Specific words and phrases. Certain words used to explain land use
regulations require special usage. Other words and terms must be defined
as to the manner in which they relate to zoning and land use. Words
not defined in this section shall be construed in the generally acceptable
meaning as defined in the most recent edition of Webster's Seventh
New Collegiate Dictionary. The following words, terms and phrases,
wherever they occur in this chapter, shall have the meanings ascribed
to them by this section. Definitions provided by this section include:
A ZONES
Those areas shown on the Official Floodplain Zoning Map which
would be inundated by the regional flood. These areas may be numbered
or unnumbered A Zones. The A zones may or may not be reflective of
flood profiles, depending on the availability of data for a given
area.
A-WEIGHTED SOUND LEVEL
The sound pressure level in decibels as measured on a sound
level meter using the A-weighting network. The level to read is designated
dB(A) or dBA.
ACCESSORY RESIDENTIAL UNIT (GRANNY FLAT)
An accessory dwelling unit established in conjunction with,
and clearly subordinate to, the principal dwelling unit on a single-family
zoned lot. Accessory residential units are typically located at the
rear of a lot, and are typically located above an attached or detached
garage that serves the primary resident, but may be located within
the single-family dwelling. Such units may contain a separate kitchen,
dining area, bathroom, living area, sleeping area, laundry facilities,
and recreation areas, including exterior porches, patios, decks and
parking areas. Separate outdoor access to the unit is required; however,
external stairs serving as the primary access are prohibited. In addition,
separate access to the garage or an internal physical connection to
the principal dwelling unit may be provided. A residence with an accessory
dwelling unit may not be used in the same manner as a duplex. An accessory
dwelling unit shall only be permitted by conditional use within specified
residential zoning districts.
ACRE, GROSS
The total area of a parcel of land. One acre equals 43,560
square feet.
ACRE, NET
A measure of developable land area after excluding dedicated
rights-of-way, waterways, wetlands, and other undevelopable natural
features.
ADEQUATE PUBLIC FACILITIES
Utilities, roads and other infrastructure required by the
Municipal Code and adopted policies of the City Council which are
in place, or planned for within 24 months of a petition, to serve
the most suitable ultimate development of a property as depicted in
the adopted Comprehensive Plan.
AFFORDABLE HOUSING UNIT
In accordance with the United States Department of Housing
and Urban Development (HUD), "affordable" is housing that costs no
more than 30% of a household's monthly income. That means rent and
utilities in an apartment or the monthly mortgage payment and housing
expenses for a homeowner should be less than 30% of a household's
monthly income to be considered affordable.
AGRICULTURE AND RELATED ACTIVITIES
The use of land for agricultural purposes, including farming,
dairying, grazing land, animal and poultry husbandry, greenhouses,
nurseries, livestock and poultry confinement, and including the necessary
accessory uses for packing, treating, storing, and shipping of farm
products. The use of the word "farm" shall have the same meaning as
the word "agriculture."
AH ZONE
See "area of shallow flooding."
ALLEY
A public or private right-of-way usually of reduced width
that affords only secondary access to a lot, block, or parcel of land.
[§ 236.02(1), Wis. Stats.]
ALTER
Any act or process that changes one or more of the exterior
architectural features of a structure, including but not limited to
the erection, construction, addition, demolition or removal of any
structure or part of a structure. Normal maintenance of existing exterior
features or materials, including cleaning and painting, shall not
fall under this definition of "alter."
ALTERATION
An enhancement, upgrading or substantial change or modifications
other than an addition or repair to a dwelling or to electrical, plumbing,
heating, ventilating, air conditioning and other systems within a
structure.
ALTERATION, STRUCTURAL
Any change in the supporting members of a building or any
substantial change in the roof structure or in the exterior walls.
ALTERATION, WETLAND
Any filling, flooding, draining, dredging, ditching, tiling,
excavating, temporary water level stabilization measures or dike and
dam construction in a wetland area.
ANIMAL UNIT
A measure which represents a common denominator for the purpose
of defining a husbandry or intensive agricultural land use. The animal
unit measure relates to the maximum carrying capacity of one acre
of land and is related to the amount of feed various species consume,
and the amount of waste they produce. The following table indicates
the number of common farm species and their corresponding animal unit
value.
|
Table 1.1: Animal Unit
|
---|
|
Livestock Type
|
Animal Unit
|
---|
|
Dairy cattle
|
Milking and dry cows
|
1.4
|
|
|
Heifers (800 pounds to 1,200 pounds)
|
1.1
|
|
|
Heifers (400 pounds to 800 pounds)
|
0.6
|
|
|
Calves (< 400 pounds)
|
0.2
|
|
Beef
|
Steer or cows (>600 pounds)
|
1.0
|
|
|
Calves (<600 pounds)
|
0.5
|
|
|
Bulls (each)
|
1.4
|
|
Swine
|
Pigs
|
0.4
|
|
|
Sows
|
0.4
|
|
|
Boars
|
0.5
|
|
Poultry
|
Layers
|
0.033
|
|
|
Fryers
|
0.033
|
|
|
Ducks
|
0.2
|
|
|
Turkeys
|
0.2
|
|
Other
|
Sheep/lamb
|
0.1
|
|
|
Goats
|
0.1
|
|
|
Horse
|
1.0
|
AO ZONE
See "area of shallow flooding."
APARTMENT
A part of a building consisting of a room or rooms designed
for residential occupancy by a single family or an individual. The
name apartment implies the ability to rent or lease the unit for a
specified amount of time.
[Amended 6-6-2006 by Ord. 979]
AREA OF SHADOW FLOODING
A designated AO, AH, AR/AO, AR/AH, or VO zone on a community's
Flood Insurance Rate Map (FIRM) with a 1% or greater annual chance
of flooding to an average depth of one to three feet where a clearly
defined channel does not exist, where the path of flooding is unpredictable,
and where velocity flood may be evident. Such flooding is characterized
by ponding or sheet flow.
BASE FLOOD
Means the flood having a 1% chance of being equaled or exceeded
in any given year, as published by FEMA as part of a FIS and depicted
on a FIRM.
BASEMENT
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.
BED-AND-BREAKFAST ESTABLISHMENT
A lodging establishment that has rooms for rent, is the owner's
personal residence, is occupied by the owner at the time of rental,
and in which the only meal served to guests is breakfast.
BOARDING, LODGING OR ROOMING HOUSE
A building other than a hotel or motel or bed-and-breakfast
establishment wherein sleeping accommodations and other services may
be provided for transients or nontransients not members of the family
occupying the dwelling unit.
BOATHOUSE
As defined in § 30.01(1d), Wis. Stats., means a
structure with one or more walls or sides that has been used for one
or more years for the storage of watercraft and associated materials,
regardless of the current use of the structure.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. I)]
BUFFERYARD
Any permitted combination of distance, vegetation, fencing
and berming which results in a reduction of visual and other interaction
with an adjoining property.
BUILDING COVERAGE
The total horizontal area or footprint of all covered principal
and accessory structures on a site, measured from the outside dimensions
of the exterior walls. Accessory structures included in the calculation
of building coverage shall include covered garages, guest houses,
carports, greenhouses, bath houses, equipment/tool shed, and enclosed
patios such as gazebos. The calculation of building coverage shall
exclude the following: projections such as cornices, eaves, uncovered
entrance steps, at-grade walkways, patios, driveways, uncovered parking
areas, uncovered and unenclosed swimming pools, walls, fences, and
covered but unenclosed patios.
[Amended 11-6-2018 by Ord. No. 1197A]
BUILDING ENVELOPE
The volume of space for building or construction as defined
by the minimum setbacks and the maximum allowable building height.
BUILDING FRONT
That exterior wall of a building which faces the front lot
line of the lot.
BUILDING LINE
A line on a lot, generally parallel to a lot line or public
or private road right-of-way line, located a sufficient distance from
either to provide the minimum yards required by this chapter. The
building line determines the area in which buildings are permitted
subject to all applicable provisions of this chapter. This is also
referred to as a "setback."
BUILDING SEPARATION
The narrowest distance between two buildings. See "minimum
building separation."
BUILDING SIZE
The total gross floor area of a building. See "maximum building
size."
BULK
The combination of building height, size, and location on
a lot.
BULKHEAD LINE
A geographic line along a reach of navigable water that has
been adopted by a municipal ordinance and approved by the WDNR pursuant
to § 30.11, Wis. Stats., and which allows limited filling
between this bulkhead line and the original ordinary high-water mark,
except where such filling is prohibited by the floodway provisions
of this chapter.
BULKHEAD LINE
A geographic line along a reach of navigable water that has
been adopted by a municipal ordinance and approved by the WDNR pursuant
to Wis. Stats. § 30.11., and which allows limited filling
between this bulkhead line and the original ordinary high-water mark,
except where such filling is prohibited by the floodway provisions
of this chapter.
BUSINESS, CONVENIENT CASH
A business licensed pursuant to Wis. Stats. § 218.05
or 138.09, engaged in the "payday loan business," "title loan business,"
"currency exchange business" (also known as "check cashing"), or any
other substantially similar business. Convenient cash businesses do
not include financial institutions as defined below. For purposes
of this chapter, the following definitions apply:
BUSINESS, CURRENCY EXCHANGE
In accordance with § 218.05, Wis. Stats., any business
except banks incorporated under the laws of this state and national
banks organized pursuant to the laws of the United States and any
credit union operating under Ch. 186, Wis. Stats., pursuant to a certificate
of authority from the Wisconsin Commissioner of credit unions, engaged
in the business of and providing facilities for cashing checks, drafts,
money orders and all other evidences of money acceptable to such community
currency exchange for a fee, service charge or other consideration.
This term does not include any person engaged in the business of transporting
for hire bullion, currency, securities, negotiable or nonnegotiable
documents, jewels or other property of great monetary value nor any
person engaged in the business of selling tangible personal property
at retail nor any person licensed to practice a profession or licensed
to engage in any business in this state, who in the course of such
business or profession and, as an incident thereto, cashes checks,
drafts, money orders or other evidences of money.
BUSINESS, PAYDAY LOAN
A business that provides unsecured loans with an initial
term of 91 days or less in which the amount borrowed does not exceed
$2,000 and is usually for a period from the time of the loan until
the borrowers next payday for which the lender charges either fees
or interest for the loan.
BUSINESS, TITLE LOAN
Any business providing loans to individuals in exchange for
receiving title to the borrower's motor vehicle as collateral.
CAMPGROUND
Any parcel of land which is designed, maintained, intended
or used for the purpose of providing sites for nonpermanent overnight
use by four or more camping units, or which is advertised or represented
as a camping area.
CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
A certification that the construction and the use of land
or a building, the elevation of fill or the lowest floor of a structure
is in compliance with all of the provisions of this chapter.
CHANNEL
A natural or artificial watercourse with definite bed and
banks to confine and conduct normal flow of water.
COMMERCIAL INDOOR LODGING
Commercial indoor lodging facilities include land uses which
provide overnight or other short-term housing to transients in individual
rooms or suites of rooms in exchange for compensation. Such land uses
may provide in-room or in-suite kitchens, private bathrooms, or indoor
recreational facilities for the exclusive use of their customers.
Such land uses may also be considered tourist rooming houses.
COMMUNICATION TOWER
Self-supporting, telescoping, monopole, or guyed communication
antenna towers systems and accessories for telecommunications.
COMMUNITY CHARACTER
The impression which an area makes in regard to the type,
intensity, density, quality, appearance, and age of development.
COMPREHENSIVE PLAN
An extensively developed plan, map, or other document pertaining
to planning and adopted by the City Council or the Plan Commission
in accordance with Wis. Stats. § 66.1001 which may pertain
to the division of lands, including the Comprehensive Development
Plan, the Official Map, comprehensive utility plans, and other planning
documents Including proposals for future land use, transportation,
urban redevelopment and public facilities. Devices for the implementation
of these plans, such as ordinances pertaining to zoning, Official
Map, land division, and building development and capital improvement
plans shall be considered as planning documents within this definition.
CONDOMINIUM
A form of property ownership providing for individual ownership
of a unit within a structure where the land, other parts of the structure,
and other facilities are held in common with other owners pursuant
to Chapter 703, Wis. Stats.
CRAWL SPACE
An enclosed area below the first usable floor of a building,
generally less than five feet in height, used for access to plumbing
and electrical utilities.
DAMAGE, SUBSTANTIAL
Damage of any origin sustained by a structure, whereby the
cost of restoring the structure to its pre-damaged condition would
equal or exceed 50% of the equalized assessed value of the structure
before the damage occurred.
DAY-CARE CENTER
A licensed facility where a person, other than a relative
or guardian, provides, for compensation or consideration, or both,
care and supervision of four or more children under seven years of
age, for less than 24 hours a day.
DAY-CARE CENTER, ADULT
A daytime community-based program for functionally impaired
adults that provides a variety of health, social and related support
services in a protective setting.
DECIBEL (DB)
A unit for measuring the volume of a sound, equal to 20 times
the logarithm to the base of 10 of the ratio of the pressure of the
sound measured to the reference pressure, which is 20 micropascals
(20 micronewtons per square meter).
DECK
An unenclosed exterior structure that has no roof or sides,
but has a permeable floor which allows the infiltration of precipitation.
DECORATIVE WATER FEATURE
Any man-made stream, fountain, waterfall, or other such water
feature that contains water that flows or is sprayed into the air,
constructed for decorative, scenic, or landscape purposes.
DEMOLISH
Any act or process which destroys or removes in part or whole
a landmark or structure within a historic district or any landmark
or structure designated as a historic structure or historic site.
DENSITY
A term used to describe the number of dwelling units per
acre.
DEVELOPMENT
Any man-made change to improved or unimproved real estate,
including, but not limited to, the construction of buildings, structures
or accessory structures; the construction of additions or substantial
alterations to buildings, structures or accessory structures; the
placement of buildings or structures; ditching, lagooning, dredging,
filling, grading, paving, excavation or drilling operations; and the
deposition of extraction of earthen materials.
DISPLAY, OUTDOOR
Outdoor display consists of the display of merchandise or equipment offered for sale or rent on the property. See regulations outlined in §§
660-22 and
660-84.
DRIPLINE
Outer perimeter edge of a tree canopy as transferred perpendicularly
to ground level.
DRY LAND ACCESS
A vehicular access route which is above the regional flood
elevation and which connects land located in the floodplain to land
outside the floodplain, such as a road with its surface above regional
flood elevation and wide enough for wheeled rescue and relief vehicles.
DWELLING
A residential building or part thereof, occupied or intended
to be occupied for nontransient residence purposes, but not including
habitations provided in nonresidential uses such as boarding, lodging
or rooming houses.
DWELLING UNIT
A room or group of rooms, providing or intended to provide
permanent living quarters for not more than one family.
DWELLING UNIT, UPPER-STORY
Dwelling units which are located above the ground or lower
floor of a building used for an office, commercial or institutional
land use.
DWELLING, ATTACHED
A dwelling that is joined to another dwelling at one or more
sides by a shared wall or walls.
DWELLING, DETACHED
A detached building on a single lot without a common wall
between dwelling units.
DWELLING, DETACHED SINGLE-FAMILY HOME
A detached building designed for or occupied by not more than one family and having no roof, wall, or floor in common with any other dwelling unit. This dwelling unit type consists of a fully detached single-family residence which is located on an individual lot or within a group development. The dwelling unit must be a site built, structure built in compliance with the State of Wisconsin Uniform Dwelling Code (UDC) or may be a manufactured dwelling (modular home) as permitted by the UDC or a manufactured home as permitted by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) code. For any of these dwelling units, the use of a permanent, continuous UDC foundation is required. This dwelling unit type may not be split into two or more residences, but includes modular, mobile, and manufactured homes, subject to §
660-75.
DWELLING, DUPLEX
These dwelling unit types consist of a single-family dwelling
which is attached on one side to another single-family residence or
upper unit and lower unit. The two residences are located on the same
lot. These dwelling unit types may not be split into additional residences.
DWELLING, MULTIPLE-FAMILY
This dwelling unit type consists of an attached, multifamily
residence which has a private, individual exterior entrance. These
dwelling typically contain no less than three dwelling units in an
individual structure.
DWELLING, ONE-FAMILY
A detached building designed for or occupied exclusively
by one family. One-family dwellings include manufactured homes and
mobile homes.
DWELLING, TOWNHOUSE
This dwelling unit type consists of attached, single-family
residences, each having a private, individual access. This dwelling
unit type is located on its own lot or within a group development
and may not be split into additional residences.
DWELLING, TWIN HOME
These dwelling unit types consist of a single-family dwelling
which is attached on one side to another single-family residence.
The two residences are located on separate lots, but connected by
a common or party wall, and the separate lots may also be referred
to as zero lot line lots. The twin-home is distinguished from the
duplex by having each unit located on an individual lot or within
a group development. These dwelling unit types may not be split into
additional residences.
DWELLING, TWO-FAMILY
A structure on a single lot containing two dwelling units,
each of which is totally separated from the other by an unpierced
wall extending from ground to roof or an unpierced ceiling and floor
extending from exterior wall to exterior wall, except for a common
stairwell exterior to both dwelling units.
DWELLING, TWO-FLAT
This dwelling unit type consists of a single-family residence,
which is in complete compliance with the State of Wisconsin Uniform
Dwelling Code (UDC), and which has been converted into a two-family
residence. The two residences are both located on the same lot or
within the same group development. This dwelling unit type may not
be split into additional residences.
EASEMENT
An area of land set aside, or over or through which liberty,
privilege, or advantage in land, distinct from ownership of the land,
is granted by the owner to the public or some particular person or
part of the public, or utility.
EQUIVALENT A-WEIGHTED SOUND LEVEL (LEQ)
The equivalent steady-state sound level, which in a stated
period of time contains the same acoustic energy as the time-varying
sound level during the same period. For purposes of measuring or predicting
noise levels, a receptor is assumed to be at ear height, located five
feet above ground surface. "Leq(h)" means the hourly value of Leq.
EROSION
The detachment and movement of soil, sediment, or rock fragments
by water, ice, or wind.
EXISTING NOISE LEVEL
The highest hourly noise level caused by existing conditions
in a particular area.
EXTRATERRITORIAL AREA
The area outside of the City Limits in which the City of
Lake Mills may exercise extraterritorial powers of planning, land
division, and/or zoning review.
FAMILY
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. I)]
(1)
One or more persons living together in a single dwelling unit
as a traditional family or the functional equivalent of a traditional
family. It shall be a rebuttable presumption that four or more persons
living together in a single dwelling unit who are not related by blood,
adoption or marriage do not constitute the functional equivalent of
a traditional family. In determining the functional equivalent of
a traditional family, the following criteria shall be present:
(a)
The group shares the entire dwelling unit.
(b)
The group lives and cooks together as a single housekeeping
unit.
(c)
The group shares expenses for food, rent, utilities or other
household expenses.
(d)
The group is permanent and stable and not transient or temporary
in nature.
(e)
Any other factor reasonably related to whether the group is
the functional equivalent of a family.
(2)
This definition is not intended to prohibit group homes or community
living arrangements that are determined to be protected by the Federal
Fair Housing Law, provided that such facilities are licensed and permitted
under the authority of the State Department of Health Services or
the State Department of Children and Families or other state department
or agency.
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
Any business authorized to do business under state or federal
laws relating to financial institutions, including, without limitation,
banks and trust companies, savings banks, building and loan associations,
savings and loan associations and credit unions. This term does not
include a currency exchange, payday loan business or a title loan
business.
FLOOD FREQUENCY
The probability of a flood occurrence which is determined
from statistical analyses. The frequency of a particular flood event
is usually expressed as occurring on the average once in a specified
number of years or as a percent chance of occurring in any given year.
FLOOD HAZARD BOUNDARY MAP
A map designating approximate flood hazard areas. Flood hazard
areas are designated as unnumbered A Zones and do not contain floodway
lines or regional flood elevations. This map forms the basis for both
the regulatory and insurance aspects of the National Flood Insurance
Program (NFIP) until superseded by a Flood Insurance Study and a Flood
Insurance Rate Map.
FLOOD INSURANCE RATE MAP (FIRM)
A map of a community on which the Federal Insurance Administration
has delineated both the floodplain and the risk premium zones applicable
to the community. This map can only be amended by the Federal Emergency
Management Agency.
FLOOD INSURANCE STUDY
A technical engineering examination, evaluation, and determination
of the local flood hazard areas. It provides maps designating those
areas affected by the regional flood and provides both flood insurance
rate zones and base flood elevations and may provide floodway lines.
The flood hazard areas are designated as numbered and unnumbered A-Zones.
Flood Insurance Rate Maps that accompany the Flood Insurance Study
form the basis for both the regulatory and the insurance aspects of
the National Flood Insurance Program.
FLOOD or FLOODING
A general and temporary condition of partial or complete
inundation of normally dry land areas caused by one of the following
conditions.
(1)
The overflow or rise of inland waters;
(2)
The rapid accumulation or runoff of surface waters from any
source;
(3)
The inundation caused by waves or currents of water exceeding
anticipated cyclical levels along the shore of Rock Lake; or
(4)
The sudden increase caused by an unusually high water level
in a natural body of water, accompanied by a severe storm, or by an
unanticipated force of nature, such as a seiche, or by some similarly
unusual event.
FLOOD FRINGE
That portion of the floodplain outside of the floodway which
is covered by floodwaters during the regional flood and associated
with standing water rather than flowing water.
FLOODPLAIN
Land which has been or may be covered by flood water during
the regional flood. It includes the floodway and the flood fringe,
and may include other designated floodplain areas for regulatory purposes.
FLOODPLAIN ISLAND
A natural geologic land formation within the floodplain that
is surrounded, but not covered, by floodwater during the regional
flood.
FLOODPLAIN MANAGEMENT
Policy and procedures to insure wise use of floodplains,
including mapping and engineering, mitigation, education, and administration
and enforcement of floodplain regulations.
FLOOD PROFILE
A graph or a longitudinal profile line showing the relationship
of the water surface elevation of a flood event to locations of land
surface elevations along a stream or river.
FLOODPROOFING
Any combination of structural provisions, changes or adjustments
to properties and structures, water and sanitary facilities and contents
of buildings subject to flooding, for the purpose of reducing or eliminating
flood damage.
FLOOD PROTECTION ELEVATION
An elevation of two feet of freeboard above the water surface
profile elevation designated for the regional flood. Also see "freeboard."
FLOOD STORAGE
Those floodplain areas where storage of floodwaters has been
taken into account during analysis in reducing the regional flood
discharge.
FLOODWAY
The channel of a river or stream and those portions of the
floodplain adjoining the channel required to carry the regional flood
discharge.
FLOOR AREA
The sum of the gross horizontal areas of the several floors
of a building including interior balconies, mezzanines, basements
and attached accessory buildings, fitting rooms, stairs, escalators,
unenclosed porches, detached accessory buildings utilized as dead
storage, heating and utility rooms, inside off-street parking or loading
space (decks are not included in this measurement). Measurements shall
be made from the inside of the exterior walls and to the center of
interior walls.
FLOOR AREA RATIO, NET
Net floor area ratio (NFAR) includes the sum of the gross
horizontal area of a floor or several floors of a building or structure
measured from the interior face of exterior walls or the center line
of a wall separating two buildings or structures, not including uninhabitable/unusable
attics or basements, underground parking, uncovered steps, unused
decks or exterior balconies, mechanical rooms, elevator shafts, permanent
accessory storage, internal loading areas, and other areas as determined
by the Zoning Enforcement Officer.
FLOOR AREA, LIVABLE
The total habitable floor area of all heated floor space
above finished grade measured from the outside dimensions of the exterior
wall and excluding all non-dwelling areas such as attic, storage,
carport, and garage, and other unheated areas.
FLY
A fly is a piece of fabric, which moves or floats in the
air and is supported by cables or ropes attached to buildings or support
posts.
FREEBOARD
A safety factor expressed in terms of a specified number
of feet above a calculated flood level. Freeboard compensates for
any factors that cause flood heights greater than those calculated,
including ice jams, debris accumulation, wave action, obstruction
of bridge openings and floodways, the effects of watershed urbanization,
loss of flood storage areas due to development and aggregation of
the riverbed or streambed.
FRONTAGE
That side of a lot abutting on a street; the front lot line.
FUTURE NOISE LEVEL
The highest hourly traffic noise level based on estimated
traffic volumes within a twenty-year period after the completion of
construction of the new highway facility.
GARAGE, PRIVATE RESIDENTIAL
A structure which is accessory to a residential building
and which is used for the parking and storage of vehicles owned and
operated by the residents thereof, and which is not a separate commercial
enterprise available to the general public.
GREEN SPACE RATIO (GSR)
The percentage of the gross site area which is preserved
as permanently protected green space. Green space ratio is calculated
by dividing the area of permanently protected green space by the gross
site area. See "minimum green space ratio."
GROSS DENSITY
The result of dividing the number of dwelling units located
on a site by the gross site area. See "maximum gross density."
GROSS SITE AREA (GSA)
The total area of a site available for inclusion in calculations
of the maximum permitted density or intensity of development.
GUEST HOUSE
Living quarters for guests or servants, on a property with
a principal residence, in an accessory structure or attached to the
principal residence.
[Added 11-6-2018 by Ord.
No. 1197A]
HARDSHIP, UNNECESSARY
Where special conditions affecting a particular property,
which were not self-created, have made strict conformity with restrictions
governing areas, setbacks, frontage, height or density unnecessarily
burdensome or unreasonable in light of the purposes of the chapter.
HEARING NOTICE
Publication or posting meeting the requirements of Wis. Stats.
Ch. 985.
HEIGHT, BUILDING
The vertical distance from the average elevation of the finished
surface of the ground adjacent to the exterior walls of the building
or structure to the highest point of a flat roof, or to the deck line
of a mansard roof, or to the average height between the eave and the
highest point of a gambrel, hip or pitch roof. Also applies to sheds
and other similar structures.
HIGHEST ADJACENT GRADE
The highest natural elevation of the ground surface prior
to construction next to the proposed walls of a structure.
HIGH FLOOD DAMAGE POTENTIAL
Damage that could result from flooding that includes any
danger to life or health or any significant economic loss to a structure
or building and its contents.
HISTORIC DISTRICT
An area designated by the City Council on recommendation
of the Plan Commission, acting as the designated Historic Preservation
Commission, that contains two or more contiguous historic sites or
sites occupied by historic structures.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. I)]
HISTORIC PRESERVATION PLAN
A comprehensive document that includes a cultural and architectural
analysis supporting the historic significance of the area, the specific
guidelines for development in the area, and a specific statement of
preservation objectives for the area.
HISTORIC SITE
Any parcel of land of historic significance due to its substantial
value in tracing the history or prehistory of humanity, or upon which
a historic event has occurred, and which has been designated as a
historic site under this section, or an improved parcel, or part thereof,
on which is situated a historic structure and any abutting improved
parcel, or part thereof, used as and constituting part of the premises
on which the historic structure is situated.
HISTORIC STRUCTURE
Any improvement which has a special character or special
historic interest or value as part of the development, heritage or
cultural characteristics of the City, state or nation and which has
been designated as a historic structure pursuant to the provisions
of this chapter.
HOME OCCUPATION
A use customarily carried on in a business establishment
that is permitted to be carried on in a residence. Said use is incidental
to the primary residential purpose, thus the residential character
of the property is not changed.
HOME, MANUFACTURED
A structure certified and labeled as a manufactured home
under 42 U.S.C. §§ 5401 through 5426, which, when placed
on a site, is set on an enclosed foundation in accordance with Wis.
Stats. Chapter 101, Subchapter V.
HOME, MOBILE
This dwelling unit type consists of a fully detached, single-family
residence, which has not received a federal manufactured housing certificate
and which is located on an individual lot or within a group development.
This dwelling unit type may not be split into two or more residences.
HOTEL
See "commercial indoor lodging."
HOUSEBOAT, FIXED
As defined in § 30.01(1r), Wis. Stats., means a
structure not actually used for navigation which extends beyond the
ordinary high-water mark of a navigable waterway and is retained in
place either by cables to the shoreline or by anchors or spud poles
attached to the bed of the waterway.
HYDRONIC HEATERS
Outdoor wood heaters or outdoor wood-fired boilers typically
located outside the buildings they heat with short smokestacks. Typically,
they burn wood to heat liquid (water or water-antifreeze) that is
piped to provide heat and hot water to occupied buildings such as
homes or outbuildings. Hydronic heaters may also be located indoors
and they may use other biomass as fuel (such as corn or wood pellets).
IMPERMISSIBLE INTERFERENCE
A blockage of solar energy from a collector surface or a proposed collector surface for which a permit has been granted under §
660-167 of this chapter during a collector use period.
IMPERVIOUS SURFACE
Areas designed and installed to prohibit infiltration of
stormwater. Homes, buildings, and other structures, as well as concrete,
brick, asphalt, and similar paved surfaces are considered impervious.
Gravel areas and areas with "landscaped pavers" and "permeable pavement"
which are intended for vehicular traffic are considered to be impervious.
IMPROVEMENT
Any building, structure, place, work of art or other object
constituting a physical addition to real property, or any part of
such addition, including but not limited to, streets, alleys, sidewalks,
curbs, lighting fixtures, and signs.
IN-FAMILY SUITE
An area within a dwelling unit that may contain separate
kitchen, dining, bathroom, laundry, living, sleeping, and recreation
areas, including exterior porches, patios, and decks. In addition
to the required internal physical connection, separate outdoor access
or separate access to the garage may be provided.
INCREASE IN REGIONAL FLOOD HEIGHT
A calculated upward rise in the regional flood elevation
greater than 0.00 foot, based on a comparison of existing conditions
and proposed conditions, which is directly attributable to development
in the floodplain but not attributable to manipulation of mathematical
variables such as roughness factors, expansion and contraction coefficients
and discharge.
INTENSITY
A term used to describe the amount of gross floor area or
landscaped area on a lot or site, compared to the gross area of the
lot or site.
JUNK
Any scrap, waste, reclaimable material or debris, whether
or not stored or used in conjunction with dismantling, processing,
salvage, storage, baling, disposal or other use or disposition. Junk
includes vehicles, tires, vehicle parts, equipment, paper, rags, metal,
glass, building materials, household appliances, brush, wood and lumber.
JUNKYARD
Any area, lot, land, parcel, building or structure or part
thereof used for the storage, collection, processing, purchase, sale
or abandonment of wastepaper, rags, scrap metal or other scrap or
discarded goods, materials, machinery or two or more unregistered,
inoperable motor vehicles or other types of junk.
LAKE SHORE
Those lands lying within the following distances from the
ordinary high water mark of navigable waters; 1,000 feet from a lake,
pond, or flowage; and 300 feet from a river or stream; or to a landward
side of the floodplain, whichever distance is the greater. Lake shores
shall not include those lands adjacent to farm drainage ditches where:
(a) such lands are not adjacent to a navigable stream or river; (b)
those parts of such drainage ditches adjacent to such lands were not
navigable streams before ditching or had no previous stream history;
and (c) such lands are maintained in nonstructural agricultural use.
LAND-DISTURBING CONSTRUCTION ACTIVITY
Any man-made change of the land surface including removing
vegetation cover, excavating, filling and grading but not including
agricultural land uses such as planting, growing, cultivating and
harvesting of crops; growing and tending of gardens, harvesting of
trees; and landscaping modifications.
LAND USE
The type of development and/or activity occurring on a piece
of property.
LAND USE, INSTITUTIONAL
Use of land for public or quasi-public uses, including schools,
churches, civic, park, and utility operations or activities.
LANDSCAPED AREA
The area of a site which is planted and continually maintained
in vegetation, including grasses, flowers, herbs, garden plants, native
or introduced ground covers, shrubs, bushes, and trees. Landscaped
area includes the area located within planted and continually maintained
landscaped planters.
LIGHT SOURCE
A single artificial point source of luminescence.
LIVING QUARTERS
Living quarters, when applied to accessory structures; shall
be defined as including toilet or kitchen facilities.
LOT
A parcel of land that:
(1)
Is undivided by any street or private road;
(2)
Is occupied by, or designated to be developed for occupancy
by a use permitted in this chapter, including one principal building
or use, together with any accessory buildings, open spaces, and parking
spaces required by this chapter; and
(3)
Has its frontage upon a street or upon an officially approved
place.
LOT AREA
The total area in a horizontal plane within the peripheral
boundaries of a lot.
LOT DEPTH
The mean horizontal distance of a parcel measured from the
rear lot line to the front lot line along each side yard setback.
LOT FRONTAGE
Lot width measured at the street lot line. When a lot has
more than one street lot line, lot width shall be measured, and the
minimum lot width required by this chapter shall be provided at each
such line.
LOT LINE
A line of record bounding a lot that divides one lot from
another lot or from a public or private street or any other public
space.
LOT LINE
A lot line is the property line (including the vertical plane
established by the line and the ground) bounding a lot except that
where any portion of a lot extends into the public right-of-way or
a proposed public right-of-way, the line of such public right-of-way
shall be the lot line for applying this chapter.
LOT LINE, FRONT
A lot line which abuts a public or private street right-of-way.
In the case of a lot which has two of more street frontages, the lot
line along the street from which the house is addressed shall be the
front lot line.
LOT LINE, REAR
In the case of rectangular or most trapezoidal-shaped lots,
that lot line which is parallel to and most distant from the front
lot line of the lot. In the case of an irregular, triangular or gore-shaped
lot, a line 20 feet in length, entirely within the lot, parallel to
and at the maximum possible distance from the front line shall be
considered to be the rear lot line. In the case of lots which have
frontage on more than one road or street, the rear lot line shall
be selected by the property owner.
LOT LINE, SIDE
Any boundary of a lot which is not a front lot line, a street
side lot line, or a rear lot line.
LOT LINE, STREET SIDE
Any lot line which abuts a public or private street right-of-way
which is not the front lot line.
LOT OF RECORD
A platted lot or lot described in a certified survey map
or in a metes and bounds description which has been approved by the
City or by Jefferson County; and has been recorded in the office of
the Register of Deeds.
LOT WIDTH
The shortest distance between the side lot lines of a lot
measured at the midpoint of the building line.
LOT, CORNER
A lot or parcel of land abutting upon two or more streets
at their intersection, or upon two parts of the same street forming
an interior angle of less than 135°.
LOT, SUBSTANDARD
A lot of record which lawfully existed prior to this chapter,
which would not conform to the applicable regulations if the lot were
to be created under the current provisions of this chapter.
LOT, THROUGH
A lot, other than a corner lot, with frontage on more than
one street. Double-frontage lots shall normally be deemed to have
two front yards and two side yards and no rear yard.
LOWEST ADJACENT GRADE
Elevation of the lowest ground surface that touches any of
the exterior walls of a building.
LOWEST FLOOR
The lowest floor of the lowest enclosed area (including basement).
An unfinished or flood-resistant enclosure, usable solely for parking
of vehicles, building access or storage in an area other than a basement
area is not considered a building's lowest floor, provided that such
enclosure is not built so as to render the structure in violation
of the applicable non-elevation design requirements of 44 CFR 60.3.
LUMINAIRE
A complete lighting unit consisting of a lamp or lamps, together
with the parts designed to distribute the light, to position and protect
the lamps, and to connect the lamps to the power supply.
LUMINAIRE, CUTOFF
Any luminary that does not emit light at an angle greater
than 90° from vertical and has less than 10% of maximum candlepower
above 75°.
MAINTENANCE
The act or process of restoring to original soundness, including
redecorating, refinishing, nonstructural repairs, or the replacement
of existing fixtures, systems or equipment with equivalent fixtures,
systems or structures.
MANUFACTURED HOME
A structure transportable in one or more sections, which
is built on a permanent chassis and is designed to be used with or
without a permanent foundation when connected to required utilities.
The term "manufactured home" includes a mobile home but does not include
a recreational vehicle.
MINIMUM SETBACK
The narrowest distance permitted from a street, side, or
rear property line to a structure.
MIXED USE
Some combination of residential, commercial, industrial,
office, institutional, or other land uses within a district or development.
MOBILE/MANUFACTURED HOME PARK OR SUBDIVISION, EXISTING
A parcel of land, divided into two or more manufactured home
lots for rent or sale, on which the construction of facilities for
servicing the lots is completed before the effective date of this
chapter. At a minimum, this would include the installation of utilities,
the construction of streets and either final site grading or the pouring
of concrete pads.
MOBILE/MANUFACTURED HOME PARK, EXPANSION TO EXISTING
The preparation of additional sites by the construction of
facilities for servicing the lots on which the manufactured homes
are to be affixed. This includes installation of utilities, construction
of streets and either final site grading or the pouring of concrete
pads.
MODEL, CORRECTED EFFECTIVE
A hydraulic engineering model that corrects any errors that
occur in the duplicate effective model, adds any additional cross
sections to the duplicate effective model, or incorporates more detailed
topographic information than that used in the current effective model.
MODEL, EFFECTIVE
The hydraulic engineering model that was used to produce
the current effective Flood Insurance Study.
MODEL, EXISTING (PRE-PROJECT)
A modification of the duplicate effective model or corrected
effective model to reflect any man-made modifications that have occurred
within the floodplain since the date of the effective model but prior
to the construction of the project for which the revision is being
requested. If no modification has occurred since the date of the effective
model, then this model would be identical to the corrected effective
model or duplicate effective model.
MODEL, REVISED (POST-PROJECT)
A modification of the existing or pre-project conditions
model, duplicate effective model or corrected effective model to reflect
revised or post-project conditions.
MOTEL
See "commercial indoor lodging."
NAVIGABLE WATERS
(1)
Lake Superior, Lake Michigan, all natural inland lakes within
Wisconsin, and all streams, ponds, sloughs, flowages and other waters
within the territorial limits of this state, including the Wisconsin
portion of boundary waters, which are navigable under the laws of
this state. Under § 281.31(2m)(a), Wis. Stats., notwithstanding
any other provision of law or administrative rule promulgated thereunder,
shoreland ordinances required under § 62.231, Wis. Stats.,
and Chapter NR 117, Wis. Adm. Code, do not apply to lands adjacent
to farm drainage ditches, if:
(a)
Such lands are not adjacent to a natural navigable stream or
river;
(b)
Those parts of such drainage ditches adjacent to such lands
were not navigable streams before ditching; and
(c)
Such lands are maintained in nonstructural agricultural use.
(2)
Wisconsin's Supreme Court has declared navigable bodies of water
that have a bed differentiated from adjacent uplands and levels or
flow sufficient to support navigation by a recreational craft of the
shallowest draft on an annually recurring basis [Muench v. Public
Service Commission, 261 Wis. 492 (1952) and DeGaynor and Co., Inc.,
v. Department of Natural Resources, 70 Wis. 2d 936 (1975)]. For example,
a stream which is navigable by skiff or canoe during normal spring
high water is navigable, in fact, under the laws of this state, though
it may be dry during other seasons.
NEW CONSTRUCTION
For floodplain management purposes, "new construction" means
structures for which the start of construction commenced on or after
the effective date of floodplain zoning regulations adopted by this
community and includes any subsequent improvements to such structures.
For the purpose of determining flood insurance rates, it includes
any structures for which the "start of construction" commenced on
or after the effective date of an initial FIRM or after December 31,
1974, whichever is later, and includes any subsequent improvements
to such structures.
NOISE BARRIER
Any device which reduces the transmissions of highway traffic
noise from a highway to an adjacent receptor, including but not limited
to, earth berms, walls made from timber, metal, concrete, or any combination.
NOISE LEVELS
The sound level obtained through use of A-weighting characteristics.
The unit of measure is the decibel (dB), commonly referred to as dBA
when A-weighting is used.
OBSTRUCTION TO FLOW
Any development which blocks the conveyance of floodwaters
such that this development, alone or together with any future development,
will cause an increase in regional flood height.
OFFICIAL MAP
A map indicating the location, width, and extent of existing
and proposed streets, highways, drainageways, parks, playgrounds,
and other facilities, as adopted by the City Council pursuant to § 62.23,
Wis. Stats.
ORDINARY HIGH-WATER MARK (OHWM)
The point on the bank or shore up to which the presence and
action of surface water is so continuous as to leave a distinctive
mark such as by erosion, destruction or prevention of terrestrial
vegetation, predominance of aquatic vegetation, or other easily recognized
characteristic.
OUTDOOR LIVING AREA
Spaces that are associated with residential land uses typically
used for passive recreational activities or other noise-sensitive
uses. Such spaces include patio areas, barbecue areas, residential
play areas; outdoor patient recovery or resting area associated with
hospitals, convalescent hospitals, or rest homes; outdoor school facilities
routinely used for educational purposes which may be adversely impacted
by noise. Outdoor areas usually not included in this definition are:
front yard areas, driveways, greenbelts, maintenance areas, and storage
areas associated with residential land uses; exterior areas at hospitals
that are not used for patient activities; outdoor areas associated
with places of worship and principally used for short-term social
gatherings; and outdoor areas associated with school facilities that
are not typically associated with educational uses prone to adverse
noise impacts (for example, school play yard areas).
OWNER
The owner of record of fee simple title to any lot that is
a part of properties, including contract sellers and vendees, but
excluding those having such interest merely as security for the performance
of an obligation, and excluding those who have a lien upon the property
by provision or operation of law.
PERSON
An individual, or group of individuals, corporation, partnership,
association, municipality or state agency.
PRIVATE SEWAGE SYSTEM
A sewage treatment and disposal system serving one structure
with a septic tank and soil absorption field located on the same parcel
as the structure. It also means an alternative sewage system approved
by the Department of Safety and Professional Services, including a
substitute for the septic tank or soil absorption field, a holding
tank, a system serving more than one structure or a system located
on a different parcel than the structure.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. I)]
PUBLIC UTILITIES
Those utilities using underground or overhead transmission
lines such as electric, telephone and telegraph, and distribution
and collection systems such as water, sanitary sewer and storm sewer.
REASONABLY SAFE FROM FLOODING
Base floodwaters will not inundate the land or damage structures
to be removed from the floodplain and that any subsurface waters related
to the base flood will not damage existing or proposed buildings.
RECHARGE AREA
Area in which water reaches the zone of saturation by surface
infiltration and encompasses all areas or features that supply groundwater
recharge to a well.
RECREATIONAL PURPOSE
A temporary structure is intended for the relaxation and
enjoyment of the owner and not used for any commercial purpose.
RECREATIONAL VEHICLE (RV)
The term "motor home" is often used interchangeably with
"RV." A motor home, however, is an informal phrase, used to describe
a variety of recreational vehicles (RVs), while recreational vehicle
(or RV) is a technical and legal term. The United States Department
of Transportation categorizes RVs by class. For the purposes of this
chapter, the term "recreational vehicle" or "RV" will include the
following vehicle types and units:
(1)
Class A RVs. Class A RVs are motor homes, regardless of the
type of chassis beneath them and whether or not the vehicle contains
"slide-outs" (additional living spaces that slide out when the vehicle
is stopped for camping). Class A also includes commercial passenger
and school buses that are converted into RVs (these are often the
largest mobile homes available). Class A RVs are generally luxurious
mobile homes with a solid body, a panoramic front window, berths that
convert from living room or dinette areas, and bathroom facilities.
(2)
Class B RVs. Class B RVs are camper vans or conventional vans
with raised roofs (either "pop-up" or "fixed"). They often have small
kitchens with refrigerators and gas grills. Larger models may have
a water heater, heat and air conditioning, a portable toilet, or an
internal shower. Smaller models usually have a portable toilet and
an external shower, which can be used with an awning to ensure privacy.
(3)
Class C RVs. Unlike a Class A mobile home, which is built on
a single chassis, a Class C vehicle is attached to a truck and hauled
behind. Class C RVs are characterized by a distinctive alcove which
fits over the truck cab, providing either a double berth for sleeping
or, sometimes, an "entertainment" section, with a TV and video games.
(4)
Other RV Types. Other types of RVs or motor homes include:
(a)
Truck campers. Similar to the C-class vehicles described above,
these are smaller RVs, carried in the beds of pickup truck.
(b)
Pop-up campers. Collapsible campers with pull-out berths and
tent walls, towed in a compact unit behind a vehicle.
(5)
Travel trailers (or caravans). Noncollapsible, lightweight trailers
with simple amenities, towed behind a vehicle.
REGIONAL FLOOD
A flood determined to be representative of large floods known
to have occurred in Wisconsin. A regional flood is a flood with a
1% chance of being equaled or exceeded in any given year, and if depicted
on the FIRM, the RFE is equivalent to the BFE.
RESIDENCE, FARM
A farm residence is a single-family detached dwelling unit
located on the same property as any of the principal agricultural
land uses.
RIGHT-OF-WAY, ULTIMATE
The required future right-of-way for a street, highway, alley,
or other public way as illustrated in the adopted Comprehensive Plan
or the adopted Official Map for the City of Lake Mills.
RIPARIAN
Of or relating to or located on the banks of a navigable
lake, river, or stream.
ROOM
A space used for living, sleeping, eating or cooking, or
combinations thereof, but not including bathrooms, toilet compartments,
closets, halls, storage rooms, laundry and utility rooms, basement
recreation rooms and similar spaces.
SCALE
The relationship between the mass of a building and its surroundings,
including the width of street, open space, and mass of surrounding
buildings. Mass is determined by the three-dimensional bulk of a structure:
height, width, and depth.
SETBACK
The shortest distance between the exterior of a building
or structure and the nearest point on the referenced lot line.
SETBACK BASE AREA
The land lying between the edge of the existing street right-of-way
line and the setback base line.
SETBACK BASE LINE
The line from which all required setbacks are measured, which
line corresponds to the established ultimate street right-of-way line.
SHORELAND-WETLAND ZONING DISTRICT
A zoning district, created as a part of this chapter, comprised
of shorelands that are designated as wetlands on final wetland inventory
maps prepared by the WDNR, with the exception of those wetlands described
in § NR 117.05(1)(b)2, Wis. Adm. Code.
SHORELANDS
Defined in § 59.692(1)(b), Wis. Stats., to mean
the area within the following distances from the ordinary high-water
mark of navigable waters, as defined in § 281.31(1)(d),
Wis. Stats.
(1)
One thousand feet from a lake, pond or flowage. If the navigable
water is a glacial pothole lake, this distance shall be measured from
the high-water mark of the lake.
(2)
Three hundred feet from a river or a stream or to a landward
side of the floodplain, whichever distance is greater.
SIGN
Any object, device, display, structure, or part thereof,
situated or visible from outdoors, which is used to advertise, identify,
display, direct or attract attention to an object, person, institution,
organization, business, product, service, event, or location by any
means, including words, letters, figures, designs, symbols, fixtures,
colors, illumination, or projected images. Signs do not include the
flag or emblem of any nation, organization of nations, state, city,
religious, fraternal, or civic organization; also merchandise and
pictures or models of products or services incorporated in a window
display, works of art which in no way identify a product, or scoreboards
located on athletic fields are not included in the definition of a
sign. Definitions of particular functional, locational and structural
types of signs are listed in this chapter. Traffic control and public
agency signs located within a right-of-way, public art approved by
the Plan Commission and legal holiday displays are not included within
this definition and are not regulated by the provisions of this chapter.
SIGN, ABANDONED
A sign that no longer correctly directs or exhorts any person,
advertises a bona fide business, lessor, owner, product, activity
conducted, or product available on the premises where such a sign
is displayed.
SIGN, AUXILIARY
A sign that provides special information such as price, hours
of operation, or warning and that does not include brand names, or
information regarding product lines or services. It may contain a
business logo if the logo is less than one square foot in area. Examples
of such signs include directories of tenants in buildings, no trespassing
signs, menu boards, and signs that list only prices of gasoline.
SIGN, BUSINESS
A sign that directs attention to a business, commodity, service,
or entertainment conducted, sold, offered, or manufactured upon the
premises where the sign is located.
SIGN, CANOPY
A sign that is mounted, painted, or attached to an awning,
canopy, or marquee that is otherwise permitted by ordinance. Canopy
signs are considered to be wall signs for purposes of determining
the maximum sign area.
SIGN, CONSTRUCTION
A sign indicating the name of the contractors, engineers,
architect, financiers and related companies or products being used
in construction on the lot.
SIGN, DECORATIVE FLAG
A sign displayed by a land use that is not the official flag
of a government, religious, fraternal or civic organization. Decorative
flags shall be regulated as a freestanding sign, and shall count toward
the total sign area and sign number requirements of a business, and
must be displayed only during business hours in a location approved
by the Zoning Administrator.
SIGN, DIRECTIONAL
A sign which indicates only the name, direction, address,
logo and/or distance of a business or activity. Directional signs
may be located off-premises if erected by a government agency, nonresidential
land use, or as a special event sign. Only those directional signs
erected by a government agency may be located in a public right-of-way.
SIGN, DIRECTIONAL, ON-PREMISES
A sign that indicates only the name or direction of a pedestrian
or traffic facility, or a particular building within a complex of
structures, on the property on which said facility or building is
located.
SIGN, ELECTRONIC MESSAGE UNIT
A sign the message of which may be changed by electronic
process, including such messages as copy, art, graphics, time, date,
temperature, weather or information concerning civic or charitable
events or the advertising of products or services for sale on the
premises. This also includes traveling or segmented message displays.
SIGN, EXEMPT
A sign that does not require a permit application or fee.
SIGN, FREESTANDING
A self-supporting sign resting on or supported by means of
poles, standards, or any other type of base on the ground. This type
of sign includes monument signs and pylon signs. The base or support(s)
of any and all freestanding signs shall be securely anchored to a
concrete base or footing. The footing and related supporting structure
of a freestanding sign, including bolts, flanges, brackets, etc.,
shall be concealed by the sign exterior, masonry covering, earth and
permanent ground cover, or through the use of evergreen shrubs.
SIGN, GROUP
A sign displaying the collective name of a group of uses
such as the title of a shopping center, office park, or industrial
park and its tenants. No sales or price information shall be permitted.
Portions of the sign containing names of individual tenants shall
be considered as part of the area of a group sign. A group sign shall
be considered a single sign structure.
SIGN, ICONIC DISPLAY
An iconic display sign is a physical representation of the
products for sale or operations of a business. The display is typically
three-dimensional and does not have "sides." Flat (less than twelve-inches
in depth) and two-sided is considered a projecting sign. The iconic
display is not considered a wall or projecting sign as it contains
no words or text. The iconic display is attached to and projects more
than one foot, generally perpendicular, from a structure or building
face. Examples of iconic displays include (but are not limited to)
a loaf of bread or cupcake for a bakery, a martini glass for a cocktail
bar, a steer for a butcher shop, grapes for wine sales, or hammer
for a hardware store.
SIGN, IDENTIFICATION
A sign indicating the name and/or address of the multifamily
development and of the manager of the multifamily property located
upon the residential premises where the sign is displayed.
SIGN, INTEGRAL BUILDING
A sign bearing the name of a building, dates of construction,
commemorative tablets and the like, which is an integral part of the
building or structure.
SIGN, MARQUEE
An overhanging sign providing a canopy of a theater, auditorium,
fairground, museum or other use, which advertises present and scheduled
events.
SIGN, MOBILE OR PORTABLE
A sign mounted on a frame or chassis designed to be easily
relocated, including vehicles and/or trailers whose principal commercial
use is for signage.
SIGN, MONUMENT
A freestanding sign whose bottom edge is located within one
foot of a ground-mounted pedestal and whose top edge is located no
more than eight feet from ground level. The base or support(s) of
any and all monument signs shall be securely anchored to a concrete
base or footing. The sign shall not be erected so that it impedes
visibility for safe pedestrian and/or vehicular circulation. The footing
and related supporting structure of a freestanding sign, including
bolts, flanges, brackets, etc., shall be concealed by the sign exterior,
masonry covering, earth and permanent ground cover, or through the
use of evergreen shrubs.
SIGN, OFF-PREMISES ADVERTISING
A sign that directs attention to a business, commodity, service,
or entertainment conducted, sold, or offered elsewhere than upon the
premises where the sign is displayed. Advertising signs include billboards.
SIGN, POLITICAL
A temporary sign which advocates the outcome of any election
or referendum, or which announces the existence of a particular candidate,
issue, or subject of any election or referendum, or any vote of a
governmental body.
SIGN, PROJECTING
A sign, other than a wall sign, that is attached to and projects
more than one foot, generally perpendicular, from a structure or building
face.
SIGN, PYLON
A freestanding sign erected upon one or more pylons or posts
so that the bottom edge of the sign face is seven feet or more above
grade.
SIGN STRUCTURE
Supports or materials capable of supporting any sign as defined
in this chapter. A sign structure may be a single pole or may or may
not be an integral part of the building.
SIGN, TEMPORARY
Any sign, banner, pennant, valance, or advertising display
not permanently attached to the ground or a structure, and intended
to be displayed for a limited period of time only.
SIGN, WALL
A sign mounted parallel to a building facade or other vertical
building surface. Wall signs shall not extend beyond the edge of any
wall or other surface to which they are mounted, nor shall they project
more than 18 inches from the wall or surface. The top of the sign
shall be no higher than the portion of the building to which it is
mounted.
SIGN, WINDOW
A sign installed inside a window for purposes of viewing
from outside the premises. This does not include merchandise located
in a window or temporary window advertising by retailers for the purpose
of informing the public of a sale or temporary offer. Window signs
are considered to be wall signs for the purpose of determining the
maximum sign area.
SITE
The entire area included in the legal description of the
land on which the land-disturbing or land development activity is
proposed in the permit application.
SOLAR COLLECTOR
A device, structure or part of a device or structure a substantial
purpose of which is to transform solar energy into thermal, mechanical,
chemical or electrical energy.
SOLAR COLLECTOR SURFACE
Any part of a solar collector that absorbs solar energy for
use in the collector's energy transformation process. Collector surface
does not include frames, support and mounting hardware.
SOLAR ENERGY
Direct radiant energy received from the sun. An oscillation
in pressure, partial displacement, particle velocity or other physical
parameter, in a medium with internal forces that cause compression
and rarefaction of that medium. The description of sound may include
any characteristic of such sound, including duration, intensity and
frequency.
SOUND LEVEL
The weighted sound pressure level obtained by the use of
a sound level meter and frequency weighting network, such as A, B,
or C as specified in American National Standards Institute specifications
for sound level meters (ANSI S1, 4-197, or the latest approved revision
thereof). If the frequency weighting employed is not indicated, the
A-weighting shall apply.
SOUND LEVEL METER
An instrument which includes a microphone, amplifier, RMS
detector, integrator or time average, output meter, and weighting
networks used to measure sound pressure levels.
START OF CONSTRUCTION
The date the building permit was issued, provided the actual
start of construction, repair, reconstruction, rehabilitation, addition,
placement, or other improvement was within 180 days of the permit
date. The actual start means either the first placement of permanent
construction on a site, such as the pouring of slab or footings, the
installation of piles, the construction of columns, or any work beyond
initial excavation, or the placement of a manufactured home on a foundation.
Permanent construction does not include land preparation, such as
clearing, grading and filling, nor does it include the installation
of streets and/or walkways, nor does it include excavation for a basement,
footings, piers or foundations or the erection of temporary forms,
nor does it include the installation on the property of accessory
buildings, such as garages or sheds not occupied as dwelling units
or not part of the main structure. For an alteration, the actual start
of construction means the first alteration of any wall, ceiling, floor
or other structural part of a building, whether or not that alteration
affects the external dimensions of the building.
STEEP SLOPE
Steep slopes are areas which contain a gradient of 12% or
greater (equivalent to a ten-foot elevation change in a distance of
83 feet or less), as shown on Environmental Corridor Map or from more
accurate on-site survey.
STORY
That portion of a building included between the surface of
a floor and the surface of the floor next above it, or if there be
no floor above it, then the space between the floor and ceiling next
above it. A basement or cellar having 1/2 or more of its height above
grade shall be deemed a story for purposes of height measurement.
STORY, HALF
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.
STREET
Unless specifically designated otherwise by the City, any
public or private way that is dedicated or permanently open to pedestrian
and vehicular use, which is 21 feet or more in width if it exists
at the time of enactment of this chapter or any such public right-of-way
50 feet or more in width when established after the effective date
of this chapter, or otherwise by approved plat.
STREET, ARTERIAL
A street that provides for the movement of relatively heavy
volumes of traffic to, from, or within the City. It has a secondary
function of providing access to collector and minor streets and tertiary
function of providing access to abutting properties; in Lake Mills:
IH 94, STH 89, CTHs A, B, and V.
STREET, COLLECTOR
A street that collects and distributes internal traffic within
a distinct urban area such as a residential neighborhood, between
the arterial street and local streets. It has a secondary function
of providing access to abutting properties; in Lake Mills: Lake Shore
Drive, Ferry Drive, Water Street, Owen Street, and Sandy Beach Road.
STREET LINE
The lines that form the boundaries of a right-of-way.
STREET, LOCAL
A street of minimum continuity designed for low speeds and
volumes and to provide access to low-traffic-generating property and
leading into collector and arterial street systems.
STREET, RESIDENTIAL COLLECTOR
A collector street serving primarily residential land uses
which primarily serves to connect local residential streets to collector
or arterial streets.
STRUCTURE
Any man-made object with form, shape and utility, either
permanently or temporarily attached to, placed upon or set into the
ground, stream bed or lake bed, including, but not limited to, roofed
and walled buildings, gas or liquid storage tanks, bridges, dams and
culverts.
STRUCTURE, ACCESSORY
A detached subordinate structure or a use which is clearly
incidental to, and customarily found in connection with, the principal
structure or use to which it is related and which is located on the
same lot as that of the principal structure or use.
STRUCTURE, NONCONFORMING
Any building, or other structure, which was lawfully existing
under ordinances or regulations preceding this chapter, but which
would not conform to this chapter if the building or structure were
to be erected under the current provisions of this chapter.
STRUCTURE, PRINCIPAL
A building in which is conducted, or in which is intended
to be conducted, the main or principal use of the lot on which it
is located.
STRUCTURE, TEMPORARY
A structure without any foundation or footings and which
is removed when the designated time period, activity or use for which
the temporary structure was erected has ceased. Any building, shed,
fence, tent or other membrane structure erected for a period of less
than 180 days. Structures intended for use longer than 180 days shall
comply with the Wisconsin Building Code as adopted by the City of
Lake Mills.
SUBDIVISION
The subdivision of a lot, parcel or tract of land by the
owner thereof or the owner's agent for the purpose of sale or of building
development, where the act of division creates five or more parcels
or building sites of 1 1/2 acres each or less in area; or five
or more parcels or building sites of 1 1/2 acres each or less
in area are created by successive divisions within a period of five
years.
SUBSTANTIAL DAMAGE
Damage of any origin sustained by a structure, whereby the
cost of restoring the structure to its pre-damaged condition would
equal or exceed 50% of the equalized assessed value of the structure
before the damage occurred.
SUBSTANTIAL IMPROVEMENT
(1)
Any repair, reconstruction, rehabilitation, addition or improvement
of a building or structure, the cost of which equals or exceeds 50%
of the equalized assessed value of the structure before the improvement
or repair is started. If the structure has sustained substantial damage,
any repairs are considered substantial improvement regardless of the
work performed. The term does not, however, include either:
(a)
Any project to improve a structure to comply with existing state
or local health, sanitary, or safety code specifications solely necessary
to assure safe living conditions; or
(b)
Any alteration of a structure or site documented as deserving
preservation by the Wisconsin State Historical Society, or listed
on the National Register of Historic Places.
(2)
Ordinary maintenance repairs are not considered structural repairs,
modifications or additions. Such ordinary maintenance repairs include
internal and external painting, decorating, paneling, and the replacement
of doors, windows, and other nonstructural components. (For purposes
of this definition, "substantial improvement" is considered to occur
when the first alteration of any wall, ceiling, floor, or other structural
part of the building commences, whether or not that alteration affects
the external dimensions of the structure.)
SURFACE, HARD
A dustless, all-weather material capable of carrying a wheel
load of 4,000 pounds (normally, a machine-laid two-inch blacktop on
a four-inch base or five inches of portland cement will meet this
requirement.
TENT
Any membrane structure, enclosure or shelter which is constructed
of canvas or any other pliable material supported in any manner except
by air or the contents it protects and used only for recreational
purposes.
TIME OF TRAVEL (TOT), FIVE-YEAR
The five-year TOT is a portion of the recharge area, the
outer boundary of which it is determined or estimated, that groundwater
and potential contaminants will take five years to reach a pumping
well.
TRADITIONAL NEIGHBORHOOD DEVELOPMENT (TND)
A development that exhibits several of the following characteristics:
alleys, streets laid out in a grid system, buildings oriented to the
street, front porches on houses, pedestrian orientation, mixed land
uses, and village squares or greens.
TRANSIENT PERSON
Any visitor or person who owns, rents, or uses a lodging
or dwelling unit, or portion thereof, for less than 30 days and whose
permanent address for legal purposes is not the lodging or dwelling
unit being occupied.
USE, ACCESSORY
A detached subordinate structure or a use which is clearly
incidental to, and customarily found in connection with, the principal
structure or use to which it is related and which is located on the
same lot as that of the principal structure or use.
USE, CONDITIONAL
A use which is permitted by this section provided that certain
conditions specified in the ordinance are met and that a permit is
granted by the City Council.
USE, CONFORMING
A use or activity on a property that conforms to the present
requirements of the zoning district in which it is located.
USE, NONCONFORMING
A use or activity which was lawful prior to the adoption,
revision or amendment of a zoning ordinance, but which fails, by reason
of such adoption, revision or amendment, to conform to the present
requirements of the zoning district.
USE, PRINCIPAL
Any and all of the primary uses of a property, treated as
a use permitted by right or as a conditional use (rather than as an
accessory use or a temporary use).
VARIANCE
Permission by the Zoning Board of Appeals to depart from the literal requirements of this chapter granted pursuant to §
660-176.
VISION CLEARANCE
An unoccupied triangular space at the corner of a corner
which is bounded by the street lines and a setback line connecting
points determined by measurement from the corner of each street line.
WATER SURFACE PROFILE
A graphical representation showing the elevation of the water
surface of a watercourse for each position along a reach of river
or stream at a certain flood flow. A water surface profile of the
regional flood is used in regulating floodplain areas.
WATERSHED
The entire region contributing runoff or surface water to
a watercourse or body of water.
WELL
An excavation opening in the ground made by digging, boring,
drilling, driving or other methods to obtain groundwater, regardless
of its intended use.
WELLHEAD PROTECTION AREAS
Those zones of influence or TOT at each municipal well that
lie within the City of Lake Mills corporate limits.
WETLAND
Defined in § 23.32(1), Wis. Stats., to mean an
area where water is at, near or above the land surface long enough
to be capable of supporting aquatic or hydrophytic vegetation in which
have soils indicative of wet conditions.
WIND ENERGY SYSTEM, COMMERCIAL
A wind energy conversion system consisting of more than one
wind turbine and tower, a wind energy conversion system which will
be used primarily for off-site consumption of power or a wind energy
system in excess of 60 kWh.
WIND ENERGY SYSTEM, SMALL
A wind energy conversion system consisting of a wind turbine,
a tower and associated control or conversion electronics which will
be used primarily to reduce on-site consumption of utility power.
A small wind energy system shall not exceed a rated capacity of 60
kW.
YARD
A required open space that lies between the principal building
and the nearest lot line.
YARD, FRONT
A yard extending along the full width of the front lot line
between side lot lines and extending from the front street right-of-way
line to a depth required in the yard regulations for the district
in which the lot is located.
YARD, REAR
A yard extending along the full width of the rear lot line
between the side lot lines and extending toward the front lot line
for a depth as specified in the yard regulations for the district
in which the lot is located.
YARD, SIDE
A yard extending along the side lot line between the front
and rear yards, having a width as specified in the yard regulations
for the district in which the lot is located.
YARD, SIDE STREET
The area extending between the front lot line and the rear
lot line and extending from the side street right-of-way to a depth
required in the yard regulations for the district in which the lot
is located.
ZONING DISTRICT, OVERLAY
A zoning district which imposes uniform restrictions on all
properties within its area which are in addition to the restrictions
specific to the standard zoning districts.