A. 
Sketch plans should be legibly drawn on a Huntingdon County Tax Map or similar property line map at a scale of between one inch equals 100 feet to one inch equals 400 feet.
B. 
Sketch plans should include:
(1) 
Proposed development and land uses.
(2) 
Proposed public improvements.
(3) 
Any existing environmentally sensitive areas, which will constrain or limit development.
A. 
Scale. The preliminary plan shall be drawn to scale based on the following:
(1) 
If the average size of the proposed lots (not including residue) in the subdivision is five acres or smaller, the plan shall be drawn to a scale of one inch equals 100 feet.
(2) 
If the average size of the proposed lots (not including residue) in the subdivision is between five acres and 50 acres, the plan shall be drawn to a scale of one inch equals 200 feet.
(3) 
If the average size of the proposed lots (not including residue) in the subdivision is over 50 acres, the plan shall be drawn to a scale of one inch equals 400 feet.
B. 
Plan size and legibility.
(1) 
The subdivision plan submitted for preliminary approval shall be a clear, legible black- or blue-line print on white paper, or suitable equivalent.
(2) 
Preliminary plans shall be on sheets no larger than 24 inches by 36 inches. For small subdivisions, an alternate standard sheet size will be accepted. Final plans drawn in two or more sections shall be accompanied by a key diagram showing the relative location of the sections.
C. 
Plan information. The preliminary plan shall show or be accompanied by the following information:
(1) 
Proposed subdivision name or identifying title.
(2) 
North point, scale and date.
(3) 
A title/certificate block, containing the following:
(a) 
Name and address of owner of property and acknowledgement of subdivision.
(b) 
Name and seal of registered design professional responsible for the plan.
(c) 
Certificate of review by the Huntingdon County Planning Commission.
(d) 
Certificate of review and approval by Township Planning Commission and approval body.
(4) 
Tract boundaries with bearings and distances and total acreage being subdivided.
(5) 
Existing zoning districts or, if no zoning exists, future land use plan category, as stated in a local plan (if adopted) or the Huntingdon County Comprehensive Plan.
(6) 
Contours at vertical intervals of five feet or, in the case of relatively level tracts, at such lesser interval as may be necessary for satisfactory study and planning of the tract. Areas of steep slope shall be clearly identified as moderate steep slope (16% to 25%) and very steep slopes (25%+).
(7) 
Datum to which contour elevations refer. Where reasonably practicable, data shall refer to known, established elevations.
(8) 
All existing watercourses, lakes or ponds, floodways, floodplains, identified wetlands, tree masses, rock outcropping, caverns, sinkholes and other environmentally sensitive areas.
(9) 
All existing buildings, sewers, water mains, culverts, petroleum or petroleum product lines, fire hydrants and other significant man-made features.
(10) 
All existing streets on or adjacent to the tract, including name, right-of-way width, and pavement width.
(11) 
All existing property lines, easements and rights-of-way, and the purpose for which the easements or rights-of-way have been established.
(12) 
Location, name and width of all proposed streets, alleys, rights-of-way, and easements; proposed lot lines with approximate dimensions; playgrounds, public buildings, public areas and parcels of land proposed to be dedicated or reserved for public use.
(13) 
The names of owners of all abutting unplotted land and the names of all abutting subdivisions.
(14) 
Where the preliminary plan covers only a part of the developer's entire abutting holdings, a statement on eventual development of those lands, including a sketch of prospective eventual street layout.
(15) 
Any agricultural security areas within or abutting the property.
(16) 
Identify any areas where nonagricultural earth disturbance will occur, including estimated acreage of disturbance.
(17) 
A map for the purpose of locating the site to be subdivided at a scale of not more that 2,000 feet to the inch (e.g., drawn on a 7.5 Minute USGS Quadrangle Map).
D. 
The preliminary plan shall include therein or be accompanied by:
(1) 
All required permits and related documentation from the Department of Environmental Protection (PA DEP) and any other commonwealth agency, or from the county or township where any alteration or relocation of a stream or watercourse is proposed.
(2) 
Documentation indicating that all affected adjacent municipalities, PA DEP, the Department of Community and Economic Development, and the Federal Insurance Administrator have been notified whenever any alteration or relocation of a stream or watercourse is proposed.
(3) 
Copies of the proposed deed restrictions, if any, shall be attached to the preliminary plan.
(4) 
Proposed cross sections, profiles and details of any new proposed streets, sewer or waterlines, or storm sewer facilities.
A. 
Plan size and legibility.
(1) 
The subdivision plan submitted for final approval shall be a clear, legible black- or blue-line print on white paper, or suitable equivalent.
(2) 
Final plans shall be on sheets no larger than 24 inches by 36 inches. For small subdivisions, an alternate standard sheet size will be accepted. Final plans drawn in two or more sections shall be accompanied by a key diagram showing the relative location of the sections.
B. 
Required information.
(1) 
The final plan shall include the following:
(a) 
Subdivision name or identifying title.
(b) 
North point, scale and date.
(c) 
Name of the record owner and developer.
(2) 
Name and seal of the registered professional, if any, responsible for the plan.
(3) 
Name and seal of the professional surveyor certifying the accuracy of the plan.
(4) 
Boundaries of the tract, along with the location of boundary monuments and markers, of the area being subdivided with accurate distances to hundredths of a foot and bearings to one quarter of a minute. These boundaries shall be determined by accurate survey in the field, which shall be balanced and closed with an error of closure not to exceed one foot in 10,000 feet.
(5) 
Street lines, lot lines, rights-of-way, easements and areas dedicated or proposed to be dedicated to public use.
(6) 
The length of all straight lines, radii, lengths of curves, deflection angles, and tangent bearings for each street.
(7) 
All dimensions and angles or bearings of the lines of each lot and of each area proposed to be dedicated to public use.
(8) 
The proposed building setback line for each lot, or the proposed placement of each building.
(9) 
Location, size and invert elevation of all sanitary, storm and combined sewers and location of all manholes, inlets and culverts.
(10) 
All dimensions shall be shown in feet and in hundredths of a foot.
(11) 
Lot numbers.
(12) 
Names of streets within and adjacent to the subdivision.
(13) 
Permanent reference monuments shall be shown.
(14) 
Names of any adjoining subdivisions shall be shown.
(15) 
Names of the owners of any unplotted land shall be shown.
(16) 
Certificates. The final plan shall include thereon or be accompanied by:
(a) 
Certificate of dedication of streets and other public property, if offered for dedication.
(b) 
Certificate for approval by the approval body.
(c) 
An affidavit that the applicant is the owner or equitable owner of the land proposed to be subdivided.
(d) 
A statement duly acknowledged before an officer authorized to take acknowledgement of deeds and signed by the owner or owners of the property, to the effect that the subdivision as shown on the final plan is made with his or their free consent and that it is desired to record the same.
(e) 
Certification by the municipal Sewage Enforcement Officer when individual sewage disposal or water systems are to be installed as required by Article V of this chapter.
(f) 
Certification by the developer's engineer or surveyor that the plan meets the design and construction standards of this chapter.
(g) 
Certification by the municipal and county planning commissions that they have reviewed the final plan.
(h) 
An affidavit from each and every utility that the easements and proposed improvements provided satisfy the requirements of the respective utility company and that there is both a capacity and willingness to serve the development.
(i) 
A bonafide letter from the Huntingdon County Conservation District or the Department of Environmental Protection stating that all requirements of the latest version of the Soil Erosion and Sedimentation Control Manual have been met by the subdivider.
(j) 
An agreement by the developer to provide a list of applicable specified standards and improvements to purchasers, builders or their agents.
C. 
The final plan shall include therein or be accompanied by:
(1) 
Construction plans including, but not limited to, typical cross sections, street profiles and drainage details for all streets. Such profiles shall show at least the following: existing (natural) grade along the proposed street center line; proposed finished center-line grade or proposed finished grade at top of curbs; sanitary sewer mains and manholes; storm sewer mains, inlet, manholes and culverts.
(2) 
Protective covenants, if any, in form for recording.
(3) 
Proof of approvals by all appropriate public and governmental authorities or agencies where applicable including, but not limited to, occupancy permits for any planned road entrances onto existing roads or highways and permits or approvals from the Department of Environmental Protection or other state agencies relating to sewage facilities, water obstructions, air quality, etc., as applicable.