The purposes of this article are:
A. To establish a more defined community identity for
the Township through the integration of creative design components,
which will enhance the functional and desirable forms of development.
B. To develop architectural and site design standards,
which are reasonable and predictable, and provide for the creation
of functional pedestrian-oriented development within the Township
of Hillsborough. This will be accomplished through architectural styles
and themes, which reflect the scale, details, massing and ornamentation
characteristics of traditional building design as determined by the
residents of the Township through the Community Vision Survey.
C. To promote a desirable visual environment through
creative development techniques and good civic design.
D. To encourage a reduction in vehicular trips and to
link neighborhoods with the major elements and community attributes
of the Township by promoting improvements to pedestrian/bicycle circulation
and by creating places that are desirable destination points within
reasonable walking or biking distances.
E. To improve the image and economic vitality of the
Township, thereby supporting the Town Center, and protect the quality
of the Township's environment while promoting beneficial economic
growth, development and renewal.
F. To coordinate public and private investments to better
define the identity of the Township in accordance with these goals
and to support the eventual Main Street and a Town Center concept
plan in accordance with the Master Plan of the Township and the State
Development and Redevelopment Plan.
G. To establish standards to be used by the Architectural
and Site Design Advisory Subcommittee hereafter created.
As used only in this article
X, the following words shall be defined as follows:
AWNING
An ancillary lightweight structure usually of canvas, cantilevered
from a facade providing shade to the fenestration and spatial containment
to the pedestrian. Awnings, to be an effective adjunct to a shop front,
must thoroughly overlap the sidewalk and should be no higher than
10 feet at the front edge of the sidewalk.
BUILDING SCALE
The relationship between the mass of a building and its surroundings,
including the width of the street, open space and mass of surrounding
buildings.
CANOPY
The mass and cover created by the upper branches of trees.
CIVIC USE
Premises used by organizations considered to support the
common good and therefore accorded special treatment. Civic uses include
educational, cultural, social, service and religious not-for-profit
organizations.
CORNICE
The topmost element composed of moldings for an entablature
in formal architecture orders or used alone at the roofline or ceilings.
CURB CUT
These allow wheelchairs, strollers and bicycles easy access
to the sidewalk when crossing a street. The curb cut must be flush
with existing street grade.
DECIDUOUS TREE
Tree species that shed their leaves in colder climates, create
shade in summer, while allowing sunlight to warm buildings and open
spaces in winter. Evergreen or conifers do not shed their leaves or
needles and therefore are better suited to performing a masking function
in a screen design.
DORMER
A projecting vertical structure on the slope of a roof which
provides light and headroom to the interior space.
EAVE
The junction of a wall of a building and an overhanging roof.
In order to encourage pitched roofs, the designated maximum building
height may be measured to the eave, not to the top of the roof.
FACADE
A primary vertical building face or wall.
FRIEZE
Used as one of the ornamentation elements of particular Greek
and then Roman design. Applied to the top of a horizontal segment
of a mantelpiece, which assumes temple format with side supports serving
as pilasters.
GABLE
The part of the end wall of a building between the eaves
and a pitched or gambrel roof. The gable orientation shows the vertical
triangular plane rather than the slope side of the roof. A gable facing
towards a frontage individualizes a building more strongly than its
alignment parallel to a frontage.
LANCET
Shape of a window, usually narrow and tall, with sharp pointed
arch as head.
LINTEL
The topmost horizontal member over an opening, which helps
carry weight of vertical structure above it.
MASSING
The three-dimensional bulk of a structure: height, width
and depth.
MIXED-USE BUILDING
A building with two or more uses such as retail and services
on the ground floor and office or residential on upper levels.
MIXED-USE DEVELOPMENT
A tract of land with three or more different uses such as,
but not limited to, residential, office, manufacturing, retail, public
or entertainment, in a compact, pedestrian-oriented form.
PARAPET
A low, horizontal wall at the edge of a roof.
PEDESTRIAN DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS
A pedestrian trip must have a destination, and that destination
should be useful or in some way rewarding. It should be accessible
within a five-minute walk, or it may consist of such increments, for
example, from a parked car. It should be logical, uninterrupted and
provided with efficient shortcuts whenever possible. It should be
along pedestrian frontages and streetscapes that are spatially defined
and interesting, avoiding parking lots. Continuous landscaping is
not an adequate frontage. It should be temperate, shaded when hot
and wind-shielded when cold. It should be perceived to be safe, shielded
from traffic by parked cars. It should be pleasant and overlooked
by windows.
PEDIMENT
A crowning triangular element at the face of a roof or above
a door opening.
PILASTER
A thin segment of a square column attached on a wall, which
matches in details accompanying freestanding columns or on corners
of buildings.
PORTICO
A small square porch placed at the entrance of a building
executed in classical mode with columns carrying an entablature and
a flattened hipped roof.
ROOF
That element of a building which covers the top as the walls
enclose the sides. The roof, perhaps more than any other tectonic
element, defines a harmonious vernacular and should therefore be controlled
for material, slope and overhang.
ROOF, GABLE
A pitched roof with one downward slope on either side of
a central, horizontal ridge.
ROOF, GAMBREL
A pitched roof with two different slopes on either side of
a central, horizontal ridge.
ROOF, HIPPED
A roof with four equal slopes all pitching inward toward
a crown.
ROOF, MANSARD
A roof with two slopes on each side; the lower very steep.
ROOF, SALTBOX
A New England term for a steeply pitched side-gable roof.
SIDEWALK
A walkway network for pedestrians of suitable width and texture
that connects all the components of a livable community.
SILL
The horizontal member at the bottom of a door or window opening.
STORMWATER MANAGEMENT
The control and management of stormwater to minimize the
detrimental effects of surface water runoff related to quantity and
quality.
STREET FURNITURE
Functional elements of the streetscape, including, but not
limited to, benches, planters and streetlights.
STREETSCAPE
The built and planted elements of a street which defines
its character. This, in combination with the building frontage and
the street itself, compromise the public realm.
TRANSOM
A horizontal window above a door or window, usually rectangular
in shape.
VERNACULAR
A regional adaptation of an architectural style or styles;
usage has intrinsically resolved the architectural response to climate,
construction technique and, to some extent, social mores.
This article is intended to apply to all site
plans to be proposed within the ASD Overlay Zone.
The following are exempt from provisions of
this article:
A. The construction or reconstruction of a single- or two-family dwelling on an individual lot that will be used exclusively as a residential use, including a home occupation as regulated by §
188-54.
B. Routine maintenance or replacement in-kind of existing
features or any residential or nonresidential building.
C. Historic structures or structures with existing historic
character that are aligned with spirit and intent of this article
shall be maintained and upgraded consistently with the predominant
architectural style of the structure. Such historic structures that
are to be utilized for nonresidential use shall be subject to review
by the appropriate Board.
Applications for development in the ASD Overlay
Zone shall be forwarded by the Planning Department to the Advisory
Subcommittee for its review and recommendation. It shall be the responsibility
of the Advisory Subcommittee to schedule a review of applications
before public hearings that are held by the Planning Board or the
Zoning Board of Adjustment, as the case may be, and to comment on
applications within 30 days. The lack of comment from the Advisory
Subcommittee before the time of a required public hearing shall not
be deemed a positive recommendation of the development application
by the Advisory Subcommittee. Final approval, in accordance with these
standards is the responsibility of the Planning Board and the Zoning
Board of Adjustment, as the case may be.