A.
A fence or freestanding wall may be erected within the limits of any yard. The height of any fence or wall shall be limited to six feet in a residential district; a fence which is no more than four feet high may be erected in any residential front yard, eight feet in a commercial district and 10 feet in an industrial district. Retaining walls and private terraces without walls, roofs or other enclosures may be erected to greater height up to a fifty-percent increase for that district. Fences erected around tennis courts, basketball courts, backstops and similar recreational facilities are exempt from height limitations. Within any residential district, no enclosure shall be permitted that causes physical harm, such as barbed wire or electric fences and razor, spike or broken glass-topped fences and walls, etc.
[Amended 9-10-2018 by Ord. No. 430-18]
B.
Where any multifamily dwelling abuts any single-family district, the owner of the multiple-family dwelling shall, before using said property, construct a fence or wall not less than four feet and not over six feet in height, of such design, construction and location as to substantially impair passage by persons or pets from such multifamily dwelling to and from such single-family use.
C.
Every swimming pool with a surface area of at least 75 square feet or a depth of two feet or more shall be enclosed by a fence or wall not less than five feet high to prevent uncontrolled access by small children.
D.
In all industrial districts, there shall be required a greenbelt area 20 feet in width adjacent to any residential district for all industrial establishments or buildings which have not gone into operations at the time of enactment of this chapter within one year of the issuance of a building permit. The greenbelt area shall be comprised of at least three rows of relatively closely planted trees or shrubs. The individual rows shall contain the following plantings as a minimum: the row immediately adjacent to any residential district, evergreen type trees or shrubs placed such that at maturity said evergreens will touch each other; middle row, soft wood type trees spaced at no more than 20 feet apart; the row immediately adjacent to the industrial district, hardwood-type trees spaced at no more than 40 feet apart. Existing wooded areas may be used as a greenbelt area, if approved by the Planning Commission. The evergreen row immediately adjacent to a residential district may be substituted by a visually solid fence, if approved by the Planning Commission. Industrial district property abutting public road rights-of-way are not required to provide a greenbelt area along said property lines. Greenbelts shall be maintained and kept in proper appearance by the owners of the industrial establishments.