The purpose of this article is to identify certain
regulations and standards that are either common to all zoning districts
or applicable to more than one district.
No principal building, or part thereof, shall
be erected within, or shall project into, any required yard in any
district, except for unenclosed porches, decks, one-story bay windows,
eaves, chimneys, balconies, fire escapes, buttresses, cornices, or
steps, and none of these, except unenclosed decks or similar projects,
shall encroach more than three feet into any required yard. In residential
districts, such unenclosed decks may extend not more than seven feet
into required rear yards.
Family-based community residence facilities
shall be permitted by right in all residential districts in accordance
with the requirements below:
A. No facility shall be located within 400 feet of an
existing facility.
B. There shall be not more than two residents per bedroom,
and this is not to exceed a maximum number of seven residents per
facility, not including staff.
C. There must be a twenty-four-hour-a-day on-duty supervisor
who is qualified for the position.
D. Parking shall comply with Article
XV.
E. Any alterations or additions to the exterior of a
community residence facility shall be compatible with the existing
structure and in keeping with the neighborhood character, excluding
safety modifications.
F. Each facility must receive all pertinent approvals
and/or licenses from the appropriate state agencies.
G. All other applicable requirements of this chapter,
the building code, fire code, and all other applicable Borough codes
and ordinances and state regulations must be met.
H. All community residence facilities will be available
for reasonable periodic inspections by the Code Enforcement Officer
(CEO).
I. The operator of the facility must register the facility
annually with the CEO and provide the following information:
(2)
Profit or nonprofit status of the facility.
(3)
The registration of the facility with the Department
of Public Welfare (DPW).
(4)
The name of each resident currently residing
on the premises.
(5)
Other information as may be reasonably requested
by the Borough.
Family day-care homes shall be permitted as
an accessory use in all residential districts, subject to the following
requirements:
A. Any outdoor play area must be enclosed with a fence
that shall be not less than four feet high and shall extend to the
ground to prevent children from crawling underneath the fence.
B. Outdoor play activities shall be limited to the hours
between 9:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m.
C. The area for pickup and discharge of children must
be free from traffic hazards.
D. The appearance and exterior design of the facility
shall be compatible with the surrounding dwellings.
E. There shall be screening and planting consistent with
the character of the surrounding uses.
F. The facility shall display no sign that is inconsistent with the residential character of the neighborhood and shall be subject to Article
XVI relating to signs.
G. No portion of the facility shall be within 200 feet
of a gasoline service station, underground gasoline storage tanks,
heavy industrial operations, truck loading areas, or other hazardous
uses or activities.
H. Each facility must have the appropriate certificates
as required by the Pennsylvania DPW that shall be prominently displayed
in the main entrance of the facility. All day-care homes must meet
all current DPW regulations and any applicable federal, state, or
local laws, ordinances, and regulations, including building and fire
safety codes.
I. The operator of the facility shall allow the Borough
CEO to enter the property at reasonable times, subject to twenty-four-hour
notice, to inspect the facility for compliance with this section and
other applicable ordinances or regulations.
Multifamily dwellings and nonresidential buildings
shall be properly lighted to assure safe driving conditions at night
as well as security and safety of residents and patrons. All lighting
shall be designed to protect neighboring properties from glare.
Private clubs shall be permitted by right in
the Central Retail District, subject to the following requirements:
A. Private clubs shall be operated for civic, cultural,
educational, social, or recreational purposes.
B. The activity shall be noncommercial, nonprofit, and
clearly not one carried on as a business.
C. Each building or facility shall be devoted to members
and their guests only.
D. No private club shall provide for eating or dining
except on an incidental basis.
In the event that multifamily dwellings are
converted or developed as condominiums, such condominiums shall be
owned and operated in accordance with the Pennsylvania Uniform Condominium
Act of 1980, as amended.
In determining if a proposed use is of the same
general character as the listed uses, Borough Council and the Planning
Commission shall consider the compatibility standards listed below:
A. Type and volume of sales, retail or wholesale activity,
size and type of items sold, and nature of inventory on the premises.
B. Extent of processing, assembly, warehousing, shipping,
and distribution of any dangerous, hazardous, toxic, or explosive
materials done on the premises.
C. The nature and location of storage and outdoor display
of merchandise and the predominant items stored.
D. The type, size, and nature of buildings and structures
supporting the use.
E. The number of employees and customers in relation
to business hours and employment shifts.
F. The business hours the use is in operation or open
for business, ranging from seven days a week, 24 hours a day to several
times a year, such as sport stadiums or fairgrounds.
G. The transportation requirements for people and freight,
by volume, type, and characteristics of traffic generation to and
from the site, trip purposes, and whether trip purposes can be shared
with other uses on the site.
H. Parking characteristics, turnover and generation,
ratio of the number of spaces required per unit area or activity,
and potential for shared parking with other uses.
I. The tendency for attracting or repelling criminal
activities to and from or on the premises.
J. The amount and nature of nuisances generated on the
premises, such as noise, smoke, odor, glare, vibration, radiation,
and fumes.
K. Any special public utility requirements for serving
the use, such as water supply, wastewater output, pretreatment of
wastes, and emissions recommended or required, and significant power
structures and communication towers or facilities.
No structure shall exceed the maximum height
as calculated by reference to the Height Limitation and Zoning District
Map for Marcus Hook Borough and the Model Airport Zoning Ordinance
to Limit the Height of Objects Around Airports. The calculation of
maximum heights for municipalities in airport hazard areas is required
by Pennsylvania Act 164 of 1984. Marcus Hook Borough falls within the airport hazard area
affected by Philadelphia International Airport.