
Abatement notice A notice
served on the owner(s) or occupier(s) of a
property from which a private nuisance arises,
warning them of the intention to enter on the
land in order to abate the nuisance.
Absolute title 1. The right
of ownership of a mortgage deed, which gives
the right, in certain specified circumstances,
to demand repayment in full, of the outstanding
debt than the due date. 2. A clause in a deed
or contract, which provides for the early termination
of an exciting interest in land, in certain
specified circumstances, thereby advancing
the future interest.
Agreement for lease/sale A
contract to enter into a lease (or sale), which
in order to be enforceable either must be evidenced
in writing and signed by the person against
whom action is taken for the breach of the
alleged contract and there must be a sufficient
act of part performance.
Alternative user value The
value of land and buildings which reflects
a prospective use which is different from that
of the current use.
Amortisation 1.(UK) The concept
of writing off the capital cost of a wasting
physical asset by means of a sinking fund.
2. (USA) Payment of a debt in equal installments
of principal interest, as opposed to interest-only
payments.
Anchor tenant One or more
department or variety chainstores, or supermarkets,
introduced into a shopping centre in key positions
to attract the shopping public into the centre
for the purpose of encouraging other retailers
to lease shops en route. The larger the developments
the more anchors required.
Annuity A sum of money paid
each year during the life of the recipient.
An annuity is usually paid as a legal obligation
under a contract or undertaking, as through
a pension scheme, and may be paid in installments
more frequently than once every twelve months.
Asset valuation In the property
market this expression is applied to the valuation
of land and buildings or plant and machinery.
The term is often used to describe an expert
opinion of the worth of a property which may
be incorporated into company accounts, where
the ownership of the asset is not necessarily
to be transferred but the valuation is required
for the company takeovers, share flotation
or mortgages.
Assignment The transfer of
a property interest, especially a lease, from
one party to another
Atrium An entrance hall of
a building, often rising through a number of
storeys and containing lifts, reception areas
and plants. Originally the hall or chief apartment
of a Roman house.
Balloon payment A repayment
of a loan bond, usually but not necessarily
the final repayment, which is larger in amount
than other installments.
Bare shell Depicts the condition
of any property after completion of construction
activity and installations of basic building
services. A bare shell includes basic flooring
- tiled, mosaic, cement or granite and plastered
walls. Apart from this, pantry and toilet facilities
may also be operational in such condition.
Basic rent A monthly rental
net of maintenance and interest costs charged
or quoted by landlords for any property. The
base rent comprises of only the payment made
for usage of the subject property under a lease
agreement. Imputed costs such as holding costs,
fit out costs and building service charges
are not usually included in the base rent.
Bayana An Indian term used
to denote the token money given to the landlord
to informally freeze negotiations on a particular
property, after the initial terms and conditions
have been formalised.
Breach of contract An act,
or omission, contrary to enforce specific performance
to rescind the contract and / or to claim damages,
the remedy available depending upon the nature
of the breach.
Broker/dealer A person or
company who acts as a medium of bringing owners
and proposed buyers together with a view to
complete a real estate transaction.
Brokerage 1. Commission paid
to a broker. 2. The activity of a broker in
bringing together two parties in a transaction.
Building bye laws Local authority
control of building standards promulgated to
regulate and control the usage of land, property
and areas in cities and towns.
Building contract A contract
between an owner or occupier of land and a
building contractor, setting forth the terms
under which construction is to be carried out,
basis of remuneration, time scale, and penalties,
if any, for failure to comply with terms of
the contract.
Business centre Commercial
premises usable by the occupiers for a short
period on a membership basis of the centre.
Usually, a business centre charges for the
full service accommodation, which is generally
substantially higher than the rental of a standard
office space and usually includes cost of HVAC,
housekeeping, electricity, and security systems.
Business park A landscaped
area containing high tech, other amenities
for business purposes, as distinct from high-tech
park or a science park. Building density is
lower than would be usual in a traditional
industrial estate. Business parks are preferentially
located where motorway, rail and airport communications
are within a short distance.
Buy-out rate In a funding
agreement between a developer and a prospective
purchaser, the pre-determined investment yield
which will be used to capitalize the annual
income receivable at the time of sale to determine
the buy out price.
Capitalisation
At a given date the conversion into
the equivalent capital worth of a series of
net receipts, actual or estimated, over a period.
A method of calculating a final purchase price
for a development using an agreed formula to
convert actual, or assumed, income from initial
lettings into a capitalism. Such capitalised
sums may be offset against a purchasing fund's
interim finance payments, any excess being
paid to the developer.
In relation to a company's reserves, the conversion
into capital of money, which is then distributed
as a capitalisation issue.
Catchment Area
Developer An entrepreneur who has an interest in a property, initiates its development and ensures, that this is carried out ( for occupation, investment or dealing) and from the outset accepts the responsibility for providing or procures the requisite funds needed to finance the whole project.
Development control The powers of a local planning authority to control the development and use of land, which includes inter alia:-Discounted cash flow analysis Techniques used in investment and development appraisal whereby future inflows and outflows of cash associated with a particular project are expressed in present-day terms by discounting. The most widely used forms of DCF are the internal rates of return (IRR) and net present value (NPV). The techniques may be used for such purposes as the valuation of land and investment, the ranking of projects or their components.
Easement (UK) A right appurtenant
to a parcel of land entitling a dominant owner
to use the land of the servient owner in a
particular manner, or constraining the legal
rights otherwise enjoyed by the servient owner,
eg. A right of way, right to light, right to
support. Strictly speaking, easements cannot
exist "in gross", ie personal and
unattached to the ownership of land, but rights
similar to easements can be created by statute,
usually for the benefit of public utility undertakings,
and these are commonly referred to as "statutory
easements".
Effective rent The gross rent
payable per month by the occupiers which includes
the base rent, maintenance charges, imputed
costs of loss of interest on security deposit
and rental advance. The effective rent indicates
the total cash outflow of an occupier every
month on account of leasing any property.
Equity linked mortgage A mortgage
whereby the interest on the principal in part
or in whole is calculated, usually yearly,
by reference on the security, eg. It may reflect
annual increase or possible decreases, in the
annual return on, or the value of, the property
in which the mortgage is secured.
Escalation clause Specified
in lease agreements wherein renewals of lease
period are built in. It involves an increment
in the base rent at every renewal of a lease
agreement and is generally a percentage rate
that is either pre agreed or negotiated before
the renewal of the lease agreement.
Facilities management The
co-ordination of many specialist disciplines
to create the optimum working environment for
staff.
Fail rent The rent determined
by a rent officer (or, on appeal, by a rent
assessment committee) under a regulated tenancy
and registered.
FERA An act to regulate certain
payments dealing in foreign exchange, securities,
the import & export of currency and acquisition
of immovable property by foreigners. Under
Section 31 (1) of the Foreign Exchange Regulation
Act ( FERA) of 1973, it is mandatory for foreign
corporations, which are not incorporated in
India to obtain permission from the Reserve
Bank Of India (RBI) to acquire, hold, transfer
or dispose off in any manner (expect by way
of lease for a period not exceeding five years)
any immovable property in India.
Fire certificate A certificate
covering matters of safety required under the
legislation for hotels, boarding houses, factories,
offices shops and railway premises, excluding
those buildings containing less than a minimum
number of employees. In order to obtain a fire
certificate,one must apply to a fire officer,
who then inspects the building and issues a
list of requirements (eg. Fire escape doors/stairways).
Once the fire officer is satisfied that those
requirements have been met he will issue the
fire certificate. It enables fire officers,
in the event of an emergency, to have prior
knowledge inter alia of the permitted number
of people on each floor; it also informs officials
if any authorised inflammables /explosives
materials are found on the premises.
Fitouts Relate to the interior
permanent furnishings required in a property
including HVAC ducting, fire protection system
implementation, establishment of workstations
and telephone/computer cabling among others,
in order to make the property fit for usage.
Flatted factory An industrial
building of more than one storey, usually with
two or more goods lifts, and constructed or
converted for multiple occupation. The building
is subdivided into small, separately occupied
units which are used for manufacturing, assembly
and associated storage.
Force majeure A force, which
cannot be resisted, in other words, something
beyond the control of the parties involved
. It includes acts of God and acts of man,
eg. Riots, strikes, arson. In many contracts
and insurance policies, specific provision
is made for damage or injury arising from force
majeure. For example, the financial liability
of a building contractor for failure to complete
by a specific date may be relieved to the extent
it was caused by force majeure. This is a common
clause in most property contracts.
Freehold In general parlance
this is used as shorthand for the tenure of
an estate in fee simple absolute in possession.
Strictly speaking, however, freehold includes
fee simple, entailed interests and tenancies
for life.
Frontage(line) The full length
of a plot of land or a building measured alongside
the road on to which the plot or building fronts.
In the case of contiguous buildings individual
frontages are usually measured to the middle
of any party wall.
Greased lease back The disposal
by a freehold or leasehold owner of his interest
on a property or leasehold interest where the
rent payable is geared to a fixed percentage
of some variables, often rack-rental value.
Gold cause (UK) A clause in
a lease which provides for the rent to be reviewed
with reference to the price of gold
Green field site An area of
land, usually in the edge of a town or city
or away from substantial urban areas, hitherto
undeveloped but for which development is now
proposed.
Gross External Area (GEA) The
aggregate superficial area of a building taking
each floor into account. As described in the
RICS/ISVA Code of Measuring Practice (UK),
this includes: external walls and projections,
internal walls and partitions, columns, piers,
chimney-breasts, stairwells, lift wells, tank
and plant rooms, fuel stores; whether or not
above main roof level and open-sided covered
areas and enclosed car-parking areas, terraces
etc.
Hi-tech building (high technology
building) Primarily a modern industrial building
which is particularly suited to the flexible
uses and space needs of business organisations
engaged in modern technologies. Such activities
usually require more office or laboratory space
than a traditional factory and also more sophisticated
and adaptable installations for services and
communications.
High point loading A
concentration of abnormally heavy floor-loading
at one point or more. Particular places in
a building or other structure where extra support
may be required.
HVAC Refers to the heating,
ventilation, air conditioning system installed
in a building to regulate temperature. This
includes air conditioning plants, chillers
and ducting systems, which ensure the uniform
transfer of the cold or hot air, as the case
may be throughout the building
Joint agent One or two or
more agents jointly instructed by a principal
to act on his behalf. In the case of estate
agents this is normally on the basis that if
any one of the agents effect the sale, letting
or other joint agent(s) will share the remuneration
in agreed proportions. None of these agents
would be entitled to a commission if the transaction
is concluded as a result of someone else's
introduction.
Joint sole agent One of two
or more agents jointly instructed as the only
agent entitled to represent the principal.
It is customary for the joint agents to share
any commission earned on an agreed basis, irrespective
of which agent effects the sale or letting.
Kiosk A small enclosed retailed outlet, normally without toilet facilities and in the retail area, frequently located in a public concourse or other place where it may remain open only during peak times and be closed securely when there are no customers. Kiosks are now sometimes included in managed shopping schemes.
Land assembly The process
of forming a single site from a number of lands,
usually for eventual development or redevelopment.
This will include acquisition of individual
interest and the eventual development or redevelopment,
removal or discharge of any restrictive covenants
or other encumbrances and obtaining physical
possession, when required, from occupiers.
Landlord The owner of an interest
in land who, in consideration of a rent or
other payment (eg. a premium), grants the right
to exclusive possession of the whole or part
of their land to another person for a specific
or determinable period by way of a lease or
tenancy.
Lease agreement An agreement,
usually written, between the lessor and the
lessee, which allows for the conveyance of
property to the tenant under a contract, and
confers usage and control rights to the tenant
for the duration of lease. Apart from financial
terms and conditions, several clauses describing
the other binding terms and conditions of the
agreement are also documented.
License The lawful grant of
a right to do something which would otherwise
be illegal or wrongful. It may be gratuitous,
contractual or coupled with an interest in
land. The grantor of license is the licensor
and the grantee is the licensee. A gratuitous
("mere" or "bare") license
can always be revoked (ie. cancelled), but
revocability of a contractual license depends
on the terms of the contract. A license coupled
with an interest in land may be irrevocable
and unlike the other two categories, may be
binding on successors in title of the licensor.
One example of license is permission, usually
required in writing, given specifically by
an owner to a tenant, enabling something to
be done which otherwise would be in breach
of a term of the lease. A license does not
itself transfer any interest in the land but
may authorise the licensee to enter the licensor's
land for some specific purposes of the license;
the licensor may enter the land and use it
in any way not inconsistent with the rights
of the licensee. However, a landlord may authorise
by license some act or omission by a tenant,
which would otherwise be a breach of the terms
of the lease.
Load bearing The capacity
of an element in a building structure to support
a weight in addition to its own, whether vertically
or laterally. Thus a load bearing wall is one
which supports part of the structure in addition
to its own weight.
Maintenance In property parlance,
the keeping of a building, structure or other
physical feature in a specified condition eg.
wind and weather tight conditions. The approved
cost of maintenance may be deductible for income
taxation.
Mattha Frontage of a building
with the main road.
Mortgage The conveyance of
a legal or equitable interest in freehold or
leasehold property as security for a loan and
with provision for redemption on repayment
of the loan. The lender (mortgagee) has powers
of recovery in the event of default by the
borrower (mortgagor). A mortgage is a form
of land charge and can be either legal or equitable.
Negotiation Discussion, written
or otherwise, between two or more parties of
different sides, the aim being to reach a common
agreement.
Non conforming use The use
of a property which does not conform to the
allocation of the area for planning purposes.
Such a property may have been built in conformity
with the planning requirement at the time and
a policy change ensued; more usually, the property
was constructed before planning control was
introduced.
Net present value method (NPV) A
method used in discounted cash flow analysis
to find the sum of money representing the difference
between the present value of all inflows and
outflows of cash associated with the project
by discounting each at a target yield.
Outgoings Costs incurred by the owner of an interest in property, usually calculated on a yearly basis. Eg. management, repairs, rates, insurance and rent payable to the holder of a superior interest, as appropriate to his contractual or other liabilities. It is prudent to make annual provision for future items involving expenditure at intervals of more than one year.
Patwari Usually denotes the
person appointed by a local government or land
authority to maintain and update land ownership
records for a specific area as well as to undertake
the collection of land taxes.
Penal rent A financial punishment
of a tenant for failing to honour his obligation
to pay rent at the proper time, taking the
form of a vastly higher figure being payable
during the period of default.
Pre-stressed concrete A type
of reinforced concrete in which all or some
of the ordinary steel reinforcement is replaced
by high-tensile steel bars or wires which are
tensioned by 'pre-tensioning' or 'post-tensioning'.
The number and positioning of wires or tendons
can be arranged to eliminate all tension in
the concrete, thereby preventing cracking and
so rendering the concrete water-tight and gas-tight
as well as increasing in durability. Pre-stressed
concrete structures can achieve greater spans
and carry higher loading.
Premium rent
Private treaty The most common
method of disposal of real property, in which
negotiations are carried out between the vendor
and prospective purchasers (or their respective
agents) privately and in comparative secrecy,
normally without any limit on the time within
which they must be completed, before contracts
are exchanged.
Project management (development management) The
leadership role which plans, budgets, co-ordinates,
monitors and controls the operational contributions
of property professionals, and others, in a
project involving the development of land in
accordance with a client's objectives in terms
of quality, cost and time.
Property investment trust A
public company, having certain tax advantages
and complying with rules applicable to its
operation and investment activities, managed
by a professional specialist team and established
for the purpose of acquiring mainly shares
in property companies-public or private. To
such an extent, as is permitted legally, without
prejudicing its beneficial tax treatment, it
may invest in other securities, own property
directly or undertake development. It provides
shareholders with an interest in a wide ranging
portfolio and the reassuring knowledge that
investment policy is in the hands of experts.
Property management The range
of functions concerned with looking after buildings,
including collection of rents, payment of outgoings,
maintenance including repair, provision of
services, insurance and supervision of staff
employed for services, together with negotiations
with tenants or prospective tenants. The extent
of and responsibility for management between
landlord and tenant depend on terms of the
lease(s). The landlord may delegate some or
all of these functions to managing agents.
Property portfolio management The
unified management of a group of properties
which are held in one ownership. Decisions
taken in respect of any issue are reached on
the basis of achieving the maximum benefit
for the owners, having regard to the effect
on the portfolio as a whole rather than on
an individual property.
Pugree An Indian term used
to describe an interest free security deposit
given to landlords which is refundable at the
expiry of the lease term to the outgoing tenant
by the successive tenant.
Qualified Covenant A restriction contained in a legal document which limits the rights of a person having an interest in the land but, by its wording envisages the possibility of removing the limitation on terms agreed between the parties eg. a covenant by a lessee not to assign or sublet without the landlord's written consent. In certain cases, such as the one quoted, statute law strengthens the applicant's position by importing such words as "such consent not to be unreasonably with-held".
Rack-rent A rent representing
the full, or nearly the full, letting value
of a property on a given set of terms and conditions
Rateable value The figure
upon which property tax is charged in India.
This value is determined by the tax authorities
and thereafter the tax liability is charged
to the owner(s) of the property on the basis
of certain pre-determined tax slab rates.
In order to qualify, a trust must, among other
requirements, be owned by at least 100 shareholders
and invest most of its capital in real estate
loans or properties and receive income in the
hands of shareholders
Real Estate Investment Trust (USA/UK) A
legally constituted organisation (entitled
to preferential tax treatment) which enables
investors to own and transfer shares of an
interest in a property or properties; the shares
can be dealt with in a manner similar to corporate
stock. In order to qualify, a trust must be
formed by at least 100 shareholders and invest
most of its capital in real estate loans or
properties and receive income from them. The
special feature is that such a trust reduces
its own taxable income by a distribution to
shareholders with no tax deducted, but this
is taxable income in the hands of shareholders
according to their own tax status. To maintain
the trust's right to gross distributions these
must, in aggregate, be equal to minimum of
90% of the total trust income.
Refurbishment Improvement
and modernisation of a building falling short
of rebuilding or redevelopment and thus not
normally requiring planning permission (other
than for alterations to the external appearance),
except in the case of listed buildings.
Registration and mutation: It
is mandatory for the sale deed of all high
value property transactions to be registered
at the regional sub registrar's office of the
local municipal authority. Thereafter, the
buyer has to apply for mutation, which involves
a change in the title records to incorporate
the name of the buyer of the property. In order
to complete the transfer of property, it is
mandatory for the seller to furnish or arrange
a valid "certificate of completion" issued
from the local municipal authority to the buyer.
Renewal As distinct from repair,
this is "reconstruction of the entirely
meaning not necessarily the whole subject matter".
Rent Act (s) Legislation promulgated
by various states in India, which regulates
the terms and conditions of the rental market
with a view to curb profiteering and hoarding.
Though its restrictive nature has not allowed
owners to enjoy economic returns from same
categories of property, thereby allowing market
inefficiencies.
Sale and leaseback An arrangement
whereby a freeholder or lessee sells his interest
in a property for an agreed sum and takes back
a lease on the whole or part of the property
from the purchaser, generally either at a rack
rent or at some lesser rent related to the
price paid.
Science park A development
of an industrial nature suited to accommodate
high technology, with supporting amenities,
which is associated on site with or is close
to a higher educational research establishment
to provide cross-fertilisation of ideas between
entrepreneurs and researchers for the purpose
of enabling academic knowledge to be applied
to effective commercial use.
Security deposit Comprises
of an interest free lump sum payment to the
landlord at the commencement of the lease,
which is refundable at the end of the lease
term. Though the deposit amount varies depending
on city, property type, location and the period
of the lease, it may range anywhere between
6 to 18 months of monthly rental. It is not
uncommon for some landlords to provide a bank
guarantee to the tenant as security for the
repayment of the initial deposit amount.
Serviced accommodation Suites
of offices or rooms where the landlord provides
a range of services within the individual premises
extending beyond the traditional ones associated
with the maintenance and management of the
building itself or the operation and maintenance
of the installation or plant therein eg. furniture,
telephone, fax machine, room cleaning, and/or
provides centralised specialised services,
such as a receptionist and secretarial and
communication facilities.
Shopping Mall A group of retail
outlets designed and built with ways for pedestrians
on one or more levels to form a unified whole
under one roof.
Site Plans A drawing of an
area of land, on a horizontal plane, showing
the boundaries and physical extent of the land
included in a particular parcel. It may also
show any existing buildings or the proposed
layout of a development.
Speculator A person (usually a dealer) who
undertakes a transaction in property, in expectation
of asking for a profit but with the risk of
not doing so.
Strata Title Freehold title
to a horizontal title above and/or below. Satisfactory
arrangements for management usually involve
a statutory obligation for the setting up of
a management corporation with responsibility
for the maintenance of common facilities and
areas.
Sub Leasing A method wherein,
the primary lessee of a property has the right
to further lease out a part or whole of the
property to another occupier or lessee. Essentially,
the right to sub lease is decided beforehand
at the time of signing the main lease agreement
and is with the consent of both the lessor
and the lessee.
Suspended ceiling A ceiling,
not being part of the structural framework
of a building, installed below the level of
the underside of the floor above or of the
roof. Commonly used to provide space for services
eg. cables, recessed lighting and piping; to
reduce the cost of heating in a room; to improve
the acoustics; or to produce more aesthetically
pleasing proportions.
Tax clearance (37-1) The
Income Tax Act, 1961 specifies that any lease
transaction for not less than 12 years or any
sale transaction, above a prescribed transaction
value limit tax, has to undergo a clearance
process from the appellate body known as the
Income Tax Appropriate Authority, constituted
under the Income Tax Act. A joint application
by the parties involved in the transaction
is submitted along with processing fees to
the Income Tax Authority, which takes upto
a maximum of three months to grant the clearance,
without which the sale transaction is not complete.
This procedure is popularly known as the 37-(I)
clearance, which is the application form number
used for this purpose.
Technology Park A landscaped
development usually comprising of high specification
office space as well as residential and retail
developments, designed to encourage localisation
of high technology companies such as information
technology, software development etc., thereby
giving each the benefit of economies of scale.
Usually, technology parks are located outside
the inner city areas as these are quite land
intensive in nature.
Tenant's improvements Improvements
to land or buildings to meet the needs of and
carried out wholly or partly at the expense
of the tenant.
Town and country planning The
determination of policy for the development
and use of land and the control of its implementations
in urban and rural areas by district and country
planning authorities.
Turnover rent A rent which
is calculated as a proportion of the annual
turnover of the lessee's business. Usually,
it does not fall below a base rent. More commonly
used in the USA, although in recent years being
applied with increasing frequency in the Europe
and the mature markets of Asia, especially
in the case of the more profitable retail outlets.
Uplifted rent A rent which
reflects lease terms which are more beneficial
to the tenant than prevailing commercial terms,
eg. a higher rent to reflect, say, 14-yearly
reviews, rather than the more common five-yearly
reviews.
Urban Land Ceiling and Regulation Act (ULCRA)
A legislation promulgated in 1976 as a social
equity measure with a view to curb profiteering
and hoarding in the urban land market as well
as prevent urban congestion.
Urban centers i.e. cities
were classified into categories such as A,
B and C and a ceiling on the maximum permissible
usage on land by respective owners was set
under provisions of the act.
User 1. The use or enjoyment
of a property or of a right over property.
User 2. A person who uses,
enjoys or has a right over a property.
Vaastu shastra A traditional Indian architecture and design system, which specifies the detailed methodology of designing buildings, buying land etc. in order to maximise benefits, from the same for the occupier. This system relies in harmonising any real estate development with the five elements of Indian Mythology namely air, water, earth, fire and space.
ValuationValue The price that might
an interested in property or some other asset
might reasonably be expected to fetch if disposed
of at right
Vertical slice participation A
method of multi-participation in a venture,
usually a development, whereby each of the
participants owns a separate legal interest
in the whole of the property concerned by way
of the freehold, head lease or a subordinate
interest. The documentation normally ensures
that rental and other income and /or capital
receipts as well as the cost of any revenue
or capital liabilities are shared by the participants
in predetermined percentages related to their
respective contributions, whether financial
or otherwise.
Warehouse Premises designed
and built for the purpose of bulk storage of
raw materials or finished or partly finished
goods, pending either onward transit or division
into smaller batches and subsequent distribution.
Willing seller-willing buyer An
assumption sometimes made for valuation purposes
that the owner of the property concerned is
willing to dispose of his interest therein
and that there is at least one genuine purchaser
in the market for that interest, whether or
not such is actually the case at the date of
valuation.
Written-down value At a given
time, the result of making one or more annual
of periodic deductions for depreciation against
capital cost or worth.
Xystus 1. A covered colonnade, as originally used for exercise by Greek athletes. 2. A garden walk, usually bordered by trees.
Yield up Give up possession, especially by the tenant at the end of a lease.
Zone A defined area of land
or part of a building which is allocated for
a particular purpose, eg. development plans
may allocate areas of land for different uses
or values of property may distinguish between
areas of floorspace of a building and ascribe
different values to them.
Zoning In planning terms,
the dividing of an area by a local planning
authority into zones for particular uses or
activities.