Terms defined. For purposes of this chapter, certain terms are herewith
defined:
ACCESSORY BUILDING
A subordinate building located on the same lot with the main
building, occupied by or devoted to an accessory use. Where an "accessory
building" is attached to the main building in a substantial manner,
as by a wall or roof, such "accessory building" shall be considered
part of the main building for yard determination.
ACCESSORY USE
A use customarily incidental and subordinate to the main
use or building and located on the same lot therewith.
ALTERATION
As applied to a building or structure, a change or rearrangement
in the structural parts or in the exit facilities; or an enlargement,
whether by extending on a side or by increasing in height; or the
moving from one location or position to another.
BOARDINGHOUSE or ROOMING HOUSE
The furnishing of meals and/or living accommodations for
five or more persons on a weekly or longer time basis, for compensation.
BUILDING COVERAGE
The horizontal area of a lot covered by all buildings, measured
to the outside of walls.
BUILDING HEIGHT
The vertical distance measured from the average elevation
of the proposed finished grade at the front of the building to the
highest point of the roof for flat roofs, to the deckline of mansard
roofs and to the mean height between eaves and ridge for gable, hip
and gambrel roofs.
CAMPING GROUND
A lot used for overnight or longer occupancy by campers,
tents or other movable or temporary dwelling or sleeping quarters
for human beings, but not including such occupancy when accessory
to a dwelling on the same lot and limited to seasonal use by members
of the immediate family residing in said dwelling.
DWELLING
A building used as the living quarters for one or more families,
but not including a boardinghouse or rooming house, hotel or lodging
house or motel.
DWELLING, MULTIFAMILY
A building or a group of buildings on one lot, containing
three or more dwelling units.
DWELLING UNIT
A structure or part of a structure containing a room or rooms
designed for human occupancy by one family and including customary
kitchen facilities.
FAMILY
One or more persons, related by birth, marriage or other
domestic bond, occupying a dwelling unit and living as a single housekeeping
unit or a group of not more than four persons not necessarily related
by blood or marriage.
FARM PRODUCTS STAND
A structure where products grown on the premises or elsewhere
by the operator of the "farm products stand" may be sold and purchased.
FENCE
A structure bounding an area of land, designed either to
limit access to the area or to screen such area from view, or both.
FILLING STATION
An area of land, including structures thereon, used for the
supply of motor vehicle fuels, lubricants, accessories and such service
as washing, polishing and minor repairs but not major repairs, collision
service or painting.
FLAMMABLE LIQUIDS
Liquids having a flash point below 200° F., closed cup
tester. Class I flammable liquids (e.g., gasoline, ether, liquid petroleum
gas) are those having a flash point below 25° F. Class II flammable
liquids (e.g., alcohol, ethyl or methyl acetate) are those having
a flash point below 70° F. but not below 25° F.
GARAGE, PRIVATE
An accessory building or portion of a main building used
for the storage of self-propelled vehicles used by the occupants of
the premises, including space for not more than one passenger vehicle
used by others.
GASOLINE SERVICE STATION
A building and appurtenant facilities designed to serve motor
vehicles, not including vehicle painting or body work, with all repair
work conducted inside a building.
HOME OCCUPATION
Any customary, incidental business operated from the dwelling
unit of the proprietor in a manner as to maintain the residential
character of the lot, without outside employees, identifying signs
or other evidence of business activity outside of the dwelling unit.
HOTEL or LODGING HOUSE
A building containing sleeping rooms for five or more persons,
which rooms are available to the public for less than a week at a
time for compensation, with no cooking or dining facilities except
a general kitchen and public dining room.
KENNEL
Any premises used or maintained for the keeping, sheltering,
care or raising of three or more dogs over four months of age.
LOT
A parcel of land considered as a unit, devoted to a certain
use or occupied by a building or a group of buildings that are united
by a common interest or use, and the customary accessories and open
spaces belonging to the same. A "lot" within the meaning of this chapter
may or may not be a lot as shown on a subdivision plat or assessment
record.
LOT AREA
The net area contained within lot lines.
LOT LINES
The property lines bounding the lot. The front lot line shall
be the right-of-way line of the street or highway giving access to
the lot. In the case of a corner lot, the owner may designate either
street lot line as the front lot line. The rear lot line shall be
the lot line most distant from the front lot line.
LOT WIDTH
The least horizontal distance across the lot between side
lot lines, measured at the front of a main building erected or to
be erected on such lot or at a distance from the front lot line equal
to the required depth of front yard.
MIGRATORY LABOR CAMP or LABOR CAMP
Any building, structure or trailer or group of buildings,
structures or trailers, erected, used or maintained for the housing
of migratory or transient laborers.
MOBILE HOME
A transportable single-family dwelling intended for permanent
occupancy, office or place of assembly, contained in one unit or in
two units designed to be joined into one integral unit capable of
again being separated for repeated towing, which arrives at a site
complete and ready for occupancy except for minor and inidental unpacking
and assembly operations and constructed so that it may be used without
a permanent foundation.
MOBILE HOME COURT OR PARK
A parcel of land under single ownership which has been planned
and improved for the placement of mobile homes for nontransient use,
consisting of two or more mobile home lots.
MOTEL
A building or group of buildings used primarily as sleeping
or living quarters for transient automobile travelers and providing
for accessory off-street parking, but with no cooking facilities except
in a restaurant or caretaker's unit. The term includes auto courts,
cabin courts, motor lodges, tourist courts and similar appellations.
NONCONFORMING USE
Lawful occupancy of a structure or land by a use that does
not conform to the regulations of the district in which it is situated.
NONRESIDENCE DISTRICT
Any district other than an R-1 One-Family Residence District,
R-2 One-Family Residence District, R-3 Two-Family Residence District
or RM Residential Mobile District.
NURSERY SCHOOL
The use of a building or lot or part of a building or lot
for nursery or other care of more than five children under six years
of age not residing on the premises and conducted on a regularly scheduled
basis.
NURSING HOME or CONVALESCENT HOME
The use of a building or part of a building for nursing care
of two or more persons not related to the operator by family ties,
and for compensation.
OFF-STREET LOADING SPACE
An unobstructed area having access to a street, suitable
for the loading or unloading of motor transport vehicles, with minimum
dimensions of 12 feet in height, eight feet in width and 30 feet in
depth.
OFF-STREET PARKING SPACE
An unobstructed area having access to a street, suitable
for the parking of passenger motor vehicles, with minimum dimensions
of eight feet in width and 20 feet in depth.
PERSONAL SERVICE ESTABLISHMENT
An office, store or other place of business catering to the
personal needs of a customer, such as normally conducted by a barber,
beautician, tailor or dressmaker.
PROFESSIONAL OFFICE
When operated as a permitted accessory use in a residence
district, a room or rooms on the same lot as the residence of a professional
doctor, dentist, engineer, architect or other recognized professional
and used as a place of business for such profession in a manner clearly
accessory to the dwelling use of the lot.
RECREATIONAL VEHICLE
A transportation structure, self-propelled or capable of
being towed by a passenger car, station wagon or small pickup truck,
of such size and weight as not to require any special highway movement
permits and primarily designed or constructed to provide temporary
movable living quarters for recreational, camping or travel use or
to carry such equipment, but not for profit or commercial use. Included
as "recreational vehicles," but not to the exclusion of any other
types not mentioned in this definition, are trailers; trailer coaches;
camping trailers; motor homes; pickup (slide-in) campers; chassis
mounts; converted vans; chopped vans; mini-motor homes; fifth-wheel
trailers of recreational vehicle construction, design and intent (as
opposed to commercial fifth-wheel trailers); boat trailers, with or
without boats mounted thereon; snowmobile trailers, with or without
snowmobiles mounted thereon; and truck caps.
(1)
TRAILERS, TRAILER COACHES and FIFTH-WHEEL TRAILERSRecreational vehicles constructed with integral wheels to make them mobile and intended to be towed by passenger cars, station wagons and/or light pickup or panel trucks and similar motor vehicles, but not including truck tractors of any type.
(2)
CAMPING TRAILERA type of trailer or trailer coach, the walls of which are so constructed as to be collapsible and made out of either canvas or similar cloth or some form of rigid material such as fiberglass or plastic or metal. The walls are collapsed while the recreational vehicle is being towed and are raised or unfolded when the vehicle becomes temporary living quarters and is not being moved.
(3)
PICKUP (SLIDE-IN) CAMPERS and TRUCK CAPSRecreational structures designed to be mounted temporarily or permanently in the beds of light trucks, with the trucks having either single or double rear wheels and with or without an assisting extra tag axle and wheels mounted either on the camper chassis or the truck chassis behind the truck's rear wheels. These campers can be readily demounted from the truck beds. When removed from their respective truck beds, "pickup (slide-in) campers" and "truck caps" are called "unmounted campers."
(5)
CONVERTED AND CHOPPED VANSRecreational structures which are created by altering or changing an existing auto van to make it into a recreational vehicle meeting the requirements in the definition of "chassis mounts, motor homes and mini-motor homes" above.
(6)
BOAT OR SNOWMOBILE TRAILERA vehicle on which a boat or snowmobile may be transported and which is towable by a passenger car, station wagon, pickup truck or mobile recreational vehicle as above defined. When removed from the trailer, a boat or snowmobile, for purposes of this chapter, is termed an "unmounted boat or snowmobile."
RESIDENCE DISTRICT
An R-1 One-Family Residence District, R-2 One-Family Residence
District, R-3 Two-Family Residence District or RM Residential Mobile
District.
SEASONAL BASIS
Conducting of a use for a period not exceeding eight months
in any calendar year.
SETBACK
The least horizontal distance from any building to the nearest
street or highway right-of-way.
SIGN
Any advertisement, announcement, direction or communication
produced in whole or in part by the construction, erection, affixing
or placing of a structure on any land or on any other structure or
produced by painting or posting or placing any printed, lettered,
pictured, figured or colored material on any structure or surface,
but not including signs placed or erected by the Village of North
Collins, the County of Erie or the State of New York for the purpose
of showing street names, traffic directions or regulations or for
other public purposes.
STORY
That portion of a building between the surface of any floor
and the surface of the floor next above it or, if there is no floor
above it, then the space between any floor and ceiling next above
it. A basement shall be counted as a "story" for purposes of height
measurement, if the ceiling is more than five feet above the average
adjoining ground level or if used for business or dwelling purposes.
A half-story is a story under a sloping roof, having a ceiling height
of seven feet or more for not exceeding 1/2 the floor area of the
uppermost full story in the building.
STRUCTURAL ALTERATIONS
Any change in the supporting members of a building or other
structure, such as bearing walls, columns, beams, girders, foundations
or foundation components.
STRUCTURE
Anything constructed or erected which requires permanent
location on the ground or attachment to something having such location.
YARD, FRONT
An open space extending the full width of the lot between
a main building and front lot line (the nearest street right-of-way
line), unoccupied and unobstructed by buildings or structures from
the ground upward, the depth of which shall be the least distance
between the front lot line (the nearest street right-of-way line)
and the front of such building. In cases where a lot is construed
to include 1/2 of the abutting street, the front yard depths herein
required may be measured from the center of the street right-of-way,
provided that 1/2 the street width is added to such required front
yard depth.
YARD, REAR
An open space extending the full width of a lot between the
rearmost main building and the rear lot line, unoccupied and unobstructed
by buildings or structures from the ground upward, except as hereinafter
specified, the depth of which shall be the least distance between
the rear lot line and the rear of such main building.
YARD, SIDE
An open space extending from the front yard to the rear yard
between a main building and the side lot line, unoccupied and unobstructed
by buildings or structures from the ground upward, except as hereinafter
specified. The required width of a "side yard" shall be measured horizontally
from the nearest point in the side lot line to the nearest building.