There shall be provided and maintained between any nonresidential
district and between any multiple-family and single-family residential
districts and between certain uses listed in this section an obscuring
screening device of the type set forth and regulated in this section.
A. Screening devices permitted.
(1) Architectural masonry screen wall with cap.
B. Where required. An obscuring screening device shall be provided and
maintained between:
(1) Any one-family residential district and any mobile home park district;
(2) Any one-family residential district and any multiple-family residential
district;
(3) Any residential district and any office district;
(4) Any residential district and any commercial district;
(5) Any residential district and any industrial district;
(6) Any residential district and a parking district and between any off-street
parking areas of nonresidential uses permitted in a residential district
next to or across a street from any residential uses;
(7) Any hospital emergency entrance and any residential district;
(8) Any utility building, utility stations or substations and any residential
or office district.
C. Height requirements. The height of an obscuring screening device
shall be in accordance with the following specifications:
(1) In those instances outlined in §
370-81B(1),
(2),
(3) and
(4) of this article, a minimum of six feet in height, including the cap.
(2) In the instance outlined in §
370-81B(6) of this article, a minimum of four foot six inches in height, including the cap.
(3) In the instance outlined in §
370-81B(7), four feet six inches, except in the case of a hospital or medical clinic emergency entrance, or ambulance delivery area, and in the case of public utility buildings with outdoor substations, eight feet.
(4) In the instance outlined in §
370-81B(8), a minimum height of six feet, or to a sufficiently greater height to effectively screen outdoor storage areas from view, except in no case shall a screening device designed and intended to screen outdoor storage exceed a height of 12 feet, unless the screen consists of natural features, such as sharp changes in topography or heavy natural foliage, all of which shall exist on the property of the use it is intended to screen.
D. Location on property line. Required screen walls and landscaped earth
berms shall be located on the property line, except where underground
utilities interfere and except in those instances where this chapter
requires conformance with front yard setback lines in abutting residential
districts. When the property line of a nonresidential district abuts
the rear or side lot line of a residential district, the six-foot
height of the screening device shall terminate at the minimum applicable
building setback line of the abutting residential property. Thereafter,
the screening device shall extend towards the intersecting property
line at a height of three feet, except no screening device shall extend
closer than six feet to the intersecting property line. Any request
or necessity for locating a screen wall or landscaped earth berm other
than along a property line shall require review and approval of an
alternate location by the Building Department or by the Planning Commission.
The Building Department or the Planning Commission, in making its
review of alternate screen wall or earth berm locations, shall consider
the following:
(1) Ability of the screen wall to maintain continuity beyond the property
line;
(2) Effectiveness of the screen wall or earth berm to screen effectively
in an alternate location; and
(3) Impact an alternate location may have on site drainage, overall site
appearance and the functional well-being of the development proposed
for the property.
E. Replacing existing fences or screening devices. Whenever the location
of a screening device shall require the removal or detaching of an
existing wall, fence, planting screen or landscaped earth berm, that
wall, fence, planting screen or landscaped earth berm shall be replaced,
restored, attached or reattached to the new screening device by those
responsible for erecting the new screening device.
F. Openings for pedestrian and vehicular traffic. A screening device
may be constructed with openings that do not in any square section
(height and width) exceed 20% of the surface. Where a screening device
is so pierced, the openings shall be spaced so as to maintain the
obscuring character of the screen and shall not reduce the minimum
required height of the screening device. The arrangement of the openings
shall be subject to review and approval by the Building Department
or by the Planning Commission.
Whenever a screen wall structure is to be used as a screening
device, it shall be an architectural masonry structure consisting
of the following materials.
A. Reinforced concrete or concrete block with face brick on both sides
of the wall. If the exterior walls of the principal use on the property
shall contain any face brick material, the face brick on the screen
wall structure shall consist of the same brick.
B. Reinforced concrete with a brick-etched appearance on both sides
of the wall.
C. Natural stone materials or reinforced concrete or concrete block
with cultured stone on both sides of the wall.
D. Reinforced concrete panel walls, so long as the vertical posts are
concrete as well and are the same color as the panels they will support.
E. All masonry screen wall structures permitted in this section, including
concrete panel walls and brick-etched concrete walls, shall include
a cap. The cap shall be a vee type of cap that shall consistently
extend along the entire top of the wall. The angle of the vee shall
not be less than 45° so that it will quickly shed water and discourage
walking on top of the cap. The vee cap shall extend out beyond the
vertical sides of the wall.
F. Screen wall structures with exposed reinforced concrete surfaces
may be stained or may be made colorfast by mixing the color into the
concrete. They may not be painted. When stained or made colorfast,
the color shall be of an earth tone.
G. Reinforced concrete panel walls shall be composed of heavy-duty panels,
the size and weight of which shall require installation by machine.
H. No screen wall structure shall consist of exposed cinder or cement
block, also known as concrete masonry units (CMU). Wood or wood products
are specifically prohibited as a screen wall material.
I. All screen walls shall be found by the Building Department to consist
of durable, weather resistant, rust proof and easily maintained materials.
J. When a screen wall structure is placed next to an off-street parking
space or parking spaces, it shall be protected by bumper blocks, a
guardrail constructed next to but physically independent from the
screen wall structure, or by other means acceptable to the Building
Department.
K. All screen wall structures shall be maintained at all times in a
structurally sound condition, neat, orderly and attractive in appearance.
All screen wall structures shall be kept free of graffiti.
SCREEN WALL ILLUSTRATIONS
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TRANSITION DETAILS BERM ILLUSTRATIONS
|
The Building Department or the Planning Commission may permit,
in place of an architectural masonry screen wall, a landscaped earth
berm, provided the earth berm shall have a minimum height of not less
than that required for a screen wall. An earth berm shall also:
A. Have a side slope no steeper than three on one (three feet of horizontal
plane for each foot of vertical rise);
B. Consist of undulating top and side slopes;
C. Have a crest at the top of the earth berm of not less than two feet
across;
D. Include an adequately designed drainage swale on the property line
side of the berm to accommodate stormwater runoff. The drainage swale
shall be subject to review and approval by the City Engineer and,
where warranted, by the Macomb County Drain Commission;
E. Be seeded or covered with sod so as to prevent erosion of the sides
of the earth berm and be attractively landscaped with plant materials
acceptable to the City. The Building Department or the Planning Commission
in making its review of the landscape planting plan for the earth
berm may require installation of an automated irrigation system to
properly maintain the landscaping materials on the earth berm. All
landscape materials approved by the Building Department or the Planning
Commission for the earth berm shall be maintained in a living, growing
condition, neat and orderly in appearance.
F. In order to properly screen an area effectively, the ends of a landscaped earth berm may be required by the Building Department or the Planning Commission to include an architectural masonry screen wall extension at the ends of the berm structure. The structure would be made an integral part of the berm and would extend out from the top of the earth berm to a peripheral property line or driveway entrance, and shall be subject to the applicable requirements of this article pertaining to screen wall structures, and the restricted clear corner vision requirements as set forth in §
370-104, Corner clearance, in this chapter.
G. Wherever an earth berm abuts any part of an off-street parking space
or parking spaces, or a service drive, it shall be placed behind a
raised concrete curb.
The Building Department or the Planning Commission may permit,
in place of an architectural masonry screen wall structure or a landscaped
earth berm, the placement of a planting screen, when the following
conditions are deemed to exist on the property.
A. This screening alternative may be permitted only when it can be shown
that a screen wall structure or a landscaped earth berm cannot be
used due to unusual circumstances. Unusual circumstances may include;
(1) Severe soil or topographic conditions in the area of the property
where a screening device is required which precludes erecting an architectural
masonry screen wall structure or a landscaped earth berm; or
(2) Dense foliage, which ought to be preserved, and which can augment
an effective planting screen that exists on the property where a screening
device is required, and which would be diminished or destroyed by
the erection of a masonry screen wall structure or landscaped earth
berm; or
(3) For aesthetic purposes, a planting screen will create a more pleasing
buffer between a one-family residential district and a multiple-family
residential district than an architectural masonry screen wall structure
or a landscaped earth berm.
B. The planting screen, where permitted, shall consist of densely placed evergreen planting materials, the minimum height of which, at the time of planting, shall be not less than the minimum height required for a screen wall structure, and shall be planted and maintained in accordance with the landscape screening requirements of §
370-84, Landscaped planting screen, in this article.
The building wall of an existing or proposed building may serve
as a screening device or partial element of a screen wall when the
wall shall generally parallel the parcel line or district line along
which a screen is required by this article, provided:
A. The building wall shall be at least six feet in height along its
entire length;
B. The building wall shall consist of architectural masonry materials,
shall have no openings, and shall have no other accessory buildings,
uses or functions, including loading and unloading facilities or any
outdoor materials storage, located between the building wall and the
property or zoning district line;
C. The yard area between the building wall and the property line shall
consist of a landscaped lawn area that may include trees and shrubs
placed for aesthetic purposes;
D. All landscaping shall be maintained in a healthy growing condition,
neat and orderly in appearance.
After review, the Building Department or the Planning Commission
may approve one of the screening alternatives set forth in this article
or a combination thereof. The Building Department or the Planning
Commission may also recommend to the Roseville Zoning Board of Appeals
(ZBA) that the screening requirements of this article be varied or
waived, provided it is determined that at least one of the following
conditions exists on the property:
A. The abutting residential district for which a screening device is
required is determined to be an area in land use transition and which
is likely to become a nonresidential district in the future. The Building
Department or the Planning Commission shall rely on the land use recommendations
of the Roseville Master Plan Map when evaluating the future use of
the land abutting the subject property.
B. Changes in topographic conditions between the nonresidential and
residential lands that are to be screened is such that a screen wall
structure or landscaped earth berm, as set forth and regulated in
this article, will not screen effectively and therefore will serve
no useful purpose. The planting screen alternative may be applicable
in such instances.
C. Sufficient natural vegetation exists along the common property line
between the nonresidential district and the affected residential district
to serve as an equally effective or better screen than the required
screen wall or any of the other permitted screening devices would
provide. The Building Department or the Planning Commission, in determining
this alternative, shall:
(1) Find the existing foliage to be extensive enough to create an effective
year-round screen; and
(2) Require documentation, in writing, from the landowner that the natural
screen will be preserved and maintained as a natural screen for as
long as a screening device shall be required by the City for the property.
The Building Department or the Planning Commission, in reviewing the
effectiveness of a natural screen, may require the placement of additional
planting materials to augment the screening capability of the natural
foliage.
GREENBELT PLANTING SCREEN ILLUSTRATIONS
|
The purpose of this article is to establish minimum standards
for the development, installation and maintenance of pervious landscaped
areas within all cluster housing, multiple-family and all nonresidential
districts and for all nonresidential uses permitted in a residential
district. This article further recognizes that the proper management
and use of trees, plants and other types of vegetation will improve
the appearance, value, character and quality of the living environment
in Roseville and promote resourceful site planning and creative design.
To this end, the regulatory standards set forth in this article are
established.
Wherever in this article a landscape planting screen is permitted
or landscape planting materials are required, such landscape planting
materials shall be subject to the following conditions:
A. All planting screens and landscape planting materials shall be planted
in accordance with an approved planting plan and planted to completion
prior to issuance of a certificate of occupancy by the Building Department.
If a use is ready for occupancy between April 1 and September 30,
a certificate of occupancy may be issued. If a use is ready for occupancy
between October 1 and March 31, a temporary certificate of occupancy
may be issued; however, all required planting materials should be
placed to completion within 60 days after March 31. Failure to have
such required planting material placed to completion within 60 days
after March 31 shall be grounds for termination or revocation of a
temporary certificate of occupancy. No additional certificate of occupancy,
either temporary or final, shall be issued thereafter until all required
landscape planting materials are placed to completion. A period of
establishment shall start at the completion of all planting and shall
continue through the succeeding summer growing season of June, July
and August as set forth in this section.
B. Whenever any aesthetic planting areas or permitted planting screens approach a street or driveway intersection, the restricted clear corner vision requirements of §
370-104, Corner clearance, in this chapter shall be observed; however, in all cases, care shall be taken relative to plant material, height and location so as not to impede the view of pedestrians or motor vehicle traffic.
C. Trees of a species whose roots are known to cause damage to public
roadways or other public utilities shall not be planted closer than
12 feet to such roadway or public utility unless the tree root system
is completely contained within a barrier, for which the minimum interior
containing dimensions shall be five feet square and five feet deep,
and for which the construction requirements shall be four-inch-thick
concrete reinforced with No. 6 road mesh (six inches by six inches
by six inches, or equivalent).
D. Ground cover used in lieu of grass shall be planted in such a manner
that it will not exceed spacing from eight inches to 10 inches on
center, depending on the material used and its growth rate, so as
to provide reasonably complete coverage.
E. Grass areas shall be planted and grown as permanent lawns. Lawns
may be seeded and mulched or covered with sod and shall be protected
from erosion until the coverage is permanently established.
F. To prevent vehicular encroachment, including vehicle overhang onto
or into landscaped areas, including lawns, planting materials in areas
involving motor vehicles shall be protected by the use of wheel stops,
raised concrete curbs, or other satisfactory and acceptable methods
of barrier.
G. All open ground areas on any site, including pervious surfaces used
in the calculation of lot coverage requirements, yard areas, open
ground areas disturbed by construction, and other similar areas where
such landscaping is appropriate and feasible, shall be provided with
coverage of grass, ground cover, shrubs, or other approved landscaping
material. Materials that prevent or inhibit to an unreasonable extent
the percolation of water into the soil shall be considered unacceptable
materials for the treatment of these areas.
H. Trees and shrubs shall be provided with a minimum thickness of at
least two inches of mulch no less than at least 24 inches beyond the
trunks or stems of all newly planted trees and shrubs. Such mulch
shall be provided at the time of planting and shall be maintained
and resupplied as needed thereafter.
I. All landscaped areas shall be maintained by an automated in-ground
irrigation system approved by the Building Department. Individual
planters and isolated planting areas shall have appropriate irrigation
sources provided within each separate planting area.
J. All irrigation systems shall be maintained in an operable condition
capable of providing adequate irrigation to landscaped areas as required.
All inoperable irrigation systems and components thereof shall be
promptly repaired or replaced so that adequate coverage of landscaped
areas is restored and maintained.
K. All planting materials shall be properly planted so as to be in a
healthy, growing condition at the time of establishment. All planting
material shall consist of permanent, living plant materials and, when
planted to completion, shall thereafter be maintained in an attractive
and presentable condition, free of weeds, refuse and debris, and shall
be continuously maintained in a sound, healthy and vigorous growing
condition, free of plant diseases and insect pests.
L. Top pruning or other severe pruning or maintenance practices of landscaping materials that results in stunted, abnormal, or other unreasonable deviation from the normal healthy growth of trees, shrubs, and other required landscaping components shall be considered as the destruction of these materials, and replacement shall be required as described in this division. Failure of the owner of the property to maintain the premises in good condition, as set forth in Subsection
K of this section, shall make the owner liable for the applicable penalties set forth by this chapter.
M. All plant materials shall meet current American Association of Nurserymen
standards.
N. No approved landscaped area shall be abandoned, paved over, encroached
upon by vehicular traffic, or otherwise used without submission of
a site plan to and approval by the Building Department or the Planning
Commission pursuant to the procedures set forth in this article.
Whenever a landscaped earth berm or landscape planting screen
is permitted under the provisions of this article, a detailed planting
plan of such screen shall be submitted to the Building Department
or to the Planning Commission for review and approval prior to issuance
of a building permit. The planting plan shall be drawn to the same
scale as the site plan and shall accurately depict the location, spacing,
starting size and identification by botanical and common name of each
type of plant material proposed for use within the required screening
area. Detailed plans shall be submitted in accordance with the following:
A. The minimum scale of the drawing shall be one inch equals 30 feet,
or the same scale as the site plan involved, if a requirement for
site plan approval.
B. Existing and proposed contours shall be depicted with contour intervals
not to exceed two feet.
C. The planting plan shall indicate the location, size, spacing and
root type (bare root, balled in burlap, or container-grown) of all
plant materials.
D. Where an earth berm is used in conjunction with a planting screen,
the planting plan shall provide typical cross-section drawings depicting
the slope, height and width of the berm and the type of ground cover
intended to be placed on it. If architectural masonry screen walls
are used in conjunction with an earth berm, the height of the wall
and the type of materials to be used in the construction of the wall,
as well as the type of materials to be used in the wall footings,
shall be shown in cross-section format.
E. The planting plan shall depict significant construction details,
where applicable, to reflect specific site conditions, e.g., tree
wells to preserve existing trees, culverts to maintain natural drainage
patterns, etc.
F. The planting plan shall indicate existing tree cover that is to be
used in conjunction with or in place of the screen planting requirements
of this article, including types of trees and overall tree height.
The planting plan shall be reviewed by the Building Department
or by the Planning Commission for conformance with the following guidelines:
A. The proper types, spacing, height, placement and location of plant
materials relative to the length and width of the screen so as to
insure that the required horizontal and vertical obscuring of the
land use it is intended to screen will be at least 60% obscured at
the time of planting.
B. The choice and selection of plant materials so as to ensure that
root systems will not interfere with public utilities and so that
fruit and other debris, except leaves, will not constitute a nuisance
within public rights-of-way or to abutting property owners.
C. The choice and selection of plant materials so as to ensure that
the type of planting materials selected will be of a type that will
thrive in the area in which they are to be located.
D. The proper relationship between deciduous and evergreen plant materials
exists so as to assure that the desired obscuring effect will be accomplished.
E. The size of plant material (both starting and ultimate) is sufficient
to ensure adequate maturity and optimum screening effect of the proposed
plant materials.
F. Compliance with the applicable landscape design principles set forth
in this article.
A. Landscape planting screens, when permitted as an alternative to a
masonry screening wall structure or landscaped earth berm, or in conjunction
with either, shall consist of diversified planting materials and shall
be laid out in conformance with the following guidelines:
(1) Plant materials, except creeping-vine-type planting materials, shall
not be located within four feet of the property line.
(2) Where plant materials are placed in two or more rows, they shall
be staggered in rows.
(3) Evergreen trees shall not be less than six feet in height. When planted
in informal groupings, they shall be spaced no less than 10 feet on
center. When spaced further apart, additional screen planting materials
shall be used to achieve the desired screening effect intended by
this article. When planted in rows, they shall be planted not less
than 10 feet on center.
(4) Narrow evergreen trees shall not be less than six feet in height
at the time of planting. When planted in informal groupings, they
shall be spaced not more than 10 feet on center. When planted in rows,
they shall be planted not more than four feet on center.
(5) Except as otherwise restricted in §
370-104, Corner clearance, in this chapter, large shrubs shall not be less than 30 inches in height. When planted in informal groupings, they shall be spaced not more than six feet on center. When planted in single rows, they shall not be spaced more than four feet on center.
(6) Small shrubs shall not have a spread of less than 18 inches, and
shall not be planted more than four feet on center.
(7) Deciduous trees shall not be less than 2 1/2 inches in trunk
caliper. For the purpose of this section, the caliper of the trunk
shall be taken six inches above ground level, up to and including
four-inch caliper size and 12 inches above the ground level for larger
trees. When placed in informal groupings, they shall be planted not
more than 30 to 35 feet on center.
(8) Small deciduous trees shall not be less than two inches in trunk caliper, measured in the same manner as set forth in Subsection
A(7) of this section. When planted in informal groupings, they shall be spaced not more than 15 feet on center.
TREE CALIPER SIZE
|
|
Recommended Distances Between Like and Unlike Plant Materials
|
---|
|
Plant Material Types
|
Evergreen Trees
(feet)
|
Narrow Evergreen Trees
(feet)
|
Large Deciduous Trees
(feet)
|
Small Deciduous Trees
(feet)
|
Large Shrubs
(feet)
|
Small Shrubs
(feet)
|
---|
|
Evergreen Trees
|
Minimum 10
Maximum 20
|
Minimum 12
|
Minimum 20
|
Minimum 12
|
Minimum 6
|
Minimum 5
|
|
Narrow Evergreen Trees
|
Minimum 12
|
Minimum 5
Maximum 10
|
Minimum 15
|
Minimum 10
|
Minimum 5
|
Minimum 4
|
|
Large Deciduous Trees
|
Minimum 20
|
Minimum 15
|
Minimum 20
Maximum 30
|
Minimum 5
|
Minimum 15
|
Minimum 3
|
|
Small Deciduous Trees
|
Minimum 12
|
Minimum 10
|
Minimum 15
|
Minimum 8
Maximum 15
|
Minimum 6
|
Minimum 3
|
|
Large Shrubs
|
Minimum 6
|
Minimum 5
|
Minimum 5
|
Minimum 6
|
Minimum 4
Maximum 6
|
Minimum 5
|
|
Small Shrubs
|
Minimum 5
|
Minimum 4
|
Minimum 3
|
Minimum 3
|
Minimum 5
|
Minimum 3
|
B. Plant materials.
(1) Suggested (not required) plant material:
(a)
Trees:
[1]
Evergreen: Abies (fir), Picea (spruce), Pinus (pine), Psuedostuga
(Douglas fir), Tsuga (hemlock). Note: Exceptions are dwarf, globe,
pendulous specie/cultivars.
[2]
Narrow evergreen: Juniperus (juniper), Thuja (arborvitae). Note:
Exceptions are dwarf, globe, spreading specie/cultivars.
[3]
Large deciduous: Acer (maple, except Japanese), Betula (birch),
Gleditsia (honey locust, thornless cultivars only), Gingko (ginkgo),
Platanus (sycamore, linden), Quercus (oak), Tulip tree (Liriodendron),
Linden (Tilia).
[4]
Small deciduous: Amelanchier (juneberry), Cercis (redbud), Cornus
(dogwood, tree form), Crataegus (hawthorn), Malus (crabapple, disease-resistant
cultivars), Prunus (flowering plum, tree form), Pyrus (flowering pear),
Syringa (lilac, tree form).
(b)
Large shrubs:
[1]
Deciduous/broadleaf evergreen: Cornus (dogwood, shrub form),
Cotoneaster (cotoneaster), Forsythia (forsythia), Lonicera (honeysuckle),
Philadelphus (mock orange), Prunus (flowering plum), Rhamnus (buckthorn),
Rhus (sumac), Spiraea (spirea), Syringa (lilac), Viburnum (viburnum),
Weigela (weigela). Note: Defined as plants maturing at five feet and
up.
[2]
Evergreen: Juniperus (hetzii, pfitzer, savin juniper), Taxus
cuspidata "Capitata" (pyramidal Japanese yew). Note: Defined as plants
maturing at five feet and up.
(c)
Small shrubs:
[1]
Deciduous/broadleaf evergreen: Berberis (barberry), Buxus (boxwood),
Chaenomeles (quince), Cotoneaster (cotoneaster), Euonymus (euonymus),
Forsythia (forsythia), Hydrangea (hydrangea), Ilex (holly), Ligustrum
(privet), Lonicera (honeysuckle), Potentilla (potentilla), Ribes (currant),
Salix (willow), Spiraea (spirea), Syringa (lilac), Viburnum (viburnum),
Weigela (weigela). Note: Defined as plants maturing under five feet.
[2]
Evergreen: Abies (fir), Chamaecyparis (false cypress), Juniperus
(low spreading juniper), Picea (spruce), Pinus (pine), Taxus (globe,
spreading, upright yew), Thuja (globe/dwarf arborvitae).
(2) Trees not suggested. Ailanthus (tree of heaven), Robinia (black locust),
Ulmus americana (American elm), and Acer negundo (Box elder).
PLANT SIZES
|
In addition to any landscaped earth berm or landscape planting
screen that may be used on the property in place of an architectural
masonry screen wall structure to satisfy any screening requirements
of this article, further on-site landscaping shall be required, as
follows.
A. Landscaping for aesthetic purposes shall be placed throughout the
property and shall be placed in compliance with the following guidelines.
(1) Care shall be taken to make certain that the location and size at maturity of any landscaping materials will comply with the applicable restricted clear corner vision requirements of §
370-104, Corner clearance, in this chapter. Furthermore, care will be taken with regard to the location and the height of all planting materials placed throughout the site so as not to unduly impair the vision of pedestrian or motor vehicle traffic within the site.
(2) Planting materials placed for aesthetic purposes shall consist of the suggested planting materials outlined in §
370-91 in this article, or similar, and equally acceptable nursery-grown stock, but shall not include stock that is not suggested in the same section.
(3) All landscaping, including lawn areas, placed for aesthetic purposes
shall be maintained by an automated in-ground irrigation system approved
by the Building Department.
Landscape planting materials shall be installed and maintained
wherever called for in this article in the following places and to
the following extent.
A. Except where excused in this subsection and except in those districts
or development options where greater or additional planting buffers
are required, a minimum ten-foot-wide landscaped lawn panel shall
be provided between any public road right-of-way, existing or proposed,
and any off-street parking space, service drive that parallels a road
right-of-way line, or other motor vehicle use areas, except loading
and unloading areas at the rear of a building or when next to an alley
right-of-way, according to the standards established in this section.
B. The minimum ten-foot-wide lawn panel required in Subsection
A of this section shall be landscaped in grass, ground cover, shrubs, trees or other acceptable living plant materials. Specified natural rock materials, brick paver materials, durable wood structures and other durable accent pieces may be used in conjunction with live plant materials to create visual landscaping accents. Low earth berms may be utilized as a landscape feature within a lawn panel. Whenever an earth berm is used it shall be covered with grass, but may also contain the nonliving durable materials outlined in this subsection as visual accent pieces.
C. Development which occurs in the OS, B-1, B-2, B-3, P-1, I-1 and I-2 Districts shall provide, in addition to the landscaped lawn panel required in Subsection
A of this section, additional on-site landscaped areas. These additional landscaped areas shall be equal in area to at least 5% of the total area of the site, less any land in public, rights-of-way, or equal to a ratio of 10 to one: 10 square feet of landscaping for each off-street parking space provided on site, whichever results in the larger area. These landscaped areas shall be distributed throughout the site and may include:
[Amended 10-14-2014 by Ord. No. 1272]
(1) Tree islands within the parking lot, placed at parking row ends,
except in the case of large parking lots, such islands may be distributed
throughout the lot at a ratio of not less than one planting island
per every 10 to 12 spaces. Wherever this landscape feature is used,
the islands shall be located so as to offer not only a visually attractive
and shading feature, but to help provide for improved traffic circulation.
The islands shall also be placed in a uniform manner to better facilitate
snow removal. A tree island shall contain at least 150 square feet
of landscape area.
(2) Pedestrian walkways, plazas, planters and other decorative features
may be included in such landscape areas when they are made an integral
part of a site's overall landscaping.
D. Stormwater detention or retention basins when required
on site, shall be made an integral feature of the site's landscaping.
When the side slopes of a stormwater basin will be steeper than a
ratio of three to one (three of horizontal plane for each foot of
vertical rise), the basin will be fenced with a six-foot-high black
or green close link woven wire (chain link) fence to discourage climbing.
Any part of a stormwater basin that must be placed in a front or exterior
side yard next to a street, and which must be fenced, shall be fenced
along the frontage by a decorative wrought iron fence of equal height.
When a stormwater basin shall retain water, the water shall be circulated
so as to prevent stagnation and pest infestation. A fenced stormwater
basin shall be aesthetically landscaped along its fence line with
a diversified mix of deciduous and evergreen trees and shrubs.
E. The area of a site that lies in a public road right-of-way between
the property line and the back edge of the curbline of the pavement,
or the edge of the pavement when there is no curb, shall be landscaped
with grass and/or other live planting materials. Wherever such landscaping
shall be installed, it shall comply with all applicable landscaping,
clear vision or line-of-sight restrictions that are set forth and
regulated by the superintending authority in control of the right-of-way.
Whenever a landscape planting plan is called for in this article,
cost estimates prepared by a licensed landscape architect or certified
nurseryman shall be submitted by the applicant as part of the site
plan review package. The cost estimate shall cover the cost of all
new planting materials proposed on the approved landscape planting
plan, the cost of their installation, including the cost of installing
the automated in-ground irrigation system required in this article.
Verification by the Building Department or its representative of the
correctness of the cost estimate or estimates submitted shall cause
surety in a form acceptable to the City to be submitted by the applicant
in an amount sufficient to insure completion within the time specified
in this article and in accordance with the approved planting plan.
All exterior climate control equipment and any other exterior mechanical equipment, including utility outlets, transformers, other electrical equipment, gas regulators, etc., serving any single-family cluster housing development, multiple-family residential development, or any nonresidential use are regarded as accessory uses and shall be restricted to locations on the property for accessory uses as set forth in §
370-100, Accessory uses, in this chapter and shall be effectively screened from view from any abutting residential district or from any street in the following manner.
A. Ground-level equipment shall be screened from view by any screening
device permitted in this article. The screening device need be no
higher than necessary to effectively screen the equipment from view.
When the exterior walls of the principal use of the property for which
the equipment is intended to serve contain any brick material and
the screening device is to consist of an architectural masonry screen
wall structure, its exterior sides shall consist of the same exterior
masonry materials that appear on the principal building. When a landscaped
earth berm or planting screen is to be used, except for minimum height
limitations, they shall comply with the applicable requirements of
this article.
B. Rooftop equipment that will be visible from the ground on the property
or from any abutting residential district or street shall be screened
from view by material that shall extend upwards at least 1/8 times
higher than the equipment it is intended to screen. Rooftop screening
materials may consist of lightweight weather-resistant metal or structurally
ridged vinyl or glass fiber materials approved by the Building Department.
Whenever a trash receptacle or receptacles will be used in conjunction
with any use in any district, the receptacle shall be screened from
view in the following manner.
A. They shall be placed in architectural masonry screening structures
as such structures are permitted and regulated in this article, except
the following requirements shall apply.
(1) The exterior walls of the structure shall consist of the same masonry
materials used in the front facade of the principal building, when
such materials are structurally applicable as a screen wall material
and accepted by the Building Department as such, except concrete masonry
units (CMUs) shall be prohibited and except when the receptacle screen
wall structure is to be made an integral part of an approved architectural
masonry screening wall structure, it may consist of the same materials
that are to be used in the screen wall structure.
(2) The minimum height of the screen wall structure shall be six feet.
(3) The screen wall enclosure shall include a gate consisting of opaque
material.
(4) Posts of adequate size and strength shall be placed at the outside
edge of the gates next to the enclosure structure to protect the structure.
(5) The floor of the enclosure shall be constructed of reinforced concrete
in a manner acceptable to the Building Department and shall extend
outward from the gate a distance of 10 feet and shall be one foot
wider than the width of the gate on both sides.
(6) Wherever a trash receptacle screen wall structure is erected, the
area inside the structure and around the outside of the structure
shall be maintained in an orderly and structurally sound condition,
clean and free from refuse clutter.