In addition to the statement of community development objectives set forth in Article
II, §§
164-3 and
164-4 of this chapter, it is hereby declared to be the specific intent of this article with respect to the MHP Mobile Home Park District to establish standards of performance and promote the desirable benefits which planned mobile home parks may have upon the community and the residents within them. It is further the intent of this article to ensure the interdependency and compatibility of proposed mobile home parks with essential utilities and surrounding land uses in the Township. It shall further be the intent of this district:
A. To reflect the changes in the technology of home building
and land development so that resulting economies may accrue to the
benefits of those who need homes.
B. To further the general welfare by extending greater
opportunities for better and more affordable housing to present and
prospective residents of Lower Salford Township.
C. To provide for better quality and greater variety
in type, design and layout of mobile home parks than has been evident
in many mobile home parks in the past by enforcing uniform standards,
desirable design criteria and encouraging innovative site design approaches.
D. To provide for a diversity in housing types and prices.
E. To encourage mobile home parks that are beneficial
rather than detrimental to property values and the general welfare
of the area in which they are proposed.
The following general regulations shall apply
to all mobile home park developments within the Mobile Home Park District.
A. The tract of land proposed for subdivision or land
development shall be in single ownership, or ownership will be such
that the tract will be developed under a single direction in accordance
with an approved plan.
B. Any parcel to be used for a mobile home park must
have a minimum gross lot area of 15 contiguous acres of land.
C. Each mobile home tract must have at least 10 acres
of land that does not contain floodplains, steep slopes (over 15%
grade), utility easements and/or wetlands.
D. Any site proposed for a mobile home park shall, in
the opinion of the governing body, be easily accessible to essential
community facilities and services such as employment centers, shopping
centers, schools and police and fire protection.
E. Every area to be used as a mobile home park must be
served exclusively by a municipal sanitary waste disposal system and
a centralized water supply system.
F. Any tract intended for a mobile home park must have
direct access to a feeder-type road (or road of a higher classification),
as defined by the Township Highway Map, which the Township governing
body deems capable of accommodating the transport of mobile home units,
upon recommendation of the Township Engineer.
G. Plans evidencing provision for safe and efficient
ingress and egress to and from the public streets and highways servicing
the mobile home park, without causing undue confusion or interference
with the normal traffic flow, shall be approved by the Township governing
body, which shall make the determination based on the adequacy of
the thoroughfare to carry the additional traffic generated by the
mobile home park, upon recommendation of the Township Engineer.
The maximum number of mobile homes permitted
in a mobile home park is based on a density of 4.5 units per gross
acre and shall be computed as follows:
A. To determine gross lot area:
(1)
Subtract the area between the center line of
abutting streets and legal right-of-way line of these streets from
total lot area.
B. To determine the maximum number of mobile homes permitted:
(1)
Subtract all area used for conventional single-family
detached lots and any streets serving these lots from the gross lot
area.
(2)
Multiply the remaining acreage by 4.5 dwelling
units per acre to determine the maximum number of mobile homes.
Conventional single-family detached dwellings
in mobile home parks shall not comprise more than 40% of the total
number of dwelling units and shall meet the lot area, setback and
building coverage regulations and the height regulations of the R-4
Medium-High-Density Residence Districts.
[Amended 8-21-1997 by Ord. No. 97-5]
At least 15% of the site area of the mobile home development must be in common open space as defined herein; no more than 1/3 of which may be required buffer area. The configuration and location of the common open space must be consistent with the requirements of §
164-22 of this chapter.
All mobile home parks must have buffers that
meet the following requirements.
A. General requirements. Along all exterior property boundary lines, except those which abut another mobile home park, there shall be a permanent buffer at least 15 feet in depth, unless this is waived pursuant to Subsection
D or
E below. A screen buffer, as defined herein, shall be provided wherever the mobile home park abuts existing residential uses, and when deemed necessary for other types of abutting uses by the Township governing body to provide sufficient buffering and transition. A softening buffer, as defined herein, shall be provided wherever the mobile home development abuts existing commercial, office, industrial and institutional uses; any existing street, as modified by Subsection
C below, drive or parking area; or open (not wooded) undeveloped land. An open buffer shall be provided wherever more extensive buffers are deemed unnecessary by the governing body.
B. Components. The minimum component of each type of
buffer shall be as follows:
(1)
Screen buffer. The primary components of a screen buffer shall be a row of evergreen trees, at a height of not less than six feet when planted, spaced not more than 10 feet apart on-center, and these trees shall be of such species to attain a height at maturity of not less than 20 feet. Also required as a secondary component of the buffer is one of the following: mounding (the use of which is encouraged), provided that the slopes shall be a maximum of three to one; visually opaque fencing not greater than six feet in height; and coniferous shrubbery. Any combination of evergreen trees, coniferous shrubs, mounding, fencing or other natural vegetation or man-made materials is allowable, provided that an effective visual screen at least 15 feet in height above the adjacent ground elevation in the mobile home park is achieved. But whenever only vegetation is used, there shall be at least a double row of evergreen trees, with the trees in one row offset five feet from the trees in the other row, and the rows at least five feet apart. All screening plant materials shall be chosen from the list in § 142-43C(4) of Ch.
142, Subdivision and Land Development.
(2)
Softening buffer. The primary component of a
softening buffer shall be a row of trees, spaced not more than 25
feet apart on-center, at least 25% of which shall be evergreens. The
evergreen trees shall be at least six feet in height when planted
and shall attain at least 20 feet in height at maturity. Any deciduous
trees shall be at least 1 1/2 inches in caliper and eight feet
in height when planted, and shall attain a height of not less than
20 feet at maturity. These trees shall be interspersed with other
allowable components, including any other type of trees, shrubs, mounding,
fencing and/or similar natural or man-made elements having a visible
vertical dimension, or any combination thereof.
(3)
Open buffer. The open buffer shall, as a minimum,
consist of grass, ground cover and/or similar vegetative material
and may include trees, shrubs or other natural or man-made landscaping
materials, but it shall be mostly vegetative with minimal paved areas
if any.
C. Street boundaries. Rather than the extensive buffers
described above, the use of a single row of deciduous trees at least
eight feet in height when planted and at least 20 feet in height at
maturity, with a spacing of not more than 40 feet on-center, may be
provided along all property boundaries which abut a street, wherever
necessary for adequate sight distance or where the governing body
determines this to be a sufficient buffer to protect the welfare and
safety of the community.
D. Existing buffers. In cases where an edge(s) of a mobile
home development occurs along natural features which function as buffers,
including but not limited to mature vegetation, significant grade
changes or stream valleys, which are likely to be permanently preserved,
buffering may be waived along that edge(s) upon approval of the governing
body.
E. Buffer alternative. Buffers may also be waived by
the governing body where the mobile home development abuts a single-family
residential use, if only conventional single-family detached dwellings,
but not mobile homes, are constructed within 200 feet of that property
boundary.
F. Maintenance. All vegetation shall be maintained permanently
and, in the event of death or other destruction, shall be replaced
within one year by the persons responsible for maintenance when death
or destruction occurred.
G. Buffer landscape plan. A landscaping plan shall be
submitted with the final plans, showing all pertinent information,
including the location, size and specie of all individual trees and
shrubs to be preserved or planted, or alternately the general characteristics
of existing vegetation masses which are to be preserved.
All mobile home parks and individual mobile homes shall meet the standards of Article
VI, Mobile Home Regulations, of Ch.
142, Subdivision and Land Development.