
County Museum
Hazards and Hazardous Materials
+5.9-1: A Fire Protection Plan shall be prepared and submitted to the
City for review and approval that includes measures consistent with
the unique problems resulting from the location, topography, geology,
flammable vegetation, and climate of the proposed development site
The Plan must also address water supply, access, building ignition fire
resistance, fire protection systems and equipment, defensible space,
and vegetation management Installation standards and maintenance
requirements for incinerators, outdoor fireplaces, barbecues and
grills, and firebreak fuel modification areas are imposed on new
developments
+5.9-2: With respect to all open space, recreational, or parkland uses,
the City will ensure through project design features and conditions
of approval that Southern California Edison (SCE) has 24/7 downline
access by SCE facilities and operations
+5.9-3: With respect to parkland proposed within utility corridors,
anti-climbing sharks teeth style barriers, or their equivalent, shall
be installed on all transmission towers Anti-climbing devices shall
conform to the California Public Utilities Commission guidance that
is in effect at the time of parkland project implementation The cost
of anti-climbing guards and installation shall be borne by the project
proponent
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+5.9-4: Any proposed trees within utility corridors should be maintained
at a height not to exceed 15 feet
+5.9-5: With the exception of utility infrastructure and other public
improvements that do not interfere with such infrastructure,
permanent structures are not allowed within utility corridors
+5.9-6: Southern California Edison (SCE) shall be notified in writing of
any proposal to locate parkland or recreational uses within a utility
corridor If the use is located on SCE property or if otherwise required
by law or the terms of a utility easement, SCE’s written approval of such
uses shall be obtained prior to the issuance of any CEQA approval or
permit or other ministerial or discretionary City approval
Hydrology and Water Quality
+5.10-1: A final drainage study shall be submitted to and approved by
the City Engineer prior to final map approval or the issuance of grading
permits, whichever occurs first All drainage facilities shall be installed
as required by the City Engineer
+5.10-2: Adequate provisions shall be made for acceptance and disposal
of surface drainage entering the property from adjacent areas
Noise
+5.13-1: For construction activities that do not involve pile driving
occurring within 580 feet residential, schools, churches, or similar uses
or within 330 feet of commercial/industrial uses or for construction
activities involving pile driving occurring within 1,000 feet of residential,
schools, churches, or similar uses, or within 330 feet of commercial/
industrial uses, or nighttime construction activities, as defined in
Development Code Section 17 66 050), the City shall require that
project applicants prepare a site-specific construction noise analysis
demonstrating compliance with the noise standards of Development
Code Section 17 66 050, as determined by the City The analysis shall
be completed prior to project approval and can be completed as part
of the environmental review process for projects subject to CEQA
Potential project-specific actions that can feasibly achieve compliance
include, but are not limited to, restrictions on construction timing
to avoid nighttime hours, restrictions on the location of equipment
and vehicle use within the construction site, installing noise mufflers
on construction equipment, use of electric-powered vehicles and
equipment, use of sound blankets on construction equipment, and the
use of temporary walls or noise barriers to block and deflect noise
+5.13-2: To avoid or substantially lessen exposure to substantial
permanent increases in traffic noise, the City shall, at the time of
development application submittal, require the preparation of a
traffic noise study that includes (1) the evaluation of potential traffic
noise impacts of new noise sources (e g , project-generated traffic
noise increases) on nearby existing noise sensitive receptors (such as
residential neighborhoods) and (2) require noise reduction measures
(e g , sound walls, rubberized asphalt) to prevent exposure of noise
sensitive receptors to substantial noise increases, consistent with Table
N-1 and incremental increase standards of no greater than 3 dB where
existing levels are below 65 dBA CNEL, 1 dB where existing levels are
between 70 dBA CNEL and 75 dBA and any increase where existing
levels are above 75 dBA CNEL, as determined by the City
+5.13-3: The City shall require that project applicants analyze and
mitigate potential noise impacts from new stationary noise sources
(e g , loading docks at commercial and industrial uses, mechanical
equipment associated with all building types), to, as determined by the
City, comply with the City’s daytime (7:00 a m to 10:00 p m ) standards
of 65 dBA Leq/50 dBA Leq (exterior/interior) and nighttime (10:00
p m -7:00 a m ) standards of 60 dBA Leq/45 dBA Leq (exterior/interior),
described in Development Code Section 17 66 050(F) The analysis shall
be prepared by a qualified acoustical engineer or noise specialist and
completed prior to project approval and can be completed as part
of the environmental review process for projects subject to CEQA
Potential project-specific actions that can feasibly achieve compliance
include, but are not limited to, the use of enclosures or screening
materials (e g , landscape buffers, parapets, masonry walls) around
stationary noise sources (e g , heating, ventilation, and air conditioning
systems, generators, heating boilers, loading docks) or of noise
suppression devices (e g , acoustic louvers, mufflers)
+5.13-4a: The City shall, at the time of development project application
submittal, evaluate the compatibility of proposed noise sensitive uses
(e g , residences, lodging, schools, parks) with the noise environment to
ensure noise compatibility standards (Table N-1) are met
+5.13-4b: Applicants for development projects shall, at the time of
application submittal, evaluate noise impacts for compliance with
noise compatibility standards (Table N-1), and when noise attenuation
measures are required, prioritize site planning that reduces noise
exposure over other attenuation measures, particularly the location of
parking, ingress/egress/loading, and refuse collection areas relative to
surrounding residential development and other noise-sensitive land
uses
+5.13-4c: Applicants for development projects shall, at the time of
application submittal, evaluate noise impacts for compliance with
noise compatibility standards (Table N-1), and when noise attenuation
measures are required, incorporate building orientation, design, and
interior layout into the project to achieve compatible noise levels For
example, noise insulation materials (e g , double-glazed windows and
well-sealed doors) substantially lessen interior noise levels In addition,
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interior building layouts that place active rooms, such as kitchens,
between noise-sensitive rooms, such as bedrooms, and exterior noise
sources, such as roadways, substantially lessen interior noise levels
within the noise-sensitive rooms
+5.13-4d: The City shall require that mixed-use development be
designed to minimize exposure of noise-sensitive uses from adjacent
noise sources and require full disclosure of the potential noise impacts
of living in a mixed-use development by requiring residential disclosure
notices within deeds and lease agreements as a condition of project
approval
+5.13-4e: The City shall review and comment on transportation capital
projects and operations sponsored by Caltrans and other agencies to
minimize exposure of noise-sensitive uses within the city to adverse
levels of transportation-related noise, including noise associated with
freeways, major arterials, bus transit, and rail lines
+5.13-5a: For development involving construction activities within
500 feet of existing sensitive land uses (places where people sleep or
buildings containing vibration-sensitive uses), the City shall require
applicants, at the time of application submittal, to prepare a project-
specific vibration analysis that identifies vibration-reducing measures
to ensure the project construction does not exceed applicable vibration
criteria (e g , FTA, Caltrans) for the purpose of preventing disturbance to
sensitive land uses and structural damage The analysis shall include,
but is not limited to, the following requirements:
• Ground vibration-producing activities, such as pile driving, shall
be limited to the daytime hours between 7:00 a m to 8:00 p m on
weekdays and prohibited on Sundays and holidays
• If pile driving is used, pile holes shall be predrilled to the maximum
feasible depth to reduce the number of blows required to seat a pile
• Maximize the distance between construction equipment and
vibration-sensitive land uses
• Earthmoving, blasting and ground-impacting activities shall be
prohibited from occurring at the same time if simultaneous activity
would result in exceedance of vibration criteria
• Where pile driving is proposed, alternatives to traditional pile
driving (e g , sonic pile driving, jetting, cast-in-place or auger cast
piles, nondisplacement piles, pile cushioning, torque or hydraulic
piles) shall be implemented when the project cannot otherwise
demonstrate vibration levels in compliance with the structural
damage threshold
• Minimum setback requirements for different types of ground
vibration-producing activities (e g , pile driving) for the purpose
of preventing damage to nearby structures shall be established
Factors to be considered include the specific nature of the vibration
producing activity (e g , type and duration of pile driving), soil
conditions, and the fragility/resiliency of the nearby structures
Established setback requirements (100 feet for pile driving, 25 feet
for other construction activity) can be revised only if a project-
specific analysis is conducted by a qualified geotechnical engineer
or ground vibration specialist that demonstrates, as determined by
the City, that the structural damage vibration threshold would not
be exceeded
• Minimum setback requirements for different types of ground
vibration producing activities (e g , pile driving) for the purpose of
preventing negative human response shall be established based
on the specific nature of the vibration producing activity (e g , type
and duration of pile driving), soil conditions, and the type of sensitive
receptor Established setback requirements (500 for pile driving,
80 for other construction) can be revised only if a project-specific
ground vibration study demonstrates, as determined by the City,
that receptors would not be exposed to ground vibration levels
in excess of negative human response vibration threshold levels,
depending on the frequency of the event and receiver type
• All vibration-inducing activity within the established setback
distances for preventing structural damage and negative human
response shall be monitored and documented to compare recorded
ground vibration noise and vibration noise levels at affected
sensitive land uses to the applicable vibration threshold values The
results included recorded vibration data shall be submitted to the
City
+5.13-5b: For projects proposed within 600 feet of commuter rail/high-
speed rail/freight rail, or rail with combined services, the City shall
require applicants, at the time of application submittal, to prepare a
project-specific vibration analyses to evaluate vibration exposure from
nearby transit sources The vibration assessment shall be prepared
by a qualified acoustical engineer or noise specialist in accordance
with Federal Transit Administration (FTA) vibration impact criteria, or
other applicable City policy in place at the time of project application
submittal The assessment shall determine vibration levels at specific
building locations and identify structural mitigation measures (e g ,
isolation strip foundations, insulated windows and walls, sound walls or
barriers, distance setbacks, or other construction or design measures)
that would reduce vibration to acceptable levels for the receptor and
source type
+5.13-5c: The City shall evaluate new transportation capital projects and
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operations sponsored by other agencies for structural vibration impacts
and vibration annoyance impacts, consistent with City-approved
methodologies (e g , Caltrans, FTA guidance)
Transportation
+5.17-1: Future development applications in the City shall be required
to provide traffic impact analyses for review and approval by the
City during the permit process to identify the traffic impacts of the
project and the needed roadway and intersection improvements
Any identified on-site improvements and improvements to abutting
roadways would need to be made part of the development Coupled
with the payment of DIF for the improvement of off-site roadways
and intersections, traffic impacts would be mitigated on a project-by-
project basis
+5.17-2: Future developments with 250 employees or more shall comply
with the South Coast Air Quality Management District’s (SCAQMD’s)
Rule 2202, which requires the implementation of trip reduction
measures as a means of reducing pollutant emission in the air basin
An employer subject to this Rule shall annually register with the
SCAQMD to implement an emission reduction program, in accordance
with this Rule
+5.17-3: Individual projects shall provide the following, as determined
applicable by City staff:
• Provide car-sharing, bike sharing, and ride-sharing programs;
• Improve or increase access to transit;
• Incorporate neighborhood electric vehicle networks into the project;
• Include project measures to reduce transportation requirements
such as work from home and flexible work schedules;
• Link to existing pedestrian or bicycle networks, or transit service;
and/or
• Provide traffic calming
Tribal Cultural Resources
+5.18-1: Inadvertent Archaeological Find If during ground disturbance
activities, cultural resources are discovered that were not assessed
by the archaeological report(s) and/or environmental assessment
conducted prior to project approval, the following procedures shall be
followed Cultural resources are defined as being multiple artifacts in
close association with each other, but also include fewer artifacts if the
area of the find is determined to be of significance due to its sacred
or cultural importance as determined in consultation with the Native
American Tribe(s)
• All ground disturbance activities within 100 feet of the
discovered cultural resources shall be halted until a meeting
is convened between the developer, the archaeologist, the
tribal representative(s) and the Planning Director to discuss the
significance of the find
• At the meeting, the significance of the discoveries shall be discussed
and after consultation with the tribal representative(s) and the
archaeologist, a decision shall be made, with the concurrence of the
Planning Director, as to the appropriate mitigation (documentation,
recovery, avoidance, etc ) for the cultural resources
• • Grading or further ground disturbance shall not resume within
the area of the discovery until an agreement has been reached by
all parties as to the appropriate mitigation Work shall be allowed to
continue outside of the 100-foot buffer area and will be monitored
by additional Tribal monitors if needed
• Treatment and avoidance of the newly discovered resources shall
be consistent with the Cultural Resources Management Plan and
Monitoring Agreements entered into with the appropriate tribes
This may include avoidance of the cultural resources through project
design, in-place preservation of cultural resources located in native
soils and/or re-burial on the Project property so they are not subject
to further disturbance in perpetuity as identified in Non-Disclosure
of Reburial Locations Condition
• If the find is determined to be significant and avoidance of the
site has not been achieved, a Phase III data recovery plan shall be
prepared by the project archaeologist, in consultation with the Tribe,
and shall be submitted to the City for their review and approval prior
to implementation of the said plan
• • Pursuant to California Public Resources Code § 21083 2(b)
avoidance is the preferred method of preservation for archaeological
resources and tribal cultural resources If the landowner and the
Tribe(s) cannot agree on the significance or the mitigation for
the archaeological or tribal cultural resources, these issues will
be presented to the Planning Director for decision The City’s
Planning Director shall make the determination based on the
provisions of the California Environmental Quality Act with respect
to archaeological and tribal cultural resources, recommendations
of the project archaeologist, and shall take into account the cultural
and religious principles and practices of the Tribe Notwithstanding
any other rights available under the law, the decision of the City
Planning Director is appealable
+5.18-2: Cultural Resources Disposition In the event that Native
American cultural resources are discovered during the course of
grading (inadvertent discoveries), the following procedures shall be
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carried out for final disposition of the discoveries:
• One or more of the following treatments, in order of preference,
shall be employed as required by the tribes subject to appeal to
the Planning Director Evidence of the approved treatment shall be
provided to the City of Rancho Cucamonga Planning Department:
• Preservation-In-Place of the cultural resources, if feasible
Preservation in place means avoiding the resources, leaving
them in the place where they were found with no development
affecting the integrity of the resources
• Reburial of the resources on the Project property The measures
for reburial shall include, at least, the following: Measures and
provisions to protect the future reburial area from any future
impacts in perpetuity Reburial shall not occur until all legally
required cataloging and basic recording has been completed,
with an exception that sacred items, burial goods, and Native
American human remains are excluded Any reburial process
shall be culturally appropriate Listing of contents and location
of the reburial shall be included in the confidential Phase IV
report The Phase IV Report shall be filed with the City under a
confidential cover and not subject to Public Records Request
• If preservation in place or reburial is not feasible then the
resources shall be curated in a culturally appropriate manner
at a San Bernardino County curation facility that meets State
Resources Department Office of Historic Preservation Guidelines
for the Curation of Archaeological Resources ensuring access
and use pursuant to the Guidelines The collection and
associated records shall be transferred, including title, and are
to be accompanied by payment of the fees by the Applicant
necessary for permanent curation Evidence of curation in the
form of a letter from the curation facility stating that subject
archaeological materials have been received and that all fees
have been paid, shall be provided by the landowner to the
City There shall be no destructive or invasive testing on sacred
items, burial goods, and Native American human remains,
as defined by the cultural and religious practices of the Most
Likely Descendant Results concerning finds of any inadvertent
discoveries shall be included in the Phase IV monitoring report
+5.18-3: Archaeologist Retained Prior to issuance of a grading permit
the project applicant shall retain a qualified Registered Professional
Archaeologist (RPA), to monitor all ground disturbing activities in an
effort to identify any unknown archaeological resources The Registered
Professional Archaeologist and the Tribal monitor(s) shall manage
and oversee monitoring for all initial ground disturbing activities
and excavation of each portion of the project site including clearing,
grubbing, tree removals, mass or rough grading, trenching, stockpiling
of materials, rock crushing, structure demolition and etc The
Registered Professional Archaeologist and the Tribal monitor(s), shall
independently have the authority to temporarily divert, redirect, or halt
the ground disturbance activities to allow identification, evaluation,
and potential recovery of cultural resources in coordination with any
required special interest or tribal monitors The developer/permit holder
shall submit a fully executed copy of the contract to the Planning
Department to ensure compliance with this condition of approval
Upon verification, the Planning Department shall clear this condition
In addition, the Registered Professional Archaeologist, in consultation
with the Consulting Tribe(s), the contractor, and the City, shall develop
a Cultural Resources Management Plan (CRMP) in consultation
pursuant to the definition in AB 52 to address the details, timing,
and responsibility of all archaeological and cultural activities that will
occur on the project site A consulting tribe is defined as a tribe that
initiated the AB 52 tribal consultation process for the Project, has not
opted out of the AB 52 consultation process, and has completed AB 52
consultation with the City as provided for in California Public Resources
Code Section 21080 3 2(b)(1) of AB 52 Details in the Plan shall include:
• Project grading and development scheduling;
• The Project archaeologist and the Consulting Tribes(s) shall attend
the pre-grading meeting with the City, the construction manager
and any contractors, and will conduct a mandatory Cultural
Resources Worker Sensitivity Training to those in attendance The
Training will include a brief review of the cultural sensitivity of the
Project and the surrounding area; what resources could potentially
be identified during earthmoving activities; the requirements of
the monitoring program; the protocols that apply in the event
inadvertent discoveries of cultural resources are identified, including
who to contact and appropriate avoidance measures until the find(s)
can be properly evaluated; and any other appropriate protocols All
new construction personnel that will conduct earthwork or grading
activities that begin work on the Project following the initial Training
must take the Cultural Sensitivity Training prior to beginning work
and the Project archaeologist and Consulting Tribe(s) shall make
themselves available to provide the training on an as-needed basis;
• The protocols and stipulations that the contractor, City, Consulting
Tribe(s) and Project archaeologist will follow in the event of
inadvertent cultural resources discoveries, including any newly
discovered cultural resource deposits that shall be subject to a
cultural resources evaluation
+5.18-4: Native American Monitoring Tribal monitor(s) shall be required
on-site during all ground-disturbing activities, including grading,
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stockpiling of materials, engineered fill, rock crushing, etc The land
divider/permit holder shall retain a qualified tribal monitor(s) from the
requesting Tribe Prior to issuance of a grading permit, the developer
shall submit a copy of a signed contract between the Tribe and the
land divider/permit holder for the monitoring of the project to the
Planning Department and to the Engineering Services Department
The Tribal Monitor(s) shall have the authority to temporarily divert,
redirect or halt the ground-disturbance activities to allow recovery of
cultural resources, in coordination with the Project Archaeologist
+5.18-5: Archeology Report - Phase III and IV Prior to final inspection,
the developer/permit holder shall prompt the Project Archaeologist to
submit two (2) copies of the Phase III Data Recovery report (if required
for the Project) and the Phase IV Cultural Resources Monitoring Report
that complies with the Planning Department’s requirements for such
reports The Phase IV report shall include evidence of the required
cultural/historical sensitivity training for the construction staff held
during the pre-grade meeting The Planning Department shall review
the reports to determine adequate mitigation compliance Provided
the reports are adequate, the Planning Department shall clear this
condition Once the report(s) are determined to be adequate, two (2)
copies shall be submitted to the South Central Coastal Information
Center (SCCIC) at California State University, Fullerton and one (1)
copy shall be submitted to the Consulting Tribe(s) Cultural Resources
Department(s)
+5.18-6: Human Remains If human remains are encountered, State
Health and Safety Code Section 7050 5 states that no further
disturbance shall occur until the San Bernardino County Coroner has
made the necessary findings as to origin Further, pursuant to Public
Resource Code Section 5097 98(b) remains shall be left in place and
free from disturbance until a final decision as to the treatment and
disposition has been made If the San Bernardino County Coroner
determines the remains to be Native American, the Native American
Heritage Commission shall be contacted within the period specified
by law (24 hours) Subsequently, the Native American Heritage
Commission shall identify the “most likely descendant ” The most
likely descendant shall then make recommendations and engage in
consultation concerning the treatment of the remains as provided in
Public Resources Code Section 5097 98
+5.18-7: Non-Disclosure of Reburial Locations It is understood by all
parties that unless otherwise required by law, the site of any reburial
of Native American human remains or associated grave goods shall
not be disclosed and shall not be governed by public disclosure
requirements of the California Public Records Act The Coroner,
pursuant to the specific exemption set forth in California Government
Code 6254 (r) , parties, and Lead Agencies, will be asked to withhold
public disclosure information related to such reburial, pursuant to the
specific exemption set forth in California Government Code 6254 (r)
Wildfire
+5.9-1: Future development shall prepare a Fire Protection Plan that
includes measures consistent with the unique problems resulting from
the location, topography, geology, flammable vegetation, and climate
of the proposed development site The Plan must also address water
supply, access, building ignition fire resistance, fire protection systems
and equipment, defensible space, and vegetation management
Maintenance requirements for incinerators, outdoor fireplaces,
permanent barbecues and grills, and firebreak fuel modification areas
are imposed on new developments
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VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 2: PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
A PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT IS...
a set of implementation tools intended as a guide for the City, property
owners, and developers, to help ensure that each new increment of private
and public investment in Rancho Cucamonga contributes to the making of
great places of strong and enduring value The intention of this Toolkit is to
clearly describe, diagram and illustrate the types of development patterns,
forms and strategies that will result in human-scale, pedestrian-oriented
places that achieve the community’s vision as presented in this General
Plan
Through the extensive PlanRC community engagement process of 2020,
thousands of residents shared their hopes and dreams for the future of our
City While there were many diverse points of view, it was very clear that
the one thing most people want is “more nice places to go and more ways
to get there ” This requires that public and private improvements work
together to “make places, not just projects” and focuses attention on the
streets and other public spaces of our City—the “public realm”—which is
the network of spaces through which one gets around town, and in which
one meets and interacts with others The public realm is the glue that holds
all the projects together and makes them into a great city
HEART OF THE MATTER
Throughout the second half of the 20th century, conventional city planning
practice was based on separating dissimilar land uses by distance and by
discontinuous street networks, which required an automobile trip for every
change of activity throughout the day Public realm design valued the
convenience of motorists over the safety and comfort of pedestrians and
bicyclists, relegating all modes of travel other than the private automobile
to the indeterminate status of “alternative modes ” Cities that were
established and grew rapidly during this time period are characterized by
patterns of low-density isolated housing, commercial centers with large
parking lots, employment centers built as “business parks,” and wide,
high-speed arterial streets This conventional pattern of development
severs neighborhood from neighborhood and commercial centers from
employment districts as they prioritize long-distance vehicular throughput
and results in a number of other environmental, economic, and social
impacts Such planning and mobility practices coincided with the growth
of Rancho Cucamonga since its incorporation in 1978, leaving us with a
range of challenging physical characteristics to address
This Toolkit, in addition to the updated General Plan, describes a more
balanced approach with tools and strategies for all-mode mobility and
placemaking that ensures the vitality of the community In planning and
designing the future of Rancho Cucamonga, we must ensure that areas
within the city that will be developing or redeveloping over the next several
decades, are developed with urban patterns and forms that deliver more
equitable and valuable results—regardless of preferred travel mode—and
that they enable significant benefits for the well-being of the community,
the environment, and the economy
This General Plan is intended to define a sustainable path forward, both
preserving those characteristics of the city that residents know and love,
while also enabling a bright future for the generations to come To that end,
this Placemaking Toolkit provides the City, property owners, and developers
with a set of tools and strategies to guide them in their mutual pursuit of
that vision
Placemaking Toolkit
“Every increment of
construction must be
made in such a way as
to heal the city.”
- Christopher Alexander
A New Theory of Urban
Design, 1987
308 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 309
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 2: PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
+Part 1 | Activating the Public Realm. Part 1 addresses the
many factors that contribute to an active, comfortable, and safe
network of human-scale streets and other public spaces—the
“public realm”—that invite and support active mobility and the
economic and social life of our community The public realm
of our City is envisioned to evolve and expand into a network of
“outdoor living rooms of our community,” beyond streets simply
managing automobile traffic The appearance and function of
these spaces are defined by the design of the streets and other
open spaces, and by the ways in which the front yards and
ground floors of buildings define, connect to, and activate, those
spaces
+Part 2 | Rebalancing Streets & Public Spaces. Part 2 focuses
on the design and management of streets, to equitably balance
facilities to accommodate all users, regardless of travel mode,
age, income, and physical capabilities The City’s current street
network strongly favors motorists, most often at the expense
of pedestrians and bicyclists This particularly and inequitably
disadvantages the young, old, and poor Rebalancing the
network and creating activatable frontages requires systematic
improvements, including adding on-street parking and medians,
providing wider, more comfortable sidewalk, improving street
tree plantings for shade/wind protection and spatial enclosure,
and adding high-quality bus lanes and safe bike lanes on select
streets to transform them into much safer and more pleasant
spaces for our community
+Part 3 | Completing the Community Fabric. Part 3 describes
and illustrates how a human scale network of multi-modal
streets and other public spaces with active frontages may be
systematically extended into large vacant or underutilized sites
The intended outcome is that each such site be configured
and designed as an integral part of the community fabric
that connects to surrounding properties and is accessible by
foot, bike, transit and car—rather than just “big development
projects” between which one must drive back and forth The key
to providing a network of human-scale, walkable, welcoming
and active frontages is a network of balanced, complete streets
and open spaces that form walkable blocks, well-connected to
and integrated with the surrounding community fabric
Part 1 of the Toolkit provides tools and strategies
for making an active, safe, and equitable Public
Realm throughout our City
Part 2 of the Toolkit provides tools and strategies
for systematically rebalancing our street and public
spaces toward and in favor of non-motorists
Part 3 of the Toolkit provides tools and strategies for
completing unbuilt (or changing) parts of our City
HOW TO USE THIS TOOLKIT
This Toolkit is not a regulatory document Rather, the tools, strategies and recommendations provided herein
are intended as a guide to the City, and to property owners and developers, for implementing the placemaking
policies set forth in the General Plan To do so, the Toolkit focuses on three high-priority topics related to the built
environment, as described in the following sections:
Topics and Applicability
While the Toolkit provides a comprehensive set of tools and strategies that cover a range of high-priority topics, not
all topics are relevant to all users or contexts The Matrix below provides an overview of the topics and information
covered, along with a quick guide as to which topics are most relevant to public and private improvements
Page #Toolkit Topics Public
Improvements
Private
Development
308 Part 1 | Activating the Public Realm
310 1A: Creating Active Frontages
312 1B: Public & Private Frontages
314 1C: Frontages: Context, Design & Calibration
314 I. Frontage Types & Contexts
315 II. Frontage Design & Calibration
316 A. Retail & Commercial Frontages
320 B. Office & Industrial Frontages
322 C. Residential Frontages
324 Part 2 | Rebalancing Streets & Public Spaces
326 2A: Applying Active Frontages
326 I. Retrofit Strategies
328 A. Bulb-Out Type
330 B Bulb-In Type
332 C. Frontage Lane Type
334 D. Adding On-Street Parking
336 2B: Applying Additional Improvements
336 I. Adding Signalized Intersections and Crosswalks
338 II. Neighborhood Street Retrofit Strategies
340 III. Traffic Calming & Placemaking Strategies
340 A. Adding Street Trees
344 B. Adding Street Lighting
344 C. Adding Safe Pedestrian Crossings
345 D. Adding Chicanes
345 E. Adding Mini-Roundabouts
346 2C: Applying Transit & Bike Improvements
346 I. Transit Priority Street Retrofits
352 II. Bike Priority Street Retrofits
356 2D: Creating New Streets & Public Spaces
356 I. Designing New Streets
358 II. Designing New Public Spaces
360 Part 3 | Completing the Community Fabric
362 3A: General Guidelines for Large Site Development
363 Case Study 1: Large Site Development
377 Case Study 2: Redevelopment of Shopping Centers
388 Case Study 3: Retrofitting Shopping Centers
Most Relevant To:
Overview & Intent
Design Tools & Strategies
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PART 1. ACTIVATING THE PUBLIC
REALM
To ensure an increasingly active, attractive, equitable, pedestrian-oriented
environment that is comfortable and safe to navigate by foot, bicycle, or
any vehicular mode, careful attention must be given to the design and
connectivity of the public realm Generally defined, the public realm is all the
publicly accessible open spaces between all the buildings within the city This
begins with the truly public spaces such as public streets and public parks,
but as residents experience the City day to day it also includes a great deal of
publicly accessible but privately owned spaces (semi-public spaces), including
but not limited to the access drives and parking lots of commercial and
industrial buildings, the internal streets within many of our neighborhoods,
and community parks owned and maintained by home-owners’ associations
It is within this extensive network of public and semi-public shared common
open spaces that our social and economic life as a community occurs
In many communities, like Rancho Cucamonga, that have developed with
predominantly suburban patterns where access to and between almost every
daily activity is provided by automobile, these spaces have been designed
and engineered almost exclusively to accommodate and facilitate driving
and parking The result is that most of our public and private streets, and the
approaches to most of our buildings are dominated by asphalt pavement
and not designed with the comfort and safety of pedestrians and bicyclists in
mind As such, they are not spaces within which people walk for enjoyment,
for shopping, for dining, or for meeting friends and neighbors and socializing
as a community Through the 2020 PlanRC public engagement process it
was heard loud and clear that many residents hope that in the future these
spaces will be more welcoming, safe and comfortable for people, not just cars
Accordingly, Part 1 of this Toolkit provides a set of tools for leveraging the
value of our public realm, recognizing that this space (our streets alone
comprising over 6,000 acres of land!) is a very significant community
resource It is intended that with these tools, over time, the value of the public
realm is systematically increased through incremental enhancements that
deliver a well-connected, healthy, active, safe, comfortable, equitable, and
economically-viable environment that is calibrated to each unique part of our
City Specific topics in Part 1 include:
+1A. Creating Active Frontages
+1B. Public & Private Frontages
+1C. Frontages: Context, Design & Calibration
Part 2 provides strategies and directions for applying these active frontages
to our existing streets and spaces (in addition to strategies for improving the
modal balance of such streets), and Part 3 provides strategies for extending
this active public network into the parts of our city that are expected to
change or have not yet developed
The “Public Realm” is all of the publicly owned and publicly accessible
land in a city and is traditionally where most of the social, economic and
civic life of a community occurs
A large majority of our existing streets and approaches
to buildings are dominated by asphalt pavement that
are not designed with the comfort safety, or access of
pedestrians and bicyclists in mind
CREATING “LOCATION”
A common real estate aphorism states that the most important factors that determine property value are
“location, location, and location ”
Location is defined fundamentally by two things One is simply geographic—what area of what City the
property is located in Rancho Cucamonga is blessed with a good and well-deserved reputation as a community
where people want to live, work, and shop, so property in our City is generally more valuable than comparable
property in many other nearby cities
The second factor defining “location” is how the area around the subject property looks, feels, and functions
If those qualities make it a place that people find attractive, pleasant, comfortable, and useful, it becomes a
place where people simply want to be, because it’s nice to be there, which generates an additional premium
in property value And unlike the simple geographic factor of where the property is located—which one clearly
cannot do anything to change—“type of place” qualities are subject to change, by the design of the streets and
the design of buildings and site improvements
So, in an important sense, it is possible to simply “build location” An empty field can become the nicest new
neighborhood or the most interesting shopping district in town simply by how it is designed That is what this
Toolkit is for
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1A. CREATING ACTIVE FRONTAGES
Frontages are the spaces along the edges of streets and along the fronts of
buildings, where the public and private realms overlap - often seamlessly -
to define the look and feel and character of our community These are the
spaces in which we walk, and where we encounter and interact with family,
friends and neighbors
Within our single-family neighborhoods, frontages typically include the
sidewalks, street trees, front yards, and the fronts of homes The current
frontages of many of our existing large streets that provide access to our
neighborhoods are generally limited to landscaping, concrete block sound
walls, and the walls of homes
In most of our multi-family communities also, apartment buildings typically
back up to public streets, with resident and visitor access oriented to
internal or perimeter parking lots In both cases, the development pattern
and street design does not encourage or support human activity along our
main public streets, just traffic
In most commercial and industrial development in Rancho Cucamonga,
frontages are limited to sidewalks, landscaping, and parking lots Buildings
typically face parking lots, which are generally not designed to facilitate or
encourage pedestrians to enter or leave each project on foot or by bicycle
In some cases, buildings are placed near the street, but where this occurs
the building “fronts” typically face the parking lots, generating little human
activity within the public streets
Whenever one walks to visit neighbors, visit a park or school,
or patronize a shop or restaurant, one is walking within and
along frontages And when one walks from a parked car into
shops or restaurants or offices or public buildings, one is once
again moving within and along frontages It is the experience
of being within these spaces—more than any one factor—
that defines the look, the feel, and the experience of being in
Rancho Cucamonga
Accordingly, this section focuses on defining a broad and
flexible palette of “Active Frontage Types” described further
in Section 1B - Frontages: Context, Design, & Calibration,
provides direction for making new ones, and provides tools
and strategies for retrofitting existing frontages that better
encourage and support activity throughout the public realm
of our City and that better reflect our identity and aspirations
as a community Active frontages in each neighborhood,
corridor, center and district must be designed, calibrated, and
coordinated to encourage and enable active habitation of our
public spaces and the buildings that front them, as well as to:
+Contribute to the place-making and urban design goals
for each part of town as described in this General Plan;
+Spatially define comfortable, safe and inviting
pedestrian spaces that offer physical and psychological
buffers between pedestrians and traffic, sun, wind and
other environmental factors, and provide safety through
“eyes on the street” during daytime and evening hours;
+Enhance the appearance of the public realm and
reinforce the unique character of the city and each of its
unique areas;
+Offer appropriate design flexibility while promoting
public realm designs that are complementary to the
intended context, function, and use of the street and
adjacent development
Well designed frontages can enable and cause the activation of the public realm This activation leverages the value of our public
streets and spaces, creating
Example of active residential frontages along an
urban neighborhood street
Example of active commercial frontages along a
downtown street
Example of active office frontages on a carless
(pedestrian) street
Common multi-family residential
frontage in Rancho Cucamonga
Many of our commercial frontages,
while attractive, are disconnected from
the public realm network by large
parking lots
314 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 315
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 2: PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
1B. PUBLIC & PRIVATE FRONTAGES
Frontages are generally organized into two areas - “Public-” and “Private-”
Frontages Public Frontage refers to the publicly-owned space between the
private property and the nearest travel lane (or bike lane, where present)
It typically includes a sidewalk, street trees and other landscaping, street
lighting, signage and other furnishings and often on-street parking and/
or passenger loading areas The primary function of public frontages is to
enable pedestrians to safely and comfortably walk along the street and
access each building or property, and to allow motorists to safely park,
become pedestrians and access the buildings The City will play a key role
in determining appropriate Public Frontage elements for each segment
of each street, and for coordinating the phasing and management of the
public frontage, while developers will typically be responsible for financing
and/or constructing such improvements
Private Frontage refers to the privately-owned space between the Public
Frontage and the building façade - also known as the “Front Setback
Area ” This space is typically in the form of a semi-private landscaped
“yard” or semi-public hardscape area, such as a forecourt or extension of
the sidewalk, that may include furnishings The two primary functions of
this space are 1) to welcome and provide access to the pedestrian; and 2) to
provide either an appropriate degree of privacy for ground floor residential
or office uses, or to provide an appropriate degree of exposure to ground
floor retail shops, restaurants and other commercial businesses
The careful design and calibration of this entire frontage “assembly”—
including the design of building façades and their entries —is essential
to ensure that building occupants will be comfortable keeping window
coverings open much of time, and in doing so, provide the “eyes on
the street” that help keep our streets and other public spaces safe and
comfortable places for pedestrians and bicyclists to be throughout the day
and evening
Courtyard as semi-public common
open space for residents
A residential stoop provides a semi-
private direct-entry into a ground-floor
residential unit
FIGURE PT-1 TYPICAL FRONTAGE ANATOMY
Frontage Setback Area Pedestrian Way Landscape/
Amenity Area Curbside Lane
Private Frontage Public Frontage Roadway
Typical Commercial Frontage
Frontage Assembly/Anatomy
Frontages are organized by a number of components, which
can be thought of as “layers” or “bands” of the public realm,
each with a specific role/function It is important to understand
the role that each of these components plays to ensure that
frontages are properly designed and calibrated to their public
and private context (as described further in Section 1B -
Frontage Design & Calibration) They include:
+Frontage Setback Area is the space in front of buildings
that “modulates” the degree of privacy for the ground floor
building occupants Residential uses are set back, along with
wall elements, landscaping and sometimes grade elevation
to provide enough privacy for residents Office and industrial
frontages generally do as well for similar reasons but with
different design configurations Commercial and retail
frontages may have little or no space in front of the building
to expose businesses to passers-by, or conversely, may have
additional space to accommodate outdoor dining
+Pedestrian Way is the clear path for pedestrian activity The
width of this space is calibrated to anticipated pedestrian
volumes, generally in the range of 6 feet in neighborhoods to
allow for comfortable walking side-by-side and up to 10 or 12
feet in urban corridor environments (free of any landscaping,
furnishings, and dining) to allow for a combination of walking
aimed at a destination and interaction with the features of
the corridor
+Landscape/Amenity Area is for landscaping and furnishings
adjacent to the curb It almost always includes planter
areas for street trees and other public landscape, along
with streetlights and traffic signal poles It may also include
parking meters, benches and other seating, outdoor dining,
and bike racks
+Curbside Lane is a flexible space that can include parallel or
angled parking, biofiltration planters, tree planters, bus stops,
loading areas (passengers and goods), and permanent or
temporary parklets In all cases this space, together with the
Landscape/Amenity Area, provide a vitally important buffer
from moving traffic to significantly enhance pedestrian safety
and comfort
Example of semi-private yards and porches within
the Front Setback Zone on a neighborhood street
Example street furnishing in the Landscape/
Amenity Area, and a clearly defined Pedestrian
Way
The Curbside Zone can be flexibly programmed
based on the needs of the adjacent property
Pictured here, a “parklet” replaces a single curbside
parking space to provide additional outdoor dining
space to the merchant
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VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 2: PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
II. FRONTAGE DESIGN & CALIBRATION
This section provides a Toolkit of design metrics and guidelines
for properly designing and calibrating frontages to their
“context,” to ensure that the public realm network in our city
is beautiful, active and safe, and a reflection of our community
identity and values
For the purposes of this Toolkit, frontages are organized into
three high-level categories or “types,” based on the predominant
ground floor use of the building that is providing the frontage
These include Retail & Commercial Ground Floors, Office &
Industrial Ground Floors, and Residential Ground Floors
To ensure that all frontages contribute (in appropriate measure)
to the type of public realm environment envisioned within
each part of our city, each of these three types must be further
calibrated to their “context”—based on considerations such as
the size and type of street or space the property is fronting, the
scale and intensity of development providing the frontage, and
the Place Type or Focus Area in which it is located
As such, this section—in the pages to follow—provides tools and
instructions for designing and calibrating frontages within/to
the following contexts:
A. Retail & Commercial Ground Floors
+Facing Streets in Corridors, Centers and Districts
+Along the Edges of Residential Neighborhoods
+Facing Non-Vehicular Open Spaces or Parking Lots
B. Office & Industrial Ground Floors
+Facing Streets in Corridors, Centers and Districts
+Facing Non-Vehicular Open Spaces or Parking Lots
C. Residential Ground Floors
+Facing Streets in Corridors, Centers and Districts
+Facing Streets in Neighborhoods
+Facing Pedestrian Open Spaces
Example of an amenity-rich commercial/retail
frontage in a mixed-use district
Clearly defined primary (common) building entry
directly accessible from the street/sidewalk
Multifamily residential building with ground floor
units oriented toward a shared courtyard directly
accessible from the street/sidewalk
Example of retail frontage with outdoor seating,
shade umbrellas, and planters
Modern office buildings arranged around a
common courtyard accessible from the street
Multifamily residential with direct-access to ground
floor units from the sidewalk via stoops Building
setback includes a high-quality, unified landscape
design, and ground floor units are elevated above
the sidewalk for added privacy
I. FRONTAGE TYPES & CONTEXTS
The following is a high-level summary of the frontage types and
contexts for which specific tools and strategies are described in
the sections to follow:
Retail & Commercial Frontages
Retail businesses thrive when passing motorists, bicyclists and
pedestrians can see their signage, display windows, and people
shopping and dining inside Unlike most other frontage types
the overall design intent is exposure—not privacy—to blur the
line between the interior space of the business and the public
environment of the sidewalk and street
Office & Industrial Frontages
Ground floor office uses typically require some privacy for
occupants that can be provided by a combination of landscape
design and elevation of the ground floor Industrial buildings
tend to have fewer windows and openings and more areas of
blank wall than office buildings, due to the nature of business
operations inside While both uses tend to be “less-active,”
attention to the design of their frontages will help ensure that
these buildings can still do their part to activate the public realm
Residential Frontages
Ground floor residential uses require a reasonable degree of
privacy so that passersby aren’t perceived to be visually intruding
into the home This is typically accomplished by elevating the
entry and/or providing some fencing and landscaping between
the building and the Pedestrian Way To ensure frontages are
active, it is critically important that the main building entries are
oriented to the street, not to side or rear parking areas or parking
structures, such that the front door at which visitors generally
arrive is oriented to and accessible from the street/sidewalk
Non-Street Frontages
All frontage types may in some circumstances face public
or common open spaces other than streets or parking lots
Retail centers and shopping districts may include pedestrian
squares, courts or malls, such as in Victoria Gardens Residential
developments may include buildings that face courts and
greens, as may office/industrial complexes In most cases, such
open spaces should be designed and integrated into the overall
public realm as “carless streets” and gathering spaces that are
interconnected with the street network so that pedestrians may
move freely through and between these spaces
1C. FRONTAGES: CONTEXT, DESIGN
& CALIBRATION
318 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 319
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 2: PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
A. RETAIL & COMMERCIAL FRONTAGES
Within mixed-use Corridors, Centers, and Districts, frontages are
intended to make commercial activity visible to and accessible by
passing pedestrians and motorists They are characterized by commercial
businesses (typically shopfronts) located at or very near the back of amply
wide sidewalks, generating amenity-rich pedestrian environments that
accommodate and encourage high levels of foot-traffic, and a wide range
of activities The essential characteristics of all retail and commercial
frontages in this context include:
+Ground floor façades of buildings are in the form of retail shopfronts
that are at or close to the sidewalk edge directly facing streets, and
accessed directly from the sidewalk with little to no elevation difference
to the private entry;
+Designed and sized to accommodate a flexible range of activities
and facilities in support of adjacent businesses and create a vibrant
commercial environment;
+Provide a safe, comfortable, shaded environment for pedestrians to
walk and shop, buffered from traffic by street trees, street furnishings,
and parked cars;
+Provide convenient, safe, on-street customer parking in front of (or very
close to) the adjacent businesses;
+Provide regularly spaced street tree species that help define the
space and shade pedestrians while maintaining good visibility for the
buildings and signage due to a relatively high and/or open canopy
Example of retail frontages in Victoria
Gardens, with street trees and awnings
shading the street;
FRONTAGE DIMENSIONS*NOTES
Frontage Setback Area
(the space from
the building
façade to the
pedestrian way)
Typical Depth:
15 ft max;
6 ft min. for
outdoor dining
Ground Floor
Ceiling Height:
12 to 15 ft
Regularity of
Entrances: Every
25 to 50 ft in
active Districts
& Corridors
• Ground floor ceilings are high to provide a generous sense of
space inside and allow natural light deep into the space
• Frequent entrances, and large, clear glass shopfront
windows, with some degree of sun-shading, are provided
so that approaching customers see into the store
rather than their own reflection and street glare
• Along mixed-use Corridors, “Retail-Ready” or “Flex Frontages”—
frontages that are designed ultimately to accommodate retail/
commercial businesses, but in advance of the market supporting
such uses at a given location—may be utilized for residential or
office use for an indefinite period of time See following page.
• Where there is space between the Pedestrian Way and the
building façade (whether within the public right-of-way
or within the private property), this area may offer space
for better pedestrian access and/or outdoor dining
• Any landscaping in this space does not interfere with
pedestrian access to or views of the shopfronts
Pedestrian Way
(the clear path
for pedestrian
activity)
Typical Width:
6 to 8 ft
8 to 10 ft for
highly-active
Districts/Corridors
• This is a clear path for pedestrian access and is not interrupted by fixed
objects (street lights, power poles, driveway ramps, street furnishings) or
objects associated with adjacent uses (dining furniture, signage, etc )
• Width of this space allows pairs of pedestrians walking side by
side to pass comfortably, and pedestrians to stop and look in
shopfront windows without feeling they are blocking the walk
• In some contexts, the pathway may be covered /
enclosed by an arcade or gallery, providing additional
enclosure and protection from the elements
Landscape/Amenity Area
(the space
between the
curb and the
pedestrian way)
Typical Depth:
6 to 10 ft
Tree Spacing:
Every 25 to 50 ft
Canopy Height:
10 to 15 ft
Planter Size:
6 ft x8 ft min.
• This area is sized and programmed based on the needs of the business
or district, and typically provides: street furniture, transit stops, street
trees and landscaping, pedestrian-scale lighting fixtures, district
branding and wayfinding signage, and short-term bike parking
• Street trees are provided in generously-sized landscaped
planters and spaced to provide a well-shaded pedestrian
environment, with relatively tall/open canopies that
maintain good visibility of the building and its signage
• Planters and landscaping that provide stormwater management
are recommended, per NACTO’s Urban Street Stormwater Guide
Curbside Lane
(the space
between travel
lanes and
the curb)
Typical Width:
7 to 18 ft
• This space can be flexibly programmed based on the needs of
the business or district, and may include parking, passenger and
commercial loading zones, transit stops, parklets, and street trees
• Where appropriate, parklets and/or bike corrals are provided in lieu
of a parking space, based on the needs of the business or district
• In some cases street trees are provided within the Curbside
Lane in “parking-lane planters” instead of, or in addition
to providing such in the Landscape/Amenity Area
*Dimensions provided in this table are typical ranges for this frontage type and are provided herein as reference only. See the Municipal
Development Code for applicable required standards.
FIGURE PT-2 RETAIL & COMMERCIAL FRONTAGE
Frontage Setback Area Pedestrian Way Landscape/
Amenity Area Curbside Lane
Private Frontage Public Frontage Roadway
Mixed-Use Centers & Districts
TABLE PT-1 RETAIL & COMMERCIAL FRONTAGES
320 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 321
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 2: PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
Retail & Commercial Frontage Variations (By Context)
Other common contexts in our city within which variations of the retail/
commercial frontage are necessary include:
Along the edges of residential Neighborhoods
Along the edges of our residential Neighborhoods—typically at
intersections of less-intense/secondary residential corridors—nodes of
neighborhood-serving retail and commercial uses may be appropriate
All of the same characteristics of retail and commercial frontages in more
intense Districts and Corridors generally apply, however, these elements
occur at the scale of the neighborhood the node is serving
Along more “suburban” Corridors
Along some of our more “suburban” Corridors, the priority of commercial
frontages is to make commercial activity visible to and accessible by
passing pedestrians, bicyclist and motorists These environments tend
to have lower development intensities and higher parking ratios than
urban commercial environments, so more of the frontages are devoted to
customer parking Commercial shopfronts—some built at or near the back
of the sidewalk and others visible through well-designed parking areas—
are served by a mix of convenient on-site and on-street customer parking
High priorities include defining the street edge with comfortable sidewalks,
steady rows of street trees and plantings buffering pedestrians from
higher-volume/speed traffic The spatial boundary of the public realm—or
“streetwall”— can be maintained in such environments by placing pad or
liner buildings at or near the back of the sidewalk, bringing commercial
activity to the street Where there is no building lining the public realm, low
walls and landscape walls can screen the parking and maintain the urban
“streetwall ”
“Retail-Ready” Frontages
“Retail Ready Frontages” are ground floor spaces that are constructed with
design characteristics to provide flexibility with regard to ground-floor use
Specifically, in locations/along streets where a highly-active (commercial)
ground-floor environment is a desired long-term outcome, but the market
is not yet ready to provide such, the ground floors of these buildings may
be occupied with residential or office space until the market is ready to
accommodate retail uses The important design characteristics that make
this possible are the traditional rhythm of shopfront bays, ADA compliance,
and ground-floor height Elevated entries, low-fencing, and landscaping
may be provided for necessary privacy in the short-term The illustrations
below show how these frontages can transform with relatively simple
retrofits to the public and private frontage Neighborhood-serving commercial
that could fit seamlessly with the
scale and character of a residential
neighborhood
Curbside Lane Landscape/Amenity Area Pedestrian Way Frontage Setback Area
Roadway Public Frontage Private Frontage
FIGURE PT-3 RETAIL & COMMERCIAL FRONTAGE
FIGURE PT-4 RETAIL READY FRONTAGES
Neighborhood Centers & Edges
Residential or Office
Retail / Service
Residential or Office
Retail / Service
322 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 323
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 2: PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
B. OFFICE & INDUSTRIAL FRONTAGES
Within mixed-use Corridors, Centers & Districts, office and industrial frontages
must provide a safe, comfortable, and attractive public realm environment
despite the “less-active” nature of these uses Office and industrial buildings
typically provide off-street parking for visitors and customers, however some
on-street parking and the formal front entry are necessary for such buildings
to contribute to the active public realm of each employment district; such
front entries encourage employees and others to walk out to the street and
walk to lunch or dinner nearby (assuming such amenities are present within
walking distance), rather than simply exiting to the parking lot, getting in
their car and driving to lunch And if arriving to work by transit, one simply
enters the lobby via the front door, rather than walking around through
the parking lot Similarly, locating and orienting the most active spaces
(conference rooms, employee break rooms, entry lobbies, courtyards, etc )
toward the street can help activate the public realm Common characteristics
of office and industrial frontages in this context include:
+Buildings are typically set back (modestly) from the sidewalk to provide
adequate privacy to ground-floor spaces, and designed so that the most
active and public spaces are oriented toward the street frontage;
+Primary entries are oriented to and accessible from the street/sidewalk;
+Sidewalk and ground-floor spaces are buffered from the street by a
generous landscaped Landscape/Amenity Area (including regularly-
spaced canopy trees that shade the sidewalk and building) and curbside
parking;
+Convenient on-street visitor/customer parking, is provided near the
primary entry
Modern office buildings with generous,
well-designed public frontage
assembly
FIGURE PT-4 OFFICE & INDUSTRIAL FRONTAGES
FRONTAGE DIMENSIONS*NOTES
Frontage Setback Area
(the space
from the
building
façade to the
pedestrian
way)
Typical Width:
10 to 20 ft
Ground Floor
Ceiling Height:
12’ to 20 ft
Regularity of
Entrances: Every
100 to 200 ft in
active Districts
& Corridors
• Primary entrances of buildings are clearly defined, oriented
toward and accessible from the street/pedestrian path or a open
space with direct-access to/from the street/pedestrian path
• Façades are activated by large, minimally-shaded windows into
the most active interior spaces such as lobbies or shared work
spaces Where portions of the street-fronting façade are “blank”
(typical of industrial uses), landscaping, public art, or other features
that create interest in the visual aesthetic of the building can be
provided in this area to soften the appearance from the street
• Ground floor ceilings are high to allow natural light deep into the space
• Parking lots, areas of truck activity, or outdoor storage and operations
are well-screened from street views by walls and landscaping
• Common outdoor areas (such as courtyards, outdoor lunch
areas, etc ) are oriented to and accessible from the street
• Employee-serving amenities (i e outdoor furniture, secured bike
parking, etc ) provided within this space are located near a common
entry and accessible from the street/sidewalk or common open space
• Front yard landscaping is provided to soften the
view of the building from the street and create a
comfortable environment for workers and visitors
• Landscaping should not obstruct clear access to the building entry
Pedestrian Way
(the clear path
for pedestrian
activity)
Typical Width:
6 to 8 ft
8 to 10 ft for
highly-active
Districts/Corridors
• This is a “clear zone” for pedestrian access and is not interrupted by fixed
objects (street lights, power poles, driveway ramps, street furnishings);
• Width of this space allows pairs of pedestrians
walking side by side to pass comfortably
Landscape/
Amenity Area
(the space
between the
curb and the
pedestrian
way)
Typical Depth:
6 to 10 ft
Tree Spacing:
Every 25 to 100 ft
Planter Width:
6 ft min.; equal-
to or greater-
than width of
Pedestrian Way
recommended.
• This area typically includes: street furniture, space for transit stops,
street trees and landscaping, pedestrian-scale lighting fixtures,
district branding & wayfinding signage, and short-term bike parking;
• Street trees are provided in generously-sized landscaped planters and
spaced to provide a well-shaded pedestrian environment, with relatively
tall canopies that maintain good visibility of the building and its signage;
• Planters and landscaping that provide stormwater management
are recommended, per NACTO’s Urban Street Stormwater Guide
Curbside Lane
(the space
between travel
lanes and
the curb)
Typical Width:
7to 18 ft’
• This space can be flexibly programmed based on the
needs of the business or district, and may include
parking, passenger and commercial loading zones,
transit stops, bike corrals, parklets, and street trees
• In some cases street trees may be provided within the Curbside
Lane in “parking-lane planters” instead of, or in addition
to providing such in the Landscape/amenity Area
*Dimensions provided in this table are typical ranges for this frontage type and are provided herein as reference only. See the Municipal Development
Code for applicable required standards.
Curbside Lane
Landscape/Amenity Area
Pedestrian Way Frontage Setback Area
Roadway Public Frontage Private Frontage
Mixed-Use Districts & Corridors
TABLE PT-2 OFFICE & INDUSTRIAL FRONTAGES
324 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 325
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C. RESIDENTIAL FRONTAGES
Residential frontages must be designed to balance the need to provide
ground floor residential units with a reasonable degree of privacy (so that
passing pedestrians and motorists aren’t perceived to be visually intruding
into the home) with the requirement that these frontages provide
activity and safety to the public realm environment they are fronting
Within mixed-use Centers, Districts and Corridors—where pedestrian and
vehicular traffic is much higher, and front setbacks are much shallower
than in residential neighborhoods—these frontages must be carefully
designed and calibrated to achieve this balance Essential characteristics of
all residential frontages in this context include:
+The primary entries of buildings (and in some cases, ground-floor units)
are oriented to, and directly accessed from the street/sidewalk (or in
some cases, a common space that is accesses directly from the street/
sidewalk), and building façades are well fenestrated with windows and
openings providing “eyes on the street ”
+Buildings are set back to provide a comfortable transition between
the street/sidewalk and private dwelling, often including low fences,
walls and plantings—and in many cases the ground floor is somewhat
elevated above the sidewalk—to provide residents with a sense of
privacy while enabling them to overlook the street
+Provision of on-street guest parking allows visitors arriving on foot, by
bike, by transit or by car to be welcomed at the front door
Multifamily residential building with
private terraces behind landscaping
and balconies along the façade to
activate the frontage
FIGURE PT-5 MIXED-USE - RESIDENTIAL GROUND FLOOR
Curbside Lane Landscape/Amenity Area Pedestrian Way Frontage Setback Area
Roadway Public Frontage Private Frontage
Mixed-Use Districts & Corridors
FRONTAGE DIMENSIONS*NOTES
Frontage Setback Area
(the space from
the building
façade to the
pedestrian way)
Typical Depth:
5 to 15 ft
Ground Floor
Ceiling Height:
8 to 15 ft
Regularity of
Entrances:
1 per 100 feet min.
recommended
for common entry
buildings (will be
less if ground floor
units are accessed
directly from
street/sidewalk)
• Primary entrances of buildings (and in some cases ground-
floor units) are clearly defined and oriented toward/accessible
from the street/pedestrian path or a common court or open
space with direct-access to/from the street/pedestrian path
• In configurations where ground floor units are accessed via a
common entry/internal corridor, or common court/open space,
building façades are well fenestrated by windows and openings,
and terraces and balconies are recommended in such cases,
where appropriate, to further activate the public realm
• Buildings and units are configured with the more social rooms
and spaces (kitchen, living, dining, or sales office and community
rooms in multi-family buildings) oriented along the frontage
• Taller ground floor ceilings heights are recommended
to allow natural light deep into the unit
• Ground floor units are typically be elevated (1’ - 3’)
above sidewalk level for additional privacy
• Landscaping is high-quality and appropriate to
the style/architecture of the building
• In highly active mixed-use environments, added layers
of privacy may be appropriate/needed, such as a low
wall or fence (3’ max) or plantings that provide a similar
physical barrier between the unit and sidewalk
• A clear comfortable transition between the public
realm and primary building/unit entry is provided
Pedestrian Way
(the clear path
for pedestrian
activity)
Typical Width:
6 to 8 ft
8 to 10 ft for highly-
active Districts/
Corridors
• This is a clear path for pedestrian access and is not interrupted
by, or have to weave-around fixed objects (street lights,
power poles, driveway ramps, street furnishings)
• Width of this path allows pairs of pedestrians
walking side by side to pass comfortably
Landscape/
Amenity Area
(the space
between the
curb and the
pedestrian way)
Typical Depth:
6 to 10 ft
Tree Spacing:
Every 25 to 100 ft
Planter Width:
6 ft min.; equal-
to or greater-
than width of
pedestrian path
recommended.
• This area typically includes street furniture, space for
transit stops, street trees and landscaping, pedestrian-
scale lighting fixtures, and short-term bike parking
• Street trees are typically provided in wide, continuous Landscape/
Amenity Areas (or generously-sized landscaped planters in
very urban environments) and spaced to provide a well-shaded
pedestrian environment, with relatively tall canopies that
maintain good visibility between the street and building
• Planters and landscaping that provide stormwater management
are recommended, per NACTO’s Urban Street Stormwater Guide
Curbside Lane
(the space
between travel
lanes and
the curb)
Typical Width:
7 to 18 ft
• This space can be flexibly programmed based on the needs of the
business or district, and may include visitor parking, passenger
and commercial loading zones, transit stops, and bike corrals
• In some cases street trees may be provided within the
Curbside Lane in “parking-lane planters” instead of, or in
addition to providing such in the Landscape/Amenity Area
*Dimensions provided in this table are typical ranges for this frontage type and are provided herein as reference only. See the Municipal Development
Code for applicable required standards.
TABLE PT-3 RESIDENTIAL FRONTAGES
326 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 327
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 2: PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
PART 2. REBALANCING STREETS
& PUBLIC SPACES
The public realm of a city comprises streets, parks, and other permanent
open spaces that form the network of community public spaces within
which much of the active life of a community occurs The community’s
vision for Rancho Cucamonga’s public realm is one that will afford people
of all ages, abilities and incomes the opportunity to move safely and
comfortably throughout the city by foot, bicycle, transit, and automobile,
providing equitable access to lively, beautiful public places for shopping,
dining, socializing, and gathering as a community
Historically, Rancho Cucamonga’s street network—which comprises the
majority of the City’s public realm—was designed based on the Federal
Highway Administration’s (FHWA) functional classification system
This system is increasingly considered an automobile-centric method
of planning and does not typically consider multimodal priorities and
surrounding context The Mobility chapter acknowledges the traditional
road classifications but establishes policies that go well beyond
maintaining this outdated system to expand opportunities for connections
and mode choices throughout the city, implement complete streets, and
support the context of the land use environment The strategies and tools
herein support the intent and policies of the Mobility chapter by illustrating
how to rebalance and create active multimodal streets
Active Streets & Public Spaces
As described in Part 1, the overarching goal of creating active frontages is
to provide a comfortable, attractive, human-scale pedestrian environment
along the edges of streets, parking lots and other public open spaces
This section describes how our streets and other public spaces may be
systematically rebalanced toward and in favor of non-motorists To help
guide this effort, this section includes tools and strategies for:
+Applying the active frontages described in Part 1 of this Toolkit to
existing public streets and private properties;
+Applying additional streetscape, pedestrian-facility, and traffic calming
improvements;
+Applying bicycle and transit improvements to select streets;
+Designing new, balanced, “activatable” streets and public spaces as
development occurs in new parts of our city or areas that redevelop
significantly
Collectively, these tools and strategies are designed to help ensure that
Rancho Cucamonga’s network of streets and public spaces are comfortable
and attractive places for pedestrians to walk, to access the buildings, and to
support community activity
KEY STRATEGIES DESCRIBED IN PART 2
Key strategies—listed briefly below and illustrated in detail in the sections to follow—may be employed individually
and in combinations, in all cases calibrated to and integrated with adjacent private frontages as described in
Section 1C Frontage Types: Context, Design & Calibration
All Streets: (And in some cases parking lots or other open spaces)
+Providing comfortable sidewalks as part of a calibrated public/private frontage assembly (see Part 1)
+Providing a Landscape/Amenity Area between pedestrians and the street, to include street trees and
landscaping to buffer and shade pedestrians and support active use of the public realm
Designated Streets: (As determined by the City)
+Adding dedicated transit lanes or transit-priority lanes
+Adding bike lanes of various types
+Adjusting travel lane widths to enable the above and to help moderate vehicular speeds
+Adding new medians and intersection controls, such as roundabouts and signals, to strategically provide safe
pedestrian crossings and better all-mode access to adjacent properties
+Providing a Curbside Lane between pedestrians and moving traffic lanes for parking and/or other vehicular
access
Implementation. The provision of active private frontages will be primarily the responsibility of developers,
business owners, and property owners The provision of active public frontages will be a collaborative effort of those
parties and the City The City will be primarily responsible for planning, approving, designing and implementing
new “activatable” streets and public spaces All such improvements will be financed primarily by developers, but
will include support from the City in many cases Through a rigorously coordinated combination of public and
private improvements, Rancho Cucamonga can systematically realize the community’s vision, and establish a new
direction for the 21st century
FIGURE PT-6 STREET RIGHT-OF-WAY COMPOSITION
See Section 1C for details Bike Lane Vehicle Lane(s)Median Vehicle Lane(s)Bike Lane See Section 1C for details
Public Frontage Roadway Public Frontage
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For Arterial or Major Collector Streets that have 2 or 3 travel lanes each
direction, and vehicular speeds in the 35 to 50 MPH range, additional
strategies and improvements are needed to create safe, comfortable,
useful active frontages The private frontages of retail, residential or office
frontages are essentially the same as they are on smaller local streets, but
the public frontages must be more extensively retrofitted and recalibrated
to render them “activatable ”
To achieve this environment, three broad “types” of retrofits are described
on the pages to follow, those retrofit types include:
I. “Bulb-Out” Curbside and Landscape/Amenity Area: Where lane
reductions in some form can make a curbside lane for parking
possible, it is often a good design strategy to add curb extensions—or
bulb-outs—to add landscaped areas at the ends of new parking lanes
to alert motorists to the presence of on-street parking and provide a
degree of protection for parked cars Bulb-out parking is created by
converting a travel lane into on-street parking and extending curbs
in key locations to define and protect the parking lane from moving
traffic In some cases—due to the great width of some existing
thoroughfares—it is also possible to add a buffered bike lane between
the parking lane and moving traffic With or without a bike lane,
such a reconfiguration reduces the effective street width, visually and
physically narrowing the roadway, which helps to moderate driving
speeds and to reduce pedestrian crossing distances and times at
intersections Parking can be parallel or angled depending on traffic
speed and volume See I Bulb-Out Type on the pages to follow
2A. APPLYING ACTIVE FRONTAGES
Almost all of Rancho Cucamonga’s activity centers—our shopping centers,
community centers, major parks and civic facilities—are located along
arterial or collector streets, and most are separated from the street by
parking lots Most of the public frontages of these streets have relatively
minimal sidewalks (if any at all) immediately adjacent to vehicular lanes
that traffic moving at 35 MPH or more In very few cases are there rows
of street trees, curbside parking/access lanes, and/or bike lanes to buffer
pedestrians from passing traffic
To realize the community’s vision for active frontages, in addition to
providing very comfortable places for pedestrians to walk, public frontages
must also enable motorists, bicyclists and transit riders to safely and
comfortably arrive and become pedestrians along the private frontages of
shops, restaurants, community facilities, office or industrial buildings, and
residential buildings
I. RETROFIT STRATEGIES
Applying this active frontage environment to our public streets will, in most
cases, require specific design retrofits to either the street itself or to the
front of the private property, or both
For Local Streets with only one lane of traffic each direction, and vehicular
speeds in the 25 to 35 MPH range, creating high quality, human-scale,
active frontages is relatively simple New streets can of course simply be
constructed per the guidelines shown in the private and public frontage
type examples in Part 1 and the public frontages of existing streets can be
retrofitted utilizing strategies that include:
+Pedestrian Way: On any street where there is no sidewalk or the
sidewalk is too narrow, a new or wider sidewalk can be provided within
the front of the private parcel when that property is developed or
redeveloped
+Landscape/Amenity Area: On existing streets that already have
curbside parking and good sidewalks, but which might lack street
trees, new street tree planters may be added within the curbside lane,
in lieu of or in addition to adding a landscape/amenity area inside the
curb In addition to adding much-needed spatial definition of the
pedestrian space of the frontage, street tree rows can help calm traffic
speeds and offer opportunities for stormwater management facilities
within such planters See examples on the pages to follow
+Curbside Lane: Where no curbside space currently exists, one may
be added by reconfiguring travel lanes with restriping—where street
width allows to provide “bulb-out parking”—or by moving the curb in
with “bulb-in” parking, a new sidewalk, and a landscape/amenity area
See B Bulb-In Type on the pages to follow
Generous sidewalk space amply sized
to accommodate pedestrians and
amenities;
Active street frontages enable social
and economic activity
Dining parklet added into the Curbside
Zone of a local street to provide an
enlarged amenity zone for the adjacent
business
Bulb-out parking extends the curb into a travel lane, thereby reducing a lane to create
on-street parking
Tree planter in Curbside between on-
street parking
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II. “Bulb-In” Curbside and Landscape/Amenity Area: On streets where
lane reductions to free up land for curbside space are not practical,
the curbs can be moved toward the building frontage to provide
such a space, along with a sidewalk and potentially also a landscape/
amenity area There is typically no reduction in travel lanes This
strategy can be applied where vacant parcels or large parking lots are
being repurposed, and can also be applied where there are existing
“pad buildings” near the street In the latter case, the new on-street
parking and pedestrian access can provide new opportunities for
such buildings and businesses to face and take access from the
major street rather than parking lots The new streetscape provides
improved access and visibility which can provide significant new value
to property owners Parking can be parallel or angled depending on
traffic speed and volume See II Bulb-In Type on the pages to follow
III. Frontage Lane: Also referred to as a side access lane, a frontage lane
is a one-way travel lane that runs parallel to a higher-speed road In
some cases, a new frontage-lane may be added to the edge of a high-
volume street/corridor to provide a highly-valuable public frontage
environment that is attractive to and appropriate to the intended
ground floor use of the buildings fronting it Frontage lanes are most
appropriate for major mixed-use corridors with higher traffic volumes
Storefronts along frontage lanes can benefit from excellent visibility
and access from the street Parking can be parallel or angled on
one or both sides of the frontage lane The street parking, trees, and
slower speed along the frontage lane provide for a more comfortable
and safer pedestrian environment The design and configuration of a
frontage lane will depend on the available space, terrain, and traffic
conditions at entry and exit points See III Frontage Lane Type on the
pages to follow
“Clear-View” (back-in) angled parking
Parking lane planter and permeable
paving
Frontage lane provides a high-quality
and safe public frontage off of a busy
corridor
Convenient curbside customer parking
is a valuable amenity for businesses
Depending on context, curbside parking—recommended for most active
frontages—may be added to existing streets via any of the three strategies
above On-street parking provides motorists with convenient access to
street adjacent uses, valuable convenient parking for local businesses, and
visitor parking for residences Such parking—whether on the street itself, or
in frontage lanes—is also critically important to supporting development
that face new buildings toward the street rather than toward parking lots in
rear
The presence of on-street parking also tends to reduce traffic speeds and
provides a valuable buffer between the car traffic and pedestrians On-
street parking is particularly advantageous in corridor environments with
ground-floor retail as it creates a more comfortable and safer environment
for walking, dining, and shopping, thereby encouraging active use of the
public realm and adding value to the street adjacent properties
Key Considerations for On-Street Parking
+Depending on traffic speeds and volumes, allowing for a “car door
buffer” between the parked car and moving traffic can be very useful
While on-street parking spaces are nominally 7-8 feet wide, it may be
appropriate to provide a striped buffer of 2 to 3 feet as well
+Where angled parking is feasible, reverse-angled design (or “clear-
view parking”) is proven to be much safer than conventional head-in
parking, especially on streets where bicyclists are expected
+In retail environments, on-street parking must be managed so that
there is always a space or two open per block If managed by pricing,
revenue can be used for improvements and maintenance in that area
+Permeable pavement in the parking spaces can provide a visual
distinction from travel lanes and reduce stormwater runoff
+Planters at intervals between 2 to 4 parking spaces can be used to
accommodate utility poles, trees, and additional stormwater facilities
+Accommodations for bikes should be provided wherever possible
These may be buffered/protected lanes or, in some cases, in shared
vehicular and bike lanes (sharrows) where vehicular speeds are low
For Parking Lots, Part 3 of this Toolkit provides additional strategies
for improved activation of many of our existing (suburban) shopping
centers where shops are disconnected from the street/public realm by
large surface parking lots In these cases, strategies for extending the
public realm environment into the site to reconnect building frontages to
pedestrians not arriving by car are provided See Section 3C “Parking Lot
Retrofits ”
Bulb-in parking cuts into the existing sidewalk to create
parking and may extend the sidewalk into private property
A frontage lane provides convenient parking and access to
shops and businesses along highly trafficked major corridors
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On-street parking can be angled or parallel Bulbed extensions at mid-block crossing
Parking lane planter and permeable paving in parking laneParking lane planter
Bulb-out parking extends the curb into a travel lane, thereby reducing a lane to create on-street parking
“Bulb-Out” Frontage ImprovementsA. BULB-OUT TYPE
Based as they were on prevailing auto-centric engineering standards of
the mid to late 20th century, the curb-to-curb vehicular way within many
of Rancho Cucamonga’s streets are wider than necessary to accommodate
existing and projected vehicular volumes In some cases, an entire travel
lane may be repurposed as space for curbside parking, bike lane or transit
lane, and on streets where the number of vehicular travel lanes must be
retained to ensure adequate traffic flows, the widths of many lanes may
be reduced somewhat, which has been shown in many cases to moderate
vehicular speeds with little or no reduction (and in some cases, counter-
intuitively, an increase) in its capacity as measured in vehicles per hour
Based on the time-tested value of efficiency and thrift, the preferred
strategy is to simply re-allocate existing built streets to rebalance
modes to favor active frontage wherever possible Key considerations in
implementing the strategy include:
Through consultation with a developer proposing new buildings along an
existing street, the City will determine whether it is possible and desirable
to reconfigure existing lanes within a sufficient segment of that street to
make available space for curbside space
+In reaching such a determination, the City will consider whether
that street has been designated as a Transit-Priority or Bicycle-Priority
Street, and/or whether improved medians related to potential new
signalized intersections may be desirable The provision of such
facilities of corridor-wide value and significance would take priority over
assigning existing public right-of-way or use as a bulb-out curbside
space for any one property
+Working with the developer, the City will determine the appropriate
location and extent and depth of the bulb-outs, in relation to proposed
development, existing and proposed cross-streets, potential new transit
stops, and access to existing and potential future development on
adjoining parcels
+In some cases, in order to provide an adequate landscape/amenity area
and tree plantings, the developer may be required to reconstruct the
sidewalk partially or entirely within the front strip of the private parcel,
and/or to construct tree planters within the bulb-out curbside space
+In some cases, the Bulb-Out Curbside space may be made deep
enough to accommodate a bus stop, in which case it would also be
deep enough to provide a car door buffer between parking spaces and
vehicular travel lanes Such a buffer may also be required regardless of
the presence of a potential bus stop, based on the City’s assessment of
vehicular speeds and volumes and hence the reality and perception of
safety in parking along that street
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Transit stop at bulbed corner Parallel parking in front of shops
Bulbed corners improve crossings for pedestrians Storm infiltration system in bulbed corner
Bulb-in parking cuts into the existing sidewalk to create on-street parking and may extend the sidewalk toward the building
“Bulb-In” Frontage ImprovementsB. BULB-IN TYPE
On streets where no curbside lane is present, where the City has
determined that the number and widths of travel lanes cannot be reduced
to free up enough space for curbside space, the curbline may be “bulbed-
in” toward the adjoining property to provide space for a curb side lane,
landscape/amenity area and pedestrian way at the time of its development
or redevelopment
In most cases, the entire new public frontage assembly will be constructed
behind the existing curb toward the building frontage, thus providing
new and enhanced access and visibility to the property owner Key
considerations in implementing this strategy include:
+Working with the developer, the City will determine the appropriate
location, extent and depth of the bulb-in curbside lane assembly, in
relation to proposed development, to existing and proposed cross-
streets, and to potential new transit stops Access to existing and
potential future development on adjoining parcels may also be taken
into account
+In some cases, the City may require that bulb-in curbside lane be made
deep enough to accommodate a bus stop, in which case it would
also be deep enough to provide a car door buffer between parking
spaces and vehicular travel lanes Such a buffer may also be required
regardless of the presence of a potential bus stop, based on the City’s
assessment of vehicular speeds and volumes and hence the reality and
perception of safety in parking along that street
+In order to provide an adequate landscape/amenity area and tree
plantings, the developer may be required to reconstruct the sidewalk
partially or entirely within the front strip of the private parcel, and/or to
construct tree planters within the bulb-out curbside lane
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Frontage lane with angled parking adjacent to sidewalk
Frontage Lane Improvements
Street trees and parked cars provide physical and visual buffer
from vehicular traffic for pedestrians
Transit stop in median between frontage lane and travel lanes
Frontage lane with raised crosswalk slows traffic, especially at
intersections
A frontage lane provides convenient parking and access to shops and businesses along highly trafficked major corridors
C. FRONTAGE LANE TYPE
On streets where no curbside lane is present, where the City has
determined that the number and widths of travel lanes cannot be reduced
to free up space for curbside space, and where the City determines
that due to vehicular speeds and volumes on that street a safe and
comfortable curbside lane cannot be provided immediately adjacent to
vehicular travel lanes, a frontage lane—also known as a side access lane—
may provide low speed vehicular access and parking along the building
frontages Side access lanes were, and are, common along the edges of
the classic “boulevards” of great American and European cities, providing
a comfortable pedestrian environment adjacent to major crosstown
thoroughfares They may equally be seen as “front parking lots” that look
more like part of an important street than “parking lots” in front of the
buildings
As illustrated to the right, a frontage lane is a low-speed, one-way roadway,
separated from the main thoroughfare by a median/planting strip, with
parking on one or both sides Parking may be parallel or angled, up to 90
degrees, both head-in and back-in As with all other active public frontage
types, the frontage lane is adjoined by a landscape/amenity area and
comfortable sidewalks Key considerations in implementing this strategy
include:
+Street tree rows are within the landscape/amenity area and the
median/planting strip
+In many cases a bike lane or transit lane may run adjacent to the
curbline of the primary thoroughfare, since the curbside lane and
pedestrian way functions are accommodated within the frontage lane
+This configuration requires that buildings be set back farther from the
main thoroughfare than in the case of bulb-in parking, but the ground
floor uses within those buildings are provided with a higher quality
parking and pedestrian experience, and in many cases would be set
back no more than existing buildings
+In select cases where the City determines that the number and width
of travel lanes may be reduced, it may prove possible to construct
frontage lanes outward into the existing streets, encroaching less or
not at all into the private properties adjacent
+Where frontage lanes are constructed along Transit-Priority Streets, the
City—in coordination with developers and Omnitrans—may incorporate
bus stops into the median/planting strip or along the curbs within the
frontage lane to provide very convenient rider access to a high-quality,
active pedestrian environment and adjoining businesses and other
uses
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2B. APPLYING ADDITIONAL
IMPROVEMENTS
I. ADDING CROSSWALKS AND
CONTROLLED INTERSECTIONS
Crosswalks are important elements of complete pedestrian networks
and should be located at major street intersections and, where safe and
appropriate, at certain mid-block locations Many major streets—designed
to carry large volumes of vehicles at relatively high speeds to “connect”
the community—end up being barriers to active transportation and
to convenient access to many parcels because of the wide spacing of
intersections and consequent scarcity of safe, convenient, and comfortable
pedestrian crossings
As many of the city’s corridors evolve toward places where people walk,
bike, shop, and gather as a community, it is critically important that these
large streets become much more “crossable” by pedestrians, bicyclists, and
even motorists who simply want to go a short distance to a destination
on the other side of the street Accordingly, as large parcels of land along
major streets are subdivided into smaller blocks accessed by new streets,
many of the new streets of this more complete network must cross
existing arterials and large collector streets to enable all-mode connectivity
between Neighborhoods, Centers and Districts
More closely spaced intersections will also help moderate the average
speed of car traffic, while drastically increasing the effective connectivity
of a place for those who seek to access amenities and visit friends along
the corridor rather than just driving by Strategies that can contribute to
improved “crossability” as new intersections are created include:
+Insert landscape medians with low shrubs near crossings
+Introduce “medianettes” with pedestrian refuges at selected crossings
+Extend (bulb-out) corners of intersection sidewalks to reduce
pedestrian crossing distance and accommodate access ramps
+Design crosswalks with high visibility enhancements, including
advance or in-street warning signage, overhead lighting, refuge island,
high-visibility markings, such as zebra style crosswalks, and raised or
tabletop design
+Restrict parking on the crosswalk approach
+Plant strong street tree rows within medians to further define and
shade the space of wide streets, along with pedestrian crossing refuges
where appropriate
+Within Transit-Priority Streets, dedicated bus rapid transit (BRT) or light
rail transit (LRT) guideways and tracks may be located within medians Mid-block crossing with zebra style crosswalk Crosswalk with median refuge
Bulbed-out cornersLandscaped median with shorter left turn pockets
New signalized intersection needed New signalized intersection added
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II. NEIGHBORHOOD STREET RETROFITS
Neighborhood streets are spaces of the public realm that residents
experience most frequently They also define the “location” and “curb
appeal” of each residence and are thus foundational to property value and
neighborhood lifestyle
It is of course vitally important that neighborhood streets provide safe
mobility and access for people of all ages, physical abilities, and modes of
travel In addition to providing safe and comfortable all-mode access to
homes, neighborhood streets should be designed as places where children
play, and neighbors meet and interact as a community As has become
even more evident during the pandemic, the opportunity to walk out
of one’s front door and immediately enter a comfortable and attractive
walking, biking and socializing environment is an invaluable amenity
The following sections present design strategies that can improve the
safety, comfort, appearance, and usability of any street, and all can be
applied to neighborhood streets Many of these strategies help to calm
traffic, improve walking and biking routes, and help make these streets
very attractive and useful public spaces Implementation of the design
strategies presented in this section will require careful consideration of
physical constraints, street function, safety, and of course engagement with
neighborhood residents and property owners
Neighborhood streets provide
opportunities for circulation and
recreation to residents
Buffered bike lane next to curbside parking Existing bike lane on Highland Avenue is not well protected
from vehicular traffic and could be improved with a buffer
With slower vehicular traffic speeds, comfortable walking and biking routes, and nice landscaping, neighborhood streets can
become “the living rooms of the neighborhood”, providing places for social interaction, play and recreation
Neighborhood streets vary in size, traffic volumes and speeds, and curbside parking needs; improvements will also vary
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III. TRAFFIC CALMING & PLACE MAKING
The urban design strategies presented in this Toolkit—noted above
and described and illustrated in a bit more detail here—are applicable
throughout Rancho Cucamonga’s street network and public realm, some
particularly suitable for improving the safety, comfort and appearance of
neighborhood streets
A. ADDING STREET TREES
Planting strong rows of street trees is perhaps the simplest way to improve
the quality of the environment on any street Street trees help to define
the space of the street as an “outdoor room of the community”, and
have a “visual narrowing” effect, which increases pedestrian comfort and
moderates driving speeds In Rancho Cucamonga’s increasingly hot, dry,
windy and unpredictable climate, the shading and wind-buffering effect
of a robust urban tree canopy can radically transform the microclimates
and human comfort of our streets Not to mention the beauty of trees
themselves, and the filtered sunlight beneath them that generates
pleasant places for people to walk, shop, and just spend time out in public
with friends and family The principles below should be followed when
adding trees in medians and along the edge of streets
+Design the landscape/amenity area with sufficient width for the
desired tree type—not the other way around
+Although there are many considerations on tree types that depend on
the specific context, they should generally be as tall and full as possible
+Street trees in the amenity zone should be distanced far enough away
from the building to shape an open and comfortable pedestrian space
This also visually “narrows” streets that feel too wide and exposed
Additional trees in a center median may be needed to achieve this on
especially-wide streets
+To the extent possible, each street, or segment of street, should be
consistent in its regularity and species of trees
Improved street environment with the addition of street trees in median, parking lane planters, and along sidewalk Regularly spaced trees contribute to an
attractive streetscape
Shade provided by street trees helps create a more comfortable pedestrian
environment
Center median with strong tree rows Parking lane planter
Large canopy trees provide shade and frame the streetscape
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Add Trees Along Street Edges
Adding trees to streets contributes both to traffic
calming and to improving the look and comfort of
walking environments in and around neighborhoods
Trees can be added to various locations within the
streetscape to visually narrow the roadway, which
moderates driving speeds, and, if the canopies are
large enough, they can provide shade and wind
protection on sidewalks
+Parking Lane Planters. Where there is on-street
parking, small planters with or without curbs can
be constructed in between parking spaces In
addition to providing shade to the parking lane
and sidewalk, this reduces the wide appearance of
streets that have on-street parking
+Continuous Planting Strip. A four- to six-foot-
wide planting strip between the sidewalk and the
street provides space for trees that can shade the
sidewalk and part of the roadway Where possible,
instead of creating street tree square planters,
as is often done in urban locations, allowing
the planting strip to continue uninterrupted
is advantageous in neighborhoods because it
provides more space for landscaping and is better
for stormwater management
+Add Medianettes. Trees can also be added into the
roadway in medianettes See the next section
Parking lane planters can be a continuation of the sidewalk curb,
or be constructed separate from the curb
Wide, continuous planting strip allows for frequently spaced
large trees with large canopies, providing lots of shade
Parking lane planters bring trees closer into the roadway,
narrowing the look of the street, encouraging drivers to move
at more careful speeds
Add Trees in Medianettes
Small medians can be added to calm traffic and
provide another location for landscaping and street
trees The ability to add medianettes will depend on
the width of the roadway and travel lanes Where there
are already center turn lanes, medianettes can be
added in a manner that still allows adequate spacing
for required left turn access However, even streets
with no center turn lane can often be reconfigured by
narrowing lanes to host 5-foot wide medianettes (large
enough for trees)
+Collector Streets. Collector streets tend to have
high speed traffic, and often do not require
curbside parking Where roadway width allows,
medians could calm traffic This would be
especially important on collector streets that have
bike lanes
+House-Fronting Streets. Streets with house fronts
benefit from the medianette’s ability to slow down
traffic and add trees to streetscape
Lemon Avenue, which has house fronts, is a wide roadway, allowing cars to speed freely Introducing medianettes is one way to
encourage cars to drive more slowly and carefully through this neighborhood, in addition to improving the environmental quality
Street Retrofit: Lanes are narrowed and reconfigured, where street width allows, to accommodate the installation of medianettes
with street trees and landscaping This contributes to a more comfortable and attractive environment for all users—pedestrians,
cyclists, and motorists
Where there are large roadways and curbside parking,
medianettes can be designed in conjunction with parking
lane planters
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B. ADD LIGHTING
Lighting is an important part of pedestrian safety and
comfort Well-placed and well designed lighting ensures
that public areas are still accessible after dark and that
motorists can see pedestrians on sidewalks and at
intersections while at the same time minimizing light
pollution This is most important on collector streets that
are not fronted by houses, where residential lights do not
provide any illumination, and wherever there are potential
traffic conflicts between pedestrians, bikes, and cars, such
as at crosswalks The appropriateness of lighting on streets
is also determined by neighborhood character—some rural
streets may not require pedestrian lighting It is essential
that lighting produces a minimum amount of glare and light
pollution as well as creating an inviting environment
+Pedestrian Scale. In addition to lighting oriented to the
roadway, lighting should be oriented toward sidewalks,
illuminating walking paths Pedestrian scale lights
can be added to street lights, lighting patterns can be
selected that focus adequate light onto the sidewalk,
or shorter luminaires can be provided near sidewalks
within landscaping
+Intersection Corners and Crosswalks. Providing
lighting at the arrival points of crosswalks creates
safer conditions because cars can see pedestrians
approaching sidewalks and bicycles approaching
intersections
C. ADD SAFE CROSSINGS
In neighborhood streets with wider crossings (generally >
40 feet), or higher traffic volumes and speeds (generally > 25
mph), the following are examples of strategies for enhancing
the safety and comfort of pedestrian crosswalks
+Curb Extensions. Wherever there is on-street parking,
the curbs at intersections (where parking is no longer
allowed) can be extended to provide a shorter crossing
distance for pedestrians
+Mid-Block Bulb-outs. In the same manner as curb
extensions, bulb-outs can be constructed around
crosswalks to shorten crossing distances These also
visually narrow the roadway and provide better visibility
of pedestrians waiting to cross
+Raised Crosswalks/Speed Tables. Raising a crosswalk at
an intersection necessarily slows vehicle speeds
A mid-block bulb-out protecting a pedestrian crossing
A raised crosswalk, also known as a speed table
Pedestrian scale lights as freestanding or part of street
lights
Mid-block crossing with a medianette pedestrian refuge
D. ADD CHICANES
Chicanes are a form of traffic calming that utilize offset
curb extensions or other barriers to vehicular travel to
redirect lanes These can be used on neighborhood
streets with a variety of widths to significantly slow
traffic speeds Chicanes can also be created by
alternating on-street parking
+Alternating Curb Extensions. Medianettes
can be added on the sides of street as curb
extensions, providing more room for landscaping
on neighborhood streets When constructed as
a retrofit, these medianettes are often separated
from the gutter to allow drainage Where there are
bike lanes, medianettes can be separated from the
sidewalk curb with enough distance to allow a bike
to pass, improving safe passage for bikes
+Alternating Parking. On streets with some on-
street parking, the parking provided can switch
from one side to the other, shifting travel lanes
This can be reinforced with some physical barriers
such as curbs and landscaping
E. ADD ROUNDABOUTS
Roundabouts, both regular and mini-sized, can be
added to most intersections and may replace stop
signs or traffic signals, providing significant safety and
environmental benefits Motorists must slow down to
navigate around a physical island, without stopping
Accordingly, as is often possible with travel lane width
reductions, such roundabouts offer the multiple
and counterintuitive benefits of increased traffic
capacity; reduced travel time, environmental noise
and GHG emissions; and significant enhancements to
pedestrian, bicycle and motorist safety
Mini RoundaboutMini Roundabout
Chicane (NACTO)
Chicane on a neighborhood street
Chicane with medianettes
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2C. APPLYING TRANSIT & BIKE
IMPROVEMENTS
I. TRANSIT PRIORITY STREET RETROFITS
Providing safe, convenient and comfortable access to transit is essential to
rebalancing travel modes and creating a street environment that equitably
serves the needs of users of all ages and abilities The Vision Diagram,
shown in Volumes 1 & 2 of this Plan, illustrates a framework for multi-
modal access throughout the city and identifies “Transit Priority Streets”
to enhance transit mobility and access In particular, Foothill Boulevard
and Haven Avenue are identified in the Mobility Chapter, in Volume 2, as
boulevards “that promote economic development around high-quality
transit service, including light rail (LRT), streetcar, and bus rapid transit
(BRT), while fostering a pedestrian scale environment in which walking and
biking actively complement public transit ”
This section provides design strategies for transit priority streets to
better accommodate transit service and provide high-quality amenities
and improved streetscape for people who walk and take transit
Implementation of the design strategies presented in this section will
require thoughtful consideration of surrounding land use context and
characteristics—both current and expected It will also require coordination
with adjacent development as well as collaboration and coordination
between City departments and relevant transit agencies, especially when
designing within a limited right-of-way
There are generally three broad strategies for integrating transit, whether
as improvements to streets with existing transit or as a new major
infrastructure improvement The following options for adding high-quality
transit are described in detail on the following pages
+Peak-Hour Bus Lane
+Bus-Priority Frontage Lane
+Center-Running Transit Lane
In conjunction with the improvements for the options above, transit stop
location should consider the physical and operational context of the street
and transit route In general, transit stops can be located on the near
side or far side of the intersection, or at midblock Far side stops improve
pedestrian safety when riders use the crosswalk behind the bus and allows
other cars to use the right lane at intersection approaches Midblock stops
can help to avoid vehicle queuing that may occur at intersections but tend
to make for longer walks to the stop from side streets Far side stops are
the most common but near side and midblock stop locations may also be
considered based on site conditions and other transit criteria
Red paint delineates and reinforces the lane for bus use only Bus bulb with transit shelter and amenities
Peak-hour bus lanes may be integrated in streets with or
without frontage lanes
Shared bus-bike lane Shared bus-bike laneBus lane signage
Peak-Hour Bus Lane
A peak-hour bus lane provides a dedicated lane for
bus travel during peak hours, typically between 7am-
9am and 4pm-7pm, thereby increasing the efficiency
of transit service during peak travel times Peak-hour
bus lanes are typically placed in the outer travel lane on
major streets with heavy transit ridership
Peak-hour bus lanes should be installed with bus
pads, appropriate signage, and pavement markings If
the appropriate width for a bicycle lane is not feasible
alongside a peak-hour bus lane, the lane may be
designed as a shared bike-bus lane
On-street parking, where available, is prohibited
during peak hours Where possible, the bus lane may
be “offset” by a parking lane so that on-street parking
is not restricted Bus bulbs, where the sidewalk is
extended to accommodate a curbside bus stop, should
be installed in conjunction with offset lanes
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Midblock entry to frontage laneEntry to frontage lane
Bus-Priority Frontage Lane
Where frontage lanes are present, the bus may
enter it via slip lanes from the main travel-way to
access bus stops on the sidewalk For that segment
of the frontage lane, the bus takes priority A bus-
priority frontage lane avoids having passengers cross
the frontage lane when getting to/from a median
boarding island It also preserves roadway traffic
capacity as the bus does not stop in a primary travel
lane A slight variation of this option is to locate the
bus stop before the entry to a frontage lane so the bus
does not travel in the frontage lane
Bus pads, appropriate signage, and pavement
markings should be installed for bus-priority segments
Entry slip lanes should be limited access for buses
only and, where possible, be of sufficient width to
accommodate a bus waiting to slip into the frontage
lane
Bus traveling along frontage lane Wide median between frontage lane and travel lanes
Bus stop in frontage lane
Center-Running Transit Lane
Dedicated lanes down the center of streets enhance
efficiency for bus travel along major corridors and may
also accommodate bus rapid transit (BRT), streetcar,
and light rail (LRT) Transit lanes can be separated from
other travel lanes by striping or a median In either
case, transit stops are located on median boarding
islands Left turn lanes can also be accommodated in
the median and should be provided with a protected
turn signal
Center-running transit lanes should be installed
with bus pads, appropriate signage, and pavement
markings Median boarding islands should be placed
in close proximity to safe, signalized crosswalks and
with sufficient queuing space for buses Boarding
islands should be a raised platform with a ramp for
greater accessibility and include an enclosure or barrier
separating waiting passengers from moving traffic
Barrier and shade structure at median boarding island Center-running bus lanes
Striped median busway with raised platform bus stop
Center-running bus lanes with medians that accommodate
transit stops and left turn lanes
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Typical Existing Condition: Narrow sidewalk directly lining 7-lane street with existing buildings set far back
Phase 1: Reconfigure existing street, either by reducing travel lane widths or the number of travel lanes, to accommodate
appropriate public realm dimensions Introduce frontage lane with on-street parking where adjacent development is expected
Provide protected bike lane in-lieu of frontage lane in the short term
Phase 2: Enhance existing sidewalk and provide new street trees and landscaping, if not already installed, to create an
appropriately, safe, attractive and comfortable public frontage environment to support new street fronting commercial buildings
FIGURE PT-7 EXAMPLE SCENARIO: HAVEN AVENUE TRANSFORMATION FIGURE PT-7 EXAMPLE SCENARIO: HAVEN AVENUE TRANSFORMATION (cont’d)
Phase 3: Convert protected bike lane into frontage lane with new curbside parking, street trees, landscaping, and enhanced
sidewalk with the development of new street fronting commercial buildings
Alternative Frontage Lane Configuration: Curbside parking may be placed along the median to allow bulb-outs near
intersections The bulb-outs provide additional space for median refuge and for transit stops at median boarding islands
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II. BIKE PRIORITY STREET RETROFITS
As illustrated in the Vision Diagram of this General Plan, shown in Volumes
1 & 2, “Bike Priority Streets” are identified throughout the city as part of the
framework for multi-modal network connectivity This section provides
design strategies for bike priority streets to better accommodate bicyclists
with improved bicycle infrastructure and amenities Implementation of the
design strategies presented in this section will require careful consideration
of physical constraints, street configuration, and design speed
Bike priority streets should be designed to encourage safer vehicle speeds,
fewer collisions, and a pedestrian- and bicycle-friendly environment
Adding dedicated bike lanes is a simple way to slow traffic while providing
cyclists with a safe space for travel between destinations as they allow
riders to travel at speeds appropriate to bicyclists rather than moving
traffic
There are generally two strategies for retrofitting streets to accommodate
bike lanes of various types The two strategies can be used in conjunction
to optimize the use of the street right-of-way and create a more safe,
comfortable, and attractive environment for all users—pedestrians, cyclists,
and motorists
+Lane Reconfiguration. Streets can be reconfigured to accommodate
a bike lane and other pedestrian- and bicycle-friendly street
improvements, such as on-street parking and wider sidewalks, by
restriping the roadway This typically involves reduction in the number
of lanes either by converting the outer travel lane or by introducing a
center-turn lane
+Lane Narrowing. Narrowing the width of wider travel lanes (12 feet or
wider) can provide space for bike lanes as well as other beneficial street
improvements, such as wider sidewalks and landscaped medians and
Landscape/Amenity Areas, within existing right-of-way Narrower lanes
provide traffic calming by encouraging slower speeds and reduce the
risk of collisions
In general, travel lanes may be narrowed to 10-11 feet depending on
target operating speeds and street context and characteristics Streets
with frequent volumes of larger vehicles, such as trucks and buses
should have at minimum one 11-foot-wide travel lane in each direction
The following are some key considerations when adding bike lanes to
existing streets through the reallocation of existing street space
+Wider bicycle lanes (greater than the required minimum width of 5 feet
but less than the width of a vehicular travel lane) should be considered
on streets with heavy bicycle traffic and on streets with steep inclines
to allow faster moving cyclists to pass one another
+Left-side bike lanes should be considered on one-way arterial streets if
significant transit service is present on the right-most travel lane
Bikers cycling along protected bikeway
Typical Existing Condition: Wide travel lanes, especially the outer lane, with minimal bike lane space
Street Retrofit: Lanes are narrowed and reconfigured to accommodate protected bike lanes and on-street parking
The installation of parklets and median with street trees and landscaping further improves the streetscape to create a
comfortable and attractive environment for all users—pedestrians, cyclists, and motorists
+Wider bike lanes should be considered on streets with steep inclines
+On streets with bike lanes, consider using parallel parking spaces as
buffer to protect the bike lanes
+Consider painting a striped buffer between the bike lane and parking
lane to reduce the risk of conflict and “dooring” collisions with bicyclists
Bikes
Bikes
Bikes
BikesParking
Travel and Turn Lanes
Travel and Turn Lanes (reduced widths)
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Bike Lane Types and Applications
In a city as large as Rancho Cucamonga, and with mild year-round
climate, extending safe and comfortable bike routes into as many streets,
neighborhoods, corridors, centers and districts as possible will be a very
high value amenity for residents, workers, and the environment
Bicycle facility types and the recommended applications and contexts for
each are described in detail in the standards and guidelines promulgated
by the National Association of City Transportation Officials (NACTO), and
the Mobility chapter of this Plan further addresses the future bicycle
network within the City’s street network The City’s Trails Master Plan
defines the currently planned off-street facilities throughout the city
and should be updated based on the policies of this Plan Accordingly,
this discussion focuses on recommendations for integrating NACTO-
compliance facilities into the Street Types and Place Types of the General
Plan
+Off-Street Lanes (NACTO Class 1) are provided within public open
spaces, include broad greenways along selected street and within the
City’s extensive, and growing, network of trails and greenways within
public utility easements
+Striped Lanes (NACTO Class 2) are dedicated one-way bike lanes,
marked with painted striping to the right of the rightmost vehicular
lane Such lanes are provided where Class 3 lanes are deemed to be
unsafe and/or where street width allows Where on-street parking is
provided, car door buffers are recommended
+Striped Buffered Lanes (NACTO Class 2) are dedicated one-way bike
lanes, with striped buffers on one or both sides Buffers to the left of the
cyclists help improved cyclist safety and comfort (although by State law
motorists must provide cyclists with 3 feet of clearance when passing)
and are recommended on higher-speed, higher-volume streets
where roadway width allows As noted above, car door buffers are also
recommended where bike lanes are adjacent to curbsides with on-
street parking
+Shared Lanes (NACTO Class 3) are bicycle “routes”, marked with
signage and pavement markings, in which bicycles share lanes with
motorized vehicles Such routes are limited to relatively low speed, low
volume streets, including most neighborhood streets as well as many
local streets within Centers, Corridors and some Districts
+Protected Lanes (NACTO Class 4), sometimes also referred to as
“cycle tracks,” are a newer type in which a physical barrier—curbs and/
or bollards—separate a bike lane from vehicular lanes Such facilities
are ideal for higher-speed, higher-volume major thoroughfares, and
may be one-way or two-way, depending on the street and Place Type
context
Striped bike lane Buffered bike lane
Typical right turn lane transitions
Protected bike lane
Bike boxes at intersections (NACTO)
Bike lane between curb and parking Bike lane along walk zone
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I. CREATING NEW STREETS
As large vacant parcels along major corridors are developed and
redeveloped, a more complete network of balanced, all-mode streets will
be extended into them This new network will provide high quality all-
mode access to new higher intensity, more active, mixed-use development,
all of which will have the types of Active Frontages defined and detailed in
Section 1C, above
These new streets will almost invariably have one travel lane in each
direction—with or without center turn lanes and medians—providing
them with comfortable Curbside Lanes, Landscape/Amenity Areas and
Pedestrian Ways that are appropriate to their ground floor uses Key
attributes of such streets include:
+One Travel Lane Each Direction. This manages vehicular speeds,
moderates pedestrian crossing distances, and helps to make the width
of the street space—as measured from building face to building face—a
reasonably human scale “outdoor room” In some cases, medians are
helpful to control left turn movements as one exits a major corridor, and
to provide left turn lanes where needed
+Curbside Lane Parking. Along commercial/retail frontages, customer
parking —parallel or angled—is very important in enabling some
customers to park right in front of shops and restaurants and gracefully
become pedestrians within the public realm Parallel guest parking
along residential frontages is a valuable amenity and convenience In
all cases the parking provides an important buffer between pedestrians
and moving traffic, although some Curbside Lane space may be
reserved for pick-up and drop-off functions
+Landscape/Amenity Area and Street Trees. The Landscape/Amenity
Area provides valuable opportunities for street trees and other
landscaping, for bike racks, trash receptacles, street lights and perhaps
parking meters, and in some cases for other furniture to make spaces in
which it is comfortable to linger and spend time with friends and family
Landscaping is prioritized along residential frontages to provide another
layer of privacy for residents
+Pedestrian Way. Described in some detail in Part 1; in general sidewalks
along commercial frontages are wider than along residential frontages
+Intersections and Crosswalks. New intersections should have very
comfortable wide, short crosswalks, and in certain environments mid-
block crosswalks may be both desirable and quite practical
2D. CREATING NEW STREETS & PUBLIC SPACES
FIGURE PT-8 COMMERCIAL STREET WITH DIAGONAL PARKING
Pedestrian Way Landscape/Amenity Area Curbside Lane Vehicle Lane(s)Curbside Lane Landscape/Amenity Area Pedestrian Way
Public Frontage Roadway Public Frontage
FIGURE PT-9 RESIDENTIAL STREET WITH BIKE LANE AND PARALLEL PARKING
Pedestrian Way
Landscape/Amenity Area
Curbside Lane Bike Lane Vehicle Lane(s)Bike Lane Curbside Lane
Landscape/Amenity Area
Pedestrian Way
Public Frontage Roadway Public Frontage
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VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 2: PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
II. CREATING NEW PUBLIC SPACES
As described and illustrated in Section 3, below, the public realm network
within new and redeveloping corridors, centers and districts is comprised
of the street network and also non-vehicular open spaces in the form of
plazas, courts, squares, greens and parks
These spaces are to be measured more in terms of quality than quantity
Most are not intended to function as typical suburban parks do,
accommodating sports activities as well as “passive” recreation Rather,
they are conceived as “the finest outdoor rooms” in the city, with active
frontages and human activity lining their edges, as they line the streets,
but without the constraints on human activity that streets must impose
as they also accommodate cars All of the Frontage Types defined in
Section 1 may directly front such open spaces, with the exact type of open
space calibrated to the adjacent ground floor uses Examples of such fine
community open spaces—several of which are already present in Victoria
Gardens—include:
+Plazas are small to moderately sized active open spaces best faced
by commercial frontages on 2 or more sides Ground surfaces are
predominantly hardscape, tree canopy is provided for shade and spatial
definition, and water features and public art are welcome focal points
and enhancements Plazas are ideal for outdoor dining, performances,
and special events such as farmers markets
+Squares are typically larger than plazas, usually surrounded on 3 or 4
sides by buildings, including commercial and residential frontages
These frontages typically open directly to the square on 2 or 3 sides,
and across small, very crossable streets on the other sides The
ground surfaces of squares are typically a combination of hardscape
and landscape, often including areas of turf or other soft surfaces
Some areas and edges may be designed for outdoor dining or other
commercial activity, while others may be designed for informal play
and just spending quiet time outdoors
+Greens are small parks, mostly landscaped with some areas of
hardscape or soft non-plant ground surface material In centers and
higher intensity neighborhoods, greens provide ideal play areas for
children, sometimes with play equipment and sometimes just with
interesting places for them to run around, play hide and seek, and have
a picnic with their friends and family Greens may be surrounding by
small, easily crossable streets on 1 to 4 sides
+Paseos/Malls are linear open spaces acting in large measure as
“car-less streets ” In most cases, they are lined with commercial or
residential active frontages, but some narrow paseos may simply
provide a pedestrian passage/shortcut between the sides of buildings
The design of these narrow paseos needs to provide for human-scale
comfortable spaces that incorporate CPTED principles to avoid the
creation of “dark alleys ”
This paseo is fronted by residences Some paseos provide access between buildings and space to gather
A mixed use building fronts this plaza, which has seating, retail kiosks, and a fountain
Greens can offer a place to site and picnic Larger greens can host programmed activities or performances
Plazas and squares can feature shade
and water elements
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PART 3. COMPLETING THE
COMMUNITY FABRIC
Part 3 of this Toolkit defines and illustrates strategies for extending the
active, human-scale public realm network of Rancho Cucamonga—as
described in Parts 1 and 2—into large development sites and areas that
have not yet been developed or are undergoing significant market-
based change A central and over-arching intent of the General Plan—as
described throughout the Plan, and as implemented through the use of
this Toolkit—is that the city’s street and open space network seamlessly
connect people by all travel modes within and between our City’s
neighborhoods, centers, corridors and districts A closely related intention
is that all buildings, businesses and residences be provided with active
frontages, equitable all-mode access, and unique and valuable addresses
that make them an integral and well-connected part of our city
+Regulation of Large Sites
Large sites—generally defined as 3 acres and more—that are being
developed for the first time or substantially redeveloped present unusual
opportunities to extend new active frontages and all-mode access into
areas within which these are currently lacking Many such sites also provide
once-in-a-generation opportunities to establish new connections between
existing adjoining development and existing major streets, providing
current residents with new and expanded mobility choices and multi-
modal access to new amenities Accordingly, such large sites will be subject
to a permit, with specific submittal requirements and required findings of
consistency with the applicable Place Type Designations, Focus Area Plans,
zoning standards, and public realm design standards
+Large Site Planning Process and Case Studies
Accordingly, this section describes the process by which developers will
collaborate with the City to define master plans for large sites that meet
the intentions of the applicable Place Type Designation(s), and connect
it to the existing street network and adjoining development Two case
studies are provided to illustrate this process as applied to prototypical
large sites Case Study #1 addresses the planning of a large, undeveloped
piece of land, while Case Study #2 illustrates the potential redevelopment
of one of the oldest shopping centers in Rancho Cucamonga The basic
patterns and methodologies outlined in these case studies are exemplary
of both centers and corridors and can be implemented at various scales
throughout the city
New development must create new places, based on the
General Plan Place Types The illustrative example above
accomplishes this and is further described in Volume 2,
Chapter 2, Focus Area 3.
New development must create new places, based on the
General Plan Place Types The illustrative example above
accomplishes this and is further described in Volume 2,
Chapter 2, Focus Area 4.
+Parking Lot Retrofits
While the case studies demonstrate the steps for development or
redevelopment of large sites, many existing shopping centers and other
commercial uses with large parking lots may be unlikely to change
significantly in the near term Therefore, this final section makes general
recommendations for relatively simple enhancements that can improve
the appearance and performance of existing shopping centers and the
businesses within them
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CASE STUDY #1 LARGE UNDEVELOPED SITE
Case Study #1 is a large, undeveloped site at the southwest corner of Foothill Boulevard and Hermosa Avenue It is
located within the “City Corridor - Moderate” General Plan designation The following page spreads illustrate the
process of defining a plan for this site that meets the intent of its designation and connects it appropriately to the
surrounding context The illustrations herein are conceptual steps for design and planning only and should not be
interpreted as project site design layouts
Case Study #1 Site seen from the southwest
Foothill Boulevard
H
e
rm
o
s
a
A
v
e
n
u
e
1. Appropriately address context and edge conditions. First assess the Site, its edge conditions, and
the development form and character of those contexts Determine how new development must
relate to each edge, consistent with the Place-Type-based intent for the site per Volume 1, Chapter 2
of the General Plan
2. Establish points of connection. Provide connections to existing streets at regular intervals - and to
adjoining existing development wherever possible - to ensure robust all-mode access to and through
the site The minimum intersection density shall be determined according to Policy LC-4 7 of the
General Plan, generally including at least 2 intersections per quarter mile along the length of a major
corridor, with closer spacings within the site
3. Connect new streets through the site. Lay out a network of new streets - which may be public or
private - linking the points of connection established in Step 2 These primary connections through
the site serve to complete and enhance the multi-modal network of the site and context Their
alignment can be configured in a variety of ways to create a beautiful and active public realm network
and all-mode access to the planned new development, however a traditional grid pattern or variation
of such a pattern will be the most effective in meeting the connectivity envisioned in the General
Plan
4. Create walkable blocks for the planned development types. Complete the public realm network
with additional streets, paseos, and open spaces to define blocks that are sized and shaped for
walkability and to generate active frontages for all new buildings In general, blocks should have a
perimeter less than 1,500 feet, and not exceeding 2,000 feet The completed public realm network
shall be comprised of public space types per Toolkit Part 2 and beautiful, active, well-calibrated
frontages per Toolkit Part 1
5. Provide alleys within blocks to support the development types and public realm quality. Alleys
provide vehicular access for parking and services, enabling streets to be free of garages, driveways,
utility equipment and trash collection, allowing the fronts of buildings to be scaled to and welcoming
to pedestrians Alleys carry far less traffic than streets - and at much lower speeds - so they can also
provide safe play areas for kids and families to enjoy Alleys enable a single block to accommodate
multiple building types, and to evolve over time without deforming street frontages with additional,
redundant vehicular access points
6. Introduce development that benefits from and supports the public realm framework. New
development must activate the established public realm framework in conformance with the
intended Place Type and surrounding context This includes calibrating building forms, frontages,
and ground floor uses as described in Part 1 Generally, the most active non-residential frontages—like
retail—and the most intense development should be located along and near to major streets, while
development of lower scales and intensities should abut existing lower-intensity neighborhoods to
generate seamless transitions
3A. GENERAL GUIDELINES FOR LARGE SITE DEVELOPMENT
Whenever developing/redeveloping large vacant, or underutilized sites within our City, the following priorities
should be considered, as reflected in the Case Studies to follow:
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APPROPRIATELY ADDRESS THE
CONTEXT AND EDGE CONDITIONS
This site (See Figure 4 3 1) is an undeveloped piece of land bounded by
multi-modal corridors to the north and east (A and B), and primarily by
existing residential neighborhoods along the west and south edges (C and
D)
Foothill Boulevard
Hermosa AvenueB
A
C
D
A. Foothill Boulevard
Foothill Boulevard is designated as a multi-modal
corridor featuring bike lanes and bus transit
Improvements to the street should be calibrated to
the intended development types and per Toolkit Part
2 Based on consultation with City staff, these will likely
include improving bike lanes, narrowing excessively
wide vehicular lanes, and adding parking on the street
or in a frontage lane to support new development
B. Hermosa Avenue
The east edge is Hermosa Avenue, which has no public
frontage on its west side Improvements to that street
should be made per Toolkit Part 2, likely including new
bike lanes, narrowing unnecessarily wide vehicular
lanes, and an entirely new public frontage from the
travel lanes to new development, including Curbside
parking, Landscape/Amenity Area with street trees, and
a comfortably wide sidewalk
C. Parking lots of adjacent housing
The south edge of the site is lined by a parking lot
and the side of one multifamily residential building
New development should treat this as a rear or side
condition, and accordingly line it with building sides,
backs, and/or alleys
D. Mobile home park
The west edge comprises sides and backs of mobile
homes and private streets/drives that dead end at
the site edge Development should present sides or
backs to this edge and make connections—which
may be variously pedestrian and bike only or all-
mode connections—to most dead ends in order to
provide a more complete the (see following spread)
and direct access from existing residences to the new
neighborhood and its amenities
Site Boundary
FIGURE PT-10 CASE STUDY #1 SITE CONTEXT AND EDGE CONDITIONS
STEP 1
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A
BD
BD
BD
New Points of Connection
No Street Connection
Site Boundary
Foothill Boulevard
ESTABLISH POINTS OF CONNECTION TO
THE CONTEXT
Define connections to the context at regular intervals Minimum
intersection density shall be determined according to Policy LC-4 7 of the
General Plan Generally, there be at least 2 intersections per quarter mile
along the length of a corridor
C
C Hermosa AvenueA. Connect to major corridors.
Connections can be made to major corridors either
directly or via frontage roads (see Toolkit Part 2) Where
a new street connection is close to an intersection,
especially on major corridors such as Foothill
Boulevard, new connections may provide only right-in,
right-out vehicular access
B. Connect to existing neighborhoods.
Where a high degree of continuity is desired, connect
at existing T intersections to create new 4-way
intersections Where a less direct—although still
connected—route is appropriate, new streets can be
offset from T intersections Along this Hermosa Avenue
edge a combination of aligned, 4-way intersections
and offset connections may be appropriate
C. Not all edges warrant street
connections.
Parking lots dominate the short south edge of the
site New street connections are not necessary here
Alleys can connect to parking drives to reduce gaps
in the street wall if this can be arranged with adjacent
development Pedestrian/bike connections can also be
made here to support the active mobility network
D. Connect to dead ends.
It is typically desirable to connect to streets and paseos
that currently form dead ends at the edge of the site
Where vehicular connections are not desired, new
connections can be pedestrian paseos with bike access
where appropriate The type and design of such will
be planned and designed in coordination with City
staff and with the owners and residents of adjoining
properties
FIGURE PT-11 CASE STUDY #1 NEW POINTS OF CONNECTION
STEP 2
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Foothill Boulevard
CONNECT NEW STREETS THROUGH THE
SITE
Within this site, new streets should link the points of connection
established in Step 2 in a very straightforward manner These will
be pedestrian-oriented neighborhood streets that provide very safe,
comfortable pedestrian routes, and also safe bike routes within shared
lanes due to low vehicular speeds
New Points of Connection
New Street
Site Boundary
Hermosa AvenueFlexibility of street alignment
These primary street connections through the site can be configured in
a variety of ways For example, the north-south route could be offset in
order to create a ‘pin-wheel’ plaza, as shown below, creating a focal point
of neighborhood activity, potentially better accommodating the intended
development types, while calming traffic and reducing vehicular speeds
New Points of Connection
New Street
Site Boundary
FIGURE PT-12 CASE STUDY #1 STREETS CONNECT THROUGH THE SITE FIGURE PT-13 CASE STUDY #1 FLEXIBILITY OF STREET ALIGNMENT
STEP 3
Foothill Boulevard
Hermosa Avenue
372 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 373
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 2: PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
CREATE WALKABLE BLOCKS
THAT SUPPORT THE INTENDED
DEVELOPMENT TYPES
In this development example, the block sizes for the intended building
types are smaller than the basic connectivity framework—the block
perimeters of most are significantly less than 1,500 feet—and the additional
access routes and frontages are provided with non-vehicular paseos and
green open spaces rather than vehicular streets
New Street
New Paseo
New Paseo Connection
Site Boundary
New Open Space
B
A
D
C
A. Streets, paseos, and open spaces
define walkable blocks.
The streets, alleys, and open spaces of this framework
define very walkable blocks with a maximum block
perimeter of 1,300 feet The blocks are generally
rectangular in shape, allowing them to accommodate
a variety of development types now and in the future
B. Longer blocks to accommodate
internal parking for commercial.
The blocks along Foothill Boulevard are longer in order
to accommodate parking for commercial uses lining
the corridor within the block
C. Extending the public realm into the
block.
The largest block in this framework abuts a large
adjacent block of the mobile home park In order to
provide access into the heart of the block, the public
realm is extended from the street into the site as a
forecourt This forecourt provides active frontages
for buildings within the center of this relatively large
block Additionally, this forecourt serves as a pedestrian
destination that terminates views from the paseo to
the east
D. Paseos for residential frontages.
In the heart of the new neighborhood fabric, paseos
provide pedestrian connectivity and a pleasant, quiet
space for residential frontages, away from vehicular
traffic Where buildings front onto paseos, visitor
parking must still be nearby, and vehicular access must
be provided to each lot via alleys (see Step 5)
Blocks throughout the site establish a walkable framework for
multi-family residential types
Paseos provide pedestrian connectivity and a pleasant home
for residential frontages
Longer blocks abut Foothill Boulevard, accommodating
commercial buildings with parking lots within the block
STEP 4
FIGURE PT-14 CASE STUDY #1 WALKABLE BLOCKS
Foothill Boulevard
Hermosa Avenue
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VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 2: PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
New Street
New Paseo
New Alley
New Paseo Connection
Site Boundary
New Open Space
USE ALLEYS WITHIN BLOCKS TO
SUPPORT THE DEVELOPMENT TYPES
AND PUBLIC REALM
Alleys are threaded through the blocks within this public realm framework
to provide vehicular access to commercial parking lots and to the rear of
residential properties This is critically important where buildings front onto
paseos, as the alley serves as the only vehicular access to each residence
Alley Orientation Allows Buildings to Front onto Major
Corridors.
The alleys are oriented to allow development to face Foothill Boulevard and
Hermosa Avenue Although most alleys run north-south along the lengths
of blocks in this framework, east-west alleys are provided in the north to
minimize the number of alleys exposed to Foothill Boulevard T alleys are
also used in southern portion of the site to create continuous frontages
along southernmost east-west street, which terminates the north-south
streets and paseos
Relationship to the Context
On the west edge of the site, alleys create a buffer against existing sides
and backs On the southern portion of the site, alleys can connect to
existing parking lot drives if that configuration proves beneficial and the
adjacent property owners agree
Such connections will help to realize two of the main goals of the General
Plan: 1) providing equitable access to those who choose to drive, and
to those who cannot or prefer not to, and 2) reducing vehicle miles
traveled and greenhouse gas emissions per person A pattern that forced
residents of the apartments to the south to walk a long distance out to
Hermosa Avenue and along Hermosa Avenue and then back into the new
neighborhood—or more likely to drive that route—would fail in many ways
to meet the intent of the General Plan, particularly where a short, safe and
pleasant walking route can so simply be provided
STEP 5
FIGURE PT-15 CASE STUDY #1 ALLEYS WITHIN BLOCKS
Foothill Boulevard
Hermosa Avenue
376 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 377
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 2: PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
Site Boundary
Building Footprint
INTRODUCE DEVELOPMENT THAT
BENEFITS FROM AND SUPPORTS THE
FRAMEWORK
As described in Step 1, two sides of the site abut existing residential, while
two sides abut corridors Building form and frontages must be calibrated
accordingly, as described in Figure 4 3 6B of the General Plan Foothill BoulevardHe
r
m
o
s
a
A
v
e
n
u
e
A. Retail Frontage on Foothill Boulevard. Foothill Boulevard is a major multimodal corridor that provides good
access and exposure for retail uses to succeed Here, retail and other commercial uses are accessible to citywide
customers via Foothill Boulevard, and to nearby customers via new neighborhood streets As noted in Step 1, a
frontage lane could be added to Foothill Boulevard to provide easy parking and pick-up/drop-off access for new
shops, restaurants or offices
B. Retail-Ready Frontage along Hermosa Avenue. Retail-ready ground floors should be located along secondary
corridors, ready to transition to retail use in the future if the near-term demand for retail is not adequate to fill
those spaces at the time of initial development Such frontages could line the first block of Hermosa Avenue
south of Foothill Boulevard, while simple residential frontages could line the remainder of Hermosa Avenue
Where residential ground floors front onto corridors, on-street visitor parking is typically necessary to support real,
functional front entries
C. Residential Neighborhood. The heart of this infill site may be entirely residential, according to housing needs
and the local context Building forms that provide a consistent—although not continuous—‘wall’ of building façade
s should line a linear park in the center of the site to clearly define it as an “outdoor room” for neighborhood activity
D. Neighborhood Edge. New townhouse building forms can smoothly transition to existing neighborhoods With
relatively small façade increments and regularly-spaced front doors on the street, they can step down in height
adjacent to the existing neighborhoods to provide a seamless transition to existing housing As noted in Step 1, the
adjacent neighborhoods present their backs and sides to this site, so new development should likewise present
sides and backs in a manner which completes blocks and provides new connections
B
B
A
C
D
A
STEP 6
FIGURE PT-16 CASE STUDY #1 DEVELOPED SITE
FIGURE PT-17 CASE STUDY #1 DEVELOPED SITE SEEN FROM THE NORTHEAST
Foothill Boulevard
Hermosa Avenue
378 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 379
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 2: PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
Case Study #2 Site seen from the southwest
This page intentionally left blank.
CASE STUDY #2 EXISTING SHOPPING CENTER
The second case study is an aging shopping center at the southwest corner of Base Line Road and Carnelian
Street It is located within the “Neighborhood Center” General Plan designation Carefully planned, such large
shopping centers may ultimately be significantly transformed, but such transformations are likely to occur
incrementally in phases It is important that a master plan guide each increment of development and prepare the
way for subsequent increments or phases Such master plans must be flexible enough to respond to changing
economic conditions but must lock in key characteristics that matter most to making a comfortable and walkable
environment, namely that streets and spaces are designed for people and framed by active, human-scale
frontages The following page spreads illustrate how a development framework could be defined for the above
shopping center site to evolve it toward a new, more active Place Type-based portion of the city The illustrations
herein are conceptual steps for design and planning only and should not be interpreted as project site design
layouts
Further Resources
Retrofitting Suburbia, by Ellen Dunham Jones and June Williamson, and Sprawl Repair Manual, by Galina
Tachieva, are excellent resources on the topic of parking lot infill and shopping center redevelopment They contain
helpful discussion, techniques, and case studies for the successful implementation of this strategy
380 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 381
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 2: PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
APPROPRIATELY ADDRESS THE
CONTEXT AND EDGE CONDITIONS
It is first necessary to assess the site, its edge conditions, and the
development form and character of the context Determine how new
development will relate to that context
Base Line Road Carnelian StB
A
C
D
Site Boundary
A. Base Line Road
Base Line Road is designated as an auto-priority
street, planned to have much improved pedestrian
and bicycle facilities and to support bus transit Active
frontages, as illustrated in Toolkit Parts 1 and 2, are
required The existing trees can be preserved, and
bulb-in street parking between the trees may be
introduced to support these new active fronts
B. Carnelian Street
Similar to Base Line Road, Carnelian Street is
designated as an auto-priority street and is to receive
improved pedestrian and bicycle facilities, support bus
transit, and be provided with active frontages at all
new development
C. Existing medical center and
neighborhood
The southerly edge of the subject site abuts the sides
of multi-family housing and a medical center New
development should treat this edge as a rear or side
condition, and line it with building sides, backs, and/or
alleys
D. Cucamonga Creek Channel and Trail
The western edge of the site abuts the Cucamonga
Creek channel and open space easement, which the
General Plan recommends be further enhanced as a
linear green open space connecting from Cucamonga
northward through Alta Loma, to the natural and rural
open spaces of the foothills above Accordingly, this
edge presents a fine opportunity to provide direct
physical and visual access from this Center to an
important community open space and the citywide
trail network
STEP 1
FIGURE PT-18 CASE STUDY #2 THE SITE CONTEXT AND EDGE CONDITIONS
382 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 383
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 2: PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
New Points of Connection
Non-Vehicular Connection
Site Boundary
ESTABLISH POINTS OF CONNECTION TO
THE CONTEXT
Form connections to the context at regular intervals Minimum intersection
density shall be determined according to Policy LC-4 7 of the General Plan
Generally, there should be at least 2 intersections per quarter mile along
the length of a corridor
Base Line Road Carnelian StA. Connect to Base Line Road
A new street can be introduced to align with Topaz
Street and form a new 4-way intersection This
would better link new development with existing
neighborhoods and create an opportunity for
pedestrians to cross Base Line Road A second street
can take the place of the existing shopping center
entry drive, forming a T intersection with Base Line
Road
B. Connect to Carnelian Street
Similar to the entry drive on Base Line Road, the entry
drive on Carnelian Street can be transformed into a
new street connection
C. Connect to dead ends
Napa Court terminates in a cul-de-sac south of the site
A non-vehicular connection here could link between
existing residential to the south and new shops and
amenities One possibility is that this paseo connect
through the existing building via a new entry or arcade
This would require coordination with City staff, property
owners, and residents of adjoining properties
AA
B
C
D. Connect to the trail network
As described in Step 1, a new active mobility
connection to the Cucamonga Creek Trail would
provide access from this Center to an important
community open space and the citywide trail network
This connection would need to deal with existing
topography in an accessible manner
D Napa CtNapa CtTopaz StTopaz StSTEP 2
FIGURE PT-19 CASE STUDY #2 NEW POINTS OF CONNECTION
384 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 385
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 2: PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
Base Line Road Carnelian StCONNECT NEW STREETS THROUGH THE
SITE
Streets, created in accordance with Toolkit Section 2, can link the points of
street connection established in Step 2 in a straightforward fashion Some
of these new street alignments may correspond to existing drive lanes
Where development is not expected in the near term, those drive lanes can
already be designed as streets
New Points of Connection
New Street
Site Boundary
CREATE WALKABLE BLOCKS
WHICH ACCOMMODATE DESIRED
DEVELOPMENT TYPES
Paseos linking to the neighborhood to the south and the trail network to
the west (as described in Step 2) complete the public realm network in
order to define walkable blocks which accommodate the development
A rectangular plaza is shown at the nexus of multiple streets and paseos in
the site This plaza can accommodate parking and offer a new active space
for existing commercial and new development types desired on the site
Base Line Road
Cucamonga C
reek
T
ra
i
lCucamonga C
reek
T
ra
i
l Carnelian StNapa CtNapa CtNew Street
New Paseo
New Paseo Connection
Site Boundary
New Open Space
STEP 3 STEP 4
FIGURE PT-21 CASE STUDY #2 WALKABLE BLOCKSFIGURE PT-20 CASE STUDY #2 STREETS CONNECT THROUGH THE SITE
386 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 387
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 2: PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
LOCATE ALLEYS AND PARKING
WITHIN BLOCKS TO SUPPORT THE
DEVELOPMENT TYPES AND PUBLIC
REALM.
Alleys in this framework configuration access structured and surface
parking within blocks
Base Line Road Carnelian StNew Street
New Paseo
New Alley
New Paseo Connection
Site Boundary
New Open Space
A. Southern service access remains.
Service and employee parking access remains behind
the southern portion of the existing commercial
center This functions as the inside of the block and this
southern side of the existing building can continue to
function as a rear
B. Structured parking within the block
Structured parking within blocks supports more
intense development types and can also be shared
with some existing retail Such structures can be
topped with solar panels
C. Share parking access between
existing and new uses
The parking lot and drives of the existing restaurant
on Carnelian St can remain in the mid-term while
providing access to tuck-under or structured parking of
new development to the west
CB
A New developm
e
n
t
s
i
t
e
STEP 5
FIGURE PT-22 CASE STUDY #2 ALLEYS WITHIN BLOCKS
A
388 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 389
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 2: PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
Site Boundary
Building Footprint
INTRODUCE DEVELOPMENT WHICH
BENEFITS FROM AND SUPPORTS THE
FRAMEWORK
Development should fill the established framework according to the
context
Base Line Road Carnelian StB
B
B
A
A. Base Line Road Frontage More intense development and some retail and retail-ready frontage should line
Base Line Road while still presenting a façade rhythm and massing which relates to the neighborhood scale of the
context The existing site level is much lower than Base Line Road, so subterranean parking could be located under
the first inhabitable level without much, if any, excavation The first inhabitable level should be at or slightly above
the existing ground level of Base Line Road A new sidewalk can be built behind the preserved existing trees, and
street parking can be introduced to support these new frontages
B. Some Existing Commercial Remains. The site can be redeveloped without replacing all of the existing
commercial In this case, the gas station and commercial at the corner of Base Line Road and Carnelian Street is
preserved The portion of the shopping center which lines the southern portion of the site can also remain
C. Cucamonga Creek Trail and Linear Park. An architectural gateway can invite pedestrians and cyclists into the
trail network A linear park can be developed along this edge, and new residences can overlook this improved open
space
A
BB
B
C
C
Base Line Road
Carnelian
S
t
r
e
e
t
STEP 6
FIGURE PT-23 CASE STUDY #2 DEVELOPED SITE
FIGURE PT-24 CASE STUDY #2 DEVELOPED SITE SEEN FROM THE NORTHWEST
390 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 391
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 2: PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
PARKING LOT RETROFITS
As with Case Study #2, most of the existing retail shopfronts and
restaurants in Rancho Cucamonga currently face parking lots Case
Study #2 expresses the long-term vision of this Plan for typical future
commercial and residential frontages that directly front and engage
streets rather than surface parking lots However, it is not anticipated
nor intended that existing shopping centers, shops, and restaurants will
go away any time soon, or in many cases ever Accordingly, this section
presents general recommendations for simple enhancements that can
improve the appearance and performance of existing shopping centers
and the businesses within them The following spread illustrates such
enhancements implemented on a prototypical shopping center site
As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, restaurant businesses have
experimented in unprecedented ways with the possibilities of repurposing
existing sidewalks and parking spaces along their frontages in new and
creative ways This experimentation has led to indoor/outdoor dining
environments and experiences that were not widely contemplated
previously, resembling in fascinating ways the indoor/outdoor
environments that have been present for decades in many American cities,
and for centuries in European and other international cities
+Dining Parklets. In the same way that many California downtowns
have redeployed on-street parking spaces as “sidewalk expansions”
to create new outdoor dining areas, restaurants in shopping centers
throughout the country—and in Rancho Cucamonga—have been
“camping out” in their parking spaces adjacent to existing shopfronts
Barriers between cars and diners are necessary, of course, and can take
many forms, including fences, planters, wine barrels, beer kegs, or any
other objects that are attractive, about 3 feet tall, and reasonably heavy
Overhead tents and canopies are possible, but tend to block visibility
for other businesses, so simple umbrellas and space heaters are
recommended in the long term Parklets can be rather temporary and
relocatable, or a permanent part of the landscape/hardscape
+Dining Islands. In addition to redeploying a few parking spaces
immediately adjacent to existing shopfronts, a block of spaces across
a drive aisle may also be converted—temporarily or permanently—to a
small “plaza” or “square” within a larger parking lot
+Arcades. Deep arcades are a classic solution too making comfortable
shaded spaces for shoppers to stroll in, and may be deep enough to
also accommodate some outdoor dining Arcades are also a relatively
simple way to put a new face on an old shopping center
+Courts Some shopping centers already have courtyards or plazas or
other pedestrian-only open spaces But enhancing those, and in some
cases creating new or updated shopfronts opening into them, they
can become higher quality and more valuable activity spaces within
existing shopping centers
Active fronts can line parking lots and
dining can extend into parking spaces
Parklets can be implemented simply with planters, barrels,
and tables
Pedestrian courts can host dining and gathering Dining parklets can extend into parking spaces
ArcadeArcade
A parklet can take the place of a couple parking spaces alongside
an arcade
392 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 393
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 2: PLACEMAKING TOOLKIT
Prototypical existing car-oriented shopping center
Prototypical shopping center
Potential public realm and frontage improvements
ACTIVATING EXISTING COMMERCIAL
CENTERS AND THEIR PARKING LOTS
The following spread illustrates how the enhancements described on the
previous pages implemented on a prototypical shopping center site This
prototypical shopping center, like various shopping centers throughout the
city, privilege private automobile transport over all other forms of mobility
Such shopping centers are typically set behind large parking lots and do
not present active frontages to the public street As previously stated, many
of these sites are not likely to be redeveloped in the near term In such
cases, strategic frontage and public realm interventions can activate these
old car-oriented shopping centers for the mutual benefit of the city and the
businesses themselves
The public realm network can be
extended into the site to connect
previously disconnected uses One
example is shown here in which a
pedestrian Pedestrian Way extends
from the sidewalk to a prominent,
central entrance of the shopping
center The Pedestrian Way and
prominent entry tower are flanked
dining and gathering islands and
landscaping
Frontages can be activated even
where shops and restaurants front
onto parking lots or internal drives As
illustrated here, a dining or gathering
parklet can be created in the place
of parking spaces Here, the court
replaces only one parking space and
also takes advantage of the corner
of the lot which would otherwise be
underutilized
Extend the public realm into the site
Activate frontages along drive lanes within the site
As with other commercial ground
floors, as described in Toolkit Part 1,
portions of shopping centers which
abut the street should have calibrated
frontages which add value to the
business and life to the street The
dining terrace shown here illustrates
one example of such frontage A
pergola holds retractable canvas
awnings and string lights, while new
landscaping provides a beautiful buffer
and transition between diners and the
rest of the public frontage
Activate frontages along the street
394 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 395
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 3: ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE STRATEGY
SENATE BILL 1000 (SB 1000)
The state of California recognizes that environmental justice disparities are
a threat to overall quality of life across all communities and has developed
various policies, such as Senate Bill 1000 (SB 1000) and the Planning for
Healthy Communities Act, to identify and address these environmental
justice disparities The bill was passed in 2016 and serves three important
purposes:
+Reducing harmful pollutants and associated health risks in
environmental justice communities;
+Promoting equitable access to health-inducing benefits; and
+Promoting transparency and public engagement
Through SB 1000, the state of California mandates that jurisdictions
concurrently updating two or more elements of their General Plan
identify “disadvantaged communities,” engage stakeholders in these
communities, and adopt either an environmental justice element or
integrate environmental justice policies throughout the General Plan to
reduce unique and compounded health risks and pollution burdens The
areas in the city that are affected most by development are outlined in the
background document for the General Plan, and in the individual chapters
Rather than a standalone environmental justice chapter, the City has
considered environmental justice issues in every aspect of design for the
future
Environmental Justice Strategy
HEART OF THE MATTER
By law the General Plan must address at least the following five health
and environmental justice outcomes: 1) reduction of pollution exposure,
including improvement of air quality; 2) improvement of public facilities;
3) promotion of food access; 4) promotion of safe and sanitary homes; and
5) promotion of physical activity This General Plan addresses the required
topics of SB 1000 and includes policies and implementation strategies
designed to address existing environmental justice issues in the City and
prevent future issues from occurring
GENERAL PLAN POLICIES AND IMPLEMENTATION
STRATEGIES
The following tables list the environmental justice goals and policies within each chapter of this General Plan as well
as implementation strategies, and identify the health and environmental justice outcome it addresses
TABLE EJ-1 LAND USE & COMMUNITY CHARACTER
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
GOAL LC-1 A CITY OF PLACES. A beautiful city with a diversity and balance of unique and well-connected
places.
+LC-1.1 Complete Places. Ensure that a broad range of
recreational, commercial, educational, arts, cultural,
and civic amenities are nearby and easily accessible to
residents and workers in each neighborhood and each
employment district
X X X
+LC-1.4 Connectivity and Mobility. Work to complete a
network of pedestrian- and bike-friendly streets and trails,
designed in concert with adjacent land uses, using the
public realm to provide more access options
X X X X X
+LC-1.6 Disadvantaged Communities. Prioritize
development appropriate to the needs of disadvantaged
communities, particularly south of Foothill Boulevard X X
396 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 397
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 3: ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE STRATEGY
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
+LC-1.7 Design for Safety. Require the use of Crime
Prevention Through Environmental Design (CPTED)
techniques such as providing clear lines of sight,
appropriate lighting, and wayfinding signs to ensure that
new development is visible from public areas and easy to
navigate
X X
+LC-1.13 Improved Public Realm. Require that new
development extend the “walkable public realm” into
previously vacant and/or parking lot-dominant single-use
parcels of land
X X X X
GOAL LC-2 HUMAN SCALED. A city planned and designed for people fostering social and economic
interaction, an active and vital public realm, and high levels of public safety and comfort.
+LC-2.3 Streetscape. Enhance the pedestrian experience
through streetscape improvements such as enhanced
street lighting, street trees, and easement dedications to
increase the widths of the sidewalks, provide side access
parking lanes, and other pedestrian and access amenities
X X X
+LC-2.4 Tree Planting. Require the planting of
predominantly native and drought-tolerant trees that
shade the sidewalks, buffer pedestrians from traffic,
define the public spaces of streets, and moderate high
temperatures and wind speeds throughout the city
X X X
GOAL LC-3 FISCALLY SUSTAINABLE. A fiscally sound and sustainable City.
+LC-3.2 Community Benefit. Require a community
benefit and economic analysis for large projects that
abut existing neighborhoods or for any project at the
maximum density, with a focus on resolving physical,
economic, and aesthetic impacts
X X
+LC-3.3 Community Amenities. Balance the impacts of
new development, density, and urbanization through the
provision of a high-level of neighborhood and community
amenities and design features
X
+LC-3.4 Institutional Land Uses. Site new institutional
land uses based on all forms of access available to service
population Satellite offices that are disbursed in the
community may be necessary to ensure equitable access
X
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
GOAL LC-4 COMPLETE NEIGHBORHOODS. A diverse range of unique neighborhoods, each of which
provides an equitable range of housing types and choices with a mix of amenities and services that support
active, healthy lifestyles.
+LC-4.2 Complete Neighborhoods. Strive to ensure that
all new neighborhoods, and infill development within or
adjacent to existing neighborhoods, are complete and
well-structured such that the physical layout, and land
use mix promote walking to services, biking and transit
use, and have the following characteristics
X X X X X
• Be organized into human-scale, walkable blocks, with
a high level of connectivity for pedestrians, bicycles,
and vehicles
• Be organized in relation to one or more focal activity
centers, such as a park, school, civic building, or
neighborhood retail, such that most homes are no
further than one-quarter mile
• Require development patterns such that 60 percent of
dwelling units are within 1/2-mile walking distance to
neighborhood goods and services
• Provide as wide a diversity of housing styles and
types as possible, and appropriate to the existing
neighborhood context
• Provide homes with entries and windows facing
the street, with driveways and garages generally
deemphasized in the streetscape composition
+LC-4.3 Connected Neighborhoods. Require that each
new increment of residential development make all
possible street, trail, and open space connections to
existing adjoining residential or commercial development
and provide for future connections into any adjoining
parcels
X X X
+LC-4.4 Balanced Neighborhoods. Within the density
ranges and housing types defined in this General Plan,
promote a range of housing and price levels within
each neighborhood to accommodate diverse ages and
incomes
X
398 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 399
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 3: ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE STRATEGY
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
+LC-4.5 Equitable Housing Opportunities and Diversity
of Housing Types. Within the density ranges and housing
types defined in this General Plan, promote a diversity of
land tenure opportunities to provide a range of choices
on the types of property estate available and ready access
to an equitable array of opportunities at a variety of
price points For projects five acres or larger, require that
diverse housing types be provided and intermixed rather
than segregated by dwelling type
X
+LC-4.12 Conventional Suburban Neighborhood
Design. Discourage the construction of new residential
neighborhoods that are characterized by sound wall
frontages on any streets, discontinuous cul-de-sac street
patterns, long block lengths, single building housing
types, and lack of walking or biking access to parks,
schools, goods, and services
X X X
GOAL LC-5 CONNECTED CORRIDORS. A citywide network of transportation and open space corridors that
provides a high level of connectivity for pedestrians, bicyclists, equestrians, motorists, and transit users.
+LC-5.1 Improved Street Network. Systematically
extend and complete a network of complete streets to
ensure a high-level of multi-modal connectivity within
and between adjacent Neighborhoods, Centers and
Districts Plan and implement targeted improvements
to the quality and number of pedestrian and bicycle
routes within the street and trail network, prioritizing
connections to schools, parks, and neighborhood activity
centers
X X X X
+LC-5.2 Connections Between Development Projects.
Require the continuation and connectivity of the street
network between adjacent development projects and
discourage the use of cul-de-sacs or other dead-end
routes
X X X
+LC-5.3 Green Public Realm. Ensure that a significant tree
canopy and landscaping is provided along corridors, and
linkages between land uses, to provide shade and wind
protection for pedestrians and bicyclists, and to define
these corridors as the “outdoor living rooms” of the City
X X
+LC-5.4 Multi Family Development. Focus new
multifamily housing development along corridors
between commercial nodes and centers and ensure that
is it well-connected to adjoining neighborhoods and
centers by high quality walking and biking routes
X X X
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
+LC-5.6 Foothill Boulevard as a Connector. Transition
Foothill Boulevard from a “divider” to a “connector”
that brings the north and south sides together Ensure
that new development along the Foothill Corridor
generates a high-quality pedestrian- and transit-oriented
environment and a concentration of commercial and civic
amenities and community gathering places for residents
from all parts of the city
X X X
GOAL LC-6 ACTIVE CENTERS. A rich variety of commercial and mixed-use centers throughout the city,
which bring a range of opportunities for shopping, dining, recreations, commerce, employment, arts and
culture within easy reach of all neighborhoods.
+LC-6.1 Diverse Centers. Encourage the development of
neighborhood-serving, community-serving and city-wide
serving centers that address the full range community
needs and market sectors
X X
+LC-6.4 Access to Transit. Encourage the development
of commercial and mixed-use centers are located at and
organized in relation to existing or planned transit stops,
especially along Foothill Boulevard and Haven Avenue
X X X X
+LC-6.5 Walkable Environments. Centers should include
very walkable and pedestrian-friendly streets with active
building frontages along primary corridors and internal
streets In some cases, side access lanes may be inserted
between existing major streets and building frontages,
providing a low-speed environment that is very safe
and comfortable for pedestrians and bicyclists, with
pedestrian-oriented building frontages
X X X
TABLE EJ-2 OPEN SPACE
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
GOAL OS-1 OPEN SPACE. A complete, connected network of diverse parks, trails, and rural and natural open
space that support a wide variety of recreational, educational and outdoor activities.
+OS-1.1 Equitable Access to Parks. Strive to ensure that
at least one park or other public open space is within
safe, comfortable walk from homes and jobs, without
crossing major streets except at signalized crossings
Equitable access to parks should be determined based on
the fundamental character of the place (rural, suburban,
urban) and corresponding transportation infrastructure
X X X X
400 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 401
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 3: ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE STRATEGY
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
+OS-1.2 Underserved Communities. Prioritize the
provision of new trails, parks, plazas, and other open
space types in areas of the city that underserved by parks,
services, and amenities
X X X
+OS-1.5 Design for Safety. Require the use of Crime
Prevention Through Environmental Design (CPTED)
design techniques such as providing clear lines of sight,
appropriate lighting, and wayfinding signs to ensure that
parks are safe and easy to navigate
X X
+OS-1.6 New Development. Ensure that new residential
and non-residential developments provide adequate on-
site recreational and open space amenities consistent
with applicable General Plan Designations, and the needs
of new development
X X X X
+OS-1.7 New Parks. Provide adequate park and
recreational facilities that meet the City standard of 5 0
acres of parkland (including trails and special facilities) for
every 1,000 persons
X X
+OS-1.9 Joint Use. Pursue and expand joint use of public
lands that are available and suitable for recreational
purposes, including school district properties and flood
control district, water district, and other utility properties
X
+OS-1.11 Locally Grown Food. Support small-scale locally
grown food in front/backyard gardens, community
gardens, parks/open space areas, and utility and flood
control easements
X
GOAL OS-2 TRAILS. A complete, connected network of diverse trails and connected open space that
improves access to all areas of the city and encourages non-motorized activities.
+OS-2.1 Trail Corridors. Extend, improve and complete
the multi-purpose trail network, wherever possible, by
utilizing existing flood control channel and utility corridor
rights-of-way as public trail corridors
X
+OS-2.6 Design for Heat. Consider extreme heat in the
design of streets, parks, trails, and playgrounds to support
activity throughout the year and in all weather conditions
by including shade trees, shade structures, water
fountains, splash pads, lighting for night play in most
spaces
X
+OS-2.7 Access. Require new development to provide
access to existing or future trails and provide appropriate
trail amenities (e g , benches, drinking fountains, hitching
posts, bike stands, and other amenities)
X X X
TABLE EJ-3 MOBILITY & ACCESS
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
GOAL MA-1 REGIONAL MOBILITY HUB. A multimodal transportation hub that connects regional and local
destinations.
+MA-1.5 Provide Mobility Options. Provide roadway
connections and local mobility hubs designed to capture
80% of the population and employment south of Base
Line Road
X
GOAL MA-2 ACCESS FOR ALL. A safe, efficient, accessible, and equitable transportation system that serves
the mobility needs of all users.
+MA-2.1 Complete Streets. Require that new roadways
include provisions for complete streets, balancing the
needs of all users of all ages and capabilities X X
+MA-2.2 New Streets. To achieve the vision for
transportation and mobility in the city, the final design,
location, and alignment of streets shall provide levels of
access, connectivity, and circulation consistent with the
conceptual layouts shown in this Mobility and Access
Chapter
X X
+MA-2.3 Street Design. Implement innovative street
and intersection designs to maximize efficiency and
safety in the city Use traffic calming tools to assist in
implementing complete street principles Possible tools
include roundabouts, curb extensions, high visibility
crosswalks, and separated bicycle infrastructure
X X
+MA-2.4 Street Connectivity. Require connectivity and
accessibility to a mix of land uses that meets residents’
daily needs within walking distance X X X
+MA-2.6 Context. Ensure that complete streets
applications integrate the neighborhood and community
identity into the street design This can include special
provisions for pedestrians and bicycles
X X
+MA-2.9 High-Quality Pedestrian Environment.
Enhance sidewalks to create a high-quality pedestrian
environment, including wider sidewalks, improved
pedestrian crossings, buffers between sidewalks and
moving traffic, pedestrian lighting, wayfinding signage,
shade trees, increased availability of benches, end of cul-
de-sac access, etc
X X
+MA-2.11 Master Planning. Master plan sites so as to
ensure a well-structured network and block pattern with
sufficient access and connectivity; especially in all focus
areas, including the Cucamonga Town Center, Etiwanda
Heights Town Center, and the Southeast Industrial Area
X X X
402 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 403
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 3: ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE STRATEGY
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
+MA-2.13 Healthy Mobility. Provide pedestrian facilities
and class II buffered bike lanes (or separated bikeways)
on auto-priority streets where feasible to promote active
transportation
X X
+MA-2.14 Bicycle Facilities. Enhance bicycle facilities
by maintaining and expanding the bicycle network,
providing end-of-trip facilities (bike parking, lockers,
showers), improving bicycle/transit integration,
wayfinding signage, etc
X X
GOAL MA-3 SAFETY. A transportation network that adapts to changing mobility needs while preserving
sustainable community values.
+MA-3.1 Pedestrian and Bicycle Networks. Maintain the
Active Transportation Plan supporting safe routes to
school, and a convenient network of identified pedestrian
and bicycle routes with access to major employment
centers, shopping districts, regional transit centers, and
residential neighborhoods
X X
+MA-3.2 Traffic Safety. Prioritize transportation system
improvements that help eliminate traffic-related fatalities
and severe injury collisions X
+MA-3.3 Vulnerable User Safety. Prioritize pedestrian
improvements in the Pedestrian Priority Area shown on
Figure 8 to promote safety in the southwestern area of
the city
X X
+MA-3.4 Emergency Access. Prioritize development and
infrastructure investments that work to implement,
maintain, and enhance emergency access throughout
the community
X
GOAL MA-5 SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORTATION. A transportation network that adapts to changing mobility
needs.
+MA-5.1 Land Use Supporting Reduced VMT. Work
to reduce VMT through land use planning, enhanced
transit access, localized attractions, and access to non-
automotive modes
X X X
TABLE EJ-4 HOUSING
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
GOAL H-1 HOUSING OPPORTUNITIES. A diverse community with a broad range of housing types and
opportunities to accommodate expected new households.
+H-1.1 RHNA Requirement. Encourage the development
of a wide range of housing options, types, and prices that
will enable the City to achieve its share of the RHNA X
+H-1.2 Elderly and Disabled Household Needs. Recognize
the unique characteristics of elderly and disabled
households and address their special needs X
+H-1.3 Accessory Dwelling Units. Facilitate the
development of accessory dwelling units to provide
additional housing opportunities pursuant to State law
and established zoning regulations
X
GOAL H-2 AFFORDABLE HOUSING. A city where housing opportunities meet the needs of all socioeconomic
segments of the community.
+H-2.1 Rental Assistance Programs. Encourage the use
of rental assistance programs to assist lower income
households and support the Housing Authority of the
County of San Bernardino (HACSB) applications for
additional vouchers to meet the needs of lower income
households
X
GOAL H-3 HOMELESSNESS. A compassionate community with a wide range of options and support for the
housing insecure and those experiencing homelessness.
+H-3.1 Homeless Services. Provide assistance as it
becomes available towards efforts of local organizations
and community groups to provide emergency shelters,
transitional housing opportunities, and services to
the City’s homeless population and those at-risk of
homelessness
X
+H-3.2 Homeless Programs. Participate with adjacent
communities toward the provision of a sub-regional
shelter program and encourage the County to develop a
comprehensive homeless program
X
GOAL H-4 HOUSING QUALITY. A community with quality, healthy housing.
+H-4.2 Substandard Housing. Encourage the revitalization
and rehabilitation of substandard residential structures X
+H-4.3 Residential Rehabilitation. Focus rehabilitation to
neighborhoods with deteriorating units X
+H-4.5 Housing Maintenance. Actively encourage the
maintenance of existing housing in to as to maintain the
housing stock in sound condition X
404 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 405
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 3: ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE STRATEGY
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
+H-4.6 Code Enforcement. Utilize concentrated Code
Enforcement programs to target specific areas or
problems when the need and community support
warrants such activity
X
GOAL H-6 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITIES. An equitable community that provides equal housing
opportunities for all residents.
+H-6.1 Reduce Housing Discrimination. Explore and
consider programs that will reduce the incidence of
housing discrimination within the City X
+H-6.2 Land Use Plan. Facilitate development projects
that will improve a neighborhood’s access to resources
and opportunities X
+H-6.3 Fair Housing Outreach and Education. Support
outreach and education efforts to actively further
fair housing practices and understanding of fair
housing rights, with emphasis on proactive education
and voluntary compliance, as well as through legal
enforcement on a case-by-case basis, including, but
not limited to, assistance with the resolution of tenant/
landlord disputes and housing discrimination complaints
X
+H-6.4 Accessible or Barrier-Free Housing. Encourage
the provisions of disabled-accessible units and housing
for the mentally and physically disabled X
TABLE EJ-5 PUBLIC FACILITIES & SERVICES
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
GOAL PF-1 STATE-OF-THE-ART FACILITIES. Residents enjoy state-of-the-art public and community facilities
that support existing programs, accommodate future needs, and are accessible to all members of the
community.
+PF-1.1 New Building Standards. Continue to implement
high-quality standards for new public facilities and
improvements to existing buildings X
+PF-1.2 Underserved Neighborhoods. Prioritize new
community facilities in underserved neighborhoods and
centers X X
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
+PF-1.3 Facilities Collaboration. Maximize public facility
use by sharing with nonprofit organizations, school
districts, and community organizations Look for
opportunities to create joint-use community space at
facilities owned by private organizations such as faith-
based groups and service clubs
X
+PF-1.4 Capital Improvements Program. Coordinate, plan,
and manage a comprehensive capital improvements
program for expansion and improvement of critical
facilities and infrastructure in response to the needs of a
growing community
X
GOAL PF-5 WATER-RELATED INFRASTRUCTURE. Water and wastewater infrastructure facilities are
available to support future growth needs and existing development.
+PF-5.2 Wastewater Treatment. Consult with the Inland
Empire Utilities Agency and the Cucamonga Valley Water
District (CVWD) to ensure that the treatment facility has
sufficient capacity to meet future wastewater treatment
needs
X
GOAL PF-7 UTILITY INFRASTRUCTURE. Protect and expand utility infrastructure in a sustainable and
innovative manner to serve the current and future needs of the community while ensuring that natural and
environmental resources are available for future generations.
+PF-7.1 Communications. Expand access to high quality
established and emerging communications technologies
for individuals, businesses, educational institutions, and
government functions
X
+PF-7.2 High Speed Internet. Prioritize extending
high speed internet into underserved lower income
neighborhoods X
+PF-7.6 Phasing of Public Facilities. Require new
parks, open spaces, infrastructure, and other facilities
be funded by and/or provided by new development as
necessary so as to ensure services can be provided to new
development
X
406 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 407
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 3: ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE STRATEGY
TABLE EJ-6 RESOURCE CONSERVATION
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
GOAL RC-5 LOCAL AIR QUALITY. Healthy air quality for all residents.
+RC-5.1 Pollutant Sources. Minimize increases of new air
pollutant emissions in the city and encourage the use of
advance control technologies and clean manufacturing
techniques
X
+RC-5.2 Air Quality Land Use Compatibility. Avoid siting
of homes, schools, hospitals, and childcare facilities and
land uses within 500 feet of land uses that are considered
large emitters
X
+RC-5.3 Barriers and Buffers. Require design features
such as site and building orientation, trees or other
landscaped barriers, ventilation and filtration,
construction, and operational practices to reduce air
quality impacts during construction and operation of
large stationary and mobile sources
X
+RC-5.4 Health Risk Assessment. Consider the health
impacts of development of sensitive receptors within
500 feet of a freeway, rail line, arterial, collector or
transit corridor sources using health risk assessments to
understand potential impacts
X
+RC-5.5 Impacts to Air Quality. Ensure new development
does not disproportionately burden residents, due to
age, culture, ethnicity, gender, race, socioeconomic
status, or geographic location, with health effects for air
pollution Prioritize resource allocation, investments, and
decision making that improves air quality for residents
disproportionately burdened by air pollution because of
historical land use planning decisions and overarching
institutional and structural inequities
X
+RC-5.6 Community Benefit Plan. Require that any
land use generating or accommodating more than
100 trucks per day, more than 40 trucks with operating
transport refrigeration units (TRUs) per day, or where
TRU unit operations exceed 300 hours per week, provide
a community benefit plan demonstrating an offset to
community impacts of the truck traffic
X
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
+RC-5.7 New Sensitive Receptors Near Existing Industrial
Uses. Avoid placing homes, schools, hospitals, and
childcare facilities within 1,000 feet of a land use that
accommodates more than 100 trucks per day, more than
40 trucks with operating transport refrigeration units
(TRUs) per day, or where TRU unit operations exceed 300
hours per week
X
+RC-5.8 New Localized Air Pollution Sources Near
Existing Sensitive Receptors. Avoid placing land uses
that accommodate more than 100 trucks per day, more
than 40 trucks with operating transport refrigeration
units (TRUs) per day, or where TRU unit operations exceed
300 hours per week within 1,000 feet of homes, schools,
hospitals, and childcare facilities
X
+RC-5.9 Truck Hook-Ups at New Industrial or
Commercial Developments. Require new industrial or
commercial developments at which heavy-duty diesel
trucks idle on-site to install electric truck hook-ups in
docks, bays, and parking areas
X
+RC-5.10 Clean and Green Industry. Prioritize non-
polluting industries and companies using zero or low air
pollution technologies X
+RC-5.11 Dust and Odor. Require new construction to
include measures to minimize dust and odor during
construction and operation X
GOAL RC-6 CLIMATE CHANGE. A resilient community that reduces its contributions to a changing climate
and is prepared for the health and safety risk of climate change.
+RC-6.1 Climate Action Plan. Maintain and implement
a Climate Action Plan (CAP) that provides best
management practices for reducing greenhouse gas
emissions
X
+RC-6.2 Renewable Energy. Encourage renewable energy
installations and facilitate green technology and business X
+RC-6.3 Reduce Energy Consumption. Encourage a
reduction in community-wide energy consumption X
+RC-6.4 Urban Forest. Protect the city’s healthy trees and
plant new ones to provide shade, carbon sequestration,
and purify the air X
+RC-6.5 GHG Reduction Goal. Reduce emissions to 80
percent below 1990 levels by 2050 and achieve carbon
neutrality by 2045 X
408 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 409
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 3: ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE STRATEGY
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
+RC-6.6 Co-Benefits. Prioritize the development and
implementation of GHG reduction measures that also
achieve economic, health, social, environmental, and
other co-benefits for the City and its residents and
businesses
X
+RC-6.7 Structural Equity. Encourage GHG reduction and
climate adaptation measures such as trail completion,
equipment upgrade, sidewalk connectivity, tree planting,
and buffers be included in the City’s Capital Improvement
Program (CIP) to improve areas of the city where these
features are lacking
X X X
+RC-6.8 Reduce Vehicle Trips. Require Transportation
Demand Management (TDM) strategies, such as
employer provided transit pass/parking credit, bicycle
parking, bike lockers, high-speed communications
infrastructure for telecommuting, and carpooling
incentives, for large office, commercial, and industrial
uses
X X X
+RC-6.9 Access. Require pedestrian, vehicle, and transit
connectivity of streets, trails, and sidewalks, as well as
between complementary adjacent land uses X X X X
+RC-6.10 Green Building. Encourage the construction
of buildings that are certified Leadership in Energy and
Environmental Design (LEED) or equivalent, emphasizing
technologies that reduce GHG emissions
X X
+RC-6.11 Climate-Appropriate Building Types. Encourage
alternative building types that are more sensitive to and
designed for passive heating and cooling within the arid
environment found in Rancho Cucamonga
X
+RC-6.12 Reduced Water Supplies. When reviewing
development proposals, consider the possibility of
constrained future water supplies and require enhanced
water conservation measures
X
+RC-6.13 Designing for Warming Temperatures. When
reviewing development proposals, encourage applicants
and designers to consider warming temperatures in the
design of cooling systems
X X
+RC-6.15 Heat Island Reductions. Require heat island
reduction strategies in new developments such as light-
colored paving, permeable paving, right-sized parking
requirements, vegetative cover and planting, substantial
tree canopy coverage, and south and west side tree
planting
X X X
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
+RC-6.16 Public Realm Shading. Strive to improve shading
in public spaces, such as bus stops, sidewalks and public
parks and plazas, through the use of trees, shelters,
awnings, gazebos, fabric shading and other creative
cooling strategies
X X X
+RC-6.17 Offsite GHG Mitigation. Allow the use of creative
mitigation efforts such as offsite mitigation and in lieu fee
programs as mechanisms for reducing project-specific
GHG emissions
X
+RC-6.18 Water Sources with Low GHG Emissions.
Encourage local and regional water utilities to obtain
water from sources with low or no GHG emissions X
GOAL RC-7 ENERGY. An energy efficient community that relies primarily on renewable and non-polluting
energy sources.
+RC-7.2 New EV Charging. Require new multifamily
residential, commercial, office, and industrial
development to include charging stations, or include the
wiring for them
X
+RC-7.3 EV Charging Retrofits. Encourage existing
development to retrofit to include charging stations X
+RC-7.4 New Off-Road Equipment. When feasible,
require that off-road equipment such as forklifts and yard
necessary for the operations of all new commercial and
industrial developments be electric or fueled using clean
fuel sources
X
+RC-7.6 Efficiency Retrofits. Encourage existing private
property owners to implement energy efficiency retrofits
during substantial improvement as defined by the
California Building Code
X
+RC-7.7 Sustainable Design. Encourage sustainable
building and site design that meets the standards for
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED),
Sustainable Sites, Living Building Challenge, or similar
certification
X X
+RC-7.8 Farmers Market, Fork to Table. Support
microscale agriculture and farmers markets, and similar
methods of encouraging locally grown and consume
produce
X X
+RC-7.9 Passive Solar Design. Require new buildings
to incorporate energy efficient building and site
design strategies for the arid environment that include
appropriate solar orientation, thermal mass, use of natural
daylight and ventilation, and shading
X X
410 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 411
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 3: ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE STRATEGY
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
+RC-7.10 Alternative Energy. Continue to promote the
incorporation of alternative energy generation (e g , solar,
wind, biomass) in public and private development X X
+RC-7.11 Community Development Subdivisions. When
reviewing applications for new subdivisions, require
residences be oriented along an east-west access,
minimizing western sun exposure, to maximize energy
efficiency
X
+RC-7.12 Solar Access. Prohibit new development and
renovations that impair adjacent buildings’ solar access,
unless it can be demonstrated that the shading benefits
substantially offset the impacts of solar energy generation
potential
X
+RC-7.13 Energy-Efficient Infrastructure. Whenever
possible, use energy-efficient models and technology
when replacing or providing new city infrastructure such
as streetlights, traffic signals, water conveyance pumps, or
other public infrastructure
X X
TABLE EJ-7 SAFETY
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
GOAL S-1 LEADERSHIP. A city that is recognized for its leadership roles in resilience and preparedness.
+S-1.2 Culture of Preparedness. Promote a culture
of preparedness for businesses and residents that
empowers them to increase their resilience to hazard
related events and a changing climate
X X
+S-1.3 Evacuation Capacity. Require new developments,
redevelopments, and major remodels to enhance the
City’s evacuation network and facilities and comply with
the City’s Evacuation Assessment
X X
+S-1.4 WUIFA Access Points. Require all new
developments and redevelopments within the WUIFA
to provide a minimum of two points of access by means
of public roads that can be used for emergency vehicle
response and evacuation purposes
X X
+S-1.5 Enhanced Circulation. In areas of the city with
limited access routes and circulation challenges, require
additional roads and improvements to ensure adequate
emergency vehicle response and evacuation
X X
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
+S-1.6 Evacuation Road Widths. Require any roads used
for evacuation purpose to provide at least 26 feet of
unobstructed pavement width X X
+S-1.9 Mutual Aid. Ensure mutual aid agreements with
Federal, State, local agencies, and the private sector
establish responsibility boundaries, joint response
services, and multi-alarm and station coverage
capabilities
X X
GOAL S-2 SEISMIC AND GEOLOGIC HAZARDS. A built environment that minimizes risks from seismic and
geologic hazards.
+S-2.1 Fault Setbacks. Require minimum setbacks for
structures proposed for human occupancy within State
and City Special Study Zones Setbacks will be based on
minimum standards established under State law and
recommendations of a Certified Engineering Geologist
and/or Geo-technical Engineer
X X
+S-2.3 Seismically Vulnerable Buildings. Prioritize
the retrofit by private property owners of seismically
vulnerable buildings (including but not limited to
unreinforced masonry, soft-story construction, and
non-ductile concrete) as better information and
understanding becomes available
X
GOAL S-3 WILDFIRE HAZARDS. A community where wildfire impacts are minimized or reduced through
investments in planning resilience.
+S-3.1 Fire Risk Reduction. Apply all state and local codes
and regulations (fire safe design, adherence to Standard
49-1) to new development, redevelopment, and major
remodels in the WUIFA
X X
+S-3.2 Fire Protection Plans. All new development,
redevelopment, and major remodels in the WUIFA will
require the preparation of Fire Protection Plans (FPPs) to
reduce fire threat, in accordance with Fire District policies
and procedures
X X
+S-3.3 Vegetation Management. Owners of properties
and public/private roads within and adjacent to the
WUIFA are required to conduct brush clearance and fuel
modification to reduce fire ignition potential and spread
X X
+S-3.4 Buffer Zones. Require development projects to
incorporate buffer zones as deemed necessary by the
City’s Fire Marshal for fire safety and fuel modification X X
+S-3.5 Water Supply. All developments will meet fire flow
requirements identified in the Fire Code X X
412 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 413
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Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
+S-3.7 Wildfire Awareness. Assist residents and property
owners with being better informed on fire hazards and
risk reduction activities in the WUIFA X
+S-3.8 New Essential Facilities (WUIFA). Prohibit the
siting of new essential public facilities (including, but not
limited to, hospitals and health care facilities, emergency
shelters, emergency command centers, and emergency
communications facilities) within the WUIFA, unless
appropriate construction methods or strategies are
incorporated to minimize impacts
X
GOAL S-4 FLOOD HAZARDS. A community where developed areas are not impacted by flooding and
inundation hazards.
+S-4.1 New Essential Facilities (Flood). Prohibit the siting
and construction of new essential public facilities within
flood hazard zones, when feasible If an essential facility
must be located within a flood hazard zone, incorporate
flood mitigation to the greatest extent practicable
X
+S-4.2 Flood Risk in New Development. Require all
new development to minimize flood risk with siting and
design measures, such as grading that prevents adverse
drainage impacts to adjacent properties, on-site retention
of runoff, and minimization of structure located in
floodplains
X X
+S-4.3 500-Year Floodplain. Promote the compliance of
100-year floodplain requirements on properties located
within the 500-year floodplain designation X X
+S-4.4 Flood Infrastructure. Require new development
to implement and enhance the Storm Drain Master Plan
by constructing stormwater management infrastructure
downstream of the proposed site
X X
+S-4.5 Property Enhancements. Require development
within properties located adjacent, or near flood zoned
and areas of frequent flooding to reduce or minimize run-
off and increase retention on-site
X X
GOAL S-5 EMERGING HAZARDS. A built environment that incorporates new data and understanding about
changing hazard conditions and climate stressors.
+S-5.1 Future Conditions. Ensure future climatic conditions
and public health emergencies are considered as part of
community resilience and investment efforts X X
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
+S-5.2 Urban Forestry Plan. Minimize damage associated
with wind-related hazards and address climate change
and urban heat island effects through the development
of an urban forestry plan and proper landscaping planting
and management techniques
X X
+S-5.3 Soil Transport. Require that properties with high
wind-blown soil erosion potential such as agricultural
operations and construction sites prevent soil transport
and dust generation wherever possible
X
+S-5.4 Extreme Heat Vulnerabilities. Require that new
developments, major remodels, and redevelopments
address urban heat island issues and reduce urban heat
island effects for the proposed project site and adjacent
properties
X X X
+S-5.5 Resilience Resources. Require new developments
and redevelopment to incorporate resilience amenities
such as, but not limited to community cooling centers,
emergency supplies, and backup power that can be used
by residents and businesses within a 1/4-mile radius of the
location
X X
+S-5.6 Underground Utilities. Promote the
undergrounding of utilities for new development, major
remodels, and redevelopment X X
+S-5.8 Climate Resiliency. Address climate resiliency
and inequities through the planning and development
process X
+S-5.9 Address High Winds. Require buildings and
developments exposed to high wind conditions to
incorporate design elements and features that minimize
or reduce damage to people, structure, and the
community
X X
GOAL S-6 HUMAN CAUSED HAZARDS. A community with minimal risk from airport hazards and hazardous
materials.
+S-6.2 Neighboring Properties. Encourage properties
that store, generate, or dispose of hazardous materials to
locate such operations as far away as possible from areas
of neighboring properties where people congregate
X X
+S-6.3 Site Remediation. Encourage and facilitate the
adequate and timely cleanup of existing and future
contaminated sites and the compatibility of future land
uses
X X
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Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
+S-6.4 Airport Planning. Protect Rancho Cucamonga
interests regarding land use and safety by participating
in the airport land use planning process for Ontario
International Airport
X X
+S-6.6 Development Near Airport. New development
within the Ontario Airport Influence Area shall be
consistent with the approved Airspace Protection Zones
identified in the latest version of the Airport Land Use
Compatibility Plan
X X
+S-6.7 Railroad Safety. Minimize potential safety issues
and land use conflicts when considering development
adjacent to the railroad right-of-way X X
TABLE EJ-8 NOISE
Goals & Policies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
GOAL N-1 NOISE. A City with appropriate noise and vibration levels that support a range of places from
quiet neighborhoods to active, exciting districts.
+N-1.2 Noise Barriers, Buffers, and Sound Walls. Require
the use of integrated design-related noise reduction
measures for both interior and exterior areas prior to the
use of noise barriers, buffers, or walls to reduce noise
levels generated by or affected by new development
X X X
+N-1.4 New Development Near Major Noise Sources.
Require development proposing to add people in areas
where they may be exposed to major noise sources (e g ,
roadways, rail lines, aircraft, industrial or other non-
transportation noise sources) to conduct a project level
noise analysis and implement recommended noise
reduction measures
X X X
+N-1.7 Rail Crossing Quiet Zones. Allow the establishment
of a full or partial at-grade rail crossing or quiet zone near
transit hubs or residential development X X
+N-1.8 Vibration Impact Assessment. Require new
development to reduce vibration to 85 VdB or below
within 200 feet of an existing structure X X X
TABLE EJ-9 IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGIES
Implementation Strategies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
FUNDING
+Greenhouse Gas Reduction Funding Opportunities:
In the short- and mid-term, explore and identify
potential funding sources or incentives for the following
greenhouse gas reduction activities:
X X X
• Evaluate the feasibility of a local or regional Vehicle
Miles Traveled (VMT) impact fee program, bank,
improvement program or exchange
X X
• Identify funding for and create an Urban Forestry
Master Plan X
• Investigate including tree planting in the capital
improvement program and development fee
structure as an offset for new development impacts
to greenhouse gases and on the environment in
accordance with the urban forestry plan
X
• Investigate possible incentives for existing non-
residential developments to install electric hook-ups
for truck in docks, bays, and parking areas to reduce
heavy-duty truck idling on-site
• Investigate incentives for existing public and private
developments to improve energy efficiency
+Hazard Retrofit Funding Opportunities: Investigate
potential funding sources for risk reduction activities that
may include:X X
• Investigate the creation of a Geologic Hazard
Abatement District that can be used to generate funds
to mitigate geologic hazards
• Investigate potential funding opportunities for
voluntary improvements/retrofits on private properties
• Investigate possible incentive programs to encourage
property owners to retrofit their homes/businesses
against climate-related hazards such as extreme
weather, flooding, wildfire, etc
• Explore new funding sources for vegetation
management activities for properties located within
the WUIFA
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VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 3: ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE STRATEGY
Implementation Strategies
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Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
IMPROVEMENTS
+Railroad Crossings: Investigate the feasibility and funding
of quiet zones at-grade crossings, improved current at-
grade crossing gates, and grade separated crossing(s) X X
+Trail Network: Continue to expand and improvement
the trail network as feasible to:X X
• Build a well-connected, off-street trail system along
the existing Pacific Electric Trail (PET), flood channels
and utility corridors
X
• Create north-south trail connections along the utility
channels and easements to create a connected trail
system, including Deer Creek channel, Day Creek/
Southern California Edison easement, and other utility
corridors connecting to Ontario
+Critical Facilities and Infrastructure: Periodically review
and update the City critical facilities and infrastructure
inventory used to support and implement the EOP,
LHMP, and CIP The inventory should be updated to
include the following:
X
• Critical facilities/infrastructure located in high-risk
areas where relocation may be a possible mitigation
strategy
• Potentially substandard structures/infrastructure for
future retrofit and rehabilitation
• Future funding opportunities for critical facility/
infrastructure improvements, retrofits/relocations
• Roadways designated as key evacuation routes are
prioritized during the CIP planning process
• Seismically vulnerable structures and infrastructure
to integrate into the City’s Capital Improvements
Program
PROCESS AND INFORMATION
+Equity and Environmental Justice: The City will
continue to maintain equitable civic engagement in the
decision-making process and will continue to improve
communication regarding new development projects
and potential health impact as follows:
X X X
• Review and update, as appropriate, procedures to
provide translation and interpretation services at
public meetings on issues affecting populations whose
primary language is not English
Implementation Strategies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
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Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
• Review and update, as appropriate, the variety of
electronic and personal techniques for outreach
• Continue to update the “Improve the Healthy
Communities” program
• Create a development checklist or disclosure tool to
inform the public, especially low-income minority
populations, on the potential health impacts of new
development
• Identify resources for the existing sensitive receptors
experiencing adverse air quality issues to incorporate
measures to improve air quality, such as landscaping,
barriers, ventilation systems, air filters/cleaners, and
other measures
• Establish procedures and tools to consider the health
needs of projects with sensitive receptors such as
through a healthy needs assessment, the Healthy
Development Measurement Tool (HDMT) or other
tools
+Mobility and Access Plans, Programs, and Activities:
The City currently maintains and updates a variety
of plans, programs and activities to improve mobility
and access in the community These plans, programs
and activities are regularly used and require ongoing
management and/or periodic update to ensure
compliance with local, state, and Federal requirements,
consistency amongst these efforts, and incorporation of
the most up to date information as follows:
X X X
• Maintain a list of Transportation Demand
Management (TDM) strategies for employers and new
developments
• Develop a system to measure roadway segments,
intersection traffic volumes, and measure vehicle level
of service along key corridors
• Include bicycle, pedestrian, and truck counts
along with vehicle counts in the City’s operations
management system and make available to the public
• Update routes in the Safe Routes to School (SRTS)
program and develop a prioritization process for
infrastructure enhancements
• Update and implement the Trail Implementation Plan
to improve equestrian access and crossing on the trails
as appropriate
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VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 3: ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE STRATEGY
Implementation Strategies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
• Develop a strategy or action plan that prioritizes
systems-based approach to preventing traffic fatalities,
focusing on the built environment, systems, and
policies that influence behavior, as well as messaging
that emphasizes that traffic losses are preventable
• As new transportation technologies and mobility
services, including autonomous vehicles, electric
vehicles, electric bicycles and scooters, and
transportation network companies (e g , Uber and
Lyft) are used by the public, review and update City
policies and plans to maximize the benefit to the
public of such technologies and services without
adversely affecting the City’s transportation network
Updates to the City’s policies and plans may cover
topics such as electric vehicle policies and plans may
cover topics such as electric vehicle charging stations,
curb space management, changes in parking supply
requirements, sharked parking, electric scooter use
policies, etc
• Coordinate with SBCTA and Omnitrans to review and
consider alternatives to conventional bus systems,
such as smaller shuttle buses (micro-transit), on-
demand transit services, or transportation networking
company services that connect neighborhood centers
to local activity centers with greater cost efficiency
+Climate Change Vulnerability and Sustainability
Activities and Programs: The City currently provides
information for and conducts a variety of programs
to address climate change and sustainability in the
community. These programs and activities will be
continued, and new programs developing including:
X X X
• Energy- or climate change-themed publications and
workshops
• Energy audits for residents
• Urban Heat Island analysis that integrates into the
Urban Forestry Plan and identifies priority projects
within the City that will mitigate the effects of future
extreme heat events
Implementation Strategies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
• Information for the community regarding the benefits
of solid waste diversion, recycling, and composting,
and programs that make it easy for all people in
Rancho Cucamonga to work toward and achieve City
waste reduction objectives
+Hazards-Related Plan Integration and Updates: The
City currently maintains and updates a variety of
plans, programs and activities that address the risks
associates with natural and human-caused hazards
throughout the City. These plans, programs and activities
are regularly used and require ongoing maintenance and
periodic update to ensure compliance with local, state,
and Federal requirements To ensure greater consistency
amongst these plans and incorporate the most up to
date information, future updates should accomplish the
following:
X X
• Updates to the EOP, Safety Element, and CWPP,
should occur concurrent with the LHMP update every
five years
• Maintain consistency between the Safety Element,
LHMP, EOP, CWPP, and Capital Improvements
Program
• Plan updates should incorporate climate change
data and information documented by staff during
subsequent hazard events that occur within the City
• Maintain an emergency evacuation plan that is
proactive, integrates data-driven approach and
core community values, and plans for all residents
equitably
+Emergency Preparedness Programs: The City currently
conducts trainings and educational awareness to
staff, citizens, and businesses. To ensure increased
preparedness and resilience future opportunities to
expand these activities should investigate:
X X
• Continue to promote “Ready, Set, Go” and Firewise
Community programs for existing and new
developments within the WUIFA to educate residents
about wildfire prevention and preparedness
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VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 3: ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE STRATEGY
Implementation Strategies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
• Implement a training program to improve staff
understanding of how vulnerable community
members, including senior citizens, low-income
persons, and persons with disabilities, may impacted
by changing climatic conditions
• Disseminate information on dam inundation areas
within the City that could be impacted by a dam
breach event
• Identify key locations within the City for community-
oriented backup power locations to serve vulnerable
populations disproportionately affected by hazard
events that affect electrical infrastructure
• Conduct annual staff trainings on the Emergency
Operations Plan (EOP) and Annexes to ensure staff can
effectively respond to emergency situations
• Develop or update strategic plans for public safety that
identify strategies for staffing, service delivery, and
critical infrastructure needs to enhance City services
These updates should identify potential improvements
for professional standards and operational readiness
• Expand and enhance the Ready RC program to
better meet future community issues and challenges
Increase and expand the delivery of Ready RC
programs and materials to the community to increase
preparedness and resilience
• Expand and enhance the strategy for post-disaster
recovery that focuses on community resilience and
sustainability
• Develop a cooling and heating plan to offset the
health effects of severe weather on lower income
communities
RULES AND COORDINATION
+Transit-Related Regional Coordination: The City
currently coordinates and works with regional partners
to improve transit for the region The City will continue to
work in concert with regional partners on the following:
X X
• Development of High-Speed Rail to Las Vegas through
Rancho Cucamonga
• Implementation of the Cucamonga Station Specific
Plan
Implementation Strategies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
• Support a future transit study to connect Rancho
Cucamonga with Ontario, Eastvale, and Corona
• Support a proposed tunnel to LA/Ontario Airport
• Bus Rapid Transit Connection projects along Foothill
Boulevard and Haven Avenue
• Consult with Caltrans, SCAG’s Connect SoCal RTP/SCS,
SBTA’s Nexus Study and Congestion Management
Plan, Omnitrans, San Bernardino County, the
South Coast Air Quality Management District, and
neighboring cities in support of a consistent and
comprehensive regional transportation system
+Mobility and Access Standards and Regulations: The
following updates and amendments to transportation-
related standards and requirements will ensure
compliance with local, state, and Federal requirements,
consistency with the General Plan, and incorporation of
the most up to date information as follows:
X X
• Develop and maintain a list of locations within the City
where LOS E or LOS F are acceptable on auto-priority
streets where, due to the right-of-way limitations or
physical constraints, roadways improvements are not
appropriate
• Revise Engineering Design standards to include
Complete streets design elements
• Identify the major arterial streets along new mixed-use
corridors and consider developing street sections that
are unique to each corridor
• Continue to review and implement the City of Rancho
Cucamonga VMT thresholds and screening criteria
to reflect the updated VMT analysis and utilize
transportation impact study guidelines for VMT
analysis when analyzing proposed new projects in the
City
• Complete and maintain the citywide Active
Transportation Plan
• Maintain a current truck route map on the City’s
website, and a truck route signage system that
identifies key goods movement corridors and ensures
goods movement needs are adequately served while
reducing impacts to other uses
422 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA 423
VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 3: ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE STRATEGY
Implementation Strategies
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Public
Facilities
Promote
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Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
• Establish restrictions on vehicle weight limit near
sensitive land uses such as schools and residential
areas to discourage cut-through truck traffic
• Work with technological providers to ensure equitable
treatment of all users by the ride hailing and
Transportation Network Companies (TNC) services,
easier options to use the services for all users, a diverse
dataset in Audiovisual (AV) technology that correctly
recognizes people of color, etc
• Modify the roadway design standards to include
innovative and energy saving alternatives such as
traffic circles, round abouts, and similar designs
+Climate Action Plan (CAP): Implement and update the
Climate Action Plan (CAP) goals, strategies, and measures
to reduce community-wide and municipal GHG emission
reductions in the categories of zero emission and clean
fuels, efficient and carbon free buildings, renewable
energy and zero carbon electricity, carbon sequestration,
local food supply, efficient water use, waste reductions,
and sustainable transportation
X X X X X
+Air Quality-Related Measures and Regional
Coordination: Improving air quality is a public health
imperative as it affects all residents Much of the air
quality impact is associated with heavy trucks and
industrial uses that are often located near lower income
neighborhoods This makes improving air quality both a
public health and an equity issue To address these issues
the City will:
X X X
• Develop guidelines to avoid locating new development
with sensitive receptors within 500 feet of a freeway
or high-volume roadway If avoidance is not feasible,
development with sensitive receptors may be located
within 500 feet of a major roadway only if the applicant
first prepares a project-specific health risk assessment
(HRA) addressing potential health risks to sensitive
receptors from exposure to toxic air contaminant (TAC)
emissions The HRA shall be conducted in accordance
with guidance and approval from SCAQMD Feasible
measures shall be implemented to reduce health risks
from TAC exposure to levels determined by the HRA
Implementation Strategies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
• Develop and maintain a standard list of development
conditions that would reduce health risk impacts, such
as toxic air contaminant (TAC) emissions, when siting
new sensitive receptors within 1,000 feet of a major
roadway
• Amend Municipal Code to require new development
that exceeds applicable air quality thresholds to notify
nearby residents and business of potential pollutants;
consult with the air quality management district,
incorporate feasible best management practices
for substantially reducing or avoiding air pollutant
emissions during construction and operational phases
• Update development code to require applicant to
install air filters with a Minimum Efficiency Reporting
Value (MERV) of 13, or greater (as defined by ASHRAE
standard 52 2 or Newer) in all buildings as proposed for
sensitive uses (e g , residences, schools, offices, medical
facilities)
• Ensure dust control provisions in the City’s
Development Code meet SCAQMD standards as they
are updated
• Coordinate air quality improvement activities with
those of neighboring local governments and other
agencies, including the Southern California Association
of Governments (SCAG), San Bernardino Council of
Governments (SBCOG), and SCAQMD to maximize the
potential local and regional air quality benefits of City
activities
• Collaborate with SCAQMD to review and provide
input on regional air quality plans and to identify
and implement best management practices to meet
and maintain State and Federal ambient air quality
standards
• Support programs and investments that increase
ridesharing, reduce pollutants generated by vehicle
use, and meet the transportation control measures
recommended by SCAQMD in the adopted Clean Air
Plan
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VOLUME 4 • CHAPTER 3: ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE STRATEGY
Implementation Strategies
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Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
+Resiliency-Related Regional Coordination: The City
currently coordinates with neighboring cities, special
districts, and the County to address regional issues and
collaborate on resilience, hazard mitigation, and disaster
response strategies and programs To ensure future
coordination meets community needs, the City should
expand the following activities:
X
• Periodically coordinate and review operations and
response plans for any dams that have the potential to
inundate portions of Rancho Cucamonga
• Promote the strengthening of infrastructure owned
and operated by other agencies/entities within the
City
• Partner with utility providers, water purveyors, and
other public agencies to reduce wildland vegetation
fuels
• Work with water purveyors to ensure adequate water
supply, long term maintenance, anticipated future
supplies, and fire flow is provided throughout the City
• Coordinate with Southern California Edison on
electrical infrastructure that may be impacted by
wildfires and/or Public Safety Power Shutoff events
+Hazards-Related Standards and Regulations: The
following updates and amendments to risk reduction and
hazards mitigation-related standards and requirements
will ensure compliance with local, state, and Federal
requirements, consistency with the General Plan, and
incorporation of the most up to date information:
X X
• Adopt design standards that ensure new development
provides adequate public safety and blends with
natural surroundings to protect development and
open space areas from fire hazards
• Enact a geologic disaster recovery ordinance for use
following severe winter storms that cause extensive
landslide or erosion damage
• Determine the viability of requiring enhanced building
standards for new developments, redevelopments, and
major remodels to ensure building functionality after a
seismic event
Implementation Strategies
Reduce
Pollution
Exposure
Improve
Public
Facilities
Promote
Food
Access
Promote
Safe &
Sanitary
Homes
Promote
Physical
Activity
+WUIFA Requirements: The City’s WUIFA currently
regulates all properties in compliance with California Fire
Safe Regulations To ensure continued compliance and
reduce future vulnerabilities to wildfire, the City shall:
X X X
• Require brush clearance activities on private properties
within the WUIFA prior to the start of the fire season
• Update the municipal code to require annual brush
clearance and vegetation management on all public
and private roadways within the WUIFA
• Periodically review and update WUIFA appropriate
landscaping options and make available to the public
• Periodically review and adopt the latest codes adopted
by the Building Standards Commission to address
wildfire
• Develop an existing non-confronting uses risk
reduction program that identifies compliance gaps
within the WUIFA and ensures properties are brought
up to code in a timely manner
+Urban Forestry Plan: Prepare an Urban Forestry Master
Plan that achieves the following:X X X
• Provides information on proper tree pruning practices
to the public
• Incorporates the management and enhancement of
native trees
• Minimizes damage associated with wind- and fire-
related hazards and risks and address climate change
and urban heat island effects
• Manages the removal and replacement of trees that
are diseased, damaged, or considered vulnerable to
high wind and/or wildfire conditions
• Provides landscaping recommendations and
requirements for new developments, redevelopment,
and major remodels
• Reflects the results of the Urban Heat Island Analysis
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FOCUS AREA IMPLEMENTATION
+Street Connectivity: Facilitate new street connections
and intersections for the following as development/
redevelopment occurs X X
• Extend Civic Center Drive to the west, bridging over
the Deer Creek Channel and connecting north to
Foothill Boulevard and west to Hermosa Avenue via
Devon Street
• Create a new signalized crossing of Foothill to connect
directly into Terra Vista Town Center, which may in
the future also be updated to a mixed-use center
environment
• Realign Red Hill Country Club Drive to create a
safer and more functional intersection with Foothill
Boulevard Extend Red Hill Country Club Drive
southward to a small new park at San Bernardino
Road
• Extend Roberds Street––and possibly create a new
north-south street parallel to and east of Amethyst
Avenue––to provide improved connection between
the historic retail businesses and the newer shopping
centers and opportunities for infill housing in the Town
Center
• Facilitate the development of new and enhanced
connections from the Southeast Area to other parts of
the city to provide additional north-south and east-
west capacity
• Complete Wilson Avenue and create a network of new
neighborhood streets to improve and distribute traffic
in the Etiwanda Town Center area
• Extend 7th Street, 9th Street, and Feron Boulevard to
create a more complete street network that improves
connectivity and access to and from the Cucamonga
Town Center to neighboring destinations
Implementation Strategies
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Improve
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Facilities
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Physical
Activity
+Parks Master Plan: Prepare a Parks Master Plan to plan
for new open space and trail network in the Focus Areas
that considered opportunities as follows:X X X
• Create s small neighborhood green on vacant land
at the junction of the 8th Street Trail and Archibald
Avenue and allow it to be fronted by housing
• Create a new neighborhood park at Roberds Street
and Base Line Road to accommodate a variety of
community activities
• Create a community park at the intersection of the
Pacific Electric Trail and Amethyst Avenue
• Provide new trailhead connections to the Deer Creek
Corridor––both south and north of Foothill Boulevard––
to provide trail access between the Civic Center area
and neighborhoods to the north and south, and to
connect to the Pacific Electric Trail
• Expand the trail network by creating a new
multipurpose trail in the historic 8th Street right-of-
way adjacent to the planned High Speed Rail line
• Reconfigure the existing trailhead parking lot and
access way to the Pacific Electric Trail to integrate it
better into the gateway center environment, while
ensuring adequate parking for visitors and trail users
Visually enhance the existing bridge to be a more
appropriate “gateway statement” for the city
• Coordinate with Southern California Edison and
the San Bernardino County Flood Control district
to improve the large open spaces along Day Creek
Channel as a usable recreational open space and a
multipurpose trail
428 PLANRC 2040 • CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA