These regulations apply to every subdivision
(as defined herein) occurring inside the corporate limits of the City
of Lexington, Illinois or occurring in the unincorporated areas within
1 1/2 miles from the City's corporate limits, as those limits
exist at the time the subdivision occurs.
Because every subdivision of land within the
jurisdiction of these regulations is or may become a part of the City
of Lexington and because each has or may have an impact on services
provided by the City, as well as on services provided by other governmental
units serving the community, this chapter is adopted for the following
purposes:
A. To protect, provide and promote the public health,
safety and general welfare of the City.
B. To guide the future growth and development of the
City, in accordance with the City of Lexington Comprehensive Plan.
C. To provide for adequate light, air and privacy, to
secure safety from fire, flood, and other danger, and to prevent overcrowding
of the land and undue congestion of population.
D. To protect the character and the social and economic
stability of all parts of the City and to encourage the orderly and
harmonious development of all parts of the community.
E. To protect and conserve the value of land throughout
the City and the value of buildings and improvements upon the land,
and to minimize the conflicts among the uses of land and buildings.
F. To guide public and private policy and action in order
to secure a uniform system of utilities and services, including adequate
and efficient transportation, water, sewerage, schools, parks, playgrounds,
recreation and other public requirements and facilities.
G. To provide the most beneficial relationship between
the uses of land and buildings and the circulation of traffic throughout
the City, having particular regard to the avoidance of congestion
in the streets and highways, and the pedestrian traffic movements
appropriate to the various uses of land and buildings, and to provide
for the proper location and width of streets and building setback
lines.
H. To establish reasonable standards of design and procedures
for subdivisions and resubdivisions, in order to further the orderly
layout and use of land, and to ensure proper legal descriptions and
monumenting of subdivided land.
I. To ensure that public facilities are available and
will have a sufficient capacity to serve the proposed subdivision
and areas reasonably anticipated to be served by such facilities.
J. To prevent the pollution of air, streams, and ponds;
to assure the adequacy of drainage facilities; to safeguard the water
table; and to encourage the wise use and management of natural resources
throughout the City in order to preserve the integrity, stability
and beauty of the community and the value of the land.
K. To preserve the natural beauty and topography of the
City and to ensure appropriate development with regard to these natural
features.
L. To provide for open spaces through the most efficient design and layout of the land, including the use of average density in providing for minimum width and area of lots, while preserving the density of land as established in Chapter
300, Zoning.
See Article
V of this chapter for the intent of planned unit development.
The language set forth in this chapter shall
be interpreted in accordance with the following rules of construction,
unless the context clearly requires a different construction:
A. The singular includes the plural and the plural the
singular.
B. The present tense includes the past and future and
the future includes the present.
C. The word "shall" is mandatory, while the word "may"
is permissive, and "should" is strongly recommended, but not mandatory.
D. Terms connoting a particular gender include each and
every other gender.
E. Whenever a word or term defined hereinafter appears
in the text of this chapter, its meaning shall be construed as set
forth in the definition thereof, and any word appearing in the parenthesis
between a word and its definition shall be construed in the same sense
as that word.
F. All words and terms not defined herein shall be construed
in their generally accepted meanings.
The following words and terms, whenever they
occur in this chapter, shall be interpreted as herein defined.
ALLEY
A public right-of-way which is less than 30 feet wide and
affords a secondary means of access to abutting property. Frontage
on an alley shall not be construed as satisfying the requirements
related to frontage on a public street.
BASEMENT
The story of a building which is partly below and partly
above grade, and having at least 1/2 its height above grade. (See
"grade" and "story.")
BLOCK
A tract of land bounded by streets, or by a street or streets
and any combination of boundary lines of public or institutionally
owned lands, railroad rights-of-way, rivers and lakes and/or other
lines of demarcation. A block may be located in part within an incorporated
city or city.
BUILDING
Any structure used or intended for supporting or sheltering
any use or occupancy.
BUILDING SETBACK LINE
A line within a lot, or other parcel of land, so designated on the preliminary plan and final plat, which denotes the area between such line and the adjacent street right-of-way line where an enclosed building and other obstructions are prohibited, except those permitted obstructions as regulated by Chapter
300, Zoning.
CENTER LINE
A.
The center line of any right-of-way having uniform
width.
B.
The original center line, where a right-of-way
has been widened irregularly.
C.
The new center line, whenever a road has been
relocated.
CITY
The City of Lexington, Illinois.
CITY CLERK
The City Clerk of Lexington, Illinois, or the duly authorized
representative.
CITY ENGINEER
The individual and/or consulting engineering firm for the
City of Lexington, Illinois or his/her or its duly authorized representative.
CITY OF LEXINGTON COMPREHENSIVE PLAN
The composite of the functional and geographic elements of
the Comprehensive Plan of the City of Lexington, or any segment thereof
in the form of plans, maps, charts, textual materials and the official
map, as adopted by the Planning Commission.
COLLECTION TILE SYSTEM
A tile system serving individual lots for the purpose of
receiving water discharged from sources such as footing tiles and
water softeners.
CONDUIT
A buried pipe for the installation of wires or cables or
the conveyance of gas, water, stormwater or wastewater.
CONTRACTOR
An individual, company, firm or other party or organization
who or which contracts to physically construct all or portion of a
project for either a developer or the City.
CRADLE
Bedding placed under and around a conduit for proper support.
CROSS SLOPE
The degree of inclination measured across pavements rather
than longitudinally.
DEDICATE
Transfer of ownership of right-of-way.
DESIGN ENGINEER
The individual responsible for the design and preparation
of plans, specifications and contract documents. This individual must
be a licensed professional engineer in Illinois.
DEVELOPMENT
Both the act of changing and the state of a tract of land
after its function has been purposefully changed by man, including,
but not limited to, construction of structures on the land, and alterations
to the land, except grading that does not alter the natural flow of
stormwater.
DRAINAGEWAY, IMPROVED
A portion of a right-of-way or easement used or intended
principally for stormwater, surface water or groundwater drainage
which meets or exceeds the design and/or construction standards for
public drainageways.
DRAINAGEWAY, UNIMPROVED
A portion of land used or intended principally for stormwater,
surface water or groundwater drainage which does not meet or exceed
the design and/or construction standards for public drainageways.
DRIVEWAY
A private access way for motor vehicles between a public
or private street and one or more structures or off-street parking
areas.
DWELLING
A building designed or used principally for residential occupancy,
including, without limitation, single-family dwellings, two-family
dwellings and multiple-family dwellings.
EASEMENT
A quantity of land set aside in which a liberty, privilege,
or advantage in land, without profit, is dedicated and is distinct
from fee ownership of the land, is granted either to the public, a
particular person, a utility company or a combination thereof.
ENGINEER
A licensed professional engineer licensed by the State of
Illinois.
ESCROW DEPOSIT
A deposit in cash or other approved securities to assure
the completion of improvements within a subdivision or planned unit
development.
EXCAVATION
Any act by which organic matter, earth, sand, gravel, rock,
or any other similar material is cut into, dug, quarried, uncovered,
removed, displaced, relocated or bulldozed and shall include the conditions
resulting therefrom.
FIELD INSPECTOR
An individual, company or firm appointed by the City Engineer
to inspect construction to ensure compliance with approved plans and
specifications.
FILL
Any act by which earth, sand, gravel, rock or any other material
is deposited, placed, replaced, pushed, dumped, pulled, transported
or moved by humans to a new location and shall include the conditions
resulting therefrom.
FINAL DEVELOPMENT PLAN
A final plan that is required to be submitted to the City Clerk as specified in the planned unit development regulations, Article
V of this chapter.
FINAL GRADE
The vertical location of the ground or pavement surface after
the grading work is completed in accordance with the approved engineering
plans.
FINAL PLAT
A map or plan of a subdivision and any accompanying material
as described hereafter.
FINAL PUNCH LIST
A tabulation of deficiencies requiring corrective action
prior to final acceptance of a project.
FLOOD
A general or temporary condition of inundation of normally
dry land areas from the overflow, the unusual and rapid accumulation
or the runoff of surface waters from any source.
FLOOD ROUTE
A designed strip or piece of land which will receive the
excess surface runoff not accommodated by storm sewer or other drainage
facilities.
FRONTAGE
The measure of lineal contiguity between a lot or portion
thereof and another lot, public street, alley or public way.
FRONTAGE ROAD
A local street which is parallel to and either contiguous
to, adjacent to, or within the right-of-way of an arterial street.
GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEM (GIS)
A computer system maintained by Bloomington, Normal and McLean
Counties that stores and links nongraphic attributes or geographically
referenced data with graphic map features to allow a wide range of
information processing and display operations, as well as map production,
analysis and modeling.
HALF STREET
A street of less than the total required width.
LAND IMPROVEMENT
Any sanitary sewerage system, storm sewer system, water access
strip, off-street parking area, or other improvement which the City
may require under this chapter.
LIVE STORAGE
That volume available in a stormwater detention/retention
basin for runoff in accordance with the requirements of this Manual.
LOT
A quantity of land capable of being described with such definition
that its location and boundaries may be established and which is designated
by its owner or developer as land to be conveyed, used or developed
as a unit or which has been conveyed, used or developed as a unit,
including any easements appurtenant thereto. Such lot shall have frontage
on a public or private street.
LOT AREA
The area of a horizontal plane bounded by the vertical planes
through front, side, and rear lot lines.
LOT OF RECORD
A lot which is part of a subdivision recorded in the office
of the McLean County Recorder of Deeds, or a lot or parcel described
by metes and bounds, the description of which has been legally recorded.
LOT, BUTT
A lot at the end of a block and located between two corner
lots.
LOT, CORNER
A lot located at the intersection of two or more streets.
A lot abutting on a curved street or streets shall be considered a
corner lot if straight lines drawn from the foremost points of the
side lot lines to the foremost point of the lot meet at an interior
angle less than 135°.
LOT, DEPTH
Any distance between the midpoints of straight lines connecting
the foremost points of the side lot lines in front and the rearmost
points of the side lot lines in the rear.
LOT, INTERIOR
A lot which faces on one street or with opposite sides on
two streets.
LOT, OUT-
A lot depicted on a final subdivision plat which does not
meet the requirements of this chapter for lots of record and which
may not be used for buildings and parking lots.
LOT, THROUGH
A lot other than a corner lot with frontage on more than
one street. Through lots abutting two streets may be referred to as
"double-frontage lots."
MEDIAN
An area between opposite traffic lanes of a street or roadway.
MINOR STREET
A street of limited continuity. Its primary purpose is to
serve abutting properties.
MONUMENT
A.
Section corner monumentation.
B.
Property line monumentation.
NO-ACCESS STRIP
A land area at least one meter (three feet) wide along a
lot line within which no vehicular driveways shall be permitted.
OFFICIAL MAP
The map adopted by the Planning Commission as part of the
City of Lexington Comprehensive Plan, which is designated "Comprehensive
Plan and Official Map" in that plan.
OWNER
Any person, firm, association, partnership, private corporation,
public or quasi-public corporation who or which will be responsible
for paying the cost of the project, or a combination of any of them,
or other legal entity having sufficient proprietary interest in the
land sought to be subdivided or developed to commence and maintain
proceedings under the provisions of this chapter.
PARCEL
All contiguous land used or legally described and recorded
as a single unit.
PARKING LOT
An area not on public right-of-way, exclusive of driveways,
which is used for the parking of motor vehicles. For purposes of computing
the number of parking space in a lot, all areas used for parking under
unified control on the same or contiguous parcels of land shall be
considered as one lot.
PARKING SPACE/PAD
An off-street parking area adjacent to a driveway which provides
parking for a single motor vehicle.
PAVEMENT
A portion of the street designated for vehicular use measured
from face of curb to face of curb or edge to edge of paved street
surface where there are no curbs.
PEDESTRIAN WAY
A right-of-way or easement across or within a block designated
for pedestrian use.
PLANNED UNIT DEVELOPMENT
A lot or group of lots which is developed as a unit under single ownership or unified control, which includes one or more principal buildings or uses, and is processed under the planned unit development procedure of Article
V of this chapter.
PRELIMINARY PLAN
A tentative map or plan of a proposed subdivision as described
in this chapter.
PROJECT
All of the various parts of proposed construction submitted
to the City Engineer for approval.
PROPERTY LINE
The lines bounding a lot or parcel and delineating the land
in individual ownership.
PUBLIC IMPROVEMENTS
Include streets, sidewalks, public utilities and other structures,
fixtures or land appurtenances which are or are intended to be dedicated
to the City of Lexington and the public generally.
RELEASE RATE
The controlled rate at which stormwater is released from
a stormwater detention/retention basin; not including overflow.
RESERVE
To set aside a parcel of land in anticipation of its acquisition
by the City (or other government entity) for public purposes.
RIGHT-OF-WAY
A strip of land dedicated to or used by the public for vehicular
and/or pedestrian passage; stormwater, surface water or groundwater
drainage; or public utility placement.
ROADWAY
A portion of a right-of-way used or intended principally
for vehicular passage, with appurtenant drainage ditches, ways or
structures.
SETBACK
The minimum longitudinal distance between the building line
or structure and the related front, side or rear property line.
SIDE STRIP
The unpaved strip of land within a right-of-way and is parallel
to the roadway.
SIDEWALK
A portion of a right-of-way used or intended principally
for pedestrian passage, which meets or exceeds the design standards
for public sidewalks.
STORM FREQUENCY
The frequency of occurrence of a rainfall representing the
number of years in which a rain of that magnitude, or larger, will
occur. Statistically, it represents the probability of occurrence
of a storm event, e.g., the one-hundred-year-frequency storm has a
one-percent probability in any given year; the five-year-frequency
storm has a twenty-percent probability in any given year.
STORMWATER DETENTION BASIN
A reservoir designed and built for temporary storage of surface
runoff, either on, below or above the ground surface, accompanied
by controlled release of the entire stored water.
STORMWATER RETENTION BASIN
A wet-bottom reservoir designed and built for the temporary
storage of surface runoff, above the normal water level of the reservoir,
accompanied by controlled release of the part of the stored water
above the normal water level of the facility.
STORY
That portion of a building included between the upper surface
of the floor and the upper surface of the floor or roof next above.
A basement shall be counted as a story, and a cellar shall not be
counted as a story, unless it contains a dwelling unit.
STREET
That portion of a public or private right-of-way used and
maintained by a public entity which affords the public the principal
means of access to adjacent lots of record or property and meets the
design and construction standards for the classification it holds.
STREET, ARTERIAL
Has high average daily traffic (ADT) and is not intended
to be a residential street. An arterial street provides connection
with major state and interstate roadways and has a high potential
for the location of significant community facilities as well as retail,
commercial, and industrial facilities.
STREET, COLLECTOR
Functions to conduct traffic between arterial streets and/or
activity centers. It is a principal traffic artery within residential
areas and carries moderate volumes of traffic. (A collector street
has the potential for sustaining minor retail or other commercial
establishments along its route which will influence the traffic flow.)
STREET, LOCAL
A short street, cul-de-sac, or court. The primary purpose
of a local street is to conduct traffic to and from dwelling units
or businesses to other streets within the hierarchy of streets.
STREET STANDARDS AND CLASSIFICATIONS
The current Illinois Department of Transportation classifications
and standards as modified by the City Council pertaining to requirements
for streets, as from time to time amended.
STREET WIDTH
The shortest distance between the right-of-way lines of a
given street.
STRUCTURE
Anything constructed or erected, the use of which requires
permanent or temporary location on or in the ground, including, but
not limited to, buildings, fences, gazebos, signs, billboards, supporting
towers, and swimming pools.
SUBDIVIDE
A.
The division of land into two or more lots,
parcels, or tracts.
B.
The dedication of streets, ways, or other areas
for use of the public.
C.
Any division of land which creates more than
one additional lot for transfer or ownership and/or building development,
or where a new street is involved, or additional utilities, such as
sewer or water trunk lines, are involved.
D.
Any development of property adjacent to a street which street does not comply with the City's standards for new street construction or right-of-way width; or meets the definition of a planned unit development as defined in Article
V; or long-term lease for new development.
SUBDIVIDER
Any owner commencing proceedings under this chapter.
SUBDIVISION
The configuration of lots of record, outlots, public rights-of-way
and public improvements which results from subdividing land in accordance
with the procedures, requirements and standards of this chapter.
TRAIL
That portion of a public right-of-way separated from the
roadway intended for multipurpose, nonmotorized transportation and
recreational use.
UNIFIED CONTROL
The combination of two or more tracts of land of either through
unified ownership or other arrangements, wherein each owner has agreed
to allow use and to develop his/her tract as a single lot under the
provisions of the ordinance applicable to planned unit developments.
USE
The purpose or activity for which the land, or building thereon, is designed, arranged, or intended, or for which it is occupied or maintained, and shall include any manner of performance of such activity with respect to the regulations of Chapter
300, Zoning.
VACATE
To terminate the legal existence of a right-of-way or easement
or subdivision, and to so note on the final plat recorded with the
McLean County Recorder of Deeds.
WALKWAY
A portion of a right-of-way used or intended principally
for pedestrian passage which does not meet or exceed the design standards
for public sidewalks.
WATERSHED
That land area from which all runoff from rainfall would
eventually reach the point in question by flowing over the surface
of the ground or through existing improvements.
ZONING MAP
The map adopted by the City Council showing all the zoning
district boundaries within the City of Lexington, Illinois.
This chapter shall not be construed as abating
any action now pending under, or by virtue of, prior existing subdivision
regulations, or as discontinuing, abating, modifying, or altering
any penalty accruing or about to accrue, or as affecting the liability
of any person, firm, or corporation, or as waiving any right of the
City under any section or provision existing at the time of adoption
of this chapter, or as vacating or annulling any rights obtained by
any person, firm, or corporation, by lawful action of the City except
as shall be expressly provided for in this chapter.
For the purpose of providing the public health,
safety, and general welfare, the City Council may from time to time
amend the provisions imposed by these subdivision regulations. Public
hearings on all proposed amendments shall be held by the City's Planning
Commission in the manner prescribed by law.
Regulation of the subdivision of land and the
attachment of reasonable conditions to land subdivision is an exercise
of valid power delegated by the State of Illinois to the City. The
subdivider or owner has the duty of compliance with reasonable conditions
laid down by the City for design, dedication, improvement, and restrictive
use of land so as to conform to the physical and economical development
of the City and to the safety and general welfare of the future owners
of lots in the subdivision.
In accordance with state law, any plat or part
thereof may be vacated by the owner of the parcel, at any time before
the sale of any lot therein, by written vacation instrument to which
a copy of the plat is attached. If there are public service facilities
in any street, or other public way, or easement shown on said plat,
the instrument shall reserve to the City or other public entity or
public utility owning such facilities the property, rights-of-way,
and easements necessary for continuing public service by means of
those facilities and for maintaining or reconstructing the same. The
vacation instrument shall be approved by the City Council in the same
manner as plats of subdivision, and shall also be approved by the
public utilities involved. In the case of platted parcels wherein
any lots have been sold, the written instrument must also be signed
by all the owners of the lots in said parcel.
Any person found guilty of violating, disobeying,
omitting, neglecting or refusing to comply with, or resisting or opposing
the investigation or enforcement of any of the provisions of this
chapter, upon conviction thereof, shall be punished by a fine in an
amount not to exceed $750 for each offense. Each day that a violation
of this chapter continues shall constitute a separate and distinct
offense and shall be punishable as such.
Whenever any trustee of a land trust or any
beneficiary or beneficiaries of a land trust make application to the
City for approval of a subdivision under this chapter relating to
the land which is subject of such trust, such application shall identify
each beneficiary of such land trust by name and address and define
his interest therein as required by the Illinois Compiled Statutes.
All such applications shall be verified by the applicant in his capacity
as trustee, or by the beneficiary as a beneficial owner of interest
in such land trust. If such application is filed by body politic or
other corporate entity, it shall be verified by a duly authorized
officer of such body politic or other corporate entity for which such
application is made.