The Borough will maintain a list of street designations by resolution.
New half or partial streets will not be permitted, but wherever
a tract to be subdivided borders an existing recorded half or partial
street, the Borough Council may require the applicant to provide adjacent
to such half or partial street a reservation of land adequate to allow
the construction of a street meeting the standards of this chapter.
At all changes in street grades where the algebraic difference
in grade exceeds 1%, vertical curves shall be provided. The minimum
sight distance provided shall be as follows for both crest and sag
vertical curves.
Design Speed
(miles per hour)
|
Minimum Sight Distance
(feet)
|
---|
20
|
125
|
25
|
150
|
30
|
200
|
35
|
250
|
40
|
325
|
45
|
400
|
50
|
475
|
55
|
550
|
All subdivisions and land developments shall be designed to meet the requirements of Chapter
450, Zoning, of the Code of the Borough of Walnutport, except as may be otherwise provided in this chapter.
The following standards are hereby established to create a transition
between potentially incompatible land uses and to reduce conflicts
between these uses.
A. Applicability. Buffer areas shall be located between uses defined
by this section and shall be required in addition to the landscaping
requirements of this section. Buffer areas shall be classified as
Class A, B, C or D buffer, and shall be required between the following
uses (inclusive of on-site parking and loading/unloading areas):
(1) Class A buffer. Any development consisting of 10 or more multifamily
dwelling units, single-family attached dwelling units (townhouses),
or mobile home parks adjoining any residentially zoned district, or
residential use, shall provide a Class A buffer.
(2) Class B buffer. Any commercial use, office use, institutional use,
or any off-street parking facility that is the principal use of a
lot, adjoining any residentially zoned district or residential use
shall provide a Class B buffer.
(3) Class C buffer. Any industrial use, unless otherwise specified in
this chapter, outdoor storage areas, utility uses, or agricultural
uses, adjoining any residentially zoned district or residential use
shall provide a Class C buffer.
(4) Class D buffer. A junkyard, recycling center or similar intensive
uses shall provide a Class D buffer between fencing and the street
line and along all property lines.
(5) Other uses determined to be potential conflicts shall provide the
buffer class specified by the Borough Council, upon recommendation
by the Planning Commission.
B. Buffer class standards. After determining the required buffer class,
the applicant shell select an appropriate planting option listed below.
Plantings are not required to be aligned on property or right-of-way
boundaries; rather, the applicant is encouraged to site plantings
as necessary to achieve the optimal screening level. Plant materials
shall be selected from the plant materials list in Appendix VI.
(1) Class A. One canopy tree every 30 feet, plus one evergreen every
40 feet of boundary; or one canopy tree every 60 feet, plus one flowering
tree every 40 feet, plus one evergreen every 40 feet of boundary.
(2) Class B. One evergreen every 20 feet, and one flowering tree every
40 feet of boundary; or one canopy tree every 40 feet, and one evergreen
tree every 30 feet plus one flowering tree every 60 feet of boundary.
(3) Class C. One evergreen every 20 feet, plus one berm four feet high;
or six-foot high cedar or spruce fencing with one flowering or evergreen
tree every 20 feet of boundary.
(4) Class D. In addition to required fencing of at least six feet in
height, the following plantings shall be provided between the fence
and street or property line: one canopy or flowering tree at an average
of one tree every 30 feet, plus one evergreen tree at an average of
one tree every 20 feet; or one evergreen tree at an average of one
tree every 20 feet, plus one shrub every five feet. The Class D buffer
yard width shall be the setback specified for the required fence for
the individual use in Article X, Supplemental Regulations.
C. Plant materials.
(1) Each plant option listed in Subsection
B, above, may use any of the plant materials listed in Appendix VI. Minimum plant size shall be as indicated in Appendix VI.
The use of native plant species, as indicated in Appendix VI, is strongly
encouraged. For reasons of permanency and resistance, a mixing of
two or more varying plant materials shall be required in meeting the
requirements of this section. Borough Council, upon recommendation
by the Planning Commission, may permit other plant types if they are
hardy to the area, are not subject to blight or disease, and are of
the same general character and growth habit as those listed in Appendix
VI. All planting materials shall meet the standards of the American
Association of Nurserymen.
(2) Where it is determined that, due to topography or other factors, the buffer classes prescribed in Subsection
B, above, do not alone provide an adequate buffer between adjoining incompatible uses, the planting shall be placed upon a berm at a height of three feet to five feet to increase its effectiveness.
(3) Existing plantings, woodlands, hedgerows, topography, or man-made
structures can reduce or eliminate the buffering requirements if they
partially or completely achieve the same level of screening as the
planting requirements outlined in this section. This determination
shall be made at the discretion of the Borough Council, upon recommendation
by the Planning Commission.
(4) Existing trees within the required buffer yard greater than three
inches in caliper or greater than eight feet in height shall be preserved
to the extent feasible. Such trees may be counted towards required
plant materials, as determined by the Borough Council, upon recommendation
by the Planning Commission.
(5) Required plantings for buffering chosen shall not interfere with
preexisting overhead wiring or other preexisting overhead permanent
structures.
D. General buffering requirements.
(1) Buffer yards shall be maintained and kept clean of all debris, rubbish,
weeds and tall grass.
(2) Planting in the buffer area shall be installed and thereafter maintained
by the property owner. Required buffer plantings shall not be removed
without the prior approval of the Borough. If such plantings are removed,
the Borough may require that they be replaced, in kind, at the expense
of the property owner.
(3) The locations, dimensions, and spacing of required plantings shall
be adequate for their proper growth and maintenance, considering sizes
of such plantings at maturity and their present and future environmental
requirements, such as soil, pH, moisture, and sunlight. The buffer
planting shall be so placed that, at maturity, vegetation extends
not closer than 1 1/2 feet from any street right-of-way.
(4) A clear sight triangle, in accordance with this chapter, shall be
maintained at all street intersections and at all points where private
accessways intersect public streets.
(5) No structures may be placed within the buffer area and no manufacturing
or processing activity or storage of materials shall be permitted,
except for the following:
(a)
Landscaped treatments, such as berms, fences or walls which
aid in screening and do not conflict with the character of adjoining
properties, including drainage, light, and air flow, or block clear
sight distance required at intersections.
(b)
Structures relating to and used for landscaping, such as tree
wells, tree guards, tree grates and retaining walls to preserve stands
or specimens of existing trees or used for other functional purposes.
(c)
Roads which provide direct ingress/egress for the tract or lot,
including appurtenant structures within road rights-of-way, such as
curbs, sidewalks, signs, lighting or benches.
(6) Mechanical equipment, storage structures, garbage and waste disposal
facilities, and similar facilities shall be fully screened from view
from adjacent streets or residential districts or uses, through the
use of fences or buffering planting materials.
(7) The applicant is encouraged to install buffer plantings in naturalistic
groupings rather than in linear strips, if a satisfactory buffer can
be achieved.
(8) Where buffering is required, a landscape plan for the new use or
development shall be submitted to the Borough which displays all proposed
plantings required to buffer the use or development and how the requirements
of this section have been achieved on that property for that particular
use or development.
(9) Where earthen berms are required to provide effective screening,
the specified elevation of the berm shall be that achieved after the
earth has settled.
(10)
To the extent possible, landscaping around detention basins
shall be naturalized (e.g., clusters of evergreens interspersed with
groupings of deciduous tress and shrubs) and designed to blend with
the surrounding environment. When buffering stormwater detention basins,
trees shall not be planted on the basin berm or dam; however, shrubs
may be planted in this area.
(11)
Buffering standards shall not apply to front yards of lots,
except for Class D buffers.
E. General landscaping requirements.
(1) Any part of a lot which is not used for buildings, other structures,
loading or parking spaces and aisles, sidewalks and designated storage
areas shall be planted with an all season ground cover approved by
Borough Council. It shall be maintained to provide an attractive appearance,
and all nonsurviving plants shall be replaced.
(2) Plant materials shall be chosen from Appendix VI to prevent soil erosion and subsequent sedimentation.
(3) Landscaping requirements for shade and street trees shall be followed
in accordance with this chapter.
F. Landscaping requirements for off-street parking. The following standards
shall be required for off-street parking facilities having greater
than five parking spaces.
(1) Raised planting islands shall be located at each end of a parking
space row and between every 12 consecutive parking spaces in a row.
Planting islands shall be a minimum of three feet in width, extend
the length of a parking space, and shall be planted with one shade
tree per island, with such trees selected from the list in Appendix
VI. Existing trees can be credited toward this requirements if in
good condition and located as required.
(2) Perimeter plantings shall be provided around all parking areas and
shall have a minimum width of three feet. Such areas shall meet the
requirements of Class B buffer of this section.
(3) Perimeter planting strips and raised planting islands shall be protected
by curbs.
(4) Surface treatment of raised planting islands and perimeter plantings
shall be grass, ground cover, or low-maintenance shrubs, or other
Borough-approved plant materials.