[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 200]
a. Unless a contrary intention clearly appears, the following words
and phrases shall have for the purposes of this chapter the meanings
given in the following subsections.
b. For the purpose of this chapter, words and terms used herein shall
be interpreted as follows:
(1)
Words used in the present tense include the future.
(2)
The singular includes the plural.
(3)
The word "person" includes an individual, firm, partnership,
corporation, company, association, association or government entity;
including a trustee, a receive, an assignee or a similar representative.
(4)
The word "lot" includes the word "plot" or "parcel."
(5)
The term "shall" is mandatory.
(6)
The word "used" or "occupied" as applied to any land or building
shall be construed to include the words "intended, arranged or designed
to be occupied."
(7)
The word "Supervisor" and the words "Board of Supervisors" always
mean the East Rockhill Township Board of Supervisors.
(8)
The word "Commission" and the words "Planning Commission" always
mean the East Rockhill Township Planning Commission.
(9)
The word "Board" or the words "Zoning Hearing Board" always
mean the East Rockhill Township Zoning Hearing Board.
(10)
The words "Zoning Officer" always mean the East Rockhill Township
Zoning Officer.
c. Any word or term not defined herein shall be used with a meaning
of standard usage.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 202; as amended by Ord. 194,
-/-/2000, Art. III; and by Ord. 201, 5/13/2003, § III]
a. Prime Farmland. The following soil types classified in the Soil Survey
of Bucks County, Pennsylvania, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Natural
Resources Conservation Service, September 2002 Report, or as amended,
shall be recognized as prime agricultural soils. Soils mapping within
the soil survey shall be utilized to determine the presence of prime
agricultural soils unless a site specific soil classification of the
tract has been completed by a certified soil scientist. The Township
reserves the right to obtain its own soil scientist to confirm any
reclassification efforts.
|
Map Symbol
|
Soil Name
|
---|
|
AlA
|
Alton gravelly loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
AlB
|
Alton gravelly loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
ArB
|
Arendtsville gravelly silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
BeA
|
Bedington channery silt loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
BeB
|
Bedington channery silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
BrB
|
Brecknock channery silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
BsA
|
Brownsburg silt loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
BsB
|
Brownsburg silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
CdA
|
Chester silt loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
CdB
|
Chester silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
CmB
|
Clarksburg silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
DaA
|
Delaware loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
DaB
|
Delaware loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
DfB
|
Duffield silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
DuA
|
Duncannon silt loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
DuB
|
Duncannon silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
EcB
|
Edgemont channery loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
FoA
|
Fountainville silt loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
FoB
|
Fountainville silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
GlB
|
Gladstone gravelly silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
GrA
|
Glenville silt loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
GrB
|
Glenville silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
LgA
|
Lansdale loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
LgB
|
Lansdale loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
LkA
|
Lawrenceville silt loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
LmA
|
Lehigh channery silt loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
LmB
|
Lehigh channery silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
Lt
|
Linden loam
|
|
MaB
|
Manor loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
McA
|
Matapeake silt loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
McB
|
Matapeake silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
MdA
|
Mattapex silt loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
MlA
|
Mount lucas silt loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
MlB
|
Mount lucas silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
NbB
|
Nashaminy silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
PeA
|
Penn channery silt loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
PeB
|
Penn channery silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
PnB
|
Penn-Lansdale complex, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
RaA
|
Raritan silt loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
RaB
|
Raritan silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
ReA
|
Readington silt loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
Ro
|
Rowland silt loam
|
|
WaB
|
Washington silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
b. Statewide Important Farmland. The following soil types classified
in the soils survey of Bucks County, Pennsylvania, U.S. Department
of Agriculture, Natural Resources Conservation Service, September
2002 Report, or as amended, shall be recognized as statewide important
farmland soils. Soils mapping within the soil survey shall be utilized
to determine the presence of statewide important farmland soils unless
a site specific soil classification of the tract has been completed
by a certified soil scientist.
|
Map Symbol
|
Soil Name (Farmland of Statewide Importance)
|
---|
|
AbA
|
Abbottstown silt loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
AbB
|
Abbottstown silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
AbC
|
Abbottstown silt loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
AmA
|
Amell silt loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
AmB
|
Amell silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
ArC
|
Arendtsville gravelly silt loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
BeC
|
Bedington channery silt loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
BrC
|
Brecknock channery silt loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
BsC
|
Brownsburg silt loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
BwB
|
Buckingham silt loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
CbA
|
Chalfont silt loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
CbB
|
Chalfont silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
CdC
|
Chester silt loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
CyB
|
Culleoka-weikert channery silt loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
CyC
|
Culleoka-weikert channery silt loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
DgC
|
Duffield-ryder silt loams, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
EcC
|
Edgmont channery loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
FoC
|
Fountainville silt loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
GlC
|
Gladstone gravelly silt loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
GlD
|
Gladstone gravelly silt loam, 15% to 25% slopes
|
|
GnC
|
Glenelg channery silt loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
Ha
|
Hatboro silt loam
|
|
KIB
|
Klinesville very channery silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
LgC
|
Lansdale loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
LgD
|
Lansdale loam, 15% to 25% slopes
|
|
LkB
|
Lawrenceville silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
LmC
|
Lehigh channery silt loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
MaC
|
Manor loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
MlC
|
Mount lucas silt loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
NbC
|
Neshaminy silt loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
NkA
|
Nockamixon silt loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
NkB
|
Nockamixon silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
NkC
|
Nockamixon silt loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
PeC
|
Penn channery silt loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
PkB
|
Penn-klinesville channery silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
PkC
|
Penn-klinesville channery silt loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
PkD
|
Penn-klinesville channery silt loam, 15% to 25% slopes
|
|
PnC
|
Penn-lansdale complex channery silt loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
RaC
|
Raritan silt loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
ReB
|
Readington silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
RlA
|
Reaville channery silt loam, 0% to 3% slopes
|
|
RlB
|
Reaville channery silt loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
RlC
|
Reaville channery silt loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
StB
|
Steinsburg gravelly loam, 3% to 8% slopes
|
|
StC
|
Steinsburg gravelly loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
|
WaC
|
Washington silt loam, 8% to 15% slopes
|
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 203]
As applied to a building or structure, a change or rearrangement
in the structural parts, or an enlargement or diminution, whether
by extending on a side or by increasing in height, or the moving from
one location or position to another.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 204; as amended by Ord. No. 303, 3/26/2024]
a. LOT AREA — The area contained within the property lines of
the individual parcels of land shown on a subdivision plan or required
by this chapter, excluding any area within an existing or designated
legal or designated future street right-of-way, or any area required
as open space under this chapter, and the area of any easement for
stormwater management and/or drainage facilities.
b. FLOOR AREA — The sum of the areas of the several floors of
the building or structure, including areas used for human occupancy
or required for the conduct of the business or use, and basements,
attics and penthouses, as measured from the exterior faces of the
walls. It does not include cellars, unenclosed porches, attics not
used for human occupancy, nor any floor space in an accessory building
nor in the main building intended or designed for the parking of motor
vehicles in order to meet the parking requirements of this chapter,
nor any such floor space intended and designed for accessory heating
and ventilating equipment.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 205]
A space having 1/2 or more of its floor-to-ceiling height above
the average level of the adjoining ground and with a floor-to-ceiling
height of not less than 6 1/2 feet. A basement shall be counted
as a story for the purposes of height measurement or the determination
of square footage or floor area.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 206]
A person, except family, occupying any room or group of rooms
forming a single, habitable unit used or intended to be used for living
and sleeping, but not for cooking or eating purposes, and paying compensation
for lodging or board and lodging by prearrangement for a week or more
at a time to an owner or operator. Any person occupying such room
or rooms and paying such compensation without prearrangement for less
than a week at a time shall be classified for purposes of this chapter
not as a roomer, boarder or lodger but as a guest of a commercial
lodging establishment (motel, hotel, inn, bed and breakfast, tourist
home).
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 207]
a. BUILDING — A structure under rook, used for the shelter or
enclosure of persons, animals or property. The word "building" shall
include any part thereof.
b. BUILDING, ACCESSORY — A subordinate building located on the
same lot as a principal building and clearly incidental and subordinate
to the principal building. Any portion of a principal building devoted
or intended to be devoted to an accessory use is not an accessory
building.
c. BUILDING, PRINCIPAL — A building in which is conducted, or
is intended to be conducted, the principal use of the lot on which
it is located.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 208]
That percentage of the lot area covered by building area.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 209]
That area of a lot that has no development restrictions. The building envelope shall not include the area of any required setbacks (except for driveways which would cross yards), buffer yards, natural features with 100% protection standard and the portion of those natural features that may not be developed or intruded upon as specified in §
27-1900, "Natural Resource Protection Standards."
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 210; as amended by Ord. 253,
4/20/2010]
A vertical distance measured from the elevation of the finished
grade at the front of the building or structure to the mean roof height
of the building or structure.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 211]
The rear line of the minimum yard, as herein designated for each use and each district, measured at a distance equal to and no greater than the minimum front yard from the street line as defined in §
27-251, "street line." For exceptions, see §
27-230(d), "lane lot."
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 212]
The minimum distance between buildings. The minimum building
spacing shall be measured from the outermost wall or projection, excluding
bay windows, chimneys, flues, columns, ornamental features, cornices
and gutters. These exceptions may encroach no more than two feet.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 213]
A space with less than 1/2 of its floor-to-ceiling height above
the average finished grade of the adjoining ground or with a floor-to-ceiling
height of less than 6 1/2 feet. A cellar is not counted as a
story for the purposes of height measurement or the determination
of square footage or floor area unless the cellar is used for dwelling,
office or business purposes.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 214]
Real estate, portions of which are designated for separate ownership
and the remainder of which is designated for common ownership solely
by the owners of those portions. Real estate is not a condominium
unless the undivided interests in the common elements are vested in
the unit owners.
A condominium is a unit with all of the following characteristics:
a. The unit may be any permitted land use. A condominium is an ownership
arrangement, not a land use.
b. All or a portion of the exterior open space and any community interior spaces are owned and maintained in accordance with the Pennsylvania Uniform Condominium Act, 68 Pa.C.S.A. § 3103 et seq., and in accordance with the provisions for open space, roads or other development features in this chapter and the Subdivision and Land Development Ordinance [Chapter
22].
[Ord. No. 303, 3/26/2024]
An unenclosed patio or porch attached to or immediately adjoining
a dwelling unit.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 215]
A measure of the number of dwelling units per unit of area.
Density shall be expressed in dwelling units per acre.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 216]
Any manmade change to improved or unimproved real estate, including
but not limited to, buildings or other structures, mining, dredging,
filling, grading, paring, excavation or drilling operations.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 217; as amended by Ord. No. 303, 3/26/2024]
Any room or group of rooms located within a residential building
and forming a single housekeeping unit with facilities which are used
or intended to be used for living, sleeping, cooking and eating by
one family.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 218]
A person who is employed or is engaged in gainful activity.
For the purposes of this chapter, the term shall refer to the maximum
number of employees on duty at any time at a place of business whether
the employees are full- or part-time. If shifts are involved in which
two shifts overlap, it refers to the total of both shifts.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 219; as amended by Ord. No. 303, 3/26/2024]
One or more persons related by blood, foster relationship, guardianship,
marriage or adoption and, in addition, any domestic servants or gratuitous
guests thereof; or one or more persons who need not be so related,
and in addition, domestic servants or gratuitous guests thereof, who
are living together in a single housekeeping unit and maintaining
a single cooking facility. A roomer, boarder, or lodger shall not
be considered a member of the family.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 220; as amended by Ord. 185,
5/11/1999, Art. 1; and by Ord. 194, -/-/2000, Art. IV; and by Ord.
278, 2/10/2015]
a. Any areas
of East Rockhill Township classified as special flood hazard areas
(SFHAs) in the Flood Insurance Study (FIS) and the accompanying Flood
Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs), dated March 16, 2015, and issued by the
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), or the most-recent revision
thereof, including all digital data developed as part of the Flood
Insurance Study; and
b. For areas
abutting streams and watercourses where the one-hundred-year floodplain
(one-percent annual chance flood) has not been delineated by the Flood
Insurance Study, the applicant shall submit a floodplain identification
study. The study, prepared by a registered professional engineer expert
in the preparation of hydrologic and hydraulic studies, shall be used
to delineate the one-hundred-year floodplain. The floodplain study
shall be subject to the review and approval of the Township. All areas
inundated by the one-hundred-year flood shall be Included in the floodplain
area.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 223]
The ratio of the floor area to the lot area as determined by
dividing the floor area by the lot area.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 224]
An activity for gain customarily carried on in a dwelling, or
in a building or structure accessory to a dwelling, clearly incidental
and secondary to the use of the dwelling for residential purposes.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 225]
A soil that is saturated, flooded or ponded long enough during
the growing season to develop anaerobic conditions that favor the
growth and regeneration of wetlands vegetation. Wetlands vegetation
are those plant species that have adapted to the saturated soils and
periodic inundations occurring in wetlands. The following soils, classified
in the "Soil Survey of Bucks and Philadelphia Counties, Pennsylvania,"
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service, July 1975,
are hydric soils:
f. Towhee extremely stony silt loam.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 226]
Those surfaces which do not absorb water. All buildings, parking
areas, driveways, roads, sidewalks, and any areas in concrete, asphalt
and packed stone shall be considered impervious surfaces within this
definition. In addition, other areas determined by the Township Engineer
to be impervious with the meaning of this definition will also be
classed as impervious surfaces.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 227]
A measure of the intensity of use of a piece of land. It is
measured by dividing the total area of all impervious surfaces within
the site by the base site area.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 228; as amended by Ord. 194,
-/-/2000, Art. V]
Natural or artificial bodies of water which retain water, exclusive
of retention basins. Artificial ponds may be created by dams, or result
from excavation. The shoreline of such waterbodies shall be measured
from the spillway crest elevation rather that permanent pool if there
is any difference. Lakes are bodies of water two or more acres in
area. Ponds are any waterbody less than two acres in area.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 229]
Areas around lakes and ponds measured 100 feet from the spillway
crest elevation.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 230]
a. LOT — A parcel of land, used or set aside and available for
use as the site of one or more buildings and any buildings accessory
thereto or for any other purpose, in one ownership and not divided
by a street, nor including any land within the right-of-way of a public
street upon which said lot abuts, even if the ownership to such right-of-way
is in the owner of the lot. A lot, for the purpose of this chapter,
may or may not coincide with a lot record. A lot shall front on a
public street.
c. CORNER LOT — A lot which haw an interior angle of less than
135° at the intersection of two street lines. A lot abutting upon
a curved street or streets shall be considered a corner lot if the
tangent to the curve at the points beginning within the lot or at
the points of intersection of the side lot lines with the street lines
intersect at an angle of less than 135°.
d. LANE LOT — A lot which meets the criteria for an exception to the minimum lot width requirements. See §
27-1704, "Exceptions to Minimum Lot Width Standards."
e. THROUGH LOT — An interior lot having frontage on two parallel
or approximately parallel streets.
f. LOT DEPTH — The mean distance from the street line of the lot
to its opposite rear line, measured in the general direction of the
side lines of the lot.
g. LOT WIDTH — The distance measured between the side lot lines at the specified distance of the required building setback line as defined in §
27-211, "building setback line." In a case where there is only one side lot line, lot width shall be measured between such side lot line and the opposite rear lot line or street line.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 231]
a. LOT LINES — Any boundary line of a lot.
b. LOT LINE, REAR — Any lot line which is parallel to or within
45° of being parallel to a street line, except for a lot line
that is itself a street line, and except that in the case of a corner
lot the owner shall have the option of choosing which of the two lot
lines that are not street lines is to be considered a rear lot line.
In the case of a lot having no street frontage or a lot of an odd
shape, only the one lot line furthest from any street shall be considered
a rear lot line.
c. LOT LINE, SIDE — Any lot line which is not a street line or
a rear lot line.
d. STREET LINE — See §
27-251, "street line."
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 232]
A transportable, single-family dwelling unit intended for permanent occupancy, office, or place of assembly, contained in one unit, or in two units designed to be joined into one integral unit capable of again being separated for repeated towing, which arrives at a site complete and ready for occupancy except for minor and incidental unpacking and assembly operations and constructed so that it may be used without a permanent foundation. For the purposes of this chapter, any inhabited mobile home shall be considered a detached dwelling unit and as such shall be subject to all applicable regulations in this chapter or other Township ordinances. As a structure, a mobile home shall be used only in conformance with §
27-304 and Parts 4 through 13.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 233]
An parcel of land in a mobile home park, improved with the necessary
utility connections and other appurtenances (accessory attachments)
necessary for the erection thereon of a single mobile home which is
leased by the park owner to the occupants of the mobile home erected
on the lot.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 234]
See § 27-304(B4).
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 235]
A dwelling unit erected on a foundation and made of one or more
sections built in a factory. The completed unit shall meet the building
code in effect.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 236; as amended by Ord. 184,
4/20/1999, Art. 1]
Open space is land used for recreation, agriculture, resource protection, amenity, educational or municipal use. Open space is accessible to residents of the Township and/or the development as approved by the Township, except in the case of agricultural lands where access may be restricted. Open space is protected by the provisions of this chapter and the Subdivision and Land Development Ordinance [Chapter
22] to insure that it remains in such uses. Open space does not include land occupied by nonrecreational or noneducational buildings, public roads or rights-of-way; nor does it include the yards or lots of dwelling units or parking areas for those dwelling units as required by the provisions of this chapter. Open space for recreational, educational or municipal uses may contain impervious surfaces; and such surfaces shall be included in the calculation of the impervious surface ratio prior to subdivision or land development approval by the Township. Refer to §
27-1903, "Open Space in Residential Developments," for limitations on the use of open space for buffer yards, utility easements, community sewage systems and/or stormwater management improvements.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 237]
A measure of the intensity of land use. It is arrived at by
dividing the total amount of open space within the site by the base
site area.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 238]
a. PRINCIPAL BUILDING — See §
27-207(c), "building, principal."
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 239]
a. RIGHT-OF-WAY — Land set aside for use as a street, ally or
other means of travel.
b. EXISTING RIGHT-OF-WAY — The legal right-of-way as established
by the Commonwealth or other appropriate governing authority and currently
in existence.
c. FUTURE RIGHT-OF-WAY — The right-of-way deemed necessary to
provide adequate width for future street improvements.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 240]
a. PUBLIC SEWER — Any Township or privately owned sewer system
in which sewage is collected and piped to an approved sewage disposal
plant or central septic tank disposal system. It may also be referred
to as "off-lot" or "offsite" sewer. This shall include capped sewers
when installed to Township specifications.
b. PRIVATE SEWER — An "onlot" disposal system generally providing
for disposal of effluent for only one building or a group of buildings
on a single lot.
c. COMMUNITY SEWAGE SYSTEM — A system for the treatment of effluent
from two or more homes that is applied to the land either on the surface
or below.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 241]
See § 27-2001(1).
[Ord. No. 303, 3/26/2024]
A permanent and nontransitory occupancy of a dwelling unit where
the occupancy of the dwelling unit is stable, permanent, and increases
the strength and continuity of the community.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 242]
A parcel or parcels of land intended to have one or more buildings
or intended to be subdivided into one or more lots.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 243]
All land area within the site as defined in the deed. This area
shall be determined from an actual site survey rather than from a
deed description.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 244]
The area of the site remaining after subtracting land which
is not contiguous land previously subdivided and road and utility
rights-of-way from the site area. See § 27-1901(b)(1) for
the specific calculations.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 245]
The area of the site which may be altered, disturbed or regraded
for development purposes. The net buildable site area could contain
buildings, roads, parking areas, sewage systems and stormwater management
facilities. The net buildable site area would not contain required
open space, recreation areas and natural resource protection areas.
See § 27-1901(b)(7) for the specific calculations.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 245; as added by Ord. 194, -/-/2000,
Art. VI; as amended by Ord. 201, 5/13/2004, § V]
The nonbuildable site area is the portion of a tract to be subdivided for single-family detached dwellings in the AP District that may not be developed pursuant to the provisions of this chapter. Land on this tract must be reserved from development if it includes the portion of prime farmland or farmland of statewide importance that must be protected in accordance with § 27-304(b)(2) of this chapter, or the portion of a natural resource that must be protected in accordance with §
27-1900 of this chapter.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 246]
The maximum number of lots or dwelling units, the maximum impervious
surfaces, the net buildable site area and the minimum required open
space as calculated under the provisions of § 27-1901(b)(10),
"Site Capacity Summary."
[Added by Ord. 278, 2/10/2015]
Areas subject to periodic flooding listed in the Official Soil
Survey provided by the United States Department of Agriculture, Natural
Resources Conservation Service, Web Soil Survey (http://websoilsurvey.nrcs.usda.gov/),
as soils having a flood frequency other than none.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 247; as amended by Ord. 194,
-/-/2000, Art. VII]
Areas of at least 1/4 acre in size where the average slope exceeds
15% which, because of this slope, are subject to high rates of stormwater
runoff and, therefore, erosion and flooding.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 248]
That portion of a building included between the surface of any
floor and the surface of the floor next above it, or if there is no
floor above it, then the space between the floor and the ceiling next
above it and including those basements used for the principal use.
A half story is a space under a sloping roof which has the line of
intersection of the roof and wall face not more than three feet above
the floor level, and in which space the possible floor area with head
room of five feet or less occupies at least 40% of the total floor
area of the story directly beneath.
Source: Moskowitz & Lindbloom, "The Illustrated Book of
Development Definitions," (1981 Rutgers University).
|
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 249]
That story with its floor level immediately above the average
finished grade level of the adjoining ground at any particular point
or side of the building.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 250]
A public way used or intended to be used for passage or travel
by motor vehicles and/or to provide access to abutting properties.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 251]
The dividing line between the street and the lot. The street
line shall be the same as the legal right-of-way; provided, that where
a future right-of-way width for a road or street has been established,
then that width shall determine the location of the street line.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 252]
A combination of materials assembled, constructed or erected
at a fixed location on or in land or water, including a building or
a mobile home, whether or not affixed to the land.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 253]
Those which measure at least 10 inches dbh (diameter at breast
height of 4 1/2 feet above the ground).
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 254]
a. USE — Any activity, occupation, business or operation carried
on, or intended to be carried on, in a building or other structure
or on a tract of land.
b. USE, ACCESSORY — A use located on the same lot with a principal
use and clearly incidental or subordinate to, and in connection with,
the principal use.
c. USE, PRINCIPAL — The main use on a lot.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 255]
Those services customarily rendered by public utility corporations,
municipalities, or municipal authorities, in the nature of electricity,
gas, telephone, water and sewerage, including the appurtenances used
in connection with the supplying of such services (buildings, wires,
pipes, poles and the like).
[Ord. No. 303, 3/26/2024]
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 255a; as added by Ord. 194,
-/-/2000, § VIII]
An intermittent or perennial stream of water, river, brook,
creek or swale identified on USGS (United States Geodetic Survey)
or SCS (Soil Conservation Service) mapping; and/or delineated Waters
of the Commonwealth.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 256; as amended by Ord. 194,
-/-/2000, Art. IX]
Those areas that are inundated or saturated by surface or groundwater
at a frequency and duration sufficient to support, and that under
normal circumstances do support, a prevalence of vegetation typically
adapted for life in saturated soil conditions, including swamps, marshes,
bogs, fens and similar areas.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 257]
The transitional area extending from the outer limit of the
wetland. For the purposes of this chapter, the wetlands margin shall
extend 100 feet from the wetland boundary or the limit of the hydric
soils, whichever is less.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 258]
Areas comprised of one or more acres of mature or largely mature
trees in which the largest trees measure at least six inches dbh (diameter
at breast height or 4 1/2 feet above the ground). The woodland
shall be measured from the drip line of the outer trees. Woodlands
are also 10 or more individual trees which measure at least 10 inches
dbh and form a contiguous canopy.
[Ord. 5/26/1987, § 259]
a. YARD — An open space unobstructed from the ground up except
for permitted projections and plantings, on the same lot with a structure,
extending along a lot line or street line and inward to the structure.
The size of a required yard shall be measured as the shortest distance
between the structure and a lot line or street line.
b. YARD, FRONT — A yard between a structure and a street line and extending the entire length of the street line. In the case of a corner lot, the yards extending along all streets are front yards. In the case of a lot other than a corner lot that fronts on more than one street, the yards extending along all streets are front yards, See §
27-1704, "Exceptions to Minimum Lot Width Standards."
c. YARD, REAR — A yard between a structure and rear lot line and
extending the entire length of the rear lot line.
d. YARD, SIDE — A yard between a structure and a side lot line,
extending from the front yard to the rear yard. In the case of a lot
having no street frontage or a lot of odd shape, any yard that is
not a front yard or a rear yard shall be considered a side yard.