We must decide the constitutionality of a local zoning ordinance concerning adult businesses. Steven A. Diamond (“Diamond”), prospective owner of an adult bookstore, sued the City of Taft (“Taft”) challenging the constitutionality of Taft’s zoning ordinance restricting the loсations in which adult businesses can operate. The district court found the ordinance constitutional. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
Taft is a small rural town in Kern County, California, with a population of about 6,800. In 1995, it amended its existing adult entertainment zoning ordinance to modify the locational restrictions on adult businesses. 1 The new ordinance provides that adult entertainment businesses are permissible only in zones designated commercial-1 (“C-l”), commercial-2 (“C-2”), manufacturing-1 (“M-l”), and manufacturing-2 (“M-2”), and may not be located within 1000 feet of any area zoned for residеntial use, any other adult entertainment business, any public or private school, park, playground, public building, church, commercial establishment operated by a bona fide religious organization, or any establishment “likely to be used by minors.” See Taft Mun.Code §§ 6-31-3, 6-31-4 (1995). 2
*1055 Diamond owns a building on Center Street in Taft. He ran a pawn shop in the building for a number of years. In 1995, he decided to close the pawn shop and open an adult bookstore. Diamond’s building does not meet the requirements of the ordinance because, although it is zoned C-2, it is within 1000 feet of parks, churches, and residences. Nevertheless, Diamond applied to Taft to use it for an adult business. After Taft rejected his proposal, he sued, seeking an injunction prohibiting Taft from enforcing the ordinance, along with monetary damages.
The district court found the ordinance constitutional. As in our related case of
Lim v. City of Long Beach,
At trial, Taft presented evidence that there were 20 potential alternative locations for adult businesses. The district court found that sites 1 through 6 met the requirements of the ordinance. Because sites 1-6 are located close together along the same street, the district court found that adult businesses cоuld simultaneously be located only at site 1 and site 6. The district court also found that site 21 met the requirements of the ordinance. Site 21 is not within 1000 feet of sites 1-6. Thus, the district court concluded that because of the 1,000 foot requirement a total of three sites — 1, 6, and 21 — could be operated simultaneously. As Diamond was the only person who had ever sought to open an adult business in Taft, the district court found that these three sites were constitutionally sufficient alternative avenues of communication.
See Diamond,
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The district court’s findings of fact are reviеwed for clear error,
see Valley Eng’rs, Inc. v. Electric Eng’g Co.,
ALTERNATIVE AVENUES OF COMMUNICATION
Diamond contends that Taft did not allow for alternative avenues of communication because it did not provide Diamond with a “reasonable opportunity to open and operate ... within the city.”
Renton,
*1056 A. Actual Business Real Estate Market
Diamond argues that the sites proffered by Taft are not part of the actual business real estate market because (1) they lack the required infrastructure, and (2) some of the properties are occupied.
Diamond asserts that sites 1, 6, and 21 lack proper infrastructure because they do not have sidewalks or streetlights. In
Topanga Press,
we stated that areas in manufacturing zones may be inсluded in the actual business real estate market as long as they have proper infrastructure.
By merely asserting that the sites lacked proper infrastructure, Diamond did not show that the sites were “inadequate for any generic commercial entеrprise.”
Topanga Press,
Diamond next argues that sites 1 and 6 were not part of the actual business real estate market because they were currently occupied. As we stated in Lim, a city cannot merely point to a random assortment of properties and assert that they form the basis of the actual real estate market. Slip op. аt 1055. However, Taft made a reasonable and good faith attempt to designate numerous sites, including sites 1 and 6, as part of the actual business real estate market by providing “pertinent, specific and detailed information about each site.” Lim, at 1055. Despitе the current unavailability of these sites, Diamond did not offer sufficient evidence to show that these sites would not reasonably become available to any commercial enterprise. 3 As such, he did not rebut Taft’s evidence. We assume that sites 1 and 6 will reasonably become available and we include them in the actual business real estate market.
B. Sufficiency of Alternative Sites
As we stated in
Lim,
at 1056, once the relevant market is defined, we must then determine whether the market contains a sufficient number of potential relocation sites for this adult business. Our overriding concern is that a city cannot “effectively deny[ ] [adult businesses] a reasonable opportunity to open and operate ... within the city....”
Renton,
There is no constitutional requirement that a city make available a certain number of sites.
See Lakeland Lоunge of Jackson, Inc. v. City of Jackson, Miss.,
Diamond argues that the district court erred in finding that three sites were sufficient to allow him to open his business. We conclude that the proper measure of sufficiency is not the three sites that could exist simultaneously, but the total sevеn sites that are available under the ordinance. 4
Because Diamond is the first person to seek to open an adult business in Taft, we need not worry about the forced relocation of existing adult businesses. In
Young v. American Mini Theatres, Inc.,
This might be a different case if Taft’s ordinance required the closing and relocation of Taft’s only adult business. In
Walnut Properties,
we held unconstitutional an ordinance that forced the closing of the only adult business within the city.
Because Diamond is the first person to seek to open an adult business in Taft, we also need not be concerned that the ordinаnce prohibits adult businesses from being located within 1,000 feet of one another. As the first person to seek to open an adult business in Taft, Diamond is not limited by the 1,000-foot restriction in choosing a site for his business. He can choose among all seven sites. Others who follow Diamond will be limited by the restriction, but he is not. Under these cir- *1058 cumstanees, we need only examine the total number of sites available. 5
Generally, in cases where there is a restriction on the distance between adult businesses, a proper measure of sufficiency can only include the number of sites that could coexist because the total acreage of land in the relevant real estate market does not determine the number of sites available to adult businesses.
See, e.g., Walnut Properties,
Under these circumstances, however, we are only concerned with Diamond’s ability to open an adult business. Because Diamond can choose among all seven potentially available sites as a location for his adult business, the potential availability of seven sites in a community of the size of Taft is sufficient to allow Diamond an opportunity to open and operate. Therefore, the ordinance is constitutional.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Taft began placing zoning restrictions on adult businesses in 1986.
See Diamond v. City of Taft,
. The ordinance also required that a conditional use permit ("CUP”) be approved by Taft Council for any prospectivе adult entertainment business even if that business con *1055 forms to the locational and distance requirements. The CUP was invalidated by the district court and is not a subject of this appeal.
. Unlike the Plaintiffs in
Lim,
Diamond was given an opportunity to present evidence that the properties would not reasonably become available. Diamond offered evidence that site 6 was occupied by Kern Electric and Supply Company. The district court found the evidence offered by Diamond unreliable and insufficient. See
Diamond,
. In arriving at our conclusion, we do not examine whether three sites would be sufficient to allow Diamond a reasonable opportunity to open and operate. We reiterate, however, that the touchstone here is reasonableness. An easy example reveаls how a small ratio of sites to adult businesses may not allow an adult business a reasonable opportunity to open and operate. Assume one adult business in a city must relocate under a new zoning ordinance. Under
Topanga Press,
a site with a restrictive lease banning adult businеsses may be included in the actual business real estate market.
. Although
Walnut Properties
suggests that the separation requirement between adult businesses should be taken into account even where only one adult business is affected,
