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  2. Real Estate Definitions Every Seller Should Know - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2010-09-14-terms-every-seller...

    Assessed value: The value of real estate property as determined by an assessor, typically from the county. "As-is": A contract or listing clause stating that the seller will not repair or correct ...

  3. Local Planning and Development Regulation in North Carolina

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Local_Planning_and...

    This section establishes a consistent legislative process for all development decisions, with additional requirements for zoning code and zoning map amendments. [ 1 ] : 40–43 City government voting rules are aligned with the county rules to allow development regulations to be adopted on first reading by a simple majority vote.

  4. California Department of Housing and Community Development

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_Department_of...

    The California Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD) is a department within the California Business, Consumer Services and Housing Agency that develops housing policy and building codes (i.e. the California Building Standards Code), regulates manufactured homes and mobile home parks, and administers housing finance, economic development and community development programs.

  5. Contract zoning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contract_zoning

    Contract zoning in the United States, also referred to as "zoning by contract", "rezoning by contract", or "rezoning subject to conditions" [1] is a form of land use regulation in which a local zoning authority accommodates a private interest by rezoning a district or a parcel of land within that district to a zoning classification with fewer restrictions based on an agreement that the ...

  6. Zoning in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoning_in_the_United_States

    Zoning has long been criticized as a tool of racial and socio-economic exclusion and segregation, primarily through minimum lot-size requirements and land-use segregation. [108] Early zoning codes often were explicitly racist, [109] or designed to separate social classes. [2]

  7. Single-family zoning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single-family_zoning

    By advocating for single-family zoning, McDuffie and other developers at the time were attempting to price out social groups whom they deemed to be less desirable for the neighborhood. [1] This makes single-family zoning one of many exclusionary zoning policies intended to limit who was able to afford living in a certain neighborhood.

  8. Massachusetts Comprehensive Permit Act: Chapter 40B

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massachusetts...

    Under Chapter 40B, in any municipality where none of the three statutory minima identified by the State are met for the amount of affordable housing that exists in the community, a developer can build more densely than the municipal zoning bylaws would permit, allowing more units per acre of land when building a new development, if at least 25% (or 20% in certain cases [4]) of the new units ...

  9. Special-use permit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special-use_permit

    Land use is governed by a set of regulations generally known as ordinances or municipal codes, which are authorized by the state's zoning enabling law. Within an ordinance is a list of land use designations commonly known as zoning. Each different type of zone has its own set of allowed uses. These are known as by-right uses.