Yes, the nature of the structure does not change.
A single family dwelling is one designed to be occupied by a single family as opposed to, say, a condominium or apartment building which is expected to be occupied by two or more distinct families. The term refers to the building itself, not necessarily how it's used (some locations may have laws restricting the number of unrelated people who can live in a single family dwelling).
A single family dwelling is a living space designed for one family. It is a house or trailer even, not an apartment.
No. A multi-family dwelling is comprised of multiple units in the same building intended to be occupied by separate family units. Someone who owned a unit comprised of 6 rented apartments would own a multi-family dwelling. The example you gave would still be an SFR (single family residence)
private single family houses
Zoning regulations concerning density allowed often make reference to the number of residential dwelling units that can be built on each acre of land (an acre of land is 43, 560 square feet of land). The residential zoning density or units allowed per acres will usually vary be the type of residential development being proposed (e,g., single family detached homes, town homes, or condominiums).
Yes, patio homes are considered a single family dwelling. They are also apartments, condos, duplexes, triplexes, etc., or any home that has a patio.
Depends on size. A group home is probably not in one small enough to be considered single family.
63010 - Single Family Dwelling
A single family dwelling is one designed to be occupied by a single family as opposed to, say, a condominium or apartment building which is expected to be occupied by two or more distinct families. The term refers to the building itself, not necessarily how it's used (some locations may have laws restricting the number of unrelated people who can live in a single family dwelling).
A single family dwelling is a living space designed for one family. It is a house or trailer even, not an apartment.
private single family houses
Single family home or unit.
No. A multi-family dwelling is comprised of multiple units in the same building intended to be occupied by separate family units. Someone who owned a unit comprised of 6 rented apartments would own a multi-family dwelling. The example you gave would still be an SFR (single family residence)
When you are renting it out as a business.
Yes, they can. The proper name for that would be extended family household.
The property line for dwelling "A" butts up to the dwelling of"B". the land belongs to A and it goes on that way through out the neighborhood
Your question is complex. First, the elevator serves owned apartments in a condominium building. Then the elevator may be known as a limited common element. Since the elevator serves both units, the location of the 'single family dwelling' is unclear. (Both apartments are condominium units; neither is commonly described as a 'single family dwelling'.)