This Chapter is intended to establish minimum, uniform safeguards
to protect human health, safety and welfare, as well as property,
by establishing reasonable regulations governing building construction
and maintenance and fire safety. Pursuant to Town Law § 130,
the Town Board hereby declares its right to set such standards and
enforce compliance. This Chapter seeks to establish minimum building
regulations and fire safety standards consistent with this goal.
The provisions of this Chapter shall govern the construction,
use and occupancy of all structures and buildings in Unincorporated
Greenburgh.
Pursuant to the provisions of § 373 of the New York
State Executive Law, the New York State Uniform Fire Prevention and
Building Code, National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) standards,
the National Electrical Code promulgated by NFPA and standards set
by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) are deemed applicable
in Unincorporated Greenburgh.
As used in this chapter, the following terms shall have the
meanings indicated:
ANSI
American National Standards Institute.
BUILDING INSPECTOR
The Building Inspector of the Town of Greenburgh who shall administer and enforce all the provisions of the Uniform Code, the Energy Code and this Chapter as further defined in §
100-5 of this Chapter. The Building Inspector may appoint, with authorization by the Town Board, one or more Code Enforcement Officers to act under her/his supervision and direction to assist her/him in the exercise of the powers and fulfillment of the duties conferred upon the Building Inspector by this Chapter.
BUILDING PERMIT
A permit issued pursuant to §
100-7 of this Chapter. The term "Building Permit" shall also include a Building Permit which is renewed, amended or extended pursuant to any provision of this Chapter.
CARBON MONOXIDE DETECTOR
Any single system, or combination of systems, capable of
detecting hazardous levels of carbon monoxide (CO) and emitting an
alarm warning of a potentially dangerous condition. Carbon monoxide
(CO) detectors shall be either single-station or central-station,
approved by a recognized laboratory.
CERTIFICATE OF COMPLETION
A document issued by the Building Department which attests
to the fact that the construction is in conformance with the plans
submitted for the Building Permit which has been obtained for said
construction. Issuance of a certificate of completion does not attest
to the fact that the building is satisfactory for occupancy and/or
use.
CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
The final document of a Change of Occupancy permit. Issuance
of a certificate of compliance by the Building Department attests
to the fact that the change of occupancy is in code conformance and
that the building is satisfactory for occupancy and/or use.
CERTIFICATE OF OCCUPANCY
A certificate issued pursuant to §
100-8 of this Chapter. A certificate of occupancy is the final document of a Building Permit. Issuance of a certificate of occupancy by the Building Department attests to the fact that the construction is in code conformance and is satisfactory for occupancy and/or use.
DEVICE
Any part or portion of a system consisting of components
and circuits arranged to monitor and annunciate the status of a fire
alarm system. Typical devices shall include, but not be limited to,
heat or smoke detectors, horn and/or strobe annunciating devices,
manual pull stations, fire alarm control panels, remote annunciator
panels, sprinkler tamper and flow switches, automatic door releases,
automatic fire dampers, cooking and specialty extinguishing system
activation notification, and duct and plenum detectors with location
indicator.
ENERGY CODE
The Energy Conservation Construction Code of New York State,
as currently in effect and as hereafter amended from time to time.
GREASE INTERCEPTOR
A plumbing appurtenance that is installed in a sanitary drainage
system to intercept oily and greasy wastes from wastewater discharge.
Such device has the ability to intercept free-floating fats and oils.
HEAT DETECTOR
Any single system, or combination of systems, capable of
detecting abnormally high temperatures or a substantial rapid rise
in temperature. Heat detectors shall be either single-station or central-station,
approved by a recognized laboratory. Every single-station heat detector
shall be powered by ordinary current or a battery having a usable
life of at least 12 months and be capable of emitting an audible alarm.
HOME ENERGY RATING SYSTEM INDEX
Scale created under the home energy rating system established
pursuant to the National Home Energy Rating Technical Guidelines issued
by the National Association of State Energy Officials and dated September
19, 1999.
LOCK BOX
Any device, including, but not limited to, a box, cabinet
or vault, approved by a recognized laboratory, capable of securely
storing keys controlling building access, fire alarms and fire suppression
equipment, as well as any hazardous-material documentation.
NEW CONSTRUCTION
Work being performed on a previously undeveloped lot or,
in the case of demolition and reconstruction, when the demolition
and/or reconstruction consists of 75% of the total square footage
of the existing structure.
NFPA
National Fire Protection Association.
NICET
National Institute of Certification in Engineering Technologies.
OPERATING PERMIT
A permit issued pursuant to §
100-9 of this Chapter. The term "Operating Permit" shall also include an Operating Permit which is renewed, amended or extended pursuant to any provision of this Chapter.
PERMIT HOLDER
The Person to whom a Building Permit has been issued.
PERSON
An individual, corporation, limited liability company, partnership,
limited partnership, business trust, estate, trust, association, or
any other legal or commercial entity of any kind or description.
PLUMBING FIXTURE
Any device, including, but not limited to, a faucet, commode,
shower head or other connection, used to supply, regulate or control
water.
SMOKE DETECTOR
Any single system, or combination of systems, capable of
detecting fire and smoke which automatically actuates an alarm warning
of a dangerous condition. Smoke detectors shall be either single-station
or central-station, approved by a recognized laboratory. Every single-station
smoke detector shall be powered by ordinary current, or by a battery
having a usable life of at least 12 months or by low-powered wireless
smoke devices, approved for both UL 268 and UL 864, and be capable
of emitting an audible alarm. Battery-powered devices shall be permitted
only in preexisting structures where allowed by the Codes of the Town
of Greenburgh and the State of New York.
SPRINKLER SYSTEM
An integrated system of piping connected to a water supply,
with listed sprinklers that will automatically initiate water discharge
over a fire area. Where required, a sprinkler system may also include
a control valve and a device for actuating an alarm when the system
operates.
STOP-WORK ORDER
A written directive duly issued by the Building Inspector
or his/her representative ordering all work or work of a specific
trade to cease immediately. Stop-work orders shall be issued for:
A.
Misrepresentation on an application or construction document;
B.
Working without a required permit;
C.
Work that is not in compliance with the Code of the Town of
Greenburgh, the Zoning Ordinance, or plans approved by the Building Inspector; or
D.
Unsafe working conditions.
SUBSTITUTE CERTIFICATE OF OCCUPANCY
A certificate of occupancy issued for buildings constructed prior to 1945 after the Building Inspector determines compliance with all applicable provisions of Chapter
285, Zoning.
TOWN
Unincorporated Greenburgh.
UNIFORM CODE
9 NYCRR; The New York State Uniform Fire Prevention and Building
Code, as currently in effect and as hereafter amended from time to
time.
XHCI
Extra-heavy cast iron.
Where lighting fixtures are used or placed in suspended ceilings, each lighting fixture must be separately and independently secured to the structure. An electrical permit is required for the installation of lighting fixtures as set forth in Chapter
110.
Unsafe buildings and structures shall be identified and addressed in accordance with the procedure set forth in Chapter
340, Demolition.
Residential home improvement contractors are required to possess
a valid Westchester County home improvement license for all work other
than new single-/two-/multifamily dwelling construction.
An appeal pursuant to this section is intended to provide for
the orderly review of a request for relief from any standard imposed
by this Chapter which is more stringent than standards established
by New York State.
A. There is hereby established a Board of Building Code Review. The
Board shall hear and determine all requests for relief from any standard
imposed by local law more stringent or restrictive than any standard
or regulatory requirement imposed by the Uniform Code. The Board's
jurisdiction shall be limited to review of local standards or requirements
more restrictive than existing state standards. Under no circumstances
shall the Board interpret, modify or otherwise assume jurisdiction
over the Uniform Code.
B. Membership.
(1) The Board of Building Code Review shall be appointed by the Building
Inspector, subject to approval by the Town Board. There shall be five
members appointed for staggered terms not to exceed three years. The
Board shall conduct its affairs consistent with the Town's Code
of Ethics, and no member who has any financial, familial or proprietary
interest in an appeal shall participate in hearing such appeal. No
elected official may serve as a member, and members shall have the
following qualifications, experience or expertise:
(a)
A licensed professional engineer.
(c)
A code enforcement official (excluding any Building Department
employee).
(e)
A resident business professional.
(g)
The Town Building Inspector or a designated representative.
(2) No Building Department employee shall serve as the code enforcement
representative, and each discipline shall be separately represented.
C. Request for relief.
(1) Any person who has filed an application for a Building Permit may
make a written appeal to the Board for relief from the more restrictive
local building standards. All appeals must be in writing and contain
the grounds which warrant relief. The Board may, in its sole discretion,
grant relief from the local code and permit an applicant to comply
with state standards where an applicant demonstrates that compliance
with local code standards:
(a)
Imposes an undue economic hardship or burden;
(b)
Restricts, impedes or negates a legitimate county, state or
federal policy objective;
(c)
Is physically, legally or practically impossible;
(d)
Is inconsistent with the stated objective of the regulation;
or
(e)
Is unnecessary given viable alternatives which meet the intended
objective of the local code.
(2) The Board may deny a request for relief in whole or part. The Board
shall attempt to fulfill the intent of this Chapter where possible
and shall endeavor to fashion a remedy that is just and equitable
under the circumstances by granting relief where necessary.
D. Procedure.
(1) The Board shall adopt rules governing the appeals process. Such rules
shall be subject to review and approval by the Town Board. Rules adopted
pursuant to this section shall be filed with the Town Clerk and made
available upon request at no charge.
(2) In addition to any rules and regulations established by the Board,
all appeals shall comply with the following standards:
(a)
An appeal taken pursuant to this section must be filed no later
than 45 days after application for a Building Permit is submitted.
(b)
Each appellant must submit written request for relief containing
an explanation why such relief should be granted. Upon request, any
person seeking relief or his representative may appear and present
the appeal to the Board in person.
(c)
The Board shall schedule an appeal within 30 days of filing.
An appellant shall be entitled to not less than five days' notice
informing him where and when his appeal will be heard.
(d)
All appeals shall be open to the general public and the Board
may, in its discretion, entertain whatever other evidence, in addition
to materials submitted by the appellant, the Board feels is relevant
and will assist its deliberations. The Board may deliberate in executive
session.
(e)
The Board will render a decision on any appeal not more than
10 days from the date the appeal was heard by filing a copy of its
decision with the Town Clerk and not less than 10 days thereafter
by mailing a copy of the decision to the appellant at the address
contained on the application for the Building Permit.
(f)
Appeals may be submitted to the Town Building Department, which
will accept receipt on behalf of the Board.
The Building Inspector shall review and investigate complaints
which allege or assert the existence of conditions or activities that
fail to comply with the Uniform Code, the Energy Code, this Chapter,
or any other Town ordinance or regulation adopted for administration
and enforcement of the regulations related thereto. The process for
responding to a complaint shall include such of the following steps
as the Building Inspector may deem to be appropriate:
A. Performing an inspection of the conditions and/or activities alleged
to be in violation, and documenting the results of such inspection
in a manner prescribed by the Building Inspector;
B. If a violation is found to exist, providing the owner of the affected
property and any other Person who may be responsible for the violation,
with either a Notice of Violation to abate, correct or cure the violation
or a Summons to appear in Town Court;
C. If appropriate, issuing a Stop-Work Order;
D. Recording abatement of the violation in a manner prescribed by the
Building Inspector.
The Building Department shall keep records in accordance with
adopted records retention and disposition schedule MU-1.
Notwithstanding any of the provisions of the Uniform Code, the
fees related to this Chapter shall be set by the Building Inspector,
subject to approval by Town Board resolution. All fees shall be paid
at the time of filing an application and prior to any permit or certificate
being issued. Such fee schedule may thereafter be amended from time
to time by like resolution. The fees set forth in, or determined in
accordance with, such fee schedule or amended fee schedule shall be
charged and collected for the submission of applications, the issuance
of Building Permits, amended Building Permits, renewed Building Permits,
Certificates of Occupancy / Certificates of Completion, Temporary
Certificates, Operating Permits, fire safety and property maintenance
inspections, and other actions of the Building Inspector described
in or contemplated by this Chapter.
If necessary, the Town Board may, by resolution, authorize the Town Supervisor to enter into one or more Intermunicipal Agreements to carry out the terms of §
100-6F of this Chapter, provided that such agreements do not violate any provision of the Uniform Code, the Energy Code, Part 1203 of Title 19 of the NYCRR, or any other applicable law.
Pursuant to New York Municipal Home Rule Law § 22
and Executive Law § 379, the provisions of this Chapter
are intended to supersede any less stringent or inconsistent provision
of law. Should any section, paragraph, sentence or word of this Chapter
be declared void, invalid or unenforceable, for any reason, such decision
shall not affect the remaining provisions of this Chapter.