The intent of the Hamlet Center (HC) Zoning Use District is
to provide small clusters of shops and professional services in a
rural setting, with a residential character. Development is intended
to be pedestrian-friendly, small-scale, and clustered in a campus-style
pattern. The HC Zoning Use District is intended to have larger front
and side setbacks and more landscaping than the Village Center (VC)
Zoning Use District.
In the HC Zoning Use District, no building, structure, or premises
shall be used or arranged or designed to be used, and no building
or structure shall be hereafter erected, reconstructed, or altered,
unless otherwise provided in this chapter, except for the following
permitted uses or specially permitted uses and their customary accessory
uses:
A. Permitted uses:
(2) Art galleries and arts and craft shops.
(3) Antiques stores and home furnishing stores.
(5) Specialty food stores, wine shops and bakeries with retail sales
on premises.
(6) Restaurants, cafes, banquet facilities, and ice cream parlors.
(13)
Apartments on upper floors.
(14)
One-family dwellings upon lots with a minimum area of 80,000
square feet.
[Added 9-15-2009 by L.L. No. 50-2009]
B. Special permit uses:
(1) Bed-and-breakfast establishments as set forth in and subject to §
301-240.
[Amended 9-15-2009 by L.L. No. 50-2009]
(2) Indoor recreation facilities.
C. Accessory uses. Accessory uses shall include those uses customarily
incidental to any of the above permitted uses or specially permitted
uses when located on the same lot.
D. Prohibited uses:
(1) Two-family dwelling units.
[Amended 9-15-2009 by L.L. No. 50-2009]
(3) Single retail stores with a floor area exceeding 10,000 square feet.
(5) Gasoline service stations.
(6) Residences on ground floors, except one-family dwellings and bed-and-breakfast facilities as an accessory use to a one-family dwelling as set forth in Subsection
B(1) of this section.
[Amended 9-15-2009 by L.L. No. 50-2009]
[Amended 5-5-2009 by L.L. No. 19-2009]
The design, buffer and parking standards listed in the provisions
below (Subsections A and B of this section) are intended as a guide
or measure for improvements in parcels in this zoning district, and
the word "shall" recited in the provisions below, with the exception
of Subsection B(1) which requires adherence to the Parking Schedule,
is intended to obtain compliance with the provisions to the extent
practicable as determined by the Board responsible for review.
A. Design standards.
(1) The principal building entrance and front shall face the primary
street frontage and sidewalk.
(2) Building design and landscaping should serve to reinforce and announce
the main pedestrian building entrances.
(3) Walkways shall be provided for safe and convenient pedestrian access
from sidewalks to storefront entries, and from storefronts to adjacent
public parks and residential and commercial areas.
(4) Special materials, such as brick or cobblestones and picket fences,
are encouraged for walkways in hamlet areas, particularly those with
older or historic buildings.
(5) For ground-floor commercial space, at least 50% of the linear width
of the front facade shall be comprised of transparent windows. Where
shade is desired, awnings are encouraged. Windows may not be obscured
more than 20% by opaque banners, or either permanent or temporary
advertisements or signs.
(6) The exteriors of buildings shall utilize natural cladding materials
such as wood, brick, stucco, stone or a combination of such materials.
The use of synthetic, metallic, and reflective materials should be
avoided.
(7) Building shape, proportions, massing, and design should be appropriate
to the historic character of the hamlet in which the building is located.
Architectural features such as porches, porticoes, shutters, decorative
door and window frames, balconies, cornices, dormers, chimneys, turrets,
and spires should be used to reinforce a pedestrian scale and create
interest and variety in the facade.
(8) Signs shall be provided in accordance with Article
XLVIII, Signs, of this chapter.
(9) Buffering and transitions.
(a)
Trash/dumpster areas shall be screened by wood fences or landscaping, or a combination thereof, pursuant to §
245-8.
(b)
Buffer plantings or landscaping or opaque fences, preferably
wood fences, shall be provided between commercial uses and adjoining
residential uses or zones.
(c)
Deliveries and loading activities shall to the extent possible
be restricted to the hours between 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. on weekdays.
B. Parking standards.
(1) The number of off-street parking spaces in the HC Zoning Use District shall be provided in accordance with §
301-231, Off-street parking, of this chapter.
(2) Where credible evidence is provided by traffic counts or data by
a licensed traffic engineer, up to 20% reduction in off-street parking
may be permitted for shared parking, where the peak parking of two
or more uses occurs at different times.
(3) Parking requirements may be reduced with payment of a fee or land dedication in lieu of providing off-street parking as provided for in §
301-231.
(4) Off-street parking areas or garages shall be recessed at least 15
feet back from the front property line.
(5) Curb cuts to parking lots and garages shall be minimized by sharing
driveways for access to adjacent parking lots. However, curb cuts
and driveways are prohibited along the front property line for properties
less than 30 feet in width; in these situations, parking must be accessed
from a rear alley, side street, or shared rear lot.
(6) Shared parking lots with cross-access agreements are encouraged so
as to allow drivers to park in one lot and walk to other businesses
without moving their cars, or to drive from one lot to another without
returning to the street.
(7) In order to soften the appearance of parking lots, parking lots shall
be landscaped with ground cover, grasses, or low shrubs for at least
15% of their land area.
(8) In order to provide shade, parking lots with 21 or more spaces shall
have "orchard" planting: one tree per 10 off-street spaces. Such trees
shall be spread throughout the parking lot, rather than clustered
only along the edges.
(9) In order to provide recharge of the groundwater basin and minimize
runoff into water bodies, at least one of the following stormwater
management techniques shall be used in parking lots where underlying
soils support infiltration of precipitation to the groundwater:
(a)
Entire parking areas shall be surfaced with gravel, rather than
pavement.
(b)
Where sanding and salting are not used in the winter, low-traffic
or seasonal parking overflow areas of the parking lot shall be surfaced
with porous pavement or gravel.
(c)
Landscaped areas of the parking lot shall be sited, planted,
and graded in a manner to provide infiltration and detention of runoff
from paved areas.
C. Additional requirements.
[Added 2-17-2016 by L.L.
No. 5-2016]
(1) Hours of operation of retail business establishments. As used herein,
a "retail business establishment" shall mean and include a retail
store, shop, or other business establishment in which goods, wares,
foods, commodities, articles or products are sold at retail, except
that a retail business establishment shall not be construed to include
any business establishment licensed to sell alcoholic beverages at
retail for on-premises consumption. No retail business establishment
shall remain open for business during the five-hour period between
12:00 midnight and 5:00 a.m. Every retail business establishment shall
be closed to the public during the aforementioned five-hour period,
and business with the public therein is prohibited after the hour
of 12:00 midnight and before the hour of 5:00 a.m. of every day.