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MAPS, PLANS & ORDINANCES 

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ORDINANCES


Town of Wake Forest Code of Ordinances

This Code constitutes the general and permanent ordinances of the Town of Wake Forest, North Carolina.

 

Zoning Ordinance

An ordinance establishing zoning regulations for the Town of Wake Forest, North Carolina and providing for the administration, enforcement and amendments thereof and creating a Board of Adjustment in accordance with the statutes of North Carolina governing municipal zoning.

 

Subdivision Ordinance

This ordinance is designed and enacted to provide for the orderly development of the Town of Wake Forest, North Carolina and its environs through the control and regulations of the subdivision of the land. The regulations contained herein are intended to coordinate proposed development with existing development and with officially adopted plans for the future development of the Town; to insure the provisions of adequate facilities for transportation, water, sewerage, and other public facilities in subdivisions; to insure the proper legal description, monumentation, and recording of subdivided land; and to create conditions essential to public health, safety, and general welfare.

 

 

MAPS (Frequently Requested)


Corporate Limits

Map showing the incorporated jurisdiction of the Town of Wake Forest

 

Zoning

Map showing the zoning boundaries by district.

 

Floodplains

Map showing the location of the Special Flood Hazard Areas (SFHA).

 

Active Developments Map

Map showing the location of all approved commercial centers and residential subdivisions within the Town of Wake Forest currently in the development process.

Transportation Plan Map
Map showing the location of all improvements recommended by the Wake Forest Transportation Plan.

 


ADOPTED PLANS
(Listed Alphabetically)


Bicycle Plan (Executive Summary)

The Wake Forest Bicycle Plan's purpose is to improve and encourage bicycle transportation in the town.  The plan focuses on creating a safe bike environment and providing more bicycling opportunities for more people in Wake Forest.

            Table of Contents

            Section 1 - Introduction & Goals
            Section 2 - Evaluating Current Conditions

            Section 3 - Existing Policies, Plans and Programs

            Section 4 - Bicycle Project Development

            Section 5 - Project Priorities

            Section 6 - Programs, Ancillary Facilities and Policies

            Section 7 - Design Guidelines

            Section 8 - Funding

            Appendix 1 - Demographic Analysis

            Appendix 2 - Survey Results

            Appendix 3 - Projects Table

            Appendix 4 - Parking Ordinance

 

Northeast Neighborhood Plan

The Northeast Neighborhood Plan will provide direction and guidance to the Town of Wake Forest for future development and improvements in the neighborhood. This plan provides evaluations of the existing conditions found within the neighborhood, and specific neighborhood goals and action items to address issues raised by the neighborhood. In addition, this plan addresses the neighborhood’s economic development needs and suggests actions for expanding local services and jobs.

 

The Plan was developed through an inclusive process of local input. Area residents and landowners have been engaged throughout the planning process and have exhibited a sense of ownership for Plan development and implementation.

 

Historic District Design Guidelines

The Town of Wake Forest takes pride in the unique architectural and historical aspects of its identity and has worked over the years to protect and enhance its architectural and cultural heritage. Various civic groups, the Chamber of Commerce, and local government advisory boards have maintained and improved many of the town’s visual and physical qualities, while also promoting community awareness of and appreciation for the town’s history and architecture. Recently, Wake County’s surging growth has motivated Wake Forest to realize that while a larger population provides many benefits, it also brings the danger of being consumed into an amorphous conglomerate where all unique identity is lost. Thus, the efforts to protect and enhance the town’s historic buildings have had to become more thorough and extensive. These guidelines are one step toward preserving the architectural heritage that Wake Forest must cherish if it wishes to remain a unique and intact community.

 

NC 98 Bypass Corridor Plan

The NC 98 Bypass Corridor Plan for the Town of Wake Forest encompasses the area along the NC 98 Bypass between its western terminus at Thompson Mill Road and its eastern terminus just east of Jones Dairy Road. The corridor, with the exception of the area south of the Bypass east of US 1, falls within the jurisdiction of the Town of Wake Forest. The width of corridor considered is approximately one-half mile on each side of the Bypass.

 

The major goals of the Corridor Plan are the following:

  1. To preserve and enhance the visual quality of the corridor so as to create welcoming gateways into the community and a pleasant passage for all,

  1. To create an east-west pedestrian and bike route on each side of the corridor, with connections across the highway to trail and sidewalk networks north and south of the corridor,

  1. To facilitate the vehicular transportation function of the corridor, including regional flow along the Bypass and connections to the Town of Wake Forest, and

  1. To encourage development within this corridor that is compatible with the first three goals.

Open Space & Greenways Plan

The Town of Wake Forest Open Space and Greenways Master Plan was prepared in order to protect the natural and cultural resources that community residents value most.

 

There are three principal goals of the plan:

  1. identify parcels and corridors of land that are in need of protection and conservation measures;

  1. establish a comprehensive approach that will link greenspace lands and corridors to residential, commercial, institutional and central business areas of the community; and

  1. define a concise set of strategies for protecting and conserving these corridors and at the same time developing public use facilities that would provide residents with access to these lands and corridors.

         2009 Open Space & Greenway Plan Update

         The Town of Wake Forest adopted its Open Space and Greenway Plan in January 2002.  In the years since

         the plan’s adoption, much has changed in Wake Forest and in Wake County as a whole. Aside from

         continued population growth and development in and around Wake Forest, there have been numerous plans

         adopted and other changes in both local and regional land use and transportation patterns. This update

         expands upon key recommendations from the 2002 Plan and provides the Town of Wake Forest with new

         ideas and tools to effectively create and maintain a comprehensive open space and greenway network. The

         Plan Update also incorporates new design standards for trails and trail amenities, trail operations and

         management guidelines, and current trail construction cost estimates.

 

            Table of Contents

            Chapter 1 - Introduction
            Chapter 2 - Existing Conditions

            Chapter 3 - Recommendations

                  Recommendation Sites

            Chapter 4 - Implementation

                  Implementation Steps 

            Appendix A - Summary of Public Input 

            Appendix B - Design Guidelines 

            Appendix C - Sources of Funding 

            Appendix D - Operations, Maintenance & Management 

 

Parks & Recreation Master Plan

The purpose of the Parks and Recreation Master Plan Update is to review, refresh and expand the framework for Town leaders and the Parks and Recreation staff to use as they chart the course for programming, maintenance and development of the park system over the next 10 years. The planning effort is a deliberate means to step back so to assess progress made and determine needs. The planning effort is also a means to inject public input into the process of programming and developing a parks system so that the Town leaders and staff stay attuned to specific interests and broader sentiments of the citizens they ultimately serve. The plan itself serves as a foundation for budget projections and for grant applications. The Town has been repeatedly successful in being awarded grants for recreational purposes. This success, in significant part, is founded upon the commitments expressed in previous master plan documents and the direct links between such commitments and actual accomplishments. This plan will build upon and reinforce such commitments.


Parks & Recreation Master Plan Map

 

Pedestrian Plan

The purpose of the Pedestrian Plan is to make an accessible, safe, convenient, interconnected and functional pedestrian transportation system, ultimately contributing to a higher quality living environment. Walking is more than a means of getting from one place to another; walking facilitates healthful living habits, conserves energy while improving air quality, and builds strong communities by increasing social interaction.

          

            Chapter 1 - Introduction

            Chapter 2 - Existing Conditions

                              Map

            Chapter 3 - Existing Plans & Policies

            Chapter 4 - Pedestrian Network Plan

                              Map 1

                              Map 2

                              Map 3

                              Map 4

            Chapter 5 - Design Guidelines

            Chapter 6 - Program & Policy Recommendations

            Chapter 7 - Implementation

            Appendix A - Summary of Public Input

            Appendix B - Network Prioritization

            Appendix B - Pedestrian Facility Prioritization Index

            Appendix C - Funding Sources

            Appendix D - Cost Estimates

            Appendix D - Pedestrian Facility Cost Estimate Index

Public Art Vision Plan
It is intended that works of public art will enliven public space, promote community identity and sense of place, and contribute to a vibrant and engaging Town. Public Art Program goals for the Town of Wake Forest are a transparent and directed public process for commissioning and acquiring art for public spaces, which will also contribute to the economic vitality of Wake Forest and be integral to its plans and regulations.

Renaissance Plan for the Heart of Wake Forest 

The purpose of the Renaissance Plan is twofold. First, the plan seeks to provide policy and programmatic recommendations for the revi­talization of and the encouragement of reinvestment into the historic downtown. Secondly, this publicly driven revitalization plan proposes a number of realistic development opportunities specifically targeted throughout the heart of the Wake Forest community which are aimed at creating a more vibrant community to engage all who visit, work, and live in this special place.

 

Urban Code Handbook

Final Transportation Summary Report
Plan Poster
Demographic Overview
Demographic Income Information
Demographic Charts
Consumer Expenditures

 

Transportation Plan

The goal of the Wake Forest Transportation Plan is to envision a future transportation system focusing on the following objectives:

 

·         Develop a plan compatible with future land use plans and adjacent jurisdictions’ plans.

·         Create a plan that accommodates community growth and its related traffic increases.

·         Create a system of interconnected streets (thoroughfares, collectors. And local streets).

·         Preserve future transportation corridors.

·         Maintain and improve roadway safety.

 

US-1 Corridor Plan

The overall purpose of the Corridor Plan is to identify ways to preserve and improve the appearance and function of the Corridor by establishing design standards and guidelines for development of the Corridor landscape, with a focus on site appearance and function rather than on land use categories.

 

The Corridor Plan, therefore, has three major goals;

  1. to facilitate the transportation function of the Corridor, including the regional flow along U.S. 1 and the connections to the Town of Wake Forest,

  1. to preserve and enhance the visual quality of the Corridor so as to create a pleasant passage for all and a welcoming gateway to the community, and

  1. to encourage development within this Corridor that is compatible with the first two goals.

US-1 Corridor Plan Map

Wake Forest Community Plan (draft)
This Community Plan marks a major new phase of the Town of Wake Forest’s planning program--reinvigorated in the late 1980s and continuing to this day. During the rapid growth era of the past quarter century, a number of important community-wide plans, special area plans and development ordinances have been prepared to help manage the town’s growth and development. These documents have included plans and ordinances addressing transportation, land use, economic development, parks and recreation, bikeways and pedestrian systems, downtown revitalization, greenways, historic preservation, and highway corridors and streetscapes, to name a few. In recent years, the Northeast (East End) Neighborhood Plan and the Renaissance Plan for the Heart of Wake Forest have each won special recognition awards for excellence from the North Carolina Chapter of the American Planning Association.

Need for This Plan
Communities seldom stand still; they are continually growing, changing, and evolving as places of human interchange and capital investment. Wake Forest is no exception. This Community Plan, therefore, addresses a number of pressing issues facing the town that require considerable attention and concerted action. Among these issues are:

   • Slowing the growth of traffic on major streets--currently increasing at a pace well in excess of population growth;
   • Improving neighborhood areas hampered by poor housing and asociated social problems;
   • Discouraging leapfrogging, single purpose subdivisions, isolated from services and jobs;
   • Encouraging development densities that promote walking and get away from over-reliance on
     the individual automobile;

   • Finding ways to provide for more walking and biking facilities,and inter and intra-town mass transit services;
   • Encouraging downtown area revitalization and reinvestment, while protecting the historic character of 
     development that gives the area its inherent value;
     
   •
Expanding currently fragile water supplies in the face of projected continued rapid growth in the region.
   
Creating new parks, recreation and open space facilities to keep up with growth-induced demand;
   Ensuring that new commercial development is supportive of the town’s natural and historic resources, unique 
     sense of place, and quality of life.

                     Growth Strategies Map

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