The following standards apply to new development, including new and substantially improved structures, in the areas of special flood hazard shown on the Flood Insurance Rate Map designated in §
34-7:
A. Coastal high-hazard areas. The following requirements apply within
Zones V1-V30, VE and V or in an area of moderate wave action:
(1) All new construction, including manufactured homes and recreational
vehicles on a site 180 days or longer and not fully licensed for highway
use, shall be located landward of the reach of high tide.
(2) The use of fill for structural support of buildings, manufactured
homes or recreational vehicles on a site 180 days or longer is prohibited.
(3) Man-made alteration of sand dunes which would increase potential
flood damage is prohibited.
B. Subdivision proposals. The following standards apply to all new subdivision
proposals and other proposed development in areas of special flood
hazard (including proposals for manufactured home and recreational
vehicle parks and subdivisions).
(1) Proposals shall be consistent with the need to minimize flood damage.
(2) Public utilities and facilities such as sewer, gas, electrical and
water systems shall be located and constructed so as to minimize flood
damage.
(3) Adequate drainage shall be provided to reduce exposure to flood damage.
C. Encroachments.
(1) Within Zones A1-A30 and AE, on streams without a regulatory floodway,
no new construction, substantial improvements or other development
(including fill) shall be permitted unless:
(a)
The applicant demonstrates that the cumulative effect of the
proposed development, when combined with all other existing and anticipated
development, will not increase the water surface elevation of the
base flood more than one foot at any location; or
(b)
The Village of Huntington Bay agrees to apply to the Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) for a conditional FIRM revision,
FEMA approval is received and the applicant provides all necessary
data, analyses and mapping and reimburses the Village of Huntington
Bay for all fees and other costs in relation to the application. The
applicant must also provide all data, analyses and mapping and reimburse
the Village of Huntington Bay for all costs related to the final map
revision.
(2) On streams with a regulatory floodway, as shown on the Flood Boundary and Floodway Map or the Flood Insurance Rate Map adopted in §
34-7, no new construction, substantial improvements or other development in the floodway (including fill) shall be permitted unless:
(a)
A technical evaluation by a licensed professional engineer shows
that such an encroachment shall not result in any increase in flood
levels during occurrence of the base flood; or
(b)
The Village of Huntington Bay agrees to apply to the Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) for a conditional FIRM and floodway
revision, FEMA approval is received and the applicant provides all
necessary data, analyses and mapping and reimburses the Village of
Huntington Bay for all fees and other costs in relation to the application.
The applicant must also provide all data, analyses and mapping and
reimburse the Village of Huntington Bay for all costs related to the
final map revision.
The following standards, in addition to the standards in §
34-16A, Coastal high-hazard areas, §
34-16B, Subdivision proposals, and §
34-17, Standards for all structures, apply to new and substantially improved residential structures located in areas of special flood hazard, shown as Zone V1-V30, VE or V, or in an area of moderate wave action, on the community's Flood Insurance Rate Map designated in §
34-7:
A. Elevation. New construction and substantial improvements shall be
elevated on pilings, columns or shear walls such that the bottom of
the lowest horizontal structural member supporting the lowest elevated
floor is elevated to or above two feet above the level of the base
flood so as not to impede the flow of water. For the purposes of this
section, the term "lowest horizontal structural member" shall not
include columns, piles, diagonal bracing attached to the piles or
columns, grade beams, pile caps and other members designed to either
withstand storm action or break away without imparting damaging loads
to the structure.
B. Determination of loading forces. Structural design shall consider
the effects of wind and water loads acting simultaneously during the
base flood on all building components.
(1) The structural design shall be adequate to resist water forces that
would occur during the base flood. Horizontal water loads considered
shall include inertial and drag forces of waves, current drag forces
and impact forces from waterborne storm debris. Dynamic uplift loads
shall also be considered if bulkheads, walls or other natural or man-made
flow obstructions could cause wave runup beyond the elevation of the
base flood.
(2) Buildings shall be designed and constructed to resist the forces
due to wind pressure. Wind forces on the superstructure include windward
and leeward forces on vertical walls, uplift on the roof, internal
forces when openings allow wind to enter the house and upward force
on the underside of the house when it is exposed. In the design, the
wind should be assumed to blow potentially from any lateral direction
relative to the house.
(3) Wind loading values used shall be those required by the building
code.
C. Foundation standards.
(1) The pilings or column foundation and structure attached thereto shall
be adequately anchored to resist flotation, collapse or lateral movement
due to the effects of wind and water pressures acting simultaneously
on all building components. Foundations must be designed to transfer
safely to the underlying soil all loads due to wind, water, dead load,
live load and other loads (including uplift due to wind and water).
(2) Spread footings and fill material shall not be used for structural
support of a new building or substantial improvement of an existing
structure.
D. Pile foundation design.
(1) The design ratio of pile spacing to pile diameter shall not be less
than eight to one for individual piles. (This shall not apply to pile
clusters located below the design grade.) The maximum center-to-center
spacing of wood piles shall not be more than 12 feet on center under
load-bearing sills, beams or girders.
(2) Pilings shall have adequate soil penetration (bearing capacity) to
resist the combined wave and wind loads (lateral and uplift) associated
with the base flood acting simultaneously with typical structure (live
and dead) loads and shall include consideration of decreased resistance
capacity caused by erosion of soil strata surrounding the piles. The
minimum penetration for foundation piles is to an elevation of five
feet below mean sea level (msl) datum if the base flood elevation
(BFE) is +10 msl or less, or to be at least 10 feet below msl if the
BFE is greater than +10 msl.
(3) Pile foundation analysis shall also include consideration of piles
in column action from the bottom of the structure to the stable soil
elevation of the site. Pilings may be horizontally or diagonally braced
to withstand wind and water forces.
(4) The minimum acceptable sizes for timber piles are a tip diameter
of eight inches for round timber piles and eight inches by eight inches
for square timber piles. All wood piles must be treated in accordance
with requirements of EPEE-C3 to minimize decay and damage from fungus.
(5) Reinforced concrete piles shall be cast of concrete having a twenty-eight-day
ultimate compressive strength of not less than 5,000 pounds per square
inch and shall be reinforced with a minimum of four longitudinal steel
bars having a combined area of not less than 1% nor more than 4% of
the gross concrete area. Reinforcing for precast piles shall have
a concrete cover of not less than 1 1/4 inches for No. 5 bars
and smaller and not less than 1 1/2 inches for Nos. 6 through
11 bars. Reinforcement for piles cast in the field shall have a concrete
cover of not less than two inches.
(6) Piles shall be driven by means of a pile driver or drop hammer, jetted
or augered into place.
(7) Additional support for piles in the form of bracing may include lateral
or diagonal bracing between piles.
(8) When necessary, piles shall be braced at the ground line in both
directions by a wood timber grade beam or a reinforced concrete grade
beam. These at-grade supports should be securely attached to the piles
to provide support even if scoured from beneath.
(9) Diagonal bracing between piles, consisting of two-inch-by-eight-inch
(minimum) members bolted to the piles, shall be limited in location
to below the lowest supporting structural member and above the stable
soil elevation and aligned in the vertical plane along pile rows perpendicular
to the shoreline. Galvanized steel rods (minimum diameter of 1/2 inch)
or cable-type bracing is permitted in any plane.
(10)
Knee braces, which stiffen both the upper portion of a pile
and the beam-to-pile connection, may be used along pile rows perpendicular
and parallel to the shoreline. Knee braces shall be two-by-eight lumber
bolted to the sides of the pile/beam or four-by-four or larger braces
framed into the pile/beam. Bolting shall consist of two five-eighths-inch
galvanized steel bolts (each end) for two-by-eight members or one
five-eighths-inch lag bolt (each end) for square members. Knee braces
shall not extend more than three feet below the elevation of the base
flood.
E. Column foundation design. Masonry piers or poured-in-place concrete
piers shall be internally reinforced to resist vertical and lateral
loads and shall be connected with a movement-resisting connection
to a pile cap or pile shaft.
F. Connectors and fasteners. Galvanized metal connectors, wood connectors
or bolts of size and number adequate for the calculated loads must
be used to connect adjoining components of a structure. Toenailing
as a principal method of connection is not permitted. All metal connectors
and fasteners used in exposed locations shall be steel, hot-dipped
galvanized after fabrication. Connectors in protected interior locations
shall be fabricated from galvanized sheet.
G. Beam-to-pile connections. The primary floor beams or girders shall
span the supports in the direction parallel to the flow of potential
floodwater and wave action and shall be fastened to the columns or
pilings by bolting, with or without cover plates. Concrete members
shall be connected by reinforcement, if cast in place, or (if precast)
shall be securely connected by bolting and welding. If sills, beams
or girders are attached to wood piling at a notch, a minimum of two
five-eighths-inch galvanized steel bolts or two hot-dipped galvanized
straps 3/16 by four inches by 18 inches, each bolted with two one-half-inch
lag bolts per beam member, shall be used. Notching of the pile tops
shall be the minimum sufficient to provide ledge support for beam
members without unduly weakening pile connections. Piling shall not
be notched so that the cross section is reduced below 50%.
H. Floor and deck connections.
(1) Wood two-inch-by-four-inch (minimum) connectors or metal joist anchors
shall be used to tie floor joists to floor beams/girders. These should
be installed on alternate floor joists, at a minimum. Cross bridging
of all floor joists shall be provided. Such cross bridging may be
one-inch-by-three-inch members, placed eight feet on center maximum,
or solid bridging of the same depth as joist at the same spacing.
(2) Plywood should be used for subflooring and attic flooring to provide
good torsional resistance in the horizontal plane of the structure.
The plywood should not be less than 3/4 inch in total thickness and
should be exterior grade and fastened to beams or joists with 8d annular
or spiral thread galvanized nails. Such fastening shall be supplemented
by the application of waterproof industrial adhesive applied to all
bearing surfaces.
I. Exterior wall connections. All bottom plates shall have any required
breaks under a wall stud or an anchor bolt. Approved anchors will
be used to secure rafters or joists and top and bottom plates to studs
in exterior and bearing walls to form a continuous tie. Continuous
fifteen-thirty-seconds-inch or thicker plywood sheathing, overlapping
the top wall plate and continuing down to the sill, beam or girder,
may be used to provide the continuous tie. If the sheets of plywood
are not vertically continuous, then two-by-four nailer blocking shall
be provided at all horizontal joints. In lieu of plywood, galvanized
steel rods of one-half-inch diameter or galvanized steel straps not
less than one-inch wide by 1/16 inch thick may be used to connect
from the top wall plate to the sill, beam or girder. Washers with
a minimum diameter of three inches shall be used at each end of the
one-half-inch round rods. These anchors shall be installed no more
than two feet from each corner rod, no more than four feet on center.
J. Ceiling joist/rafter connections.
(1) All ceiling joists or rafters shall be installed in such a manner
that the joists provide a continuous tie across the rafters. Ceiling
joists and rafters shall be securely fastened at their intersections.
A metal or wood connector shall be used at alternate ceiling joist/rafter
connections to the wall top plate.
(2) Gable roofs shall be additionally stabilized by installing two-by-four
blocking on two-foot centers between the rafters at each gable end.
Blocking shall be installed a minimum of eight feet toward the house
interior from each gable end.
K. Projecting members. All cantilevers and other projecting members must be adequately supported and braced to withstand wind and water uplift forces. Roof eave overhangs shall be limited to a maximum of one foot. Larger overhangs and porches will be permitted if designed or reviewed by a registered professional engineer or architect and certified in accordance with §
34-14J of this chapter.
L. Roof sheathing.
(1) Plywood, or other wood material, when used as roof sheathing, shall
not be less than 15/32 inch in thickness and shall be of exterior
sheathing grade or equivalent. All attaching devices for sheathing
and roof coverings shall be galvanized or be of other suitable corrosion-resistant
material.
(2) All corners, gable ends and roof overhangs exceeding six inches shall
be reinforced by the application of waterproof industrial adhesive
applied to all bearing surfaces of any plywood sheet used in the sheathing
of such corner, gable end or roof overhang.
(3) In addition, roofs should be sloped as steeply as practicable to
reduce uplift pressures, and special care should be used in securing
ridges, hips, valleys, eaves, vents, chimneys and other points of
discontinuity in the roofing surface.
M. Protection of openings. All exterior glass panels, windows and doors
shall be designed, detailed and constructed to withstand loads due
to the design wind speed of 75 miles per hour. Connections for these
elements must be designed to transfer safely the design loads to the
supporting structure. Panel widths of multiple-panel sliding glass
doors shall not exceed three feet.
N. Breakaway wall design standards.
(1) The breakaway wall shall have a design-safe loading resistance of
not less than 10 and not more than 20 pounds per square foot, with
the criterion that the safety of the overall structure at the point
of wall failure be confirmed using established procedures. Grade beams
shall be installed in both directions for all piles considered to
carry the breakaway wall load. Knee braces are required for front
row piles that support breakaway walls.
(2) Use of breakaway wall strengths in excess of 20 pounds per square
foot shall not be permitted unless a registered professional engineer
or architect has developed or reviewed the structural design and specifications
for the building foundation and breakaway wall components and certifies
that the breakaway walls will fail under water loads less than those
that would occur during the base flood, and the elevated portion of
the building and supporting foundation system will not be subject
to collapse, displacement or other structural damage due to the effects
of wind and water loads acting simultaneously on all building components
(structural and nonstructural). Water loading values used shall be
those associated with the base flood. Wind loading values shall be
those required by the building code.
The following standards apply to new and substantially improved commercial, industrial and other nonresidential structures, in addition to the requirements in §
34-16B, Subdivision proposals, §
34-16C, Encroachments, and §
34-17, Standards for all structures.
A. Within Zones A1-A30, AE and AH, and also Zone A if the base flood
elevation data are available:
(1) New construction and substantial improvements of any nonresidential
structure, together with attendant utility and sanitary facilities
shall either:
(a)
Have the lowest floor, including basement or cellar, elevated
to or above two feet above the base flood elevation; or
(b)
Be floodproofed so that the structure is watertight below two
feet above the base flood level with walls substantially impermeable
to the passage of water.
(2) All structural components located below the base flood elevation
must be capable of resisting hydrostatic and hydrodynamic loads and
the effects of buoyancy.
B. Within Zone AO, new construction and substantial improvements of
nonresidential structures shall:
(1) Have the lowest floor (including basement) elevated above the highest
adjacent grade at least as high as two feet above the depth number
specified in feet on the Village's FIRM (at least two feet if
no depth number is specified); or
(2) Together with attendant utility and sanitary facilities, be completely floodproofed to that level to meet the floodproofing standard specified in §
34-17C.
C. If the structure is to be floodproofed, a licensed professional engineer or architect shall develop and/or review structural design, specifications and plans for construction. A floodproofing certificate or other certification shall be provided to the local administrator who certifies the design and methods of construction are in accordance with accepted standards of practice for meeting the provisions of §
34-20A(1)(b), including the specific elevation (in relation to mean sea level) to which the structure is to be floodproofed.
D. Within Zones AH and AO, adequate drainage paths are require to guide
floodwaters around and away from proposed structures on slopes.
E. Within Zone A, when no base flood elevation data are available, the
lowest floor (including basement) shall be elevated at least three
feet above the highest adjacent grade.
In Zones V1-V30 and VE, and also Zone V if base flood elevations
are available, or in an area of moderate wave action, new construction
and substantial improvements of any nonresidential structure, together
with attendant utility and sanitary facilities, shall have the bottom
of the lowest member of the lowest floor elevated to or above two
feet above the base flood elevation. Floodproofing of structures is
not an allowable alternative to elevating the lowest floor to two
feet above the base flood elevation in Zones V1-V30, VE and V.
The following standards, in addition to the standards in §
34-16, General standards, and §
34-17, Standards for all structures, apply in areas of special flood hazard to manufactured homes and to recreational vehicles which are located in areas of special flood hazard:
A. Recreational vehicles.
(1) Recreational vehicles placed on sites within Zones A1-A30, AE, AH,
V1-V30, V and VE shall either:
(a)
Be on site fewer than 180 consecutive days;
(b)
Be fully licensed and ready for highway use; or
(c)
Meet the requirements for manufactured homes in Subsections
B,
C and
D of this section.
(2) A recreational vehicle is ready for highway use if it is on its wheels
or jacking system, is attached to the site only by quick-disconnect
type utilities and security devices and has no permanently attached
additions.
B. A manufactured home that is placed or substantially improved in Zone
A1-A30, AE, AH, V1-V30, V or VE shall be elevated on a permanent foundation
such that the lowest floor is elevated to or above two feet above
the base flood elevation and is securely anchored to an adequately
anchored foundation system to resist flotation, collapse and lateral
movement. Elevation on piers consisting of dry stacked blocks is prohibited.
C. Within Zone A or V, when no base flood elevation data are available,
new and substantially improved manufactured homes shall be elevated
such that the manufactured home chassis is supported by reinforced
piers or other foundation elements of at least equivalent strength
that are no less than 36 inches in height above the lowest adjacent
grade and are securely anchored to an adequately anchored foundation
system to resist flotation, collapse or lateral movement. Elevation
on piers consisting of dry stacked blocks is prohibited.
D. Within Zone AO, the floor shall be elevated above the highest adjacent
grade at least as high as the depth number specified on the Flood
Insurance Rate Map enumerated in § 37-7 (at least two feet
if no depth number is specified). Elevation on piers consisting of
dry stacked blocks is prohibited.