[Code 1992, § 32-730(a); 2-22-1999 by Ord. No. 1157]
The purpose of this division is to:
(1) Safeguard the heritage of the City by preserving one or more historic
districts in the City that reflect elements of the City's history,
architecture, engineering, archaeology, or culture;
(2) Stabilize and improve property values in such districts and the surrounding
areas;
(4) Strengthen the local economy; and
(5) Promote the use of historic districts for the education, pleasure
and welfare of the citizens of the City.
[Code 1992, § 32-730(b); 2-22-1999 by Ord. No. 1157; 10-10-2005 by Ord. No. 1253]
The following words, terms and phrases, when used in this division,
shall have the meanings ascribed to them in this section, except where
the context clearly indicates a different meaning:
ALTERATION
Work that changes the detail of a resource but does not change
its basic size or shape.
CERTIFICATE OF APPROPRIATENESS
The written approval of a permit application for work that
is appropriate and that does not adversely affect a resource.
COMMITTEE
The Historic District Study Committee appointed by the City
Council.
DEMOLITION
The razing or destruction, whether entirely or in part, of
a resource and includes but is not limited to demolition by neglect.
DEMOLITION BY NEGLECT
Neglect in maintaining, repairing, or securing a resource
that results in deterioration of an exterior feature of the resource
or the loss of structural integrity of the resource.
DENIAL
The written rejection of a permit application for work that
is inappropriate and that adversely affects a resource.
HISTORIC DISTRICT
An area, or group of areas not necessarily having contiguous
boundaries, that contains one resource or a group of resources that
are related by history, architecture, archeology, engineering or culture,
as approved by the City Council. A historic landmark as defined in
this section shall be considered a historic district for purposes
of this division and state law.
HISTORIC LANDMARK
A historic landmark (resource) as designated by the federal
or state government and the local Historic District Commission and
is, therefore, deemed to be its own historic district. A historic
district which contains only one resource (landmark) is subject to
the requirements and restrictions of this division.
HISTORIC PRESERVATION
The identification, evaluation, establishment, and protection
of resources significant in history, architecture, archaeology, engineering
or culture.
HISTORIC RESOURCE
A publicly or privately owned building, structure, site,
object, feature or open space that is significant in the history,
architecture, archeology, engineering or culture of the City.
NOTICE TO PROCEED
The written permission issued by the Historic District Commission for work to be performed within a historic district which is otherwise inappropriate when the Commission has found the proposed work to be necessary, pursuant to a finding under §
52-581.
OPEN SPACE
Undeveloped land, a naturally landscaped area, or a formal
or man-made landscape area that provides a connective link or a buffer
between resources.
ORDINARY MAINTENANCE
Keeping a resource unimpaired and in good condition through
ongoing minor intervention, undertaken from time to time, in its exterior
condition. Ordinary maintenance does not change the external appearance
of the resource except through the elimination of the usual and expected
effects of weathering. Ordinary maintenance does not constitute work
for the purposes of this division.
PROPOSED HISTORIC DISTRICT
An area, or group of areas not necessarily having contiguous
boundaries, that has delineated boundaries and that is under review
by a committee or a standing committee for the purpose of making a
recommendation as to whether it should be established as a historic
district or added to an established historic district.
REPAIR
To restore a decayed or damaged resource to a good or sound
condition by any process. A repair that changes the external appearance
of a resource constitutes work for the purposes of this division.
RESOURCE
One or more publicly or privately owned historic or nonhistoric
buildings, structures, sites, objects, features or open spaces located
within an historic district.
WORK
Construction, addition, alteration, repair, moving, excavation
or demolition.
[Code 1992, § 32-731; 2-22-1999 by Ord. No. 1157; 5-14-2001 by Ord. No. 1183; 10-22-2001 by Ord. No. 1189]
(a) Military Road Historic District. The boundaries of the Military Road
Historic District are as follows:
Beginning at the southeast corner of block 73, White Plat; thence
westward to the centerline of the alley at the south line of block
55, White Plat; thence north to a point east of the north line of
lot 23, block 55; thence west to the east line of block 42, White
Plat; thence south to the southeast corner of that block; thence west
to the southwest corner of that block; thence north to the northwest
corner of that block; thence east to a point directly south of the
centerline of the vacated alley of block 41, White Plat; thence north
to a point due west of the north line of lot 13, block 41, White Plat;
thence due east to the centerline of Military Street; thence north
along the centerline of Military Street, continuing across the bridge
on the centerline of Huron Avenue to a point directly east of the
southernmost point of block 16, Butler Plat; thence west to the southernmost
point of block 16, Butler Plat; thence northwesterly along the southwest
side of block 16 to the west line of lot 2, block 16; thence north
to the southeast corner of lot 9, block 16; thence west along the
south line of lots, 9, 10, and 11; thence northwesterly along the
south line of lots 12, 13, and 14 to a point directly south of a point
on the north line of lot 14, that is 26 feet west of the east line
of lot 14; thence due north to the point on the north line of lot
14, that is 26 feet west of the east line of lot 14, thence east along
the north line of block 16, Butler Plat, to a point directly south
of the west line of block 17, Butler Plat; thence north to the north
line of McMorran Boulevard; thence west to the southwest corner of
block 26, Butler Plat; thence north along the west line of block 26,
Butler Plat, to the north line of such block; thence east to a point
directly south of the west line of lot 1, block 18, Butler Plat; thence
north to the southeast corner of lot 9, block 18, Butler Plat; thence
west to the southwest corner of lot 9; thence north to the northwest
corner of lot 7; thence east to the northeast corner of such lot 7,
block 18; thence north to the southwest corner of lot 1, block 19,
Butler Plat; thence west 9.58 feet; thence north 42 feet; thence west
8.82 feet; thence north eight feet; thence west 31.6 feet; thence
north to the north line of lot 11, block 19, Butler Plat; thence east
to the centerline of Huron Avenue; thence south to a point directly
west of the north line of block 12, Butler Plat; thence east to the
centerline of Michigan Street; thence south along such centerline
to the northeast side of block 1, Butler Plat; thence southeasterly
to the east corner of lot 6, block 1, Butler Plat; thence southwesterly
to the south corner of lot 6, block 1, Butler Plat; thence southeasterly
across the Black River to the east corner of lot 7, block 93, White
Plat; thence northwesterly 101.5 feet; thence southwesterly to a point
on the southwest side of block 93 that is 101.5 feet northwest of
the south corner of lot 7, block 93, White Plat; thence south to the
northeast side of block 58, White Plat; thence southeasterly to the
northeast corner of block 58, White Plat; thence south to the northeast
corner of block 60, White Plat; thence east to the northeast corner
of block 73, White Plat; thence south to place of beginning.
(b) Olde Town Historic District. The boundaries of the Olde Town Historic
District are as follows:
Beginning at the northeast corner of block 39, White Plat; thence
west to the northwest corner of lot 2, block 22; thence south to the
southwest corner of lot 13, block 22; thence southerly to a point
14 feet due west of the northeast corner of lot 2, block 23, White
Plat; thence due south to the south line of lot 2, block 23; thence
due west to the southeast corner of lot 1, block 16, White Plat; thence
due north 26 feet; thence due west to the west line of lot 1, block
16; thence due south to the southwest corner of lot 1, block 16; thence
due west to the center of Tenth Street; thence due south to a point
due west of the centerline of the alley of block 15, White Plat; thence
due east to the northwest corner of lot 13, block 24, White Plat;
thence due south to a point 76 feet north of the south line of lot
13; thence due east 44 feet; thence due south to the south line of
block 24; thence southerly to a point ten feet west of the northeast
corner of lot 2, block 25, White Plat; thence due south 95 feet; thence
due west to the west line of lot 2, block 25; thence due south to
the south line of block 25; thence due east to the southeast corner
of lot 16, block 36, White Plat; thence due north to a point directly
west of the southwest corner of lot 1, block 44, White Plat; thence
due east to west line of lot 14, block 44, White Plat; thence due
south to a point 46.2 feet south of the northwest corner of lot 13,
block 44; thence due east 41 feet; thence due north to a point 4.8
feet south of the north line of lot 13, block 44; thence due east
to the east line of lot 13; thence easterly to the southwest corner
of lot 1, block 53, White Plat; thence due east 60 feet; thence due
south to the south line of lot 2, block 53; thence due east to the
centerline of the alley of block 53; thence due north to the north
line of block 53; thence northerly to the centerline of the alley
at the south line of block 54, White Plat; thence due north to a point
east of the north line of lot 23, block 55, White Plat; thence west
to the east line of block 42, White Plat; thence south to the southeast
corner of block 42; thence west to the southwest corner of block 42;
thence north to the northwest corner of block 42; thence west to the
northeast corner of block 38; thence north to the place of beginning.
[Code 1992, § 32-732; 2-22-1999 by Ord. No. 1157]
There shall be no construction, addition, alteration, repair,
moving, excavation, or demolition of a resource within any designated
historic districts within the City, unless such action complies with
the requirements set forth in this division.
[Code 1992, § 32-733; 2-22-1999 by Ord. No. 1157; 3-22-1999 by Ord. No. 1161; 5-24-2010 by Ord. No. 1311]
(a) Created. In order to execute the purposes declared in this division,
there is hereby created a commission to be called the "Historic District
Commission."
(b) Membership; compensation; removal. The Historic District Commission
shall consist of nine members whose residence is located in the City.
They shall be appointed by the City Council for terms of office of
three years on a staggered-term basis. At least two members of the
Commission shall be appointed from a list of citizens submitted by
a duly organized and existing preservation society. The Commission
shall include, if available, a graduate of an accredited school of
architecture who has two years of architectural experience or who
is an architect registered in this state. A majority of the members
of the Commission shall have a clearly demonstrated interest in and
knowledge of historic preservation. A vacancy occurring in the membership
of the Commission for any cause shall be filled within 60 calendar
days by a person appointed by the City Council for the unexpired term.
The members of the Commission shall serve without compensation. Any
member of the Commission may be removed by vote of the City Council
for inefficiency, neglect of duty, conflict of interest, or malfeasance
in office, after due consideration by the City Council.
(c) Duties and powers. Duties and powers of the Commission shall be as
follows:
(1)
It shall be the duty of the Commission to review all plans for
the construction, addition, alteration, repair, moving, excavation
or demolition of structures in the historic district, and it shall
have the power to act upon such plans before a permit for such activity
can be granted. In reviewing the plans, the Commission shall follow
the U.S. Secretary of the Interior's Standards for Rehabilitation
and Guidelines for Rehabilitating Historic Buildings, as set forth
in 36 CFR 67, or their equivalent as approved or established by the
State Historical Center, formerly the Bureau of Michigan History,
of the State Department of History, Arts and Libraries, and shall
also give consideration to the following:
a.
The historic or architectural value and significance of the
historic resource and its relationship to the historic value of the
surrounding area.
b.
The relationship of the exterior architectural features of such
historic resource to the rest of the resource and to the surrounding
area.
c.
The general compatibility of the exterior design, arrangement,
texture and materials proposed to be used.
d.
Any other factor, including aesthetics, which it deems pertinent.
(2)
The Commission shall review and act upon only exterior features
of a resource and shall not review and act upon interior arrangements
unless specifically authorized to do so by the City Council or unless
interior work will cause visible changes to the exterior of the historic
resource. The Commission shall not disapprove applications except
in regard to considerations as set forth in Subsection (c)(1) of this
section.
(3)
The Commission may delegate the issuance of certificates of
appropriateness for specified minor classes of work to its staff,
to the inspector of buildings, or to another delegated authority.
The Commission shall provide to such delegated authorities specific
written standards for issuing the certificates of appropriateness
under this subsection. On at least a quarterly basis, the Commission
shall review the certificates of appropriateness, if any, issued for
work by its staff, the inspector, or another authority to determine
whether or not the delegated responsibilities should be continued.
(4)
If an application is for work that will adversely affect the
exterior of a resource the Commission considers valuable to the City,
state, or nation, and the Commission determines that the alteration
or loss of that resource will adversely affect the public purpose
of the City, state, or nation, the Commission shall attempt to establish
with the owner of the resource an economically feasible plan for preservation
of the resource.
(5)
If all efforts by the Commission to preserve a resource fail
or if it is determined by the City Council that public ownership is
most suitable, the City Council, if considered to be in the public
interest, may acquire the resource using public funds, downtown development
association (DDA) funds, public or private gifts, grants or proceeds
from the issuance of revenue bonds. Such an acquisition shall be based
upon the recommendation of the Commission. The Commission is responsible
for maintaining publicly owned resources using its own funds, if not
specifically designated for other purposes, or public funds committed
for that use by the City Council. Upon recommendation of the Commission,
the City may sell resources acquired under this section with protective
easements included in the property transfer documents, if appropriate.
(d) Rules. Rules of the Commission are as follows:
(1)
The Historic District Commission shall adopt its own rules of
procedure and shall adopt design review standards and guidelines for
resource treatment to carry out its duties under this division.
(2)
All meetings of the Commission shall be open to the public,
and any person or his or her duly constituted representative shall
be entitled to appear and be heard on any matter before the Commission
prior to its reaching a decision.
(3)
Applicants may file supporting documentation in addition to
the required forms and may be represented by legal counsel. An applicant
may present testimony in support of his or her application from architects,
engineers, or other qualified persons. If the applicant desires the
Commission to consider especially voluminous testimony, the Commission
may require that the testimony be presented in writing. Two copies
of all supporting documents must be submitted.
(4)
Public notice of the time, date and place of meetings shall
be given in the manner required by Public Act No. 267 of 1976 (MCL
15.261 et seq.). A meeting agenda shall be part of the notice and
shall include a listing of each permit application to be reviewed
or considered by the Commission.
(5)
The Commission shall keep a record of its resolutions, proceedings,
and actions. A writing prepared, owned, used, in the possession of,
or retained by the Commission in the performance of an official function
shall be made available to the public in compliance with the Freedom
of Information Act, Public Act No. 442 of 1976 (MCL 15.231 through
15.246).
(6)
The Commission shall submit an annual report to the City Council
of the general activities of the Commission and shall submit such
special reports as requested by the City Council.
[Code 1992, § 32-734; 2-22-1999 by Ord. No. 1157; 5-24-2010 by Ord. No. 1311]
(a) Filing of application. A permit shall be obtained before any work
affecting the exterior appearance of a resource is performed within
an historic district or any work affecting the interior arrangements,
if this work causes visible change to the exterior of the resource.
Any person, individual, partnership, firm, corporation, organization,
institution, or agency of government proposing to do work shall file
an application for a permit with the City Inspection Division. The
application shall be referred together with all required supporting
materials that make the application complete to the Historic District
Commission for consideration at the next regularly scheduled meeting.
A permit shall not be issued and proposed work shall not proceed until
the Commission has acted on the application by issuing a certificate
of appropriateness or a notice to proceed as prescribed in this division.
(b) Contents of application. A complete application shall include the
following:
(1)
A completed permit application.
(2)
A completed Historic District Commission application form, together
with the following:
a.
Accurate drawings, photos, color samples, material samples,
or any other exhibits which would be helpful to the Commission in
reviewing the application.
b.
Any drawings submitted in support of the application shall be
drawn to scale with accurate dimensions and accurate site locations.
The drawings shall accurately indicate relationships to adjacent structures;
descriptions or samples of colors, textures, finishes and quality
of material to be used on visible exterior areas.
c.
Any other construction documents or samples which the Commission
finds to be necessary for the proper review of the permit application.
(c) Incomplete applications. If the Historic District Commission application
is incomplete, the Commission shall so inform the applicant and shall
state what additional information and/or documents the Commission
requires to complete the application.
(d) Action upon application. The Historic District Commission shall review
the application according to the duties and powers specified in this
division. In reviewing the application, the Commission must make every
effort to confer with the applicant. No fee shall be charged to process
an application through the Commission beyond the existing Inspection
Division fees. The failure of the Commission to act within 60 calendar
days after the date a complete application is filed with the Commission,
unless an extension is agreed upon in writing by the applicant and
the Commission, shall be considered to constitute approval, and the
Inspection Division shall proceed to process the application as if
the Commission had issued a certificate of appropriateness or a notice
to proceed.
(e) Approval of application. If the Commission finds such proposed work
appropriate, it shall issue a certificate of appropriateness determination
which is to be signed by the Planning Director, attached to the application
for a building permit, application, and all submitted documentation,
and immediately transmitted to the Inspection Division. After the
certificate of appropriateness determination has been issued and the
building permit granted to the applicant, the City Inspection Division
shall inspect the work permitted and shall take such action as is
necessary to enforce compliance with the approved plans. Approval
of the permit shall be in addition to any other building, plumbing,
electrical or mechanical permit required by ordinance or state law.
(f) Denial of application. If the Commission finds proposed work inappropriate,
it shall issue a denial determination and shall state its reasons
for doing so and shall transmit a record of such action and reasons
therefor in writing to the Inspection Division and to the applicant.
The Commission may suggest appropriate alternatives to the applicant
if it issues a denial. The applicant may make modifications to the
permit application and shall have the right to resubmit the application
at any time after so doing. A denial of an application shall be binding
on the Planning Department, Building Inspector or any such other relevant
authority, and a permit shall not be issued. A denial of an application
shall also include a notice to the applicant of the rights of appeal.
(g) Repair or ordinary maintenance and prior permit work. Nothing in this division shall be construed to prevent repair or ordinary maintenance, as defined in §
52-777, of a resource within the historic district or to prevent work on any resource under a permit issued by the City Inspection Division before the enactment of the ordinance from which this division is derived.
(h) Notice to proceed. Work within an historic district which may otherwise
be inappropriate may be permitted through the issuance of a notice
to proceed determination by the Commission if any of the following
conditions prevail and if the proposed work is found by the Commission
to be necessary to substantially improve or correct any of the following:
(1)
The resource constitutes a hazard to the safety of the public
or the occupants of a structure;
(2)
The resource is a deterrent to a major improvement program which
will be of substantial benefit to the community and the applicant
proposing the work has obtained all necessary planning and zoning
approvals, financing and environmental clearances;
(3)
Retention of the resources would cause undue financial hardship
to the owner when a governmental action, an act of God, or other events
beyond the owner's control created the hardship, and all feasible
alternatives to eliminate the financial hardship, which may include
offering the resource for sale at its fair market value or moving
the resource to a vacant site within the historic district, have been
attempted and exhausted by the owner; or
(4)
Retention of the resource would not be in the interests of the
majority of the community.
[Code 1992, § 32-735; 2-22-1999 by Ord. No. 1157; 5-24-2010 by Ord. No. 1311]
(a) Any applicant aggrieved by a decision of the Commission may file
an appeal with the State Historic Preservation Review Board of the
State Historic Preservation Office. The appeal shall be filed within
60 days after the decision is furnished to the applicant.
(b) An applicant aggrieved by the decision of the State Historic Preservation
Review Board may appeal the decision to the county circuit court having
jurisdiction over the Historic District Commission's decision that
was appealed to the State Historic Preservation Review Board. Such
applicant may only appeal to the county circuit court after appealing
to the State Historic Preservation Review Board.
(c) In addition, any citizen or duly organized historic preservation
organization in the City, other than the resource property owner,
jointly or severally aggrieved by a decision of the Commission may
appeal the decision to the county circuit court.
[Code 1992, § 32-736; 2-22-1999 by Ord. No. 1157]
Upon a finding by the Historic District Commission that a historic resource either in a historic district or in a proposed historic district which is subject to Commission review pursuant to the terms of §
52-586 is threatened by demolition by neglect, the Commission may do either of the following:
(1) Require the owner of the resource to repair all conditions contributing
to demolition by neglect; or
(2) If the owner does not make the repairs within a reasonable time,
the Commission or its agents may enter the property and make such
repairs as are necessary to prevent demolition by neglect. The cost
of the work shall be charged to the owner and may be levied as a special
assessment against the property. The Commission or its agents may
enter the property for purposes of this section upon obtaining an
order from the county circuit court.
[Code 1992, § 32-737; 2-22-1999 by Ord. No. 1157]
(a) When work has been done upon a historic resource without a permit
and the Historic District Commission finds that the work does not
qualify for a certificate of appropriateness, the Commission may require
an owner to restore the resource to the condition the resource was
in before the inappropriate work or to modify the work so that it
qualifies for a certificate of appropriateness.
(b) If the owner does not comply with the restoration or modification
requirement within a reasonable time, the Commission may seek an order
from the county circuit court to require the owner to restore the
resource to its former condition or to modify the work so that it
qualifies for a certificate of appropriateness.
(c) If the owner does not comply or cannot comply with the order of the
court, the Commission or its agents may enter the property and conduct
work necessary to restore the resource to its former condition or
modify the work so that it qualifies for a certificate of appropriateness
in accordance with the court's order. The cost of the work shall be
charged to the owner and may be levied by the City as a special assessment
against the property. When acting pursuant to such order of the county
circuit court, the Commission or its agents may enter a property for
purposes of this section.
[Code 1992, § 32-738; 2-22-1999 by Ord. No. 1157]
Before establishing, amending, adding to, removing properties
from or eliminating any historic district, the City Council shall
appoint a Historic District Study Committee, as provided for in Section
3 of Public Act 169 of 1970 (MCL 399.203).
[Code 1992, § 32-739; 2-22-1999 by Ord. No. 1157; 5-24-2010 by Ord. No. 1311]
Upon receipt of substantial evidence showing the presence of historic, architectural, archaeological, engineering or cultural significance of a proposed historic district, the City Council may adopt a resolution requiring that all applications for work to be performed within the proposed historic district be referred to the Historic District Commission as prescribed in §§
52-579 and
52-581. The Commission shall review applications with the same powers that would apply if the proposed historic district was an established historic district for not more than one year or until such time as the City Council approves or rejects the establishment of the historic district by ordinance, whichever occurs first.
[Code 1992, § 32-740; 2-22-1999 by Ord. No. 1157]
(a) The City may accept gifts, grants or bequests from the state or federal
government for historic restoration purposes or historic purposes.
It may accept public or private gifts, grants or bequests for such
purposes; provided, however, that such gifts, grants or bequests are
not prohibited by the Charter and are not used for the purpose of
paying any fees or expenses arising out of any litigation. Further,
the City Council may appoint the Historic District Commission to administer
on behalf of the City such gifts, grants or bequests for the purpose
provided.
(b) The City Treasurer shall be custodian of funds of the Historic District
Commission, and authorized expenditures shall be certified by the
City Treasurer or Director of Finance, designated by such Historic
District Commission. The Historic District Commission shall annually
report to the City Council any money it shall receive or expend.
[Code 1992, § 32-741; 2-22-1999 by Ord. No. 1157]
(a) A person, individual, partnership, firm, corporation, organization, institution, or agency of government that violates this division is responsible for a blight violation as provided for in §
2-901 of the City of Port Huron Code of Ordinances.
[9-27-2021 by Ord. No.
21-008]
(b) A person, individual, partnership, firm, corporation, organization,
institution, or agency of government that violates this division and
state law may be ordered by the court to pay the costs to restore
or replicate a resource unlawfully constructed, added to, altered,
repaired, moved, excavated, or demolished.
[Code 1992, § 32-742; 2-22-1999 by Ord. No. 1157]
If any other ordinance is found to be in conflict with the provisions
of this division, the provisions of this division shall control.
[Code 1992, § 32-743; 2-22-1999 by Ord. No. 1157]
No other portion, paragraph or phrase of this Code shall be
affected by this division except as to the sections of this division.
If any portion, section or subsection of this division shall be held
invalid for any reason, such invalidation shall not be construed to
affect the validity of any other part or portion of this division
or of this Code.