[Amended 12-19-1991 by Ord. No. 317-91]
A. Permitted principal uses.
(1)
Commercial and wholesale establishments, such as, but not limited
to:
[Amended 10-10-1995 by Ord. No. 706-95; 5-13-2004 by Ord. No.
107-04; 11-28-2023 by Ord. No. 106-23]
(a)
Equipment sales, but not including automobile sales.
(2)
Light mechanical operations or industrial processes, such as,
but not limited to:
(a)
Publishing, printing, bookbinding and related industries.
(b)
Electronic components and accessories and computer centers.
(c)
Engineering, laboratory, scientific, and research instruments
and related equipment.
(d)
Optical instruments and lenses.
(e)
Surgical, dental and medical instruments and apparatus.
(f)
Jewelry, silverware and precious metals.
(3)
Professional and office uses, including but not limited to:
[Amended 5-13-2004 by Ord. No. 107-04]
(b)
Accounting and financial.
(4)
Any form of horticulture consisting of customary and conventional
farming operations and any form of horticulture, except the commercial
keeping, breeding, raising or handling of livestock, fowl and fur-bearing
animals. Commercial greenhouses and structures or establishments for
the raising or sale of farm or horticultural products are permitted.
(5)
Such municipal or public buildings, parks and other municipal
facilities or properties, of a character not customarily conducted
as a gainful business, as deemed appropriate by the governing body.
B. Permitted accessory uses.
(1)
Private garages and other enclosed storage space necessary to
store motor vehicles or mobile vehicles on the premises.
(2)
Any accessory use on the same lot with and customarily incidental
to any use permitted in this district.
C. Off-street parking. See Article
XVII.
E. Lot area and yard requirements. See Article
XX.
F. Other provisions. All uses in this district shall comply with the performance standards in Article
XIX of this chapter.
G. ROM –
99 North Street Redevelopment Overlay Development Option.
[Added 6-28-2022 by Ord. No. 103-22]
(1)
Principal permitted uses.
(a)
All uses permitted in the ROM District.
(2)
Permitted accessory uses.
(a)
All accessory uses permitted in the ROM District.
(3)
Uses permitted as a conditional use.
(a)
Parking area. Parking area as a principal use is permitted for
Block 21, Lot 6, subject to the facilitation of parking for the principal
use located on Block 8, Lot 3, 99 North Street.
(4)
Off-street parking. See Article
XVII.
(7)
Lot area and yard requirements. See Article
XX.
(8)
Other provisions and requirements.
(a)
A traffic report shall be provided and shall include, but not
be limited to, traffic volumes expected from the development, number
of daily, weekly or monthly deliveries, type of vehicles for deliveries,
site circulation, any problem spots in the overall road network, including
unsafe intersections, turns, or grades, and the development of a truck
route to mitigate any potential negative impacts to the adjoining
uses and the community.
(b)
Shall comply with the performance standards in Article
XIX of this chapter.
H. Existing
wholesale businesses, including the storage of building materials
and storage warehouses which received a certificate of occupancy prior
to the date of adoption of this chapter, may continue and enlarge
in accordance with requirements for the ROM Zone District. Any building
which shall accidentally be destroyed may be replaced with the use
previously approved and in the same location as occupied on the lot
immediately prior to said destruction and shall not constitute a nonconforming
structure or use.
[Added 11-28-2023 by Ord. No. 106-23]
I. Prohibited
uses. All uses that are not permitted are prohibited.
[Added 11-28-2023 by Ord. No. 106-23]
[Amended 12-19-1991 by Ord. No. 317-91; 10-13-1992 by Ord. No.
409-92]
A. Purpose.
(1)
The purpose of the PUD District is to encourage the development
of certain large vacant tracts in a manner which incorporates the
best features of design and relates the type, design and layout of
residential, nonresidential and recreational development to the particular
site and, at the same time, to provide the realistic opportunity for
lower-income housing to be constructed in accordance with the guidelines
set forth in the Mount Laurel II decision. Special standards and procedures
applicable to these two districts only are set forth herein to expedite
the production of the lower-income housing.
(2)
Recognizing that the provision of lower-income housing requires the removal of standards which may be desirable to achieve but which may also be cost generating to a developer of lower-income housing and thereby inhibit its production, the multifamily residential development areas of the PUD may be designed in accordance with the guidelines set forth at Subsection
H, which guidelines are deemed to be the minimum necessary for public health, safety and welfare. Any provision of this chapter or any other ordinance in conflict with this section and which imposes restrictions or limitations not required for health and safety shall be inapplicable to the PUD District.
B. Application procedures.
(1)
The applicant shall submit all plans and documents to the Planning
Board for review and approval as required by this chapter. The applicant
shall distribute the plans to those agencies required by law to review
and/or approve development plans and to all other Borough agencies
which normally review development plans.
(2)
The technical advisors to the Board shall review the complete
application for technical compliance and shall convey comments directly
to the applicant's advisors in advance of the public hearing, so that
at the time of the public hearing the applicant will have had sufficient
opportunity to resolve any technical problems associated with the
submission. Daytime meetings shall be held at the request of the applicant
between the Borough's advisors and/or technical coordinating committee
and the applicant's advisors for this purpose.
(3)
The Planning Board shall hold a public hearing in accordance
with N.J.S.A. 40:55D-46.1 on the application. The Planning Board shall
take action on the application within 60 days from the date of submission
of a complete application for preliminary or for simultaneous preliminary
and final approval. If a subsequent final approval is sought, action
on the final plan shall be taken by the Board within 30 days of the
date a complete application is submitted.
(4)
The applicant is encouraged to submit a concept plan for informal
review by the Board pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40:55D-10.1 prior to the
preparation of a preliminary development plan.
(5)
The development plans submitted shall contain the information
as required in this chapter.
C. Permitted uses. Permitted uses shall be as follows:
(1)
Principal uses.
(a)
Single-family dwellings in the single-family residential development
area of the PUD.
(b)
Multifamily dwellings and townhouses in the multifamily residential
development areas of the PUD.
(c)
Two-family dwellings, including both side-by-side style and
duplex style (one over another) dwellings, in the multifamily residential
development areas of the PUD.
(d)
Public or private parks and playgrounds.
(e)
Public or private recreation buildings and facilities.
(g)
Office building(s), scientific or research laboratories, and
data processing facilities in the office development area of the PUD.
(2)
Accessory uses and structures.
(a)
Garages and off-street parking facilities.
(b)
Storage and maintenance buildings.
(c)
Customary accessory structures approved as part of the site
plan for the development, including fences, walls, lampposts, trellises
and the like.
(d)
Signs in accordance with this chapter.
D. Tract area; development areas; density and bulk requirements.
(1)
Tract area. A PUD shall contain a minimum of 15 acres.
(2)
Development areas. The PUD shall be divided into a single-family
residential development area, multifamily residential development
areas and an office development area.
(3)
Density. Within the PUD, the gross density shall not exceed
7.2 dwelling units per acre. The net density shall be up to three
dwelling units per acre for the single-family residential area and
up to 10 dwelling units per acre for the multifamily residential area,
with such net densities computed as averages for the entire single-family
residential development area or multifamily residential development
area.
(4)
Bulk requirements for multifamily residential development areas.
(a)
Minimum distances.
[1]
There shall be the following minimum distances between buildings
in the multifamily residential development areas of the PUD:
|
Type of Structure
|
Minimum Distance
(feet)
|
---|
|
Windowless wall to windowless wall
|
20
|
|
Window wall to windowless wall
|
20
|
|
Window wall to window wall
|
|
|
|
Front to front
|
50
|
|
|
Rear to rear
|
50
|
|
|
End to end
|
30
|
|
Any building face to local street curb face or edge of pavement
|
30
|
|
Any building face to collector street curb face or edge of pavement
|
40
|
|
Any building face to arterial street curb face or edge of pavement
|
50
|
|
Any building face except garage face to common parking area
|
12
|
|
Garage face to common parking area
|
5
|
[2]
The Planning Board may reduce the above distance by not more
than 1/3 if there is an angle of 20° or more between buildings
and if extensive landscaping or buffers are placed between buildings.
(b)
Coverage. The maximum coverage by buildings in the multifamily
residential development areas shall not exceed 30%. The maximum coverage
by all impervious surfaces, including buildings, shall not exceed
60%.
(c)
Buffer areas. No building, driveway or parking area shall be
located within 30 feet of any tract boundary line.
(d)
Building height. No building shall exceed three stories in height,
nor shall any building exceed 39 feet in height.
(e)
Minimum floor area for individual multifamily units:
|
Number of Bedrooms
|
Area
(square feet)
|
---|
|
1
|
550
|
|
2
|
660
|
|
3
|
850
|
(5)
Bulk requirements for single-family residential development
area.
(a)
Lot area. No individual lot shall contain less than 7,500 square
feet nor have a lot width of less than 75 feet.
(b)
Building setbacks.
[1]
Building setbacks shall be as follows:
|
Yards
|
Setback
(feet)
|
---|
|
Front yard
|
30
|
|
Rear yard
|
40
|
|
Side yards
|
|
|
|
Minimum on 1 side
|
10
|
|
|
Combined
|
25
|
[2]
Where individual lots are not being subdivided, yards shall
be created for each building such that a subdivision could occur and
all lots and buildings would conform to the area and setback requirements
set forth herein.
E. Parking requirements.
(1)
Residential uses.
(a)
There shall be 2.0 parking spaces for each dwelling unit in
the residential area.
(b)
Parking spaces in common parking areas in the multifamily residential
development area shall be located within 300 feet of the dwelling
unit served.
(c)
All required parking for multifamily dwelling units shall be
provided off street, except that nothing herein shall be construed
to prohibit required parking spaces from being placed perpendicular
to a one- or two-way local street or at an angle on a one-way local
street, provided that both the pavement width of the street and the
length of each parking space meet the requirements set forth in this
chapter.
(d)
No arterial or collector street shall provide direct access
to an individual required parking space.
(2)
Nonresidential uses. Parking in the office development area shall conform to the applicable requirements of Article
XVII of this chapter.
F. Lower-income housing requirements.
(1)
Lower-income dwelling units required to be constructed.
(a)
Number. All developments in the PUD Zone shall be required to
provide housing affordable to lower-income households at the rate
of 20% of the number of dwelling units constructed in the PUD. If
the required percentage of the lower-income housing units required
to be constructed in a PUD yields a fraction of 0.5 or more, the number
shall be rounded up to the next whole number; if the required percentage
yields a fraction of less than 0.5, the number may be rounded down
to the next whole number, but at no time shall it be less than one.
(b)
Type and location. All lower-income units may be multifamily
units and may be located in the multifamily residential development
area.
(c)
Size. A minimum of 15% of the lower-income units shall be three-bedroom
units, and a minimum of 35% of the lower-income units shall be two-bedroom
units; at least 1/2 of all two-bedroom and 1/2 of all three-bedroom
lower-income units shall be for very-low-income as opposed to low-income
occupancy, as defined in this chapter. If a required percentage yields
a fraction of 0.5 or more, the number shall be rounded up to the next
whole number; if a required percentage yields a fraction of less than
0.5, the number may be rounded down to the next whole number, but
at no time shall it be less than one. Odd units may be considered
low-income as opposed to very-low-income units.
(2)
Eligibility standards for housing units. One-half of all lower-income
units shall be priced so as to be eligible for rent or purchase by
very-low-income households earning between a floor of 40% and a ceiling
of 50% of the median household income for the region, and 1/2 of all
lower-income units shall be priced so as to be eligible for rent or
purchase by low-income households earning between a floor of 50% and
a ceiling of 80% of the median household income for the region. Such
housing units shall be priced to be affordable to households representing
a reasonable cross section of households within the above-stated income
ranges.
(3)
Definition of housing costs. Lower-income housing costs shall
not exceed 28% of the monthly family income for sale housing and not
more than 30% of the monthly family income for rental housing, considering
the following:
(a)
Rental units: gross rent, including utilities or a utility allowance.
(b)
Sale units:
[4]
Condominium or homeowners' association fees.
(4)
Relief. In the event that a lower-income unit cannot be sold
or rented, as applicable, within 120 days of being substantially completed
and offered for sale or rent, the inclusionary developer may apply
to the Affordable Housing Board appointed by the Mayor and Council
for relief. Such application must provide evidence of the developer's
having undertaken an affirmative marketing effort to sell or rent
the unit. Relief to the developer shall not include exempting the
unit from the required low- or very-low-income sales price or rent
level, nor shall relief include exempting the unit from restrictions
on escalation allowable upon rerental. The Board may allow the developer
to sell or rent the subject unit to a household whose income exceeds
that otherwise required; provided, however, that in no event shall
a very-low-income unit be sold or rented to a household earning in
excess of 50% of the median income for the region, and in no event
shall a low-income unit be sold or rented to a household earning in
excess of 80% of the median income for the region.
(5)
Down payment assistance. At least 25% of all lower-income housing
units shall be made available for sale under a program of down payment
assistance administered by the Borough in accordance with applicable
regulations, provided that such a program is funded by the State of
New Jersey.
(6)
Subsidies. Government subsidies may be used at the discretion
of the applicant and are encouraged. The Borough of Bloomsbury shall
cooperate in obtaining such subsidies by making application for assistance
either in concert with or on behalf of a private developer, if requested
to do so, and will provide a resolution of need and authorization
of tax abatement, where required, to facilitate obtaining such subsidies.
Additionally, the Borough of Bloomsbury shall make application for
available state funding to establish a down payment assistance program
of housing rehabilitation and conversion. The lack of said subsidies
shall in no way alter or diminish the lower-income-housing requirements
of this chapter.
(7)
Covenants and controls on sales and rentals.
(a)
All lower-income dwelling units shall be covered by a covenant,
with the Borough of Bloomsbury as a party beneficiary, to insure that
in all initial sales and rentals, and in all subsequent resales and
rerentals, the units will continue to remain available and affordable
to the lower-income households for which they were intended. All such
covenants shall be approved by the Borough Attorney.
(b)
The application for the issuance of a certificate of occupancy
for any new designated low-income housing unit shall include certification
by the Housing Officer to the Affordable Housing Board documenting
the eligibility of the unit and the qualification of the new purchaser
and/or occupant as a lower-income household.
(c)
Prior to any resale or transfer of ownership or change of occupancy
of a designated lower-income housing unit, application shall be made
for a new certificate of occupancy. The application for a certificate
of occupancy shall include certification by the Housing Officer to
the Affordable Housing Board documenting the continued eligibility
of the unit and the qualification of the new purchaser and/or occupant
as a lower-income household.
(d)
Lower-income rental units may be leased for periods of up to,
but not exceeding, one year. At least 60 days prior to the expiration
of each lease which is subject to renewal, the owner of any lower-income
rental unit shall provide documentation to the Housing Officer that
the rental unit continues to be occupied by and remains affordable
to a lower-income household. At such time as an owner of a rental
unit is informed by the Affordable Housing Board that the occupying
household no longer qualifies as lower income, the rental unit shall,
within 90 days, be made available for occupancy by a qualified household.
(e)
All requests for certification shall be made by the seller or
owner in writing, and the Housing Officer shall grant or deny such
certification within 30 days of the receipt of the request.
(f)
The Borough shall develop reasonable administrative procedures
for qualifying the occupants of lower-income housing. Procedures shall
be directed and administrated by an Affordable Housing Board, appointed
by the Mayor with the advice and consent of Council, and a Housing
Officer, appointed by the Mayor and Council. The Housing Officer may
be a full- or part-time municipal employee or consultant, an outside
agency or a housing authority. Lower-income employees of the Borough
of Bloomsbury and lower-income residents of the Borough of Bloomsbury
living in substandard or overcrowding housing shall have first priority
over all lower-income housing for a period not to exceed 15 business
days from the time such units are listed for sale or resale or made
available for rent.
(g)
At the time a certificate of occupancy is reissued, sales prices
and rents may be increased over the original levels permissible by
the Affordable Housing Board in accordance with the annual Metropolitan
New York Regional Consumer Price Index for Housing of the Department
of Labor, including, in the case of sales units, the addition of reimbursements
for documented monetary outlays for reasonable improvements, similarly
increased over the original costs incurred in selling the unit, less
withholdings for the current costs of essential maintenance not undertaken
by the previous owner. After 30 years from the date of its initial
occupancy, a lower-income housing unit may be sold or rented without
restrictions.
(h)
Rental units may be converted for sale as condominium or fee
simple units, but any sale of converted units shall continue to be
restricted as to purchase price and occupancy to persons to meeting
the income eligibility standards as set for the particular unit until
the thirty-year restriction period has passed.
(i)
Phasing of construction of lower-income housing.
[1]
Lower-income housing shall be phased in accordance with the
following schedule:
|
Maximum Percentage of Total Market Dwelling Units
|
Minimum Percentage of Lower-Income Dwelling Units
|
---|
|
25%
|
0%
|
|
50%
|
35%
|
|
75%
|
75%
|
|
100%
|
100%
|
[2]
The developer may construct the first 25% of the market units
without constructing any lower-income housing units. No certificates
of occupancy shall be issued for any of the next 25% of the market
units until 35% of the lower-income units (of which half must be very-low-income)
shall have been issued certificates of occupancy. No certificates
of occupancy shall be issued for any of the next 25% of the market
units until at least 75% of the lower-income units (of which half
must be very-low-income) have been issued certificates of occupancy.
The remaining required lower-income housing units shall be completed
and certificates of occupancy issued before certificates of occupancy
shall be issued for any of the remaining market units.
(j)
Placement. The lower-income dwelling units shall be designated
on the preliminary site plan, shall have compatible exteriors to the
market units and shall be located so that they have comparable access
to that of the market units to all common elements within the development.
(k)
Waiver of fees for lower-income housing units. Notwithstanding
any other requirements of the Borough of Bloomsbury, the following
fees shall be waived for every unit designated as lower-income housing
and only for those units designated as lower-income housing: subdivision
and site plan application fees applicable to lower-income housing
units.
G. Common open space and common elements.
(1)
A minimum of 20% of the land in the multifamily residential
area in a PUD shall be designated as conservation area, open space,
recreation and/or other common open space. Up to 25% of the designated
common open space may consist of natural or man-made water bodies.
The common open space area shall include private patios and any area
located between a building and street or common parking area.
(2)
All property owners and tenants in the development shall have
the right to use the common open space and any recreational facilities
located on the site.
(3)
Common open space may be deeded to the Borough, if accepted
by the Mayor and Council.
(4)
All common open space not accepted by the Borough and all common
elements in the development shall be deeded to an open space organization
established to own and maintain the common elements as provided in
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-43. The open space organization documents shall be
submitted to the Borough Attorney for review and approval.
H. Engineering and construction design standards. Design and construction
design standards for single-family and multifamily residential development
areas shall be determined by the Borough Engineer in compliance with
other standards of this chapter.
(1)
Lighting.
(a)
Streetlighting shall be provided at all street intersections
and along all collector and local streets, parking areas and anywhere
else deemed necessary for safety reasons.
(b)
Any outdoor lighting, such as building and sidewalk illumination,
driveways with no adjacent parking, the lighting of signs, and ornamental
lighting, shall be shown on the lighting plan in sufficient detail
to allow a determination of the effects upon adjacent properties,
roads and traffic safety from glare, reflection and overhead sky glow
in order to recommend steps needed to minimize these impacts.
(c)
The average intensity of lighting permitted on roadways shall
be as follows: 0.2 footcandle along local streets, 2.0 footcandles
at local street intersections, 0.4 footcandle along collector streets
and 3.0 footcandles at any intersection involving a collector street.
(2)
Sanitary sewers. The developer shall design and construct sewage
collection facilities in accordance with applicable requirements and
in such a manner as to make adequate sewage treatment available to
each lot and building within the development from said treatment and
collection system. The developer shall provide the Planning Board
with a copy of the agreement with the contractor for the sewage treatment.
(3)
Streets.
(a)
All developments shall be served by paved streets in accordance
with the approved subdivision and/or site plan, and all such streets
shall have adequate drainage.
(b)
Local streets shall be planned so as to discourage through traffic.
(c)
All streets within the development shall be designed in accordance
with New Jersey Department of Transportation's Standard Specifications
for Road and Bridge Construction, 1983, as amended, together with
the construction standards of the Borough of Bloomsbury, on file with
the Borough Engineer.
(d)
Intersections shall be designed in accordance with and as described
in this chapter.
(4)
Sidewalks. Sidewalks shall be installed in locations determined
by the Board to be in the interest of public safety and proper pedestrian
circulation. Sidewalks need not follow all streets and in some instances
may better follow open space corridors. The determination of whether
sidewalks are needed and where they are best located shall be based
on public safety, considering the intensity of development, the probable
volume of pedestrian traffic, the adjoining street classification
(where sidewalks parallel streets), access to school bus stops, recreation
areas and the general type of improvement intended.
(5)
Water supply.
(a)
Water mains and services shall be constructed and paid for by
the developer in such a manner as to make adequate potable water service
available to each lot and building within the development. The system
shall be designed and constructed in accordance with applicable requirements
of the Borough Engineer. Prior to the grant of the preliminary approval,
the applicant shall provide the Board with a copy of a letter from
the water company indicating that the project will be serviced with
public water.
[Amended 11-9-1993 by Ord. No. 506-93]
(b)
Fire hydrants of a type and number and in locations approved
by the Borough Engineer, with the advice of the Chief of the Bloomsbury
Fire Company, shall be installed by the developer.
I. Multifamily residential development area requirements.
(1)
No building or group of attached buildings shall contain more
than 24 dwelling units.
(2)
No building shall exceed a length of 200 feet.
(3)
Each dwelling unit shall have at least two exterior exposures
with at least one window in each exposure; alternatively, each dwelling
unit shall be designed in conformance with the Uniform Construction
Code such that either 8% of the floor area of all habitable rooms
shall be in windows or the maximum depth of the unit shall not exceed
22 feet.
(4)
No room within a dwelling unit intended for human habitation
shall be located in a cellar, basement or attic, except that a cellar
or basement may contain a family room or recreation room.
(5)
Accessory buildings shall meet the property line setbacks of
the principal building.
(6)
The maximum height of an accessory building shall be 16 feet.
Recreational buildings and facilities shall be governed by the height
limitations for principal buildings.
(7)
Garages may be built into the principal structure or separately
constructed as hereinafter provided. Each garage space shall be at
least 10 feet in width and 20 feet in depth. Each group of attached
garages shall have a joint capacity of not more than 12 automobiles
arranged in a row, and there shall be a minimum distance of 10 feet
between structures.
(8)
Exterior television antennas shall be limited to one antenna
per building.
(9)
Laundry facilities shall be provided in each building. Outside
clothes drying is prohibited except in designated areas on the site
plan.
(10)
One or more completely enclosed but unroofed structures for
the collection and storage of solid waste shall be provided. The system
of collecting and storing solid waste shall be approved by the Board
of Health. No garbage or other refuse shall be stored or collected
except in such approved structures.
(11)
In addition to any storage area contained within the dwelling
unit, a minimum of 150 cubic feet of storage space shall be provided
for each dwelling unit, which storage area shall be convenient to
and accessible from the outside of the building for the purpose of
storing bicycles, perambulators and similar outside equipment.
(12)
Screening and fencing shall be provided as needed to shield
parking areas and other common facilities from the view of adjoining
properties and streets.
(13)
Provisions shall be made for the preservation of existing trees
and natural features to the extent possible. All disturbed areas shall
be landscaped. Landscaping shall be provided as follows:
(a)
Shade trees shall be planted along all streets and in common
parking areas. Such trees shall be 1 1/2 to two inches in caliper
at time of planting and shall be planted a minimum of 50 feet on center
along both sides of all streets and common parking areas. The Planning
Board shall approve the choice of plantings and, in so doing, may
rely upon the recommendations of the Shade Tree Commission.
(b)
Common areas and yards shall be planted with:
[1] One conifer, six feet to eight feet high at time of planting, for
each dwelling unit;
[2] One deciduous tree, 1 1/2 to two inches in caliper, for each
two dwelling units; and
[3] Ten shrubs, 15 to 18 inches high at time of planting, for each dwelling
unit.
(c)
Buffer areas shall be left in a natural state wherever they
are outside the limits of disturbance; otherwise, buffer areas shall
be planted with conifers, six to eight feet high at time of planting,
eight feet on center.
(d)
All disturbed areas shall be planted in grass or ground cover.
(e)
All plantings shall be of nursery stock, balled and burlapped,
and shall be healthy and free of disease.
[Added 10-13-1992 by Ord. No. 409-92]
A. No permit shall be issued to erect a building which is to be used
as a dwelling on any plot having less than a one-hundred-foot frontage
and a one-hundred-fifty-foot depth for each family unit for which
the building is designed or by which it is occupied, provided that
any owner of a lot which was acquired, or which was a separate lot,
prior to January 29, 1957, and which has a frontage of 50 feet or
more may construct a single-family dwelling thereon without violating
the provisions of this chapter. The lot depth must be sufficient to
permit proper location, installation and operation of a septic tank
disposal system.
[Amended 2-9-1993 by Ord. No. 502-93]
B. Principal structures and uses.
(1)
All buildings hereafter erected which front on state highways
shall be set back at least 30 feet from the right-of-way line. All
buildings on other roads or streets shall be set back at least 50
feet from the center thereof or in line with other houses in built-up
sections. No garages, signboards or buildings of any kind shall be
erected without a permit, and none shall be closer to the road or
highway than the line permitted for dwellings. The construction of
such shall not depreciate the value of the existing property or create
a fire hazard causing insurance rates to be raised.
(2)
Every building to be used for a dwelling shall be constructed
on a foundation of not less than 672 square feet, outside measurement,
for each family unit, and shall contain no fewer than three rooms
for each family unit, exclusive of toilets, bathrooms, porches and
breezeways.
C. No permit shall be granted for a temporary residential trailer, cabin, tent, or tourist cabin, or any temporary place for living, nor shall any permit be granted for a trailer to be used for a dwelling, except as provided in Article
XIX, §
270-152. No place shall be used or occupied as a dwelling except a building meeting all of the requirements of this chapter, or a building which was so used or occupied on the effective date of this chapter.
[Added 7-22-2021 by Ord. No. 104-21]
The following uses are expressly prohibited in all zone districts:
A. The operation of any and all classes of cannabis establishments or
cannabis distributors or cannabis delivery services as said terms
are defined in this chapter and in Section 3 of P.L. 2021, c. 16,
but not the delivery of cannabis items and related supplies within
the Borough by a cannabis delivery service located outside the Borough.
B. The smoking of cannabis on any public property.
C. High
cube warehousing distribution center.
[Added 11-28-2023 by Ord. No. 106-23]
D. Large
fulfillment distribution center.
[Added 11-28-2023 by Ord. No. 106-23]
E. Last-mile
fulfillment center.
[Added 11-28-2023 by Ord. No. 106-23]
F. Major
distribution center.
[Added 11-28-2023 by Ord. No. 106-23]
G. Warehouse.
[Added 11-28-2023 by Ord. No. 106-23]