L224. In-fill: Development consisting of either construction on one or more lots in an area that <br />is mostly developed or new construction between existing structures. Development of <br />this type can conserve land and reduce sprawl. <br />23?2. Infrastructure: The facilities and services that support the functions and activities of a <br />community, including roads, street lights, wastewater lines, storm drainage, power lines, <br />and water lines. <br />2424. Key urban facilities and services: <br />Minimum level: Wastewater service, stormwater service, transportation, solid waste <br />management, water service, fire and emergency medical services, police protection, city- <br />wide parks and recreation programs, electric service, land use controls, communication <br />facilities, and public schools on a district-wide basis (in other words, not necessarily <br />within walking distance of all students served). <br />Full range: The minimum level of key urban facilities and services plus urban public <br />transit, natural gas, street lighting, libraries, local parks, local recreation facilities and <br />services, and health services. <br />2524. Low-income housing: Housing priced so that a household at or below 80 percent of <br />median income pays no more than 30 percent of its total gross household income on <br />housing and utilities. (HUD's figure for 1997 annual 80 percent of median income for a <br />family of three in Lane County is $27,150; 30 percent = $687/month.) . <br />2624. Manufactured dwelling: A structure constructed at an assembly plant and moved to a <br />space in a manufactured dwelling park or a lot. The structure has sleeping, cooking, and <br />plumbing facilities and is intended for residential purposes. <br />2726. Manufactured dwelling park: Any place where four or more manufactured dwellings are <br />located within 500 feet of one another on a lot, tract, or parcel of land under the same <br />ownership, the primary purpose of which is to rent or lease space. <br />28. Metro Plan Plan Boundary: Defines that area shown on the Metro Plan Diagram that <br />includes Springfield, Eugene, and unincorporated urban, urbanizable, rural, and <br />agricultural lands exclusive of areas encompassed in the Lane County Rural <br />Comprehensive Plan. (Note: Assumes boundaries between the area of the Metro Plan <br />and the Lane County Rural Comprehensive Plan will coincide.) <br />k 29. Metro Plan Diagram: A graphic depiction in the Metro Plan of: (a) the land use planned <br />for the metropolitan area; and (b) the goals and policies embodied in the text and <br />elements of the Metro Plan. Information includes land use designations and the UGB. <br />302-7. Metropolitan area: Generally, an area that includes and surrounds a city or group of <br />cities. The Eugene-Springfield metropolitan area is the area within the Metro Plan Plan <br />Boundary (Plan Boundary). <br />V-3 <br />Laurel Ridge Record (Z 15-5) Page 273 <br />