In expansion of the declaration of legislative intent and community development objectives contained in Article
I of this chapter, the primary intent of the Village Mixed-Use District is to retain and enhance the identity and purposes of the Village of Zieglerville by conserving and building upon desirable village characteristics and encouraging development to provide a harmonious mix of housing, businesses, institutions, and public spaces. This district is intended to be consistent with the future growth area category as designated in the Central Perkiomen Valley Regional Comprehensive Plan and is intended to implement the applicable goals and objectives of the regional plan. In addition, the Village Mixed-Use District is intended to achieve the following specific objectives:
A. Maintain to the greatest extent possible, the historical
visual character established along Routes 29 and 73 by the locations,
sizes, shapes, styles, and spatial relationships of existing residential
buildings, businesses, and other properties relative to each other
and to the mature landscaping adjacent to these buildings.
B. Encourage economically viable residential and/or nonresidential
use or re-use of existing buildings by permitting substantial additions
to existing buildings and by permitting additional buildings on lots
with existing buildings.
C. Accommodate residential and/or nonresidential uses
in new buildings while ensuring that the architecture, proportions,
and window and door openings of new buildings reflect the architectural
heritage of the community and the multistory residential character
of existing buildings located along Routes 29 and 73, including front
and side facades, porches, and rooflines.
D. Consolidate driveways and establish shared parking
facilities at the rear of parcels that front on Routes 29 and 73,
and provide a network of sidewalks throughout the village to give
priority to pedestrian movement and encourage walking among buildings,
open spaces, and streets.
E. Establish standards that allow a mixed use, small
town character with opportunities for affordable housing and a range
of small-scale business and institutional uses that are compatible
with small town character, including buildings and spaces with a pedestrian
scale, proportions, and orientations that promote social interaction
and establish community identity.
F. Provide open space that includes community focal points,
and preserve and protect areas containing sensitive natural features
such as woodlands, steep slopes, streams, floodplain, and wetlands,
by setting them aside from development and integrating them into the
system of public green spaces within and adjacent to the village.
G. Strengthen the role of Zieglerville as a core area
of Lower Frederick Township, and enhance the opportunities for preservation
of rural resources along and outside the future growth area boundaries
as defined in the Central Perkiomen Valley Regional Comprehensive
Plan.
H. Provide regulations to achieve the intent and objectives
of the Village Mixed-Use District.
The following uses are permitted by right in
compliance with the dimensional and development regulations of the
VMU Village Mixed-Use District:
A. Single-family detached dwelling, only in compliance
with one of the following options:
(1) As an existing or replacement principal building, located completely or partially within 50 feet of the ultimate right-of-way of Route 29 and/or 73, in compliance with §§
170-90 and
170-90.1, Regulations for existing and replacement buildings.
(2) As a new principal building, located completely beyond 50 feet from the ultimate right-of-way of Route 29 and/or 73, in compliance with §
170-90.4, Additional standards for development with single-family detached dwellings.
B. Conversion of an existing single-family detached dwelling
to not more than two dwelling units.
C. One or more dwelling units located in the same building
with one or more permitted nonresidential use(s), provided that no
more than four dwelling units shall be permitted in any one building
and that the nonresidential floor area shall be greater than or equal
to the total residential floor area (permitted as a new building or
as a conversion of or addition to an existing building).
D. Family day-care home, group day-care home, day-care center in compliance with §
170-28, Child day care, of this chapter.
E. Bed-and-breakfast establishment in compliance with §
170-26, Bed-and-breakfast accommodations, of this chapter.
F. Retail establishment for the sale or rental of merchandise,
and/or for the sale and repair of items such as jewelry, watches,
clocks, optical goods, musical, professional or scientific instruments,
and/or for mailing and/or carry-in shipping services.
G. Business office, such as real estate sales, travel
agency, insurance sales, advertising, or retail copying and printing
services.
H. Professional office, such as those for the practice
of medicine or other health services, or for the practice of law,
engineering, architecture, accounting, or similar services.
I. Personal service shop, such as tailor, barber, beauty
salon, shoe repair, dressmaker, or dry cleaner (provided that no cleaning
operations are performed on the premises).
J. Establishment serving food or beverages to the general public, such as restaurant, cafe, taproom, tavern, retail baker, confectionery or ice cream shop; with drive-through by conditional use in compliance with §
170-90.4, Regulations for all uses with drive-through facilities.
K. Financial institution, such as a bank or savings and loan association; with drive-through by conditional use in compliance with §
170-90.5, Regulations for all uses with drive-through facilities.
L. Studio for dance, music, fitness, art or photography.
M. Undertaking establishment and funeral home.
N. Self-service laundromat only when served by public
water and sewer facilities.
O. Office buildings for corporate, administrative, executive,
or government purposes.
P. Institutional uses in compliance with the standards and criteria of Article
XIII, Institutional and Recreational Overlay District.
Q. Open space and recreation areas, including parks,
village greens, greenway corridors, preservation of natural features,
and similar uses.
R. Accessory uses on the same lot and customarily incidental
and subordinate to the principal uses listed herein.
The following uses are permitted only by conditional use in compliance with §§
170-89, Dimensional regulations, 170-90.2, Development regulations for all principal buildings, and 170-90.6, Conditional use standards and criteria for all conditional uses, herein:
A. Village market place consisting of a supermarket in one freestanding building plus two or more other smaller freestanding buildings in compliance with the standards of §
170-90.3, Village market place conditional use standards and criteria, herein.
C. Place of indoor or outdoor amusement or recreation,
including miniature golf, theater, movie house, or arcade, not including
shooting, gun or pistol range.
D. Indoor sports facility for racquet or court sports
and/or indoor swimming pool.
E. Public utility facility, not including electrical
power generation.
F. Contractors' establishments, repair shops, indoor
trade schools.
G. Wholesaling and/or warehousing of dry goods, variety
and general merchandise, clothing, food, drugs, household supplies,
beverages, hardware, furnishings, antiques, books, and/or similar
commodities.
H. Uses determined by the Board of Supervisors to be
of similar nature and impact to the uses listed in this section.
I. Accessory uses on the same lot and customarily incidental
and subordinate to the principal uses listed herein.
In support of the legislative intent and statement
of community development objectives of this article, the following
uses are prohibited in the VMU Village Mixed-Use District:
A. Self-service storage facilities (miniwarehouses).
B. Bulk storage and sale of lumber, plumbing and other
building materials and supplies; home center.
C. Adult entertainment uses, as defined in §
170-8, Definitions, and as regulated in §
170-20 of this chapter.
D. Monument production; commercial laundry/dry cleaning
businesses; junkyards, scrap yards, or similar facilities; food processing
businesses.
E. Automobile or other motorized vehicle sales, service,
or repair establishments, including vehicle body repair, vehicle painting,
or washing as principal or accessory uses.
F. Gasoline service station and uses with gasoline filling
station facilities.
G. All uses not listed in §§
170-86 and
170-87, herein, and uses determined by the Board of Supervisors to be of similar nature or impact to the prohibited uses listed in this section.
The following regulations shall apply to existing
principal buildings that were constructed before 1950 and are completely
or partially located within 50 feet of the ultimate right-of-way of
Routes 29 and/or 73.
A. Retention and use. These existing principal buildings shall be retained and used for uses permitted in §
170-86, Use permitted by right.
B. Modification and expansion. These existing principal buildings may be modified and/or expanded to accommodate those uses and/or to improve their appearance, structural stability, and compliance with fire and safety codes in compliance with the standards in §
170-90D and
E, herein.
C. Demolition and replacement. These existing principal buildings shall not be demolished unless the Board of Supervisors approves a replacement building in compliance with §
170-90.1, Regulations for replacement of existing principal buildings, herein.
D. Building modification standards for existing principal
buildings.
(1) External building characteristics.
(a)
The bulk, scale, design, style, character, proportions,
and rooflines of the existing building shall be maintained.
(b)
Window and door openings shall be retained on
the front and side facades and porches.
(c)
Open porches on the front and sides shall not
be enclosed.
(d)
Building materials used to modify or upgrade
the windows, doors, facades and/or roof shall be consistent with the
architectural heritage of the Central Perkiomen Valley.
(2) Internal building characteristics. Internal modifications
shall comply with building, fire, and safety codes applicable to the
use or uses proposed, and shall not be permitted to alter the external
appearance of the building except for required emergency access purposes.
E. Building expansion standards for existing principal
buildings.
(1) Within the building envelope. An existing building
may be expanded to the side or rear within the limits of the building
envelope defined by the minimum front, side, and rear yard dimensions,
but shall not be expanded toward the road. The expanded building shall
not exceed a total width of 50 feet, including the existing building
and expansion, measured parallel to the front lot line.
(2) Along or within the side yard. When the existing building
wall is located along the minimum side yard setback line or within
the minimum side yard setback, the following standards apply:
(a)
Toward the side. No expansion shall be permitted
closer to the side lot line.
(b)
Toward the rear. Expansion may be permitted
toward the rear of the property along the line of the existing building
wall only when the existing building and the expansion are located
a minimum of 20 feet from the principal building on the adjoining
lot.
(3) Toward or within the front yard. No expansion shall
be permitted toward or within the minimum front yard setback and the
visual character of the front facade shall be retained.
(4) Architectural characteristics. Building expansion
shall be compatible with the existing building's bulk, scale, design,
style, character, proportions, and rooflines and shall provide windows
and doors that reflect the style and locations of the existing building.
Open porches on the front and sides shall not be enclosed.
(5) Existing side yard areas. Applicants are encouraged
to retain the existing side yard spacing on both sides of existing
buildings to help conserve the historical visual character of the
village.
(6) Existing vegetation. Applicants shall maintain existing
landscaped spaces and mature vegetation in front of and between existing
buildings to the greatest extent possible.
F. Standards for connecting existing principal buildings.
As an incentive to attract viable uses for retained buildings, additions
may be made to existing buildings to connect them together in compliance
with the following standards:
(1) Front facade setback. The minimum front facade setback
for a building addition that connects two retained principal buildings
shall be 50 feet from the ultimate right-of-way of Route 29 and/or
Route 73.
(2) Landscaped space. The space in front of the addition,
between the retained buildings, shall be landscaped to reflect the
historical visual character of small buildings and the spaces between
them along the street frontage. Pedestrian access is encouraged through
this space.
(3) Architectural characteristics. The addition's building
style and character, proportions, window and door openings, and building
materials shall be compatible with the existing buildings and form
a unified structure, consistent with the architectural heritage of
the Central Perkiomen Valley.
(4) Parking and vehicular access. Parking shall be located
only to the rear of the connected buildings and vehicular access shall
be provided from the rear when feasible, in preference to individual
driveway access to public streets. Shared driveways are encouraged.
Cross easements shall be provided to allow current or future interconnection
of parking and driveways.
(5) Pedestrian access. Convenient pedestrian access shall
be provided from the rear parking area to all proposed building entrances
and may include an internal or external passageway through the building.
Pedestrian access shall also connect to public sidewalks.
The following standards shall apply when an
applicant requests approval from the Board of Supervisors to replace
an existing principal building.
A. Required evidence. The applicant shall provide evidence
sufficient to convince the Board of Supervisors that the building
is inadequate for reasons of safety or practicality. This may include
evidence of structural deficiencies and/or dimensions and layouts
of interior spaces compared to the needs of the proposed uses. The
Board of Supervisors may request the advice of the Township Planning
Commission, Township Engineer, and/or Building Inspector in this regard.
B. Standards for replacement buildings.
(1)
Documentation for comparison. The applicant
shall provide documentation of the existing and proposed buildings'
characteristics in photographs and drawings sufficient for comparison
of location, footprint, external shape, bulk, dimensions, roofline,
and proportions, including locations, sizes, and shapes of windows,
doors, and porches.
(2)
Approval of replacement buildings. The Board
of Supervisors may grant approval to raze the existing building and
build the replacement when it is satisfied that the proposed replacement
building conforms sufficiently to the documented characteristics of
the existing principal building. The Board of Supervisors may request
the advice of the Township Planning Commission, Township Engineer,
and/or Building Inspector in this regard.
(3)
Permitted latitude. The replacement building shall generally conform to the existing building's documented characteristics, but these features need not be exactly duplicated. In addition, the new building's width and height may be increased by a maximum of 25% to allow for practical interior room dimensions and practical use of standardized building materials, subject to the maximum limits in §
170-89, Dimensional regulations.
(4)
Upgraded alternative. When an applicant's documentation
proposes an alternative replacement building that the Board of Supervisors
agrees is superior to simply replacing the characteristics of the
existing building, the Supervisors may approve an upgraded replacement
building proposal. The Board of Supervisors may request the advice
of the Township Planning Commission, Township Engineer, and/or Building
Inspector in this regard. The upgraded alternative shall be a minimum
of two stories, with suitable architectural characteristics, including
a front porch, reflecting the architectural heritage of the Central
Perkiomen Valley.
(5)
Relocation.
(a)
If the existing building is located within the
minimum front yard setback from the ultimate right-of-way of Route
29 or 73, the replacement building may be shifted on the lot, but
not further back than the minimum twenty-five-foot front yard setback.
(b)
If the existing building is located within a
side yard setback area, the replacement building may be shifted on
the lot to provide the minimum side yard setback.
C. Modification and expansion of replacement buildings. When a replacement building has been approved by the Board of Supervisors, it shall be considered an existing principal building and any modifications and/or expansion shall comply with the requirements of §
170-90, Regulations for existing principal buildings, herein.
All principal buildings shall comply with the
standards of this section.
A. Architectural characteristics.
(1)
The architectural characteristics of all buildings
with a footprint up to and including 15,000 square feet shall reflect
the historical multistory residential characteristics of existing
buildings in the village, including scale, proportions, window and
door openings, facade variations, porches, and rooflines. Minimum
height shall be 1 1/2 stories, with rooflines at a pitch of eight
to 12 for a minimum of 50% of the building foot print, and a minimum
pitch of five to 12 for the remainder of the roof. For expansion or
replacement of existing buildings, the pitch may be equivalent to
the original existing building's roofline.
(2)
For buildings larger than 15,000 square feet,
the architectural characteristics shall reflect the historical multistory
residential characteristics of existing buildings in the village to
the greatest extent feasible, with facade design that takes on the
appearance of two or more smaller buildings attached together. Pitched
rooflines shall be required for a minimum of 50% of the building footprint,
at a minimum pitch of five to 12.
(3)
Large buildings for indoor amusement or recreation,
indoor sports facility, hotel, motel, or supermarket shall incorporate
major architectural features into the building designs, including
canopies, towers, offset facades, and three-dimensional ornamental
structures for variety and interest. These features should reflect
the historical multistory residential characteristics of existing
buildings in the village to the greatest extent feasible and include
pitched rooflines, gables, and dormers as appropriate.
B. Other building characteristics.
(1)
Building entrances for everyday use shall be
visible and accessible from a network of street sidewalks, sidewalks
along parking areas, and walkways or courtyards between buildings.
(2)
Buildings with multiple leaseholds shall have
at least one everyday entrance along the facade facing the street.
(3)
Locations of building entrances shall be emphasized
by appropriate building articulation, such as chamfered corners, turrets,
porches, canopies, or other similar building features.
(4)
Building materials such as brick, stone, stucco,
and wood shall be integrated into the building facades consistent
with the architectural heritage of the Central Perkiomen Valley Region.
(5)
Side and rear building facades shall be constructed
of materials similar to and compatible with the character, color scheme,
and architectural features of the buildings' front facades.
A village market place may be permitted only when authorized by the Board of Supervisors as a conditional use in compliance with §
170-31, Conditional use applications, of this chapter, and the standards and criteria herein.
A. Village market place concept. In support of the objectives listed in §
170-85, herein, a village market place shall have a unified site design planned for safe, efficient, and convenient operation, that includes a harmonious arrangement of three or more architecturally compatible buildings, fully integrated with the character and functions of adjoining development in the village, including attractive and functional landscaped areas, and vehicular and pedestrian circulation, parking and service areas.
B. Pedestrian access. Pedestrian access shall be provided
into, within, and through the village market place by a network of
street sidewalks, sidewalks along parking areas, and walkways or courtyards
between buildings, interconnected with the pedestrian network of the
village.
C. Dimensional and development standards for the village
market place.
(1)
Composition. The village market place shall
contain a freestanding supermarket (grocery/food store) and a minimum
of two additional freestanding buildings that comply with the development
standards of the VMU District regarding maximum footprint, number
of stories/height, and architectural characteristics.
(2)
Supermarket building dimensions.
(a)
Maximum store size. The supermarket footprint
shall not exceed the sum of the footprints of the additional freestanding
buildings in the village market place, and in no case shall be larger
than 50,000 square feet of gross leasable area. Total building coverage
(footprints) in the village market place shall not exceed 100,000
square feet.
(b)
Maximum building height: 35 feet for all routinely occupied spaces; 45 feet for normally unoccupied major architectural features intended to satisfy the building development standards of §
170-90.2, Development regulations for all principal buildings.
(c)
Minimum building setbacks:
[1] From driveways internal to the
village market place: 25 feet, except that no setback is required
where the building's roofline is extended as an overhang or portecochere.
[2] From parking spaces: 25 feet.
(3)
Other building standards. The other buildings
within the village market place shall comply with the dimensional
and development standards otherwise applicable to principal buildings
in the Village Mixed-Use District.
(4)
Vehicular access, parking, and loading.
(a)
Vehicular access. Vehicular access for the village
market place shall be provided only from local access streets within
the Village Mixed-Use District, not directly from arterial streets.
(b)
Parking. No parking shall be located between
the buildings and abutting property zoned or used exclusively for
residential purposes.
(c)
Loading area orientation. Service/loading areas
for the village market place shall not face adjoining property that
has been developed for residential use unless the nearest dwelling
is located at least 200 feet beyond the property line.
[1] Building walls shall be extended
along the edges of the service/loading areas as sound barriers for
the benefit of nearby residences.
[2] Site element screening shall be
installed between all service/loading areas and property lines and
ultimate right-of-way lines.
(5)
Landscaping. Landscaping within the village market place shall comply with the standards in Chapter
145, Subdivision and Land Development.
D. Additional overall standards for a village market
place.
(1)
Building, impervious, and landscaped area coverage:
(a)
Impervious coverage: maximum 65% of the buildable
lot area of the parcel developed as a village market place.
(b)
Landscaped or other vegetated area: minimum
35% of the buildable lot area of the parcel developed as a village
market place.
(2)
Parking standards.
(a)
Parking capacity. Total parking capacity for
a village market place shall be a minimum of 4.5 spaces per 1,000
square feet of gross leasable retail area.
(b)
Additional capacity. Any spaces proposed at a rate greater than 5.0 spaces per 1,000 square feet of gross leasable retail floor area shall be placed in reserve, in compliance with §
170-131B, Parking reserve areas, of this chapter. Spaces placed in reserve shall not be constructed until approved or requested by the Board of Supervisors.
[1] Shared parking. If the adequacy of proposed parking capacity is questioned by the Township's consultants or Planning Commission, the Township Planning Commission may request the applicant to provide convincing evidence to demonstrate adequacy, consistent with accepted industry standards, in compliance with §
170-131A, Shared parking requirements, of this chapter.
[2] Parking space size. Village market
place parking spaces shall be a minimum of 10 feet by 20 feet.
E. Central common area. A village market place shall
provide a central common area suitable for shared use by tenants,
customers and visitors for special events such as cultural performances,
exhibitions, health fairs, sidewalk sales, community events, and for
routine use as a focal point, sitting area, and meeting place. Each
central common area shall comply with the following standards:
(1)
It may be an atrium, courtyard, plaza, or village
green prominently located among the principal buildings, visible from
entrance driveways and the parking lot, or centrally located among
the village development adjoining the village market place.
(2)
It shall have walkways, seating and landscaping.
Water features, performance stage, and table facilities for adjacent
restaurants are encouraged.
(3)
The total area shall be a minimum of 15% of
the gross leasable ground floor area of all the buildings in the center.
Where superior site design and function may be achieved, the Board
of Supervisors may allow the area to be divided into two separate
locations.
(4)
A minimum of 30% of the central common area shall be ornamentally landscaped (may include water features). The landscaped area may be included in calculation of the minimum 35% landscaped area of the site required by §
170-90.3D(1)(b), herein.
(5)
The minimum required space for a central common
area shall not include paved areas used for parking, service or driveways,
required storefront landscaping, softening and screen buffers, required
parking lot planting, and commercial recreation facilities.
F. Village market place development regulations.
(1)
Village market place design standards. Development shall comply with the design standards for parking lots, driveway hierarchy, and landscaping of Chapter
145, Subdivision and Land Development, applicable to village market place.
(2)
Equipment screening. Mechanical and utility
equipment shall be screened from public view by means of architectural
features when projecting from the tops of buildings, and by landscaping
when located on the ground.
Subdivision proposals to create new building
lots for single-family detached dwellings shall comply with the following
standards:
A. A minimum of 50% of the parcel's original land area
shall be used for nonresidential uses or for buildings with a mix
of nonresidential and residential uses in each building.
B. A maximum of 25% of the parcel's original land area
may be used for new lots for single-family detached dwellings (SFD).
C. An area at least equal to the total area of lots proposed
for SFD shall be permanently preserved as common open space.
D. Existing parcels smaller than 50,000 square feet in
area may be developed entirely for single-family detached dwellings.
E. Any existing lot may be developed with one single-family
detached dwelling as a principal use.
F. All development shall comply with the dimensional
and development standards of this district otherwise applicable to
the types of development proposed.