[Ord. 1263, 8/10/2009; as amended by Ord. 1294, 5/13/2013]
1. Purpose. The purposes of the R-1 Residential District are to provide
areas to meet the needs of the present and expected future residents
in single family, medium density dwellings, to protect residential
neighborhoods from the negative impacts of incompatible land uses,
and to protect residents' privacy, access to air and solar energy
and investments of money, time and pride in their community.
2. Uses Permitted by Right. Each of the following uses are permitted by right in the R-1 Residential District, provided that the use, dimensional and all other applicable requirements of this chapter are satisfied. The number/letter combination in parenthesis preceding each use identifies the use, a description and regulations for which are located in §
27-320, "Use Regulations," of this chapter.
A. (1A) Single-Family Detached Dwelling.
B. (1D) Semi-Detached Dwelling (Twin).
C. (2E) Group Home for Handicapped Individuals.
D. (2Q) Public Park/Recreation Facility.
E. (4L) Forestry/Timber Harvesting.
G. (7I) Microwave or Satellite Dish.
H. (7J) No-Impact Home-Based Business.
I. (7K) Noncommercial Swimming Pool.
J. (7O) Parking or Storage of Recreational Vehicles and Other Recreational
Equipment.
K. (7P) Residential Accessory Building, Structure or Use.
L. (7R) Solar Energy System.
M. (7S) Temporary Structure or Use.
N. (7M)
Outdoor Eating Accessory to Food Service.
[Added by Ord. No. 1341, 7/13/2020]
3. Special Exception Uses. Each of the following uses may be permitted in the R-1 Residential District as authorized by the Zoning Hearing Board in accordance with the standards contained in §
27-804, Subsection
6B, of this chapter. The number/letter combination in parenthesis preceding each use identifies the use, a description and regulations for which are located in §
27-320, "Use Regulations," of this chapter.
F. (4X) Private Recreation Facility.
G. (5D) Parking Garage or Area.
H. (7E) Family Day Care Center.
4. Conditional Use. Each of the following uses may be permitted in the R-1 Residential District as authorized by Council in accordance with the standards contained in §
27-805 of this chapter. The number/letter combination in parenthesis preceding each use identifies the use, a description and regulations for which are located in §
27-320, "Use Regulations," of this chapter.
5. Lot Area, Width, Building Coverage, and Height Regulations. Each
of the following dimensional requirements shall apply to each use
in the R-1 Residential District, except as specifically provided for
in this chapter:
Principal Use
|
Minimum Lot Area1
(square feet)
|
Minimum Lot Width2
(feet)
|
Maximum Building Coverage
(%)
|
Maximum Impervious Surface Ratio
(%)
|
Maximum Building Height
(feet)
|
---|
Single-Family Detached Dwelling
|
4,500/d.u.
|
45
|
40
|
50
|
35
|
Semi-Detached Dwelling (Twin)
|
3,500/d.u.
|
30
|
40
|
50
|
35
|
Any Other Use
|
5,000
|
50
|
30
|
40
|
35
|
NOTES:
|
---|
1
|
Per dwelling unit for residential uses.
|
2
|
Measured at the minimum front yard listed in Subsection 6 for the particular use.
|
6. Minimum Yard Requirements. Each of the following minimum yard requirements
shall apply to each use in the R-1 Residential District, except as
specifically provided for in this chapter:
|
Principal Use
|
Front Yard1, 2
(feet)
|
Side Yard
(feet)
|
Rear Yard2
(feet)
|
---|
|
Single-Family Detached Dwelling
|
10
|
20 feet total with no less than 5 feet on one side
|
25
|
|
Semi-Detached Dwelling (Twin)
|
10
|
20 feet total with no less than 5 feet on one side
|
25
|
|
Any Other Use
|
20
|
10
|
25
|
|
NOTES:
|
---|
|
1
|
The depth at which the minimum lot width shall be measured.
|
|
2
|
For exceptions to the minimum front and rear yard requirements, see § 27-404, Subsection 2E, of this chapter.
|
[Ord. 1263, 8/10/2009; as amended by Ord. 1294, 5/13/2013]
1. Purpose. The purposes of the R-1A Residential District are to provide
for moderate density residential areas which are protected from incompatible
land uses, so as to maintain these areas as attractive living environments
and to promote the orderly development of the Borough.
2. Uses Permitted by Right. Each of the following uses are permitted by right in the R-1A Residential District, provided that the use, dimensional and all other applicable requirements of this chapter are satisfied. The number/letter combination in parenthesis preceding each use identifies the use, a description and regulations for which are located in §
27-320, "Use Regulations," of this chapter.
A. (1A) Single-Family Detached Dwelling.
B. (1C) Attached Dwelling (Rowhouse or Townhouse).
C. (1D) Semi-Detached Dwelling (Twin).
D. (2E) Group Home for Handicapped Individuals.
E. (2Q) Public Park/Recreation Facility.
F. (4L) Forestry/Timber Harvesting.
H. (7I) Microwave or Satellite Dish.
I. (7J) No-Impact Home-Based Business.
J. (7K) Noncommercial Swimming Pool.
K. (7O) Parking or Storage of Recreational Vehicles and Other Recreational
Equipment.
L. (7P) Residential Accessory Building, Structure or Use.
M. (7R) Solar Energy System.
N. (7S) Temporary Structure or Use.
O. (7M)
Outdoor Eating Accessory to Food Service.
[Added by Ord. No. 1341, 7/13/2020]
3. Special Exception Uses. Each of the following uses may be permitted in the R-1A Residential District as authorized by the Zoning Hearing Board in accordance with the standards contained in §
27-804, Subsection
6B, of this chapter. The number/letter combination in parenthesis preceding each use identifies the use, a description and regulations for which are located in §
27-320, "Use Regulations," of this chapter.
H. (4X) Private Recreation Facility.
I. (5D) Parking Garage or Area.
4. Conditional Uses. Each of the following uses may be permitted in the R-1A Residential District as authorized by Council in accordance with the standards contained in §
27-805 of this chapter. The number/letter combination in parenthesis preceding each use identifies the use, a description and regulations for which are located in §
27-320, "Use Regulations," of this chapter.
5. Lot Area, Width, Building Coverage and Height Regulations. Each of
the following dimensional requirements shall apply to each use in
the R-1A Residential District, except as specifically provided for
in this chapter:
Principal Use
|
Minimum Lot Area1
(square feet)
|
Minimum Lot Width2
(feet)
|
Maximum Building Coverage
(%)
|
Maximum Impervious Surface Ratio
(%)
|
Maximum Building Height
(feet)
|
---|
Single-Family Detached Dwelling
|
4,500/d.u.
|
45
|
40
|
50
|
35
|
Semi-Detached Dwelling (Twin)
|
3,500/d.u.
|
30
|
40
|
50
|
35
|
Attached Dwelling (Row-house or Townhouse)
|
3,000/d.u.
|
20
|
40
|
50
|
35
|
Any Other Use
|
6,000
|
60
|
30
|
40
|
35
|
NOTES:
|
---|
1
|
Per dwelling unit for residential uses.
|
2
|
Measured at the minimum front yard listed in Subsection 6 for the particular use.
|
6. Minimum Yard Requirements. Each of the following minimum yard requirements
shall apply to each use in the R-1A Residential District, except as
specifically provided for in this chapter:
Principal Use
|
Front Yard1, 3
(feet)
|
Side Yard
(feet)
|
Rear Yard3
(feet)
|
---|
Single-Family Detached Dwelling
|
10
|
20 feet total with no less than 5 feet on one side
|
25
|
Semi-Detached Dwelling (Twin)
|
10
|
20 feet total with no less than 5 feet on one side
|
25
|
Attached Dwelling (Rowhouse or Townhouse)
|
10
|
102
|
25
|
Any Other Use
|
25
|
15
|
25
|
NOTES:
|
---|
1
|
The depth at which the minimum lot width shall be measured.
|
2
|
For the end dwelling units.
|
3
|
For exceptions to the minimum front and rear yard requirements, see § 27-404, Subsection 2E, of this chapter.
|
[Ord. 1263, 8/10/2009; as amended by Ord. 1294, 5/13/2013]
1. Purpose. The purposes of the R-2 Residential District are to provide
for moderate density residential areas with access to convenient commercial
use developed in a manner so as to maintain these areas as attractive
living environments and to promote the orderly development of the
Borough.
2. Uses Permitted by Right. Each of the following uses are permitted by right in the R-2 Residential District, provided that the use, dimensional and all other applicable requirements of this chapter are satisfied. The number/letter combination in parenthesis preceding each use identifies the use, a description and regulations for which are located in §
27-320, "Use Regulations," of this chapter.
A. (1A) Single-Family Detached Dwelling.
B. (1C) Attached Dwelling (Rowhouse or Townhouse).
C. (1D) Semi-Detached Dwelling (Twin).
D. (1K) Residential Conversion of Existing Commercial or Industrial
Building.
E. (2E) Group Home for Handicapped Individuals.
F. (2Q) Public Park/Recreation Facility.
G. (4L) Forestry/Timber Harvesting.
I. (7I) Microwave or Satellite Dish.
J. (7J) No-Impact Home-Based Business.
K. (7K) Noncommercial Swimming Pool.
L. (7O) Parking or Storage of Recreational Vehicles and Other Recreational
Equipment.
M. (7P) Residential Accessory Building, Structure or Use.
N. (7R) Solar Energy System.
O. (7S) Temporary Structure or Use.
P. (7M)
Outdoor Eating Accessory to Food Service.
[Added by Ord. No. 1341, 7/13/2020]
3. Special Exception Uses. Each of the following uses may be permitted in the R-2 Residential District as authorized by the Zoning Hearing Board in accordance with the standards contained in §
27-804, Subsection
6B, of this chapter. The number/letter combination in parenthesis preceding each use identifies the use, a description and regulations for which are located in §
27-320, "Use Regulations," of this chapter.
I. (4AA) Restaurant, Standard.
K. (5D) Parking Garage or Area.
M. (7C) Day Care Center (accessory to office).
O. (7Q) Retail Space within Office Buildings.
4. Conditional Uses. Each of the following uses be permitted in the R-2 Residential District as authorized by Council in accordance with the standards contained in §
27-805 of this chapter. The number/letter combination in parenthesis preceding each use identifies the use, a description and regulations for which are located in §
27-320, "Use Regulations," of this chapter.
5. Lot Area, Width, Building Coverage, and Height Regulations. Each
of the following dimensional requirements shall apply to each use
in the R-2 Residential District, except as specifically provided for
in this chapter:
Principal Use
|
Minimum Lot Area1
(square feet)
|
Minimum Lot Width2
(feet)
|
Maximum Building Coverage
(%)
|
Maximum Impervious Surface Ratio
(%)
|
Maximum Building Height
(feet)
|
---|
Single-Family Detached Dwelling
|
4,500/d.u.
|
45
|
40
|
50
|
35
|
Semi-Detached Dwelling (Twin)
|
3,500/d.u.
|
30
|
40
|
50
|
35
|
Attached Dwelling (Row-house or Townhouse)
|
3,000/d.u.
|
20
|
40
|
50
|
35
|
Residential Conversion of Existing Commercial or Industrial
Building
|
750/d.u.
|
100
|
80
|
90
|
70
|
Any Other Use
|
4,500
|
30
|
40
|
50
|
35
|
NOTES:
|
---|
1
|
Per dwelling unit for residential uses.
|
2
|
Measured at the minimum front yard listed in Subsection 6 for the particular use.
|
6. Minimum Yard Requirements. Each of the following minimum yard requirements
shall apply to each use in the R-2 Residential District, except as
specifically provided for in this chapter:
|
Principal Use
|
Front Yard1, 3
(feet)
|
Side Yard
(feet)
|
Rear Yard3
(feet)
|
---|
|
Single-Family Detached Dwelling
|
10
|
20 feet total with no less than 5 feet on one side
|
25
|
|
Semi-Detached Dwelling (Twin)
|
10
|
20 feet total with no less than 5 feet on one side
|
25
|
|
Attached Dwelling (Rowhouse or Townhouse)
|
10
|
202
|
25
|
|
Residential Conversion of Existing Commercial or Industrial
Building
|
10
|
—
|
20
|
|
Any Other Use
|
20
|
10
|
25
|
|
NOTES:
|
---|
|
1
|
The depth at which the minimum lot width shall be measured.
|
|
2
|
For the end dwelling units.
|
|
3
|
For exceptions to the minimum front and rear yard requirements, see § 27-404, Subsection 2E, of this chapter.
|
[Ord. 1263, 8/10/2009; as amended by Ord. 1294, 5/13/2013]
1. Purpose. The purposes of the R-3 Active Adult Residential District
are to provide for moderate density residential areas which are protected
from incompatible land uses, so as to maintain these areas as attractive
living environments for the housing of active adults and to promote
the orderly development of the Borough.
2. Uses Permitted by Right. Each of the following uses are permitted by right in the R-3 Residential District, provided that the use, dimensional and all other applicable requirements of this chapter are satisfied. The number/letter combination in parenthesis preceding each use identifies the use, a description and regulations for which are located in §
27-320, "Use Regulations," of this chapter.
A. (1A) Single-Family Detached Dwelling.
B. (1C) Attached Dwelling (Rowhouse or Townhouse).
C. (1D) Semi-Detached Dwelling (Twin).
D. (1F(1)) Multi-Family Dwelling: Low-Rise Apartment.
E. (2Q) Public Park/Recreation Facility.
F. (4L) Forestry/Timber Harvesting.
H. (7I) Microwave or Satellite Dish.
I. (7J) No-Impact Home-Based Business.
J. (7K) Noncommercial Swimming Pool.
K. (7P) Residential Accessory Building, Structure or Use.
L. (7R) Solar Energy System.
M. (7S) Temporary Structure or Use.
N. (7M)
Outdoor Eating Accessory to Food Service.
[Added by Ord. No. 1341, 7/13/2020]
3. Special Exception Uses. Each of the following uses may be permitted in the R-3 Residential District as authorized by the Zoning Hearing Board in accordance with the standards contained in §
27-804, Subsection
6B, of this chapter. The number/letter combination in parenthesis preceding each use identifies the use, a description and regulations for which are located in §
27-320, "Use Regulations," of this chapter.
D. (4X) Private Recreation Facility.
4. Area Dimensional and Design Requirements. All uses in the R-3 District
shall meet the following requirements.
|
A.
|
Minimum Site Area:
|
10 acres (gross)
|
|
B.
|
Minimum Frontage:
|
300 feet along a public thoroughfare
|
|
C.
|
Maximum Density:
|
Five dwelling units per gross acre.
|
|
D.
|
Maximum Building Coverage:
|
30%
|
|
E.
|
Maximum Impervious Coverage:
|
55%
|
|
F.
|
Minimum Open Space:
|
The minimum open space ratio shall be 30% of gross site area.
|
|
G.
|
Minimum Building Setbacks from Site Boundary:
|
From tract boundary public thoroughfare right-of-way line —
25 feet.
|
|
|
|
From other property lines and interior thoroughfare cartway
— 15 feet.
|
|
|
|
(Setbacks from sunrooms shall be 20 feet from tract boundary.)
|
|
H.
|
Maximum Building Height:
|
Three stories or 35 feet, whichever is less.
|
|
I.
|
Off-Street Parking:
|
There shall be two off-street parking spaces provided for each
dwelling unit. (Garage parking shall be included calculation.)
|
5. Individual Lot Area and Bulk Requirements.
|
Use
|
Single-Family Detached
|
Single-Family Semi-detached
|
Low-Rise Apartment
|
---|
|
Minimum Lot Area
|
6,000 square feet
|
4,000 square feet
|
N.A.
|
|
Minimum Lot Width
|
60 feet
|
40 feet
|
N.A.
|
|
Minimum Front Yard From Edge of Cartways1
|
30 feet with sidewalks or 25 feet without sidewalks
|
30 feet with sidewalks or 25 feet without sidewalks
|
30 feet with front entry garage, or 20 feet with side or rear
entry garage, or 20 feet with parking lots other than driveway cover
|
|
Minimum Side Yard
|
20 feet total with no less than 5 feet on one side
|
20 feet total with no less than 5 feet on one side
|
N.A.
|
|
Minimum Rear Yard1
|
15 feet
|
15 feet
|
N.A.
|
|
Aggregate Front and Rear Yard
|
45 feet
|
45 feet
|
N.A.
|
|
Maximum Building Coverage
|
35%
|
35%
|
N.A.
|
|
Maximum Floor Area Ratio
|
N.A.
|
N.A.
|
N.A.
|
|
Maximum Impervious Coverage per Lot
|
45%
|
55%
|
N.A.
|
|
Minimum Distance Between Buildings
|
20
|
20 feet
|
24 feet
|
|
Maximum Units per Structure
|
N.A.
|
2
|
5
|
|
NOTES:
|
---|
|
1
|
For exceptions to the minimum front and rear yard requirements, see § 27-404, Subsection 2E, of this chapter.
|
6. General Requirements.
A. Utilities. All units shall be served by public water and public sewer.
All utilities including water and sewer shall be in accordance with
the requirements of Bristol Borough. All utilities, including electric,
telephone, cable and other utility services shall be installed underground.
B. Common Area and Facilities. Designated open space shall be restricted
from further development by a declaration and it shall be duly recorded
in the office of the Recorder of Deeds of Bucks County. Required open
space may be owned by a homeowners or condominium association, the
Borough or may remain in private ownership.
C. Roads within the proposed development shall be gated and private
and shall be owned and maintained by a homeowners or condominium association.
All roads shall be constructed to Borough standards for public residential
streets, except that all such streets within the proposed development
shall have a minimum cartway width of 24 feet for two-way traffic
and a minimum cartway width of 18 feet for one-way traffic. The Borough
Council may impose parking restrictions on one or both sides of such
streets. A utility easement area shall be provided along all streets
to provide suitable area for the location of underground utility lines.
D. A pedestrian circulation system shall be provided as an integral
part of the proposed development. The pedestrian circulation system
shall include any one, or a combination of sidewalks, pathways and
trails to provide reasonable access to all areas within the proposed
development, and suitable access to public thoroughfares adjacent
to the site shall be provided.
E. Unit Occupancy. At least one occupant of each dwelling shall be 55
years of age or older. No persons under the age of 18 shall occupy
a dwelling for more than two weeks in a calendar year. (Owner shall
have the right to conform the maximum number of units occupied by
persons 55 years of age or older to Federal Fair Housing Standards.)
F. Declaration of Age Qualification. Subsequent to the approval of the
plan for the development, but prior to the recording of the plan,
developers shall each record a declaration in a form acceptable to
the Borough Solicitor, binding all properties and owners to the restriction
which shall require one occupant of an individual dwelling unit within
the proposed development to be 55 or older, and which shall require
that any residents of an individual dwelling unit within the proposed
development under the age of 18 shall not reside in that unity for
more than two weeks in any calendar year.
G. The Borough Police Department shall be given the right to enforce
the provisions of the Pennsylvania Motor Vehicle Code, 75 Pa.C.S.A.
§ 101 et seq., on streets throughout the development.
H. No outdoor storage of boats, campers, RVs or motor homes shall be
permitted in any part of the development.
I. All units must have garages for the parking of at least one vehicle,
which cannot be used for storage or converted to additional living
space. This restriction to be included in the declaration of covenants,
easements and restrictions.
[Ord. 1263, 8/10/2009; as amended by Ord. 1294, 5/13/2013]
1. Purpose. The purposes of the NC District are to provide areas with
adequate parking and loading facilities, internal traffic circulation
and safe ingress and egress to the public street system for commercial
and business uses that are compatible with the existing uses in the
area.
2. Uses Permitted by Right. Each of the following uses are permitted by right in the NC District, provided that the use, dimensional and all other applicable requirements of this chapter are satisfied. The number/letter combination in parenthesis preceding each use identifies the use, a description and regulations for which are located in §
27-320, "Use Regulations," of this chapter.
A. (2Q) Public Park/Recreation Facility.
E. (4L) Forestry/Timber Harvesting.
G. (4AA) Restaurant, Standard.
H. (4BB.1) General Merchandise Store.
M. (7C) Day Care Center accessory to Office.
P. (7I) Microwave or Satellite Dish.
Q. (7J) No-Impact Home-Based Business.
R. (7N) Outdoor Storage or Display.
S. (7Q) Retail Space within Office Buildings.
T. (7R) Solar Energy System.
U. (7S) Temporary Structure or Use.
W. (7V) Non-household Swimming Pool.
X. (7M) Outdoor Eating Accessory to Food Service.
[Added by Ord. No. 1341, 7/13/2020]
3. Special Exception Uses. Each of the following uses may be permitted in the NC District as authorized by the Zoning Hearing Board in accordance with the standards contained in §
27-804, Subsection
6B, of this chapter. The number/letter combination in parenthesis preceding each use identifies the use, a description and regulations for which are located in §
27-320, "Use Regulations," of this chapter.
A. (1A) Single-Family Detached Dwelling.
B. (1D) Semi-Detached Dwelling (Twin).
C. (1E) Two-Family Dwelling (Duplex).
F. (2F) Group Home for Non-Handicapped Individuals.
N. (7M) Outdoor Eating Accessory to Food Service.
4. Conditional Uses. Each of the following uses may be permitted in the NC District as authorized by Borough Council in accordance with the standards contained in §
27-805 of this chapter. The number/letter combination in parenthesis preceding each use identifies the use, a description and regulations for which are located in §
27-320, "Use Regulations," of this chapter.
5. Lot Area, Width, Building Coverage and Height Regulations. Each of
the following dimensional requirements shall apply to each use in
the NC District, except as specifically provided for in this chapter:
Principal Use
|
Minimum Lot Area1
(square feet)
|
Minimum Lot Width2
(feet)
|
Maximum Building Coverage
(%)
|
Maximum Impervious Surface Ratio
(%)
|
Maximum Building Height
(feet)
|
---|
Single-Family Detached Dwelling
|
4,500/d.u.
|
45
|
40
|
50
|
35
|
Semi-Detached Dwelling (Twin)
|
3,500/d.u.
|
30
|
40
|
50
|
35
|
Attached Dwelling (Rowhouse or Townhouse)
|
3,000/d.u.
|
20
|
40
|
50
|
35
|
Two-Family Dwelling (Duplex)
|
2,500/d.u.
|
60
|
40
|
50
|
35
|
Any Other Use
|
3,000
|
30
|
50
|
70
|
35
|
NOTES:
|
---|
1
|
Per dwelling unit for residential uses.
|
2
|
Measured at the minimum front yard listed in Subsection 6 for the particular use.
|
6. Minimum Yard Requirements. Each of the following minimum yard requirements
shall apply to each use in the NC District, except as specifically
provided for in this chapter:
|
Principal Use
|
Front Yard1,2
(feet)
|
Side Yard
(feet)
|
Rear Yard2
(feet)
|
---|
|
Single-Family Detached Dwelling
|
20
|
20 feet total with no less than 5 feet on one side
|
25
|
|
Semi-Detached (Twin)
|
20
|
20 feet total with no less than 5 feet on one side
|
25
|
|
Attached Dwelling (Rowhouse or Townhouse)
|
20
|
10 (for each end unit)
|
25
|
|
Two-Family Dwelling (Duplex)
|
20
|
10
|
25
|
|
Any Other Use
|
20
|
10
|
25
|
|
NOTES:
|
---|
|
1
|
The depth at which the minimum lot width shall be measured.
|
|
2
|
For exceptions to the minimum front and rear yard requirements, see § 27-404, Subsection 2E, of this chapter.
|
[Ord. 1263, 8/10/2009; as amended by Ord. 1294, 5/13/2013]
The provisions contained in this section apply to every zoning
district in which the uses mentioned herein are permitted, whether
by right, special exception or conditional use.
All uses permitted in the Borough shall be subject in addition
to these ordinance regulations to all other applicable county, state
or federal requirements and licensing regulations and to the requirements
of any other agency with jurisdiction. These include, but are not
limited to, regulations for licensing of human service activities,
requirements for accessibility of the disabled, sewage disposal requirements,
water supply regulations, state road regulations and fire protection
requirements.
1. Residential Uses.
A. Single-Family Detached Dwelling. A structure having only one dwelling
unit from ground to roof, designed and occupied exclusively as a residence
for one family, having independent outside access and having yards
on all sides. The term "single-family detached dwelling" shall be
deemed to include a "modular home," but shall not be deemed to include
a "mobile home."
B. Mobile Home. A transportable, single-family dwelling unit intended for permanent occupancy, contained in one unit, or in two or more 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 in conformance with the Pennsylvania Uniform Construction Code, 34 Pa. Code § 401 et seq., as amended [Chapter
5, Part
1].
(1)
A mobile home shall meet the area and dimensional requirements
for single family detached dwellings for the district in which the
mobile home is located.
(2)
Each mobile home shall be placed on a concrete slab of at least the same length and width as the mobile home, with a minimum thickness of six inches, and shall have installed in it a minimum of six tie-down rings to which the mobile home shall be secured. Pads shall be on footings at least one foot below the frost line, or other standards as required by the Pennsylvania Uniform Construction Code, 34 Pa. Code § 401 et seq., as amended [Chapter
5, Part
1].
(3)
All mobile homes shall have the space between the floor of the
mobile home and the mobile home stand completely enclosed. Such enclosure
may be provided by a permanent masonry foundation or by temporary
materials or skirting. Skirting shall be compatible in design with
the mobile home to which it is attached and shall provide ventilation
to inhibit decay and deterioration of the structure. Skirting shall
be constructed of materials designed and commonly used for exterior
building surfaces and at least of such rigidity and strength as the
exterior surface of the mobile home itself.
C. Attached Dwelling (Rowhouse or Townhouse). A building containing
one dwelling unit with no more than two party walls in common with
any other dwelling, and not a two-family dwelling. Each dwelling shall
be designed and occupied exclusively as a residence for one family,
having independent outside access.
D. Semi-Detached Dwelling (Twin). A building containing one dwelling
unit and having a party wall unpierced by opening in common with an
adjacent dwelling, but detached from any other building. Dwellings
having a party wall in common must be erected at the same time. Each
dwelling shall require a separate lot, or sufficient site area regulated
by a single form of legal ownership as an individual lot, that satisfies
minimum lot requirements.
E. Two-Family Dwelling (Duplex). A detached building containing two
dwelling units with one dwelling unit wholly or partly over the other.
Each dwelling shall require sufficient site area regulated by a single
form of legal ownership as an individual lot that satisfies minimum
lot requirements.
F. Multi-Family Dwelling. A detached building containing three or more
dwelling units that are completely separated by party walls.
(1)
Low-Rise Apartment. A multi-family dwelling, as defined above,
which is three stories or less in height, including quadruplex units.
(2)
High-Rise Apartment. A multi-family dwelling, as defined above,
which is four or more stories in height.
G. Dwelling in Combination with a Business. One dwelling unit that is
part of the structure, which includes one nonresidential use, under
one ownership.
(1)
The residential unit shall have a minimum area of 1,200 square
feet or if there is more than one residential unit the average of
all units shall be at least 1,200 square feet. No individual residential
unit shall be smaller than 900 square feet or larger than 3,000 square
feet. In addition, no more than 25% of the residential units on any
property shall be less than 1,200 square feet in area.
(2)
The residential unit shall be located on the second or third
floor of the building.
(3)
The total area of residential uses shall not exceed 60% of the
total building area.
(4)
All buildings containing one or more residential units shall
be equipped with an automatic fire suppression system throughout the
entire building.
(5)
Access to all residential units shall be provided by a common
area with a common entrance and exit.
(6)
Each residential unit shall have off-street parking in accordance with Part
7 of this chapter with the exception of properties which are continuous and directly abut the Mill Street public parking lot or any extension thereof in which case there shall be a minimum of one off-street parking space for each residential unit.
H. Mobile Home Park. A parcel of land under single ownership which has been planned and improved for the placement of mobile homes for dwelling or sleeping purposes and for non-transient use, as described in Subsection
1B of this section, providing:
(1)
The density of such development shall not exceed 12 dwelling
units per acre.
(2)
The minimum yard requirements for each mobile home lot shall
be 15 feet front, 25 feet rear yard and five feet for side yards.
Such yards shall be measured from the perimeter of the mobile home
stand.
(3)
Each mobile home stand shall have minimum dimensions of 50 feet
by 24 feet, except that at least 20% of the stands shall have minimum
dimensions of 70 feet by 24 feet.
(4)
Every mobile home stand shall have access to a public street
in accordance with appropriate subdivision regulations for private
access drives.
(5)
A thirty-foot buffer yard shall be located on-site and shall be placed along the perimeter of the mobile home park. Such buffer yard shall contain a twenty-five-foot wide planting screen in accordance with §
27-404, Subsection
4E, of this chapter.
(6)
A mobile home park shall have direct access to an arterial or
collector highway.
(7)
The minimum lot area for a mobile home park shall be five acres.
(8)
The minimum number of spaces completed and ready for occupancy
before the first occupancy is permitted shall be three.
(9)
No space shall be rented for residential use of a mobile home
in any such park except for periods of 30 days or more.
(10)
Public sewerage shall be required.
(11)
Plans for any mobile home park shall be submitted in conformance with appropriate articles of Bristol Borough Subdivision and Land Development Regulations [Chapter
22].
(12)
Each mobile home shall meet the requirements in Subsections
1B(2) and
(3) of this section.
I. Boarding House (Rooming House). A building in which the owner or
tenant rents at least one (but not more than five) rental units for
residential or lodging purposes, regardless of whether meals are furnished
or not. Individuals to whom the units are rented must be living independently,
needing no assistance such as physical or custodial care. Such use
may include dormitories, fraternity or sorority houses, or other buildings
of charitable, educational, or philanthropic use.
(1)
Each room used for sleeping shall be limited to one bed.
(2)
No separate cooking facilities shall be provided within each
guest room.
(3)
No additional rooms shall be constructed for the purpose of
accommodating boarders.
J. Bed and Breakfast. The use of a detached dwelling for the accommodation
of over night guests for a fee.
(1)
Number of guest rooms: maximum number-8; minimum number-2.
(2)
There shall be one full bathroom for every two guest rooms.
(3)
There shall be only one central common kitchen and eating area
if eating facilities are provided, and guest rooms shall not have
separate cooking or eating facilities. The serving of meals shall
be limited to breakfast and afternoon tea to overnight guests.
(4)
The premises shall be managed by a person or persons who shall
be permanent full time residents within the structure housing the
bedrooms for guests. The manager's quarters shall have full bathroom
facilities and may have kitchen facilities, in addition to and separate
and apart from those servicing the guests.
(5)
The use of amenities provided by the bed and breakfast, such
as swimming pools or tennis courts, shall be restricted in use to
the guests of the establishment.
(6)
The minimum lot size shall be 20,000 square feet, unless a greater
minimum lot size is specified for a particular district in this chapter.
K. Residential Conversion of Existing Commercial or Industrial Building.
The conversion of an existing commercial or industrial building into
residential units.
(1)
Such use may only be permitted within 800 feet of a transit
station.
2. Institutional, Recreational and Educational Uses.
A. Cemetery. A burial place or graveyard including mausoleum, crematory
or columbarium.
(1)
Shall be on a lot at least five acres in area.
(2)
Minimum yards (front, side and rear yards) for all accessory
buildings, mausoleums, offices, maintenance buildings, or other structures
other than fences and burial markers shall be 20 feet.
(3)
No more than 10% of the entire area may be devoted to above-ground
buildings not serving as burial markers or memorials, such as business
and administration offices, chapels, maintenance facilities, greenhouses
or repair shops.
(4)
A buffer strip of at least 20 feet shall be provided between
any building or burial site and the cemetery property line.
(5)
There shall be not more than one identification sign at each
entrance.
(6)
No entrance walls, signs or other entrance features shall exceed
12 feet in height.
(7)
No burial plots, structures or parking areas shall be located
within the one-hundred-year floodplain.
B. Commercial School. Trade or commercial school providing instruction
in a trade, in the arts or other activities; this does not include
a public or private school or a day care center.
C. Community Center. An educational, social, cultural or other similar
facility, operated by a public or nonprofit group or agency subject
to the following provisions:
(1)
Dining services and/or the service of alcoholic beverages shall
not be part of the regular activities at the facility.
(2)
No outdoor active recreation areas shall be located nearer to
any lot line than the required front yard depth.
D. Day Care Center. A facility in which out-of-home day care is provided
to four or more children, disabled persons and/or elderly. This use
may also include nursery school.
(1)
An outdoor recreation area shall be provided with a minimum
area of 200 square feet for each child and 100 square feet for each
disabled or elderly person. This outdoor play area shall be located
to the side or the rear of the lot and shall not include any parking
areas. The outdoor play area shall be fully enclosed by a four-foot
high fence and shall be sufficiently screened and insulated so as
to protect the neighborhood from inappropriate noise and other disturbance.
(2)
Sufficient facilities for passenger loading and unloading shall
be provided.
(3)
This use may be permitted as accessory to a permitted nonresidential
use.
(4)
A license from the Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare
shall be required.
E. Group Home for Handicapped Individuals. A building occupied by no
more than eight individuals who have physical or mental impairments
which substantially limit one or more of each individual's major life
activities.
(1)
The occupants shall have documentation substantiating such impairment.
The term handicap shall not include the current or illegal use or
addiction to a controlled substance.
(2)
The occupants of the building shall be required to reside in
the structure for a significant period of time and not be mere transients.
(3)
All occupants except for supervisory personnel shall meet the
standards for being handicapped. The occupancy shall also possess
all required state approvals and licenses.
F. Group Home for Non-Handicapped Individuals. A building occupied as
a residence by no more than five residents, which provides residential
and custodial services to persons requiring rehabilitation from substance
abuse and who are not able to live without care or supervision provided
by professionals trained to provide such care or supervision, subject
to the following provisions:
(1)
No parcel of ground upon which a group home for substance abuse rehabilitation is located shall be permitted within 3,000 feet of the nearest property line of any other parcel which is also used as a family care home for substance abuse rehabilitation or a family care home for disabled persons as defined in Subsection
2E of this section.
(2)
The family care home for substance abuse rehabilitation must
be not for profit, receive all pertinent approvals and licenses from
all appropriate state and county agencies, and must comply in all
respects with applicable provisions of Borough building and fire codes,
and the state adopted National Fire Protection Association (NFPA),
Life Safety Code § 101, regulating new and existing residential-custodial
care facilities.
(3)
The special exception shall not be transferable, and shall expire
at the termination of the property as a family care home for substance
abuse rehabilitation use.
(4)
The use shall be screened by a six-foot high wooden fence. However, where the fence would be located in the required front yard, the height of the fence shall not exceed four feet. Fences shall meet applicable standards in Subsections
7L(4) and
(5) and
7P(2) of this section. Where fences are prohibited, buffer plantings shall be provided in accordance with requirements for a ten-foot buffer yard listed in §
27-404, Subsection
4, of this chapter.
(5)
The family care home for substance abuse rehabilitation shall
not be located within 3,000 feet of any educational, religious, recreational,
or institutional use.
(6)
Each person shall have private sleeping space and shall share
kitchen, bath, living and dining spaces.
G. Hospital. A facility licensed by the Pennsylvania Department of Health,
which provides health services primarily for inpatient medical or
surgical care, including related facilities, such as laboratories,
outpatient departments, training facilities, central service facilities
and staff offices as an integral part of the establishment.
(1)
A hospital shall have direct access from a major collector or
arterial highway.
(2)
At least two means of ingress and egress shall be provided for
emergency service vehicles to access the facility.
(3)
Area and Dimensional Requirements.
|
Minimum lot area:
|
10 acres
|
|
Minimum lot width:
|
200 feet
|
|
Minimum yards:
|
|
|
|
Front:
|
75 feet
|
|
|
Side:
|
100 feet
|
|
|
Rear:
|
100 feet
|
(4)
The following may be permitted as an accessory use to a hospital:
WELLNESS CENTER
An establishment primarily engaged in operating fitness and
physical therapy facilities featuring exercise, physical fitness conditioning,
and other therapeutic or rehabilitative activities, subject to the
following:
(a)
Such establishments are not permitted to operate spectator sports
events.
(b)
All activities must be held indoors with the exception of walking
trails or sidewalks internal to any tract on which such building is
located.
H. Library. A cultural or educational facility open to the public or
accessory to a permitted educational use.
I. Life Care Facility. A life care facility is a form of residential
use designed and operated exclusively for mature adults, of 55 years
of age or over, containing certain support facilities specifically
designed for these individuals. The facility may include independent
living units, assisted living units, personal care boarding facilities,
and nursing care beds. This use is subject to the following restrictions:
(1)
Dimensional requirements:
|
Minimum lot area:
|
5 acres
|
|
Minimum front yard:
|
75 feet
|
|
Minimum side yard:
|
50 feet
|
|
Minimum rear yard:
|
50 feet
|
(2)
Maximum impervious surface ratio: 25%.
(3)
Maximum height: three stories, 35 feet.
(4)
Support facilities:
(a)
Retail facilities shall be for use of residents and their guests
only. No outside advertising is permitted. The life care retail facilities
may occupy no more than .1% of the total floor area.
|
Retail facilities shall be limited to the following uses:
|
|
Barber shop
|
|
Beauty parlor
|
|
Commissary
|
|
Gift shop
|
|
Handicraft shop
|
|
Newsstand
|
|
Pharmacy (as an adjunct to the life-care nursing facility)
|
|
Snack bar/coffee shop
|
|
Thrift shop
|
(b)
Life Care Nursing Facility. This facility shall be designed
for the temporary and long-term care of the residents of the life
care facility. Long-term nursing beds within this facility shall not
exceed one bed per three dwelling units and two beds shall be equivalent
to one bedroom in the determination of density.
(c)
Other support facilities may include, but are not limited to,
lounge areas, reading rooms, craft rooms, common dining facilities
and recreational rooms.
(5)
Open Space and Passive Recreational Area. At least 50% of the
site area must be maintained as open space which shall not include
detention basins, parking lots, accessory buildings or any impervious
surfaces except those used for recreational purposes. At least 20%
of the site, which may be considered part of the open space, shall
be developed for passive recreation. This area shall include outdoor
sitting areas and pedestrian walks. No outdoor sitting areas shall
be located on land subject to flooding or on slopes in excess of 5%.
(6)
Fire Protection. All rooms in the life care facility shall be
provided with sprinkler systems for fire protection and shall contain
and be served by wet charged stand pipes to the top floor.
(7)
Location to Service. Due to the dependence of some elderly on
alternate means of transportation and the need for acquiring access
to primary services, a life care facility must be located within a
1/4 of a mile to the following services:
|
Bank
|
|
Barber shop
|
|
Beauty parlor
|
|
Drug store
|
|
Dry cleaner
|
|
Grocery store
|
|
House of worship
|
|
Library
|
|
Movie house
|
|
Post office
|
|
Public transportation
|
|
Regional shopping center
|
|
Restaurant
|
|
If this is not possible, the developer of a life care facility
shall submit to the Borough a transportation plan which shall outline
a transportation service for the residents of the life care facility,
to be provided by the owner or manager, providing access to these
services at reasonable intervals. This plan must be approved by the
Borough as a condition for approval of use.
|
(8)
Safety Features. The facility shall meet the standards and requirements
for licensing as established by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania or
other agencies with jurisdiction.
J. Membership Club. An area of land or building owned, leased or occupied
by an association of persons, operated solely for a social, fraternal,
civic, cultural or educational purpose, and whose activities are confined
to the members and guests.
(1)
No outdoor active recreation area shall be located nearer to
any lot line than the required front yard depth.
(2)
Any eating and dining accommodations shall be incidental to
the purpose of the club.
(3)
No loudspeaker or amplifying device shall be permitted which
will project sound beyond the boundaries of the property.
(4)
No lighting shall be permitted which will shine on adjacent
property.
(5)
Swimming pools and tennis facilities may be permitted as accessory
uses to a membership club.
K. Museum. A building or use open to the public or connected with a
permitted educational use, and not conducted as a private gainful
business.
L. Nursing Home. A care facility licensed and approved by the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania to provide nursing care, intermediate care, or full-time
convalescent or chronic care to individuals who require such care.
Nursing homes must be licensed by the Pennsylvania Department of Health,
and must meet all state requirements.
M. Outpatient Surgical Facility. Any facility where medical procedures
are performed involving general anesthesia or the use of other anesthetics
and controlled substances such that the patient is impaired from vacating
the premises under his/her own volition.
(1)
The following may be permitted as an accessory use to an outpatient
surgical facility:
WELLNESS CENTER
An establishment primarily engaged in operating fitness and
physical therapy facilities featuring exercise, physical fitness conditioning,
and other therapeutic or rehabilitative activities, subject to the
following:
(a)
Such establishments are not permitted to operate spectator sports
events.
(b)
All activities must be held indoors with the exception of walking
trails or sidewalks internal to any tract on which such building is
located.
N. Personal Care Facility. Facility licensed by the Pennsylvania Department
of Welfare to provide personal care services in accordance with 55
Pa. Code, Chapter 2600.
O. Place of Worship. Any structure(s) used for worship or religious
instruction, including social and administrative rooms accessory thereto,
but not including any commercial activity except for place of worship-sponsored
functions.
(1)
A cemetery may be an accessory use to a place of worship provided
that the following requirements are met:
(a)
No more than 10% of the entire area may be devoted to above-ground
buildings not serving as burial markers or memorials, such as business
and administration offices, chapels, maintenance facilities, greenhouses
or repair shops.
(b)
A buffer strip of at least 20 feet shall be provided between
any building or burial site and the cemetery property line.
(c)
There shall be not more than one identification sign at each
entrance.
(d)
No such entrance walls, signs or other entrance features shall
exceed 12 feet in height.
(2)
Day care is permitted as an accessory use to a place of worship.
P. Public Maintenance Facility. A municipal or other governmental facility
for the purpose of housing vehicles, equipment, and materials used
in maintaining public services.
Q. Public Park/Recreation Facility. A park, playground, field, or other
indoor or outdoor recreational facility owned, leased, or licensed
by the Borough, county or state.
(1)
Outdoor play areas shall be screened by a ten-foot wide planted buffer in accordance with §
27-404, Subsection
4, of this chapter.
R. School. Religious, sectarian and non-sectarian, denominational private
school or public school which is not conducted as a private gainful
business, not including a trade or commercial school.
(1)
The minimum lot area for elementary schools, junior high schools,
middle schools, or high schools shall meet the guidelines of the Pennsylvania
State Board of Education.
(2)
At least two means of ingress and egress shall be provided for
emergency service vehicles to access the facility.
(3)
Outdoor play areas shall be at least 50 feet from all property
lines. Outdoor play areas shall be screened with a planted buffer.
S. Visitors Center. A building or use designed to accommodate the distribution
of information relating to the educational, cultural, recreational
or other like interests of residents.
3. Business and Office Uses.
A. Animal Hospital. A building, structure, or area of land where animals
are given medical care, other than the premises where such animals
are normally kept.
(1)
A minimum lot size of at least 20,000 square feet shall be required
for those animal hospitals treating small animals (e.g., cats, birds,
exotic animals). A minimum lot size of at least 40,000 square feet
shall be required for those animal hospitals treating large animals
(e.g., cattle, horses, etc.).
(2)
All buildings in which animals are housed or provided care shall
be located at least 20 feet from all lot lines. Buildings shall be
adequately soundproofed so that sounds generated within the buildings
cannot be perceived at the lot lines.
(3)
Outdoor animal runs may be provided for small animals so long
as a visual barrier at least four feet in height is provided between
the runs and a double evergreen screen at least six feet in height
is provided around the runs. No animal shall be permitted to use the
outdoor runs from 8:00 p.m. to 8:00 a.m.
(4)
Use of the facility for boarding is prohibited (except for animals
undergoing medical treatment) unless the boarding facility meets all
requirements for Use 4P Kennel.
B. Medical Office. Office for medical, psychological or dental examination
or treatment of persons as outpatients, including laboratories incidental
thereto.
(1)
This use may include accessory uses such as chiropractic services,
physical therapy, or massage therapy by massage therapists with certification
from the National Certification Board for Therapeutic Massage and
Bodywork or other recognized national certification board approved
by Council.
C. Medical Treatment Clinic. An establishment for the care, diagnosis
and treatment of sick or injured persons on an outpatient basis. Such
use may not include surgical facilities, but may include specialized
health services such as x-ray and laboratory facilities incidental
thereto.
D. Office. Offices for business or professional use, including offices
providing legal, engineering, design, insurance, brokerage, or other
similar services, and which do not include retail activities and which
are distinct from home offices.
E. Planned Business Park. A planned development of office and related
uses which includes improvements for internal streets, coordinated
utilities, landscaping and buffering.
(1)
Area and Dimensional Requirements.
|
Minimum site area:
|
6 acres (gross)
|
|
Minimum frontage:
|
150 feet along a public thoroughfare
|
|
Maximum building coverage:
|
30% of gross site area
|
|
Maximum impervious surface:
|
80% of gross site area
|
|
Minimum open space:
|
20% of gross site area
|
|
Maximum building height:
|
4 stories or 60 feet, whichever is less
|
|
Minimum yard requirements:1
|
|
|
|
Front yard:
|
20 feet
|
|
|
Side yards:2
|
20 feet
|
|
|
Rear yards:2
|
20 feet
|
|
NOTES:
|
---|
|
1
|
Except as specified for the HC-1 District (§ 27-311).
|
|
2
|
Where a lot abuts a residential district, residence, school,
playground, hospital, church, public library, the yard shall not be
less than 80 feet.
|
(2)
Permitted Uses. Use 4G Bank; Use 2D Day Care Center; Use 3B
Medical Office; Use 3D Office; Use 4BBI General Merchandise Store;
Use 4N Health Club; Use 4Y Restaurant, Fast Food; Use 4AA Restaurant,
Standard; Use 4BB3 Retail Store; 5E Transit Station.
(3)
At least 70% of the total floor space of the park shall be utilized
for office uses.
(4)
Accessory outside storage or display of materials, goods, or
refuse is not permitted within an office park.
(5)
Individual uses may be located in detached and attached structures.
(6)
All uses within the office park shall take access from an interior
roadway. Access for the park shall be from an arterial or collector
roadway.
(7)
All parking and loading facilities shall be located to the side
or rear of buildings.
(8)
A pedestrian circulation system shall be provided as an integral
part of the proposed development. The pedestrian circulation system
shall include any one, or a combination of sidewalks, pathways and
trails to provide reasonable access to all areas within the proposed
development and suitable access to public throughfares adjacent to
the site shall be provided.
(9)
Lighting facilities shall be provided and arranged in a manner
which will protect the highway and neighboring properties from direct
glare or hazardous interference of any kind.
(10)
All units shall be served by public water and public sewer.
All utilities including water and sewer shall be in accordance with
the requirements of Bristol Borough or appropriate utility provider.
All utilities, including electric, telephone, cable and other utility
services shall be installed underground.
(11)
The proposed development shall be constructed in accordance
with an overall plan and shall be designed as a single architectural
unit with appropriate landscaping and coordinated access.
(12)
All commonly owned elements shall be owned and maintained in
accordance with the Pennsylvania Uniform Condominium Act, 68 Pa.C.S.A.
§ 3801 et seq., or other ownership arrangement approved
by the Borough.
4. Retail and Consumer Service Uses.
A. Adult Business. All adult businesses shall comply with Chapter
13, Part 9, "Adult Business" 3 [Ord. 1148, 10/12/1999] in the Bristol Borough Code of Ordinances.
B. Amusement Halls and Arcade. An entertainment facility providing as
its principal use automatic amusement devices or games, including
pool or billiard rooms or similar locations used for these purposes.
(1)
An automatic amusement device or game is defined to be each
coin-operated machine, mechanical machine or electronic machine, which
operates or may be operated as a game or contest of skill or amusement
of any kind or description.
(2)
No audio speakers or equipment shall be installed inside or
outside the location of such use which would cause sounds to emanate
to the exterior of the premises.
(3)
Such facilities shall be subject to adult management, with an
adult manager(s) on premises at all times during operation.
C. Auto Repair Garage (Major Repairs). An establishment where motor
vehicle parts and accessories are sold, facilities where parts may
be installed, or an automobile repair garage including maintenance,
servicing, paint spraying and body and fender work. This use includes
the retail sales of motor vehicle parts and accessories separate from
an automotive repair shop.
(1)
All installation of parts and accessories, repairs, maintenance,
servicing, paint spraying, body work and fender work shall be performed
within an enclosed building.
(2)
All provisions shall be made to prevent or minimize noise, odor,
vibration, light or electrical interference to adjacent lots.
(3)
Outdoor storage of autos and other vehicles shall not exceed
two times the indoor repair area, shall only be back of the front
yard line and shall be no closer than 20 feet from side and rear lot
lines.
(4)
Any vehicle on the premises longer than 48 hours shall be deemed
a stored vehicle. No vehicle shall be stored in excess of 30 days.
(5)
Damaged vehicles parked on the lot shall be screened from view.
(6)
Refuse shall be stored within an enclosed building or screened with a landscaped fence in accordance with the requirements in §
27-404, Subsection
4H, of this chapter.
(7)
Such use must comply with state and federal requirements for
ventilation.
D. Auto Repair Garage (Minor Repairs). A business which offers minor
auto repairs and services including the following: sale and servicing
of spark plugs, batteries and distributors and distributor parts;
tire servicing and repair, but not recapping or regrooving; replacement
of mufflers and tail pipes, water hoses, fan belts, brake fluid, light
bulbs, fuses, floor mats, seat covers, windshield wipers and wiper
blades, grease retainers, wheel bearings, mirrors and the like; radiator
cleaning and flushing; washing and polishing, and sale of automotive
washing and polishing materials; greasing and lubrication; providing
and repairing fuel pumps, oil filters and lines; minor servicing and
repair of carburetors; emergency electrical repair; adjusting and
repairing brakes; provision of road maps and other informational material
to customers; provision of restroom facilities; and, state inspection
and normal state inspection repairs.
(1)
All repair work shall be performed within an enclosed building. All refuse shall be stored within an enclosed building or screened with a landscaped fence in accordance with the requirements in §
27-404, Subsection
4H, of this chapter.
(2)
All provisions shall be made to prevent or minimize noise, odor,
vibration, light or electrical interference to adjacent lots.
(3)
Outdoor storage of autos and other vehicles shall not exceed
two times the indoor repair area, shall only be located behind the
front yard line and shall be no closer than 20 feet from side and
rear lot lines.
(4)
Any vehicle on the premises longer than 48 hours shall be deemed
a stored vehicle. No vehicle shall be stored in excess of 10 days.
(5)
Damaged vehicles parked on the lot shall be screened from view.
(6)
Such use must comply with state and federal requirements for
ventilation.
E. Auto Service Station. Buildings and land areas where gasoline, oil,
grease, batteries, tires or automobile accessories are supplied and
dispensed at retail and where minor auto repairs and services are
conducted.
(1)
No entrance or exit shall be located within 200 feet of the
entrance or exit of a school, library, theater, church, hospital,
park or fire station.
(2)
No fuel pump shall be located within any required yard area.
(3)
Any vehicle on the premises longer than 48 hours shall be deemed
a stored vehicle. No vehicle shall be stored in excess of 10 days.
(4)
Damaged vehicles parked on the lot shall be screened from view.
(5)
Such use may only be located on a collector or arterial roadway.
(6)
Access to the street shall be physically controlled by a concrete
curb at least eight inches in height and 10 feet wide landscaped strip
along all street frontages except where broken for the accessways.
(7)
All fuel tanks shall be placed underground.
(8)
All canopies and other structures shall meet the building setback
requirements of the applicable zoning district.
(9)
Fuel pumps shall be at least 25 feet from the ultimate street
right-of-way.
(10)
All underground storage tanks, associated pumps and piping and
leak detection systems shall be designed and constructed using "state
of the art" industry standards. The leak detection system shall be
a continuous automated system.
(11)
The applicant shall present a plan to demonstrate the methods
by which any underground leaks or spills of liquids will be continuously
monitored and contained and shall also demonstrate that the stormwater
management system is designed to capture volatile organic compounds,
oils, and solids. The applicant shall also provide to the Borough
a copy of a maintenance agreement setting forth the terms for the
management of the facilities.
(12)
This use shall not be permitted within 1,000 feet of any pre-existing
public or private drinking water supply source.
(13)
Convenience commercial floor area, for the sale of minor automobile
accessories and food and beverage items, shall be limited to 800 square
feet.
(14)
No drive-through windows are permitted for the sale of convenience
items.
F. Auto/Boat/RV Sales. An open area, other than a street, used for the
display, sale, or rental of new or used motor vehicles, recreation
vehicles, or boats in operable condition, and where no major repairs
are done.
(1)
All preparation, lubrication, repair and storage of parts shall
be accessory to the principal use and shall be conducted within a
building.
(2)
Storage or display of automobiles, trucks, boats, and other
vehicles for sale shall be placed no closer to the ultimate street
right-of-way line than 20 feet and shall be separated from the right-of-way
by a landscaped strip, which shall be interrupted only for vehicular
exits and entrances.
(3)
Access to the street shall be physically controlled by a concrete
curb at least eight inches in height.
(4)
No parking space required for this use shall be used for the
display of vehicles or boats for sale.
(5)
Parking areas for customers must be clearly delineated so as
to separate them from display and storage areas.
G. Bank. Includes savings and loan, finance companies, credit unions
and other similar enterprises.
(1)
If a drive-through facility is permitted by the zoning district requirements, the standards for accessory drive-through facility located in Subsection
7D of this section must be met.
H. Car Wash. Washing and cleaning of automobiles or other motor vehicles
and related light equipment.
(1)
Car washing facilities shall use a water recycling system, which
shall meet all local, state and federal requirements or standards,
including the removal and proper disposal of suspended particulates.
(2)
Car washes shall be designed with a stacking area to accommodate
a minimum of eight cars. The stacking area shall not in any way conflict
with through circulation or parking.
I. Check Cashing Facility. A business which is not a bank (Use 4G) subject
to federal and state regulation that charges either a flat fee or
a fee based on a percentage of the face value of a check to be cashed
or processed by such establishment and provides such service to the
public. This use shall be subject to the following provisions:
(1)
The building or structure of such use shall be located no less
than 1,000 feet from any residential use or district, school, place
of worship, day care center, recreation facility, public park, pawn
shop or another check cashing facility.
(2)
The sale of convenience-type products may be permitted as an
accessory use and shall be limited to a maximum floor area of 250
square feet.
J. Conference Center. A building or use designed to accommodate the
gathering of a group or association of common interest for the formal
or informal exchange of views, etc.
K. Farmers Market. An activity that is generally described as a building
and/or open space, public or private, equipped with booths, stalls,
and tables where there is a gathering of people for the purpose of
buying and selling a variety of items related to farm and garden products.
This use does not include those activities resembling a farmers market
that are sponsored by the Borough.
(1)
Standards. Farmers markets must comply with all of the following
regulations:
(a)
Farmers markets must be sponsored by the property owner or a
formal committee or organization and may accommodate any number of
individual vendors.
(b)
Farmers markets sponsored by a formal committee or organization
are allowed only with the written permission and consent of the property
owner.
(c)
The majority of commodities to be sold at a farmers market shall
be produced in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and/or Burlington County,
New Jersey, and shall be limited to:
1)
Farm and garden produce and agricultural products such fruits
and vegetables, plants, flowers, nuts and seeds, meat, poultry, fish,
dairy products, and honey.
2)
Baked goods, processed food items (such as jams, jellies, salsas,
and sauces), and hot or cold beverages.
3)
Handmade arts and crafts related to gardening or outdoor living,
handmade soaps and lotions, and similar non-mass-produced items.
(d)
Food items prepared or assembled on site may not be sold at
farmers markets.
(e)
The sponsor of a farmers market must provide the Borough proof
of liability insurance sufficient to cover the owner of land where
a market is located and market participants.
(f)
Sufficient parking must be provided such that the farmers market
does not create parking or traffic congestion on or around the property
where the market is located. Written permission must be obtained from
the owner of any private parking areas used to serve the farmers market.
(g)
Farmers markets may not be established in any manner that impedes
or impairs emergency service ingress and egress to any fire hydrant
or building. No farmers market vendor or any vehicle associated with
the farmers market shall be located within 15 feet of any fire hydrant.
(h)
The sponsoring committee, owner, or organization is responsible
for supervising and ensuring the remittance of sales tax from farmers
market sales to the state tax commission.
(i)
All tents, booths, tables, and other temporary structures used
in the operation of an outdoor farmers market must be removed from
the farmers market site at the conclusion of each day the market is
in operation.
(j)
All trash, fruit or produce remnants, debris, and general litter
must be removed from the farmers market site at the conclusion of
each day the market is in operation. The sponsoring committee or organization
is responsible for ensuring the general cleanup of the farmers market
area at the conclusion of each day of operation.
(2)
Health Department Supervision. Each vendor selling processed
foods, baked goods, meats, eggs, dairy products, or other goods that
may be a health concern is subject to approval of the county health
department and shall operate according to the Department's rules and
regulations.
(3)
Months of Operation and Days Open for Outdoor Farmers Markets.
Outdoor farmers markets shall only operate during the months of April
through November of each year and for a maximum of two nonconsecutive
days per week. In the event more than one outdoor farmers market is
established in the Borough, the Zoning Officer shall designate permissible
days and times for each market to operate.
(4)
Signage for Outdoor Farmers Markets. A total of 32 square feet
of sign area shall be permitted. The sign area may be divided into
no more than two signs. The signs may be put in place no more than
48 hours prior to when the farmers market is actually in operation
and must be removed within 24 hours after the market is closed for
the season. No more than 32 square feet of sign area for the farmers
market shall be permitted at any time on any one property. No internally
lighted signs or portable signs on wheels shall be permitted. The
signs must have a sign permit and shall be subject to all applicable
requirements of this chapter.
(5)
Application and Zoning Permit for Outdoor Farmers Markets. A
zoning permit application for a farmers market shall be filed with
the Zoning Officer, who shall review the application and issue a zoning
permit if the proposed market complies with all the standards of this
chapter. The zoning permit application shall contain the following
required information:
(a)
Name of the applicant and organizational affiliation.
(b)
A current copy of the sponsoring committee's or organization's
by-laws or rules of operation.
(c)
Letter of authorization from the owner of the property on which
the farmers market is proposed to be located.
(d)
Existing zoning of site and contiguous properties.
(e)
Site plan, drawn to scale, showing proposed locations of all
market uses as well as existing permanent structures and parking areas.
(f)
The proposed dates and times the market will be in operation.
(g)
Proof of liability insurance sufficient to cover the owner of
land where the market is located and market participants.
(h)
Color rendering of temporary signage associated with the market
and letters of authorization from property owners where the signage
will be hung.
(6)
Suspension of Zoning Permit. The Zoning Officer is authorized
to conduct inspections of the farmers market to ensure compliance
with the standards of this section. The zoning permit shall be suspended
and the market immediately ceased in the event the Zoning Officer
finds the market violates any of the provisions of this section or
the conditions set forth in the zoning permit. The permit may be reinstated
at such time as the violation is corrected.
L. Forestry/Timber Harvesting. The management of forests and timberlands
when practiced in accordance with accepted forestry principles, through
developing, cultivating, harvesting, transporting and selling trees
for commercial purposes, which does not involve any land development.
Clear cutting or selective cutting of forest or woodlands for development,
building, subdivision, or any other land use change is not forestry.
(1)
Applicability. A zoning permit shall be required for all forestry/timber
harvesting activities; however, an individual property owner need
not obtain a permit to cut a tree or trees as part of normal home
maintenance and upkeep, and the following activities are specifically
exempted:
(a)
Removal of diseased or dead trees.
(b)
Removal of trees, which are in such a condition or physical
position as to constitute a danger to the structures or occupants
of properties or a public right-of-way.
(2)
Forestry Plan. Every landowner on whose land timber harvesting
is to occur shall prepare a written logging plan in the form specified
by this chapter. No timber harvesting shall occur until the plan has
been prepared. The provisions of the plan shall be followed throughout
the operation. The plan shall be available at the harvest site at
all times during the operation and shall be provided to the Borough
upon request.
(3)
Responsibility for Compliance. The landowner and the operator
shall be jointly and severally responsible for complying with the
terms of the logging plan.
(4)
Contents of the Forestry/Logging Plan.
(a)
Design, construction, maintenance of the access system, including
haul roads, skid roads, skid trails and landings.
(b)
Design, construction and maintenance of stream and wetland crossings.
(c)
The general location of the proposed operation in relation to
municipal and state highways, including any accesses to those highways.
(d)
Copies of all required permits shall be submitted.
(e)
Proof of current general liability and/or workers' compensation
insurance.
(f)
Proof of PennDOT highway occupancy permit or Borough driveway
permit for temporary access, as applicable.
(g)
Copy of Bucks County Conservation District "letter of adequacy"
for the proposed erosion control facilities, including associated
plans, reports and other permits as required.
(h)
Map showing site location and boundaries, including both the
boundaries of the property on which the timber harvest will take place
and the boundaries of the proposed harvest area within that property.
(i)
Significant topographic features related to potential environmental
problems.
(j)
Location of all earth disturbance activities such as roads,
landings and water control measures and structures.
(k)
Location of all crossings of streams or waters of the Commonwealth.
(5)
Compliance with All Laws. The forestry/logging plan shall address
and comply with the requirements of all applicable federal, state
and Borough laws and regulations including, but not limited to, the
following:
(a)
Erosion and sedimentation control regulations contained in 25
Pa. Code, Chapter 102, promulgated pursuant to the Clean Streams Law,
35 P.S. § 691.1 et seq.
(b)
Stream crossing and wetlands protection regulations contained
in 25 Pa. Code, Chapter 105, promulgated pursuant to the Dam Safety
and Encroachments Act, 32 P.S. § 693.1 et seq.
(c)
Stormwater management plans and regulations issued pursuant
to the Stormwater Management Act, 32 P.S. § 680.1 et seq.
(d)
Compliance with Federal Law/Regulations. The forestry/logging
plan shall address and comply with the requirements of all applicable
federal laws and regulations including, but not limited to, the best
management practices (BMPs).
(e)
Compliance with Borough Ordinances. The forestry/logging plan
shall comply with the requirements of this chapter.
(6)
Forestry Practices. The following requirements shall apply to
all forestry/timber harvesting operations.
(a)
Felling or skidding on or across any public thoroughfare is
prohibited without the express written consent of the Borough or the
Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, whichever is responsible
for maintenance of the thoroughfare.
(b)
No forestry refuse shall be left on or within 25 feet of any
public thoroughfare.
(c)
Litter resulting from a timber harvesting operation shall be
removed from the site before it is vacated by the operator.
(d)
Any soil, stones and/or debris carried onto public roadways
must be removed immediately.
(e)
No forestry/logging use shall be permitted within areas with
slopes of 15% or greater.
(f)
When the harvest is completed, both dirt roads used by the trucks
and skid roads used to drag the logs from the woods to the loading
area must be graded approximately to original contours, and be seeded
and mulched as necessary to establish stable ground cover.
(g)
A "no logging" buffer zone with a width of 25 feet shall be
maintained along any street abutting or running through a property
on which the forestry/logging operation is to be conducted. The buffer
shall be measured from the ultimate right-of-way of a public street
and from the easement boundary of a private street. No trees shall
be cut, removed, skidded, or transported in a "no logging" buffer
zone except as necessary for access to site from the street.
(h)
A "no logging" riparian buffer zone with a width of 50 feet
shall be maintained along both sides of any watercourse or canal that
abuts or runs through a property on which the forestry, logging, or
timber harvest operation is to be conducted. The buffer shall be measured
from the high water mark of the watercourse or canal. No trees shall
be cut, removed, skidded, or transported in a "no logging" riparian
buffer zone.
M. Funeral Home. An establishment for the preparation of the deceased
for burial and the display of the deceased and ceremonies connected
therewith before burial. This use does not include a crematory.
(1)
The facility must be operated by a licensed funeral director.
(2)
The facility must meet all state licensing requirements.
N. Health Club. A building and associated land used as a health club
operated as a gainful business which may include, inter alia, indoor
and outdoor court games played with a ball such as racquetball, handball,
squash, tennis, basketball and volleyball; facilities for exercise
equipment, swimming, sauna, steam rooms and facilities related thereto.
(1)
No outdoor active recreation area shall be located nearer to
any lot line than the required front yard depth.
(2)
Outdoor recreation areas shall be sufficiently screened and
isolated so as to protect the neighborhood from inappropriate noise
and other disturbances.
(3)
Except for a snack bar, dining services and/or the service of
alcoholic beverages shall not be part of the regular activities at
the facility.
(4)
This use may include therapeutic massage services provided that
such services constitute no more than 20% of the revenue of the health
club based on gross receipts.
O. Hotel, Motel and Inn. A building or group of buildings which contains
six or more rental units for overnight lodging of travelers or for
the temporary occupancy of transients, licensed under applicable laws.
(1)
Motels, hotels and inns may contain the following accessory
facilities: eating place, tavern, conference and meeting rooms, and
banquet rooms.
P. Kennel. A place where dogs or cats are boarded for a fee. In addition
to the principal use as a boarding facility, the kennel may include
as accessory uses training, grooming, limited breeding, or dog day
care.
(1)
All kennels shall provide the minimum area for kennels required
by state regulations.
(2)
All buildings in which animals are housed and all runs shall
be located at least 100 feet from all lot lines.
(3)
Buildings shall be adequately soundproofed so that sounds generated
within the buildings cannot be perceived at the lot lines.
(4)
Outdoor runs may be provided so long as a visual barrier at least four feet in height is provided between the runs and a planting screen of double evergreen plantings at least six feet in height is provided around the runs. The evergreens shall be selected from the plant materials list in §
27-404, Subsection
4P, of this chapter. No animal shall be permitted to use the outdoor runs from 8:00 p.m. to 8:00 a.m.
(5)
All areas used for training of animals shall be enclosed by
a fence not less than six feet in height. The fence shall be no closer
than 12 feet from any property line.
(6)
All kennels shall be licensed under the Dog Law of 1982, P.L.
784-255, 3 P.S. § 459-101 et seq., as amended.
Q. Laundromat. An establishment equipped with individual coin-operated
self-service laundry and dry-cleaning equipment for customer use on
the premises.
(1)
In the TC and NC Districts, a laundromat shall not exceed 2,500
square feet in gross floor area.
(2)
Such use shall be permitted to operate only from 6:00 a.m. to
10:00 p.m.
(3)
The Fire Marshal shall have certified that the premises, machines,
equipment and materials are in compliance with the Fire Code.
(4)
An attendant over 21 years of age and trained in the use of
the equipment on the premises, shall be employed by the licensee and
shall be present at all times the establishment is open for business.
R. Marina. An area designated for the temporary, seasonal or permanent
storage, docking or repair of boats or other water-dependent vehicles
or uses including, but not limited to, yacht club, marina offices
and club area for marina members or customers, docks, lifts, ramps
or other appurtenant structures. A marina also specifically includes
all customary uses ordinarily found at marinas including, but not
limited to: temporary, seasonal or permanent storage of boats or water
dependent vehicles either in water or on land, retail or commercial
uses, including the sale of liquid fuels and marina supplies and the
repair of boats or other water dependent vehicles. A commercial or
private facility used for the mooring and storage of recreational
watercraft and boats with direct waterfront access to an open water
body. Such use may include the sale of fuel and supplies associated
with the servicing of boats both in and out of the water.
(1)
No boats offered for sale shall be displayed in the required
front or side yards established for the zoning district.
(2)
New or expanded marinas must provide a direct sewer connection
to the Borough sanitary sewer system for the servicing of overnight
or transient boats. Permanent live-aboard use of marina slips is prohibited.
(3)
All boat maintenance shall be done in a designated area and
in such a manner as to preclude the contamination of any water body.
Any runoff from the designated maintenance area shall be collected
and treated prior to discharge.
(4)
There shall be no covered wet slips in the marina, nor shall
the establishment of a marina significantly alter natural water circulation
or salinity patterns. Disturbances to wetlands or aquatic plant beds
and habitats shall be minimized to the greatest extent possible.
(5)
All marina activities including dredging, shall comply with
state and federal requirements.
(6)
If fuel is available at the marina, the applicant must provide
the Borough with a spill contingency plan. Within that plan shall
be information pertaining to the type and location of all tanks, spill
containment equipment, information for emergency shutdown of pump
equipment and a description of the training that will be provided
to marina personnel prior to their operation of any refueling equipment.
This plan must be approved by the Borough Fire Marshal.
(7)
Boat maintenance activities in new or expanded marina sites
shall be located as far as possible from open water bodies in order
to reduce contamination of water bodies by toxic substances common
to boat maintenance. Paint chips and cleaning agents must be kept
in hull maintenance areas so as to avoid contaminating surface water.
Runoff from boat maintenance activities must be collected and treated
prior to discharge.
S. Massage Therapy. An establishment which has as its primary business
purpose the treating of the superficial parts of a patron for medical,
hygienic, exercise or relaxation purposes by rubbing, stroking, kneading,
tapping, pounding, vibrating or stimulating with hands, feet or any
instrument. Provided, however, that this definition shall not include
any business establishment operated by or employing licensed psychologists,
licensed physical therapists, licensed athletic trainers, licensed
cosmetologists or licensed barbers engaged in performing functions
authorized under the license held; and, provided further, however,
that this definition shall not include any business or establishment
operated by or employing licensed physicians or licensed chiropractors
engaged in practicing the healing arts.
T. Miniature Golf Course. A commercial recreation facility where players
use a golf club to putt a ball into each hole on the course using
the least possible number of strikes.
U. Nursery/Greenhouse. The raising of trees (for transplanting), ornamentals,
shrubs, flowers, or houseplants for any commercial purpose.
V. Pawn Shop (Pawnbroking).
(1)
A business engaged in:
(a)
Lending of money on the deposit or pledge of personal property,
securities, or written evidences of indebtedness.
(b)
Purchasing personal property with an expressed or implied agreement
or understanding to sell it back at a subsequent time at a stipulated
price.
(c)
Lending money upon goods, wares, or merchandise pledged, stored,
deposited as collateral.
(2)
This use shall be subject to the following provisions:
(a)
The building or structure of such use shall be located no less
than 1,000 feet from any residential use or district, school, place
of worship, day care center, recreation facility, public park, check
cashing facility or another pawn shop.
(b)
The sale of convenience-type products may be permitted as an
accessory use and shall be limited to a maximum floor area of 250
square feet.
(c)
The sale of firearms shall be in accordance with the Bureau
of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, federal firearms licensing requirements.
W. Personal Service. A business that provides a service oriented to
the care of a person or his or her apparel including, but not limited
to, the following: a barber shop, beauty shop, nail salon, tattoo
parlor, shoe repair, tailor, photographic studio, etc. A personal
service business may include dry cleaning establishments but does
not include any industrial processing or industrial use such as dry
cleaning processing.
X. Private Recreation Facility. Buildings, structures or land used as
a recreation center owned or operated by a nongovernmental agency
and whose use is conducted as a private gainful business. Such use
shall not include Use 4T Miniature Golf Course, Use 4JJ Commercial
Swimming Pool, or Use 4B Amusement Hall and Arcade as defined in this
chapter.
(1)
Outdoor play areas shall be screened by a ten-foot wide planted buffer in accordance with §
27-404, Subsection
4, of this chapter.
Y. Restaurant, Fast Food. A restaurant providing for an inside window or service area or cafeteria line where customers place their orders and food is served for consumption at seating areas within the building and for customer take-out. This type of restaurant may also have a drive-through service. Outdoor eating and food service is permitted as a use accessory to a restaurant use only when permitted as a special exception and only where the requirements set forth in Subsection
7M for outdoor eating as accessory to food service are met.
(1)
Trash receptacles shall be provided outside the restaurant for patron use. Outdoor collection stations shall be provided for garbage and trash removal. These stations shall be located to the rear of the structure and shall be screened from view and landscaped in accordance with the requirements in §
27-404, Subsection
4H, of this chapter.
(2)
All areas not covered by buildings, structures, parking areas
or access drives shall be landscaped.
(3)
May provide an outdoor menu board, which shall be considered
a sign, if drive-through service is provided from within the building
to customers in their vehicles.
(4)
If a drive-through facility is provided, the standards for accessory drive-through facility located in Subsection
7D of this section must be met.
(5)
A planted buffer 10 feet in width shall be provided along all
property lines.
(6)
The use must have direct access to a collector or arterial street.
(7)
There shall be only one point of ingress and only one point
of egress per collector or arterial street.
(8)
When this use is adjacent to, or on the same lot with a group
of commercial facilities, it shall use the common access with the
other business establishments and not have a separate access to the
abutting collector or arterial street.
(9)
A pedestrian walkway shall be provided between an existing sidewalk
and the entrance to the restaurant.
Z. Restaurant, Food Take-Out Establishment. A place such as a snack bar, dairy bar, or hamburger or hotdog stand where customers are served at a service area or an exterior window and where no inside seating facilities are provided. Outdoor eating and food service is permitted as a use accessory to a restaurant use only when permitted as a special exception and only where the requirements set forth in Subsection
7M for outdoor eating as accessory to food service are met.
AA. Restaurant, Standard. An establishment used for the purpose of furnishing meals to the public which are to be consumed within the building or the place of business, with limited take-out service and where waiters and/or waitresses serve all food and beverages to patrons, but does not include drive-through, drive-up, or walk-up window service, which are prohibited. Outdoor eating and food service is permitted as a use accessory to a restaurant use only when permitted as a special exception and only where the requirements set forth in Subsection
7M for outdoor eating as accessory to food service are met.
(1)
Outdoor collection stations shall be provided for garbage and trash removal. These stations shall be located to the rear of the structure and shall be screened from view and landscaped in accordance with the requirements in §
27-404, Subsection
4H, of this chapter.
(2)
The sale of alcoholic beverages must be incidental to the sale
and consumption of food.
BB. Retail Establishments.
(1)
General Merchandise Store. A building containing one business
with 5,000 — 10,000 square feet of floor area in which retail
merchandise is sold. This use shall not include the sale of gasoline.
(2)
Retail Center. A building containing one business with over
10,000 square feet or more of floor area in which retail merchandise
is sold. This use shall not include the sale of gasoline.
(a)
If shopping carts are to be used, cart corrals shall be provided
in addition to the required parking spaces.
(b)
Loading docks shall be shielded from view and shall not be visible
from adjacent residential districts or from public streets.
(c)
All loading docks, trash containment areas and outside work
areas shall be constructed in such a manner as to promote sound abatement.
No trash pickup may occur between 9:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m. when this
use abuts a residential property.
(d)
Unregistered or unlicensed tractor trailers, cargo boxes, or
other vehicles or structures meant to be transportable shall not be
permitted to be used as accessory building or structures for storage.
(e)
Outdoor collection station shall be provided for garbage and trash removal. These stations shall be located to the rear of the structure and shall be screened from view and landscaped in accordance with the requirements in §
27-404, Subsection
4H, of this chapter.
(3)
Retail Store. A building containing one business with less than
5,000 square feet in floor area in which retail merchandise is sold.
This use shall not include the sale of gasoline.
CC. Sale or Storage of Fireworks. Facilities engaged in the storage or
sale of fireworks. Fireworks are defined as follows:
FIREWORKS
Any combustible or explosive composition or any substance
or combination of substances or, except as hereinafter provided, any
article prepared for the purpose of producing a visible or an audible
effect by combustion, explosion, deflagration or detonation, and shall
include blank cartridges and toy cannons in which explosives are used,
the type of balloons which require fire underneath to propel the same,
firecrackers, torpedoes, skyrockets, Roman candles, aerial fireworks,
or other fireworks of like construction and any fireworks containing
any explosive or flammable compound or any tablets or other device
containing an explosive substance.
(1)
No fireworks sales or storage use shall be located within 300
feet of any residential use or residential district.
(2)
The facility shall be licensed by the Department of Agriculture
in accordance with the licensing requirements as set forth by the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
(3)
The facility shall be in a stand alone building and shall be
no larger than 12,000 square feet, from which no other uses shall
be permitted.
(4)
Storage areas shall be separated by appropriately rated fire
separation from wholesale or retail sale areas to which a purchaser
may be admitted.
(5)
The facility shall be located no closer than 250 feet from any
facility selling or dispensing gasoline, propane or other such flammable
products.
(6)
The facility shall be located no closer than 250 feet from any
facility licensed to sell consumer fireworks.
(7)
The facility shall have a monitored burglar and fire alarm system.
(8)
The hours of operation shall be no earlier than 9:00 a.m. and
no later than 10:00 p.m. prevailing time.
(9)
The facility shall be served by public water and sewer.
(10)
The proposed facility shall otherwise comply in all respects
with the requirements and standards more fully set forth in the Fireworks
Law, 35 P.S. § 1271 et seq., the Pennsylvania Construction
Code Act, 35 P.S. § 7210.101 et seq., and the Pennsylvania
Uniform Construction Code, 34 Pa. Code § 401 et seq., as
enacted by the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
DD. Shopping Center. A neighborhood shopping center, which is planned
and designed as a complex of related structures and circulation patterns.
(1)
Minimum lot area: five acres.
(2)
The following uses shall be permitted as part of the Shopping
Center use: Use 3B Medical Office, Use 3D Office, Use 4G Bank, Use
4N Health Club, Use 4BB1 General Merchandise Store, Use 4Y Restaurant,
Fast Food, Use 4Z Restaurant, Food Take-Out, Use 4AA Restaurant, Standard,
Use 4BB3 Retail Store, Use 4BB2 Retail Center, Use 4FF Theater (Indoor),
Use 6M Repair Shop.
(3)
Such centers may only be located on an arterial or collector
roadway.
(4)
No building or permanent structure, other than a permitted sign, shall be erected within 100 feet of a street line, or within 50 feet of any property line, except as specified for the HC-2 District (§
27-312).
(5)
No parking, loading, or service area shall be located less than 50 feet from any property line, including the street line. Parking shall be arranged so that at least 50% of the required parking is located to the side or rear of the shopping center buildings, except as specified for the HC-2 District (§
27-312).
(6)
Loading docks shall be shielded from view and shall not be visible
from adjacent residential districts or from public streets.
(7)
Parking, loading or service areas shall not be permitted within
the required buffer yards.
(8)
The proposed development shall be constructed in accordance
with an overall plan and shall be designed as a single architectural
style that reflects the building mass, materials, style and character
of Bristol Borough. No unconnected building pads are permitted.
(9)
Within a tract to be used for a shopping center, subdivision
of the tract into individual lots is not permitted initially or after
the use is established.
(10)
All structures in a shopping center shall be connected either
as a part of one large structure or by means of pedestrian ways or
walkways on which pedestrians can move from one building to another
without unsafe interference from vehicular traffic. Pedestrian connections
shall be provided to sidewalks adjoining the shopping center.
(11)
Outdoor collection station shall be provided for garbage and trash removal. These stations shall be located to the rear of the structure and shall be screened from view and landscaped. Outdoor collection stations shall be provided for garbage and trash removal in accordance with the requirements in §
27-404, Subsection
4H, of this chapter.
EE. Tavern. A bar, saloon, or similar establishment where liquors and
beer are primarily sold to be consumed on the premises. The sale of
food for consumption on the premises as an accessory use is permitted.
(1)
Outdoor collection stations shall be provided for garbage and trash removal. These stations shall be located to the rear of the structure and shall be screened from view and landscaped in accordance with the requirements in §
27-404, Subsection
4H, of this chapter.
FF. Theater (Indoor). A commercial facility providing entertainment in
the form of performers, music, theater, or movies, not including adult
business.
(1)
If food or beverages are served, all requirements for restaurants
and outdoor eating, if applicable, shall be met.
(2)
No amplified music or sound is permitted. All activities, including
the playing of music, shall comply with the noise limitations of this
chapter and the Bristol Borough Code of Ordinances, whichever is stricter.
(3)
Outdoor lighting shall not shine onto adjoining properties.
Light standards shall not exceed a height of 15 feet and light fixtures
shall be focused downward with a shield, preventing light from shining
on adjacent properties.
GG. Banquet Hall. A facility available for special dinners, banquets or other dining events by prearrangement with the management of the facility for groups or parties and not open to the general public on a daily basis. Such establishments may include full kitchen facilities and a catering facility, as defined in Subsection
4HH. This use shall not be considered a restaurant (fast food, food take-out establishment, or standard).
HH. Catering Facility. The use of a building or part of a building where food or beverages, or both, are prepared on the premises and picked up or delivered for off-site consumption as part of a banquet or other dining event for groups or parties. Where such facility is housed on the same premises or within the same building as a banquet facility, as defined in Subsection
4GG, food and beverages may also be served and consumed on-site. This use shall not be considered a restaurant (fast food, food take-out establishment, or standard).
II. General Auction. A public or private sale conducted by competitive
bidding for goods, new or used, that occurs on a regular basis.
(1)
Outdoor sales areas shall not be located in the minimum front,
side or rear yards and shall be set back at least 25 feet from any
lot line or street line.
(2)
Tables and other accessories which are used for outdoor auction
activities shall be stored within a completely enclosed building when
the auction is not operating.
(3)
Outdoor auction activities shall not encroach upon required
parking areas and shall not interfere with traffic movement on the
site.
(4)
No amplified sound is permitted for outdoor auction activities.
(5)
Activities and displays shall be sufficiently screened from
adjacent properties to the satisfaction of Borough Council.
JJ. Commercial Swimming Pool. Any man-made area containing water with
a depth greater than 24 inches that is intended primarily for swimming
and recreational purposes by the public or by members for a fee.
(1)
A zoning permit shall be required to locate, construct or maintain
a commercial swimming pool.
(2)
Commercial swimming pools must be located a minimum of 15 feet
from any lot line and may not be located under or within 15 feet of
electric lines (including service lines), or over any on-lot sewage
disposal field. No portion of any walkway or pool appurtenance structure
shall be closer than five feet to any lot line.
(3)
All commercial swimming pools shall be entirely enclosed by
a minimum seven-foot high chain link, stockade, picket (not exceeding
three-inch spacing), solid wood fence, building wall, or such other
material as may be acceptable, at the discretion of the building inspector,
to carry out the intent of this chapter. All gates or doors opening
through such enclosure shall be kept securely closed and locked at
all times when the pool is not in actual use and locks or latches
shall be placed so as to be inaccessible to children. All other Pennsylvania
Uniform Construction Code (PaUCC) requirements for the securing and
fencing of pools shall be followed.
(4)
Access to Above-Ground Pools. All detachable ladders shall be
removed when the pool is not in use.
(5)
No loudspeaker or amplifying device shall be permitted which
will project sound beyond the boundaries of the property or the lot
where such pool is located.
(6)
No lighting or spot light shall be permitted which will shine
directly upon or beyond the bounds of the property or lot where such
pool is located. If underwater lighting is used for pool illumination,
such lighting shall be in compliance with the applicable National
Electric Code.
(7)
If the water for such pool is supplied from a private well,
there shall be no cross-connection with the public water supply system.
If the water for such pool is supplied from the public water supply
system, the inlet shall be above the overflow level of said pool.
(8)
The draining of all pools shall comply with the environmental protection requirements of Part
5 of this chapter.
(9)
All pools shall meet the applicable state and federal public
bathing requirements.
(10)
The Borough Zoning Officer shall inspect each pool annually
to ensure continued compliance with this chapter.
(11)
The pool shall comply with the applicable sections of the Bristol
Borough Code of Ordinances, regulating the construction, operation
and maintenance of swimming pools.
5.
Utility, Service and Transportation
Uses.
A. Wireless Communications Facilities.
[Amended by Ord. No. 1324, 3/12/2018]
(1)
General and Specific Requirements for Non-Tower Wireless Communications
Facilities.
(a)
The following regulations shall apply to all non-tower WCFs
that do not meet the definition of a small WCF:
[Amended by Ord. No. 1331, 9/9/2019]
1)
Permitted in All Zones Subject to Regulations. Non-tower WCFs
are permitted in all zones subject to the restrictions and conditions
prescribed below and subject to applicable permitting by the Borough.
2)
Nonconforming Wireless Support Structures. Non-tower WCFs shall
be permitted to co-locate upon nonconforming tower-based WCFs and
other nonconforming structures. Co-location of WCFs upon existing
tower-based WCFs is encouraged even if the tower-based WCF is nonconforming
as to use within a zoning district.
3)
Standard of Care. Any non-tower WCF shall be designed, constructed,
operated, maintained, repaired, modified and removed in strict compliance
with all current applicable technical, safety and safety-related codes,
including, but not limited to, the most-recent editions of the American
National Standards Institute (ANSI) Code, National Electrical Safety
Code, and National Electrical Code. Any WCF shall at all times be
kept and maintained in good condition, order and repair by qualified
maintenance and construction personnel, so that the same shall not
endanger the life of any person or any property in the Borough.
4)
Wind and Ice. All non-tower WCF structures shall be designed
to withstand the effects of wind gusts and ice to the standard designed
by the American National Standards Institute as prepared by the Engineering
Departments of the Electronics Industry Association and Telecommunications
Industry Association (ANSI/EIA/TIA-222, as amended).
5)
Aviation Safety. Non-tower WCFs shall comply with all federal
and state laws and regulations concerning aviation safety.
6)
Public Safety Communications. Non-tower WCFs shall not interfere
with public safety communications or the reception of broadband, television,
radio or other communication services enjoyed by occupants of nearby
properties.
7)
Radio Frequency Emissions. A non-tower WCF shall not, by itself
or in conjunction with other WCFs, generate radio frequency emissions
in excess of the standards and regulations of the FCC, including,
but not limited to, the FCC Office of Engineering Technology Bulletin
65, entitled "Evaluating Compliance with FCC Guidelines for Human
Exposure to Radio Frequency Electromagnetic Fields," as amended.
8)
Removal. In the event that use of a non-tower WCF is discontinued,
the owner shall provide written notice to the Borough of its intent
to discontinue use and the date when the use shall be discontinued.
Unused or abandoned WCFs, or portions of WCFs, shall be removed as
follows:
a) All abandoned or unused WCFs and accessory facilities
shall be removed within 60 days of the cessation of operations at
the site, unless a time extension is approved by the Borough.
b) If the WCF or accessory facility is not removed
within 60 days of the cessation of operations at a site, or within
any longer period approved by the Borough, the WCF and/or associated
facilities and equipment may be removed by the Borough and the cost
of removal assessed against the owner of the WCF.
9)
Insurance. Each person that owns or operates a non-tower WCF
shall provide the Borough with a certificate of insurance evidencing
general liability coverage in the minimum amount of $1,000,000 per
occurrence and property damage coverage in the minimum amount of $1,000,000
per occurrence covering the non-tower WCF.
10) Indemnification. Each person that owns or operates
a non-tower WCF shall, at its sole cost and expense, indemnify, defend
and hold harmless the Borough, its elected and appointed officials,
employees and agents at all times against any and all claims for personal
injury, including death, and property damage arising in whole or in
part from, caused by or connected with any act or omission of the
person, its officers, agents, employees or contractors arising out
of, but not limited to, the construction, installation, operation,
maintenance or removal of the non-tower WCF. Each person that owns
or operates a non-tower WCF shall defend any actions or proceedings
against the Borough in which it is claimed that personal injury, including
death, or property damage was caused by the construction, installation,
operation, maintenance or removal of a non-tower WCF. The obligation
to indemnify, hold harmless and defend shall include, but not be limited
to, the obligation to pay judgments, injuries, liabilities, damages,
reasonable attorneys' fees, reasonable expert fees, court costs and
all other costs of indemnification.
11) Maintenance. To the extent permitted by law, the
following maintenance requirements shall apply:
a) The non-tower WCF shall be fully automated and unattended
on a daily basis and shall be visited only for maintenance or emergency
repair.
b) Such maintenance shall be performed on an annual
basis to ensure the upkeep of the facility in order to promote the
safety and security of the Borough's residents.
c) All maintenance activities shall utilize nothing
less than the best available technology for preventing failures and
accidents.
(b)
The following regulations shall apply to all co-located non-tower
WCFs that do not substantially change the physical dimensions of the
wireless support structure to which they are attached, and/or fall
under the Pennsylvania Wireless Broadband Collocation Act:
1)
Building Permit Required. WCF applicants proposing the modification
of an existing tower-based WCF shall obtain a building permit from
the Borough. In order to be considered for such permit, the WCF applicant
must submit a permit application to the Borough in accordance with
applicable permit policies and procedures.
2)
Timing of Approval for Applications That Fall Under the WBCA.
Within 30 calendar days of the date that an application for a non-tower
WCF is filed with the Borough, the Borough shall notify the WCF applicant,
in writing, of any information that may be required to complete such
application. Within 60 calendar days of receipt of a complete application,
the Borough shall make its final decision on whether to approve the
application and shall advise the WCF applicant, in writing, of such
decision. If additional information was requested by the Borough to
complete an application, the time required by the WCF applicant to
provide the information shall not be counted toward the Borough's
sixty-day review period. The timing requirements in this section shall
only apply to proposed facilities that fall under the Pennsylvania
Wireless Broadband Collocation Act.
3)
Accessory Equipment. Ground-mounted accessory equipment greater
than three cubic feet shall not be located within 50 feet of a lot
in residential use or zoned residential.
4)
Permit Fees. The Borough may assess appropriate and reasonable
permit fees directly related to the Borough's actual costs in reviewing
and processing the application for approval of a non-tower WCF or
$1,000, whichever is less.
(c)
The following regulations shall apply to all non-tower WCFs
that do substantially change the wireless support structure to which
they are attached, or that otherwise do not fall under the Pennsylvania
Wireless Broadband Collocation Act:
1)
Noncommercial Usage Exemption. Borough residents utilizing satellite
dishes, citizen and/or band radios, amateur (ham) radios, and antennas
for the purpose of maintaining television, phone, and/or internet
connections at their respective residences shall be exempt from the
regulations enumerated in this section.
2)
Prohibited on Certain Structures. No non-tower WCF shall be
located on single-family detached residences, single-family attached
residences, twin-homes, duplexes, or any residential accessory structure.
3)
Special Exception Authorization Required. Any WCF applicant
proposing the construction of a new non-tower WCF, or the modification
of an existing non-tower WCF, shall first obtain a special exception
authorization from the Borough. New constructions, modifications,
and replacements that do fall under the WBCA shall not be subject
to the special exception process. The special exception application
shall demonstrate that the proposed facility complies with all applicable
provisions in this chapter.
4)
Historic Buildings. No non-tower WCF may be located upon any
property or on a building or structure that is listed on either the
National or Pennsylvania Register of Historic Places, or is listed
on the official historic structures and/or historic districts list
maintained by the Borough, has been designated by the Borough to be
of historical significance, or is located in the Bristol Historic
Overlay District.
5)
Retention of Experts. The Borough may hire any consultant(s)
and/or expert(s) necessary to assist the Borough in reviewing and
evaluating the application for approval of the WCF and, once approved,
in reviewing and evaluating any potential violations of the terms
and conditions of these WCF provisions. The WCF applicant and/or owner
of the WCF shall reimburse the Borough for all costs of the Borough's
consultant(s) in providing expert evaluation and consultation in connection
with these activities.
6)
Permit Fees. The Borough may assess appropriate and reasonable
permit fees directly related to the Borough's actual costs in reviewing
and processing the application for approval of a non-tower WCF, as
well as related inspection, monitoring and related costs.
7)
Development Regulations. Non-tower WCFs shall be located or
co-located on existing wireless support structures, such as existing
buildings or tower-based WCFs, subject to the following conditions:
a) The total height of any wireless support structure
and mounted WCF shall not exceed 20 feet above the maximum height
permitted in the underlying zoning district.
b) In accordance with industry standards, all non-tower
WCF applicants must submit documentation to the Borough justifying
the total height of the non-tower WCF. Such documentation shall be
analyzed on an individual basis.
c) If the WCF applicant proposes to locate the accessory
equipment in a separate building, the building shall comply with the
minimum requirements for the applicable zoning district.
d) A security fence of not less than eight feet shall
surround any separate communications equipment building. Vehicular
access to the communications equipment building shall not interfere
with the parking or vehicular circulation on the site for the principal
use.
8)
Design Regulations. Non-tower WCFs shall employ stealth technology
and be treated to match the wireless support structure in order to
minimize aesthetic impact. The application of the stealth technology
chosen by the WCF applicant shall be subject to the approval of the
Borough.
9)
Removal, Replacement and Modification.
a) The removal and replacement of non-tower WCFs and/or
accessory equipment for the purpose of upgrading or repairing the
WCF is permitted, so long as such repair or upgrade does not substantially
change the overall size of the WCF or the number of antennas.
b) Any material modification to a WCF shall require
notice to be provided to the Borough and possible supplemental permit
approval to the original permit or authorization.
10) Inspection. The Borough reserves the right to inspect
any WCF to ensure compliance with the provisions of this chapter and
any other provisions found within the Borough Code or state or federal
law. The Borough and/or its agents shall have the authority to enter
the property upon which a WCF is located at any time, upon reasonable
notice to the operator, to ensure such compliance.
(2)
Regulations Applicable to All Non-Tower WCFs located in the Public Rights-of-Way. In addition to the applicable non-tower WCF provisions listed in Subsection
5A(1), the following regulations shall apply to non-tower WCFs located in the public rights-of-way:
(a)
Location. Non-tower WCFs in the ROW shall be located or co-located
on existing poles, such as existing utility poles, light poles, or
traffic lights. If co-location is not technologically feasible, the
WCF applicant shall locate its non-tower WCF on existing poles or
freestanding structures that do not already act as wireless support
structures with the Borough's approval. The placement of non-tower
WCFs shall comply with all PennDOT requirements, as applicable.
(b)
Design Requirements:
1)
WCF installations located above the surface grade in the public
ROW, including, but not limited to, those on streetlights and joint
utility poles, shall consist of equipment components that are no more
than six feet in height and that are compatible in scale and proportion
to the structures upon which they are mounted. All equipment shall
be the smallest and least visibly intrusive equipment feasible.
2)
Antennas and accessory equipment shall be treated to match the
supporting structure and may be required to be painted, or otherwise
coated, to be visually compatible with the support structure upon
which they are mounted.
(c)
Time, Place and Manner. The Borough shall determine the time,
place and manner of construction, maintenance, repair and/or removal
of all non-tower WCFs in the ROW based on public safety, traffic management,
physical burden on the ROW, and related considerations. For public
utilities, the time, place and manner requirements shall be consistent
with the police powers of the Borough and the requirements of the
Public Utility Code.
(d)
Equipment Location. Non-tower WCFs and accessory equipment shall
be located so as not to cause any physical or visual obstruction to
pedestrian or vehicular traffic, or to otherwise create safety hazards
to pedestrians and/or motorists, or to otherwise inconvenience public
use of the ROW as determined by the Borough. In addition:
1)
In no case shall ground-mounted accessory equipment, walls,
or landscaping be located within 18 inches of the face of the curb
or within an easement extending onto a privately owned lot.
2)
Ground-mounted accessory equipment that cannot be placed underground
shall be screened, to the fullest extent possible, through the use
of landscaping or other decorative features to the satisfaction of
the Borough.
3)
Required electrical meter cabinets shall be screened to blend
in with the surrounding area to the satisfaction of the Borough.
4)
Any graffiti on any wireless support structures or any accessory
equipment shall be removed at the sole expense of the owner.
5)
Any proposed underground vault related to non-tower WCFs shall
be reviewed and approved by the Borough.
6)
Accessory equipment attached to the wireless support structure
shall have 12 feet of vertical clearance above finished grade.
(e)
Relocation or Removal of Facilities. Within 60 days following
written notice from the Borough, or such longer period as the Borough
determines is reasonably necessary or such shorter period in the case
of an emergency, an owner of a WCF in the ROW shall, at its own expense,
temporarily or permanently remove, relocate, change or alter the position
of any WCF when the Borough, consistent with its police powers and
applicable Public Utility Commission regulations, shall have determined
that such removal, relocation, change or alteration is reasonably
necessary under the following circumstances:
1)
The construction, repair, maintenance or installation of any
Borough or other public improvement in the right-of-way;
2)
The operations of the Borough or other governmental entity in
the right-of-way;
3)
Vacation of a street or road or the release of a utility easement;
or
4)
An emergency as determined by the Borough.
(f)
Reimbursement for ROW Use. In addition to permit fees as described
in this section, every non-tower WCF in the ROW is subject to the
Borough's right to fix annually a fair and reasonable fee to be paid
for use and occupancy of the ROW. Such compensation for ROW use shall
be directly related to the Borough's actual ROW management costs,
including, but not limited to, the costs of the administration and
performance of all reviewing, inspecting, permitting, supervising
and other ROW management activities by the Borough. The owner of each
non-tower WCF shall pay an annual fee to the Borough to compensate
the Borough for the Borough's costs incurred in connection with the
activities described above.
(3)
General and Specific Requirements for All Tower-Based Wireless
Communications Facilities.
(a)
The following regulations shall apply to all tower-based wireless
communications facilities that do not meet the definition of a small
WCF.
[Amended by Ord. No. 1331, 9/9/2019]
1)
Permitted Design. All tower-based WCFs shall be in the form
of a monopole. No lattice, guyed, or other non-monopole tower-based
WCF shall be permitted in the Borough.
2)
Standard of Care. Any tower-based WCF shall be designed, constructed,
operated, maintained, repaired, modified and removed in strict compliance
with all current applicable technical, safety and safety-related codes,
including, but not limited to, the most-recent editions of the American
National Standards Institute (ANSI) Code, National Electrical Safety
Code, National Electrical Code, as well as the accepted and responsible
workmanlike industry practices of the National Association of Tower
Erectors. Any tower-based WCF shall at all times be kept and maintained
in good condition, order and repair by qualified maintenance and construction
personnel, so that the same shall not endanger the life of any person
or any property in the Borough.
3)
Notice. Upon submission of an application for a tower-based
WCF and the scheduling of the public hearing upon the application,
the WCF applicant shall mail notice to all owners of every property
within 500 feet of the proposed facility. The WCF applicant shall
provide proof of the notification to the Borough.
4)
Special Exception Authorization Required. Tower-based WCFs are
permitted in certain zoning districts by special exception and at
a height necessary to satisfy their function in the WCF applicant's
wireless communications system. No WCF applicant shall have the right
under these regulations to erect a tower to the maximum height specified
in this section unless it proves the necessity for such height. The
WCF applicant shall demonstrate that the antenna/tower/pole for the
tower-based WCF is the minimum height necessary for the service area.
a) Prior to the Zoning Hearing Board's approval of
a special exception authorizing the construction and installation
of tower-based WCFs, it shall be incumbent upon the WCF applicant
to demonstrate that the proposed tower-based WCF must be located where
it is proposed in order to serve the WCF applicant's service area
and that no other viable alternative location exists.
c) The special exception application shall also be
accompanied by documentation demonstrating that the proposed tower-based
WCF complies with all state and federal laws and regulations concerning
aviation safety.
d) Where the tower-based WCF is located on a property
with another principal use, the WCF applicant shall present documentation
to the Zoning Hearing Board that the owner of the property has granted
an easement for the proposed WCF and that vehicular access will be
provided to the facility.
e) The special exception application shall also be
accompanied by documentation demonstrating that the proposed tower-based
WCF complies with all applicable provisions of this chapter.
5)
Engineer Inspection. Prior to the Borough's issuance of a permit
authorizing construction and erection of a tower-based WCF, a structural
engineer registered in Pennsylvania shall issue to the Borough a written
certification of the proposed WCF's ability to meet the structural
standards offered by either the Electronic Industries Association
or the Telecommunications Industry Association and certify the proper
construction of the foundation and the erection of the structure.
This certification shall be provided during use hearings or at a minimum
be made as a condition attached to any approval given such that the
certification is provided prior to issuance of any building permits.
6)
Visual Appearance and Land Use Compatibility. Tower-based WCFs
shall employ stealth technology, which may include the tower portion
being painted silver or another color approved by the Council or having
a galvanized finish. All tower-based WCFs and accessory equipment
shall be aesthetically and architecturally compatible with the surrounding
environment and shall maximize the use of a like facade to blend with
the existing surroundings and neighboring buildings to the greatest
extent possible. The Council shall consider whether its decision upon
the subject application will promote the harmonious and orderly development
of the zoning district involved; encourage compatibility with the
character and type of development existing in the area; benefit neighboring
properties by preventing a negative impact on the aesthetic character
of the community; preserve woodlands and trees existing at the site
to the greatest possible extent; and encourage sound engineering and
land development design and construction principles, practices and
techniques.
7)
Co-Location and Siting. An application for a new tower-based
WCF shall demonstrate that the proposed tower-based WCF cannot be
accommodated on an existing or approved structure or building, or
sited on land owned and maintained by the Borough. The Council may
deny an application to construct a new tower-based WCF if the WCF
applicant has not made a good-faith effort to mount the commercial
communications antenna(s) on an existing structure. The WCF applicant
shall demonstrate that it contacted the owners of tall structures,
buildings, and towers within a one-fourth-mile radius of the site
proposed, sought permission to install an antenna on those structures,
buildings, and towers and was denied for one of the following reasons:
a) The proposed antenna and accessory equipment would
exceed the structural capacity of the existing building, structure
or tower, and its reinforcement cannot be accomplished at a reasonable
cost.
b) The proposed antenna and accessory equipment would
cause radio frequency interference with other existing equipment for
that existing building, structure, or tower, and the interference
cannot be prevented at a reasonable cost.
c) Such existing buildings, structures, or towers do
not have adequate location, space, access, or height to accommodate
the proposed equipment or to allow it to perform its intended function.
d) A commercially reasonable agreement could not be
reached with the owner of such building, structure, or tower.
8)
Permit Required for Modifications. To the extent permissible
under applicable state and federal law, any WCF applicant proposing
the modification of an existing tower-based WCF, which increases the
overall height of such WCF, shall first obtain a permit from the Borough.
To the extent permissible under law, nonroutine modifications shall
be prohibited without a permit.
10) Additional Antennas. As a condition of approval
for all tower-based WCFs, the WCF applicant shall provide the Borough
with a written commitment that it will allow other service providers
to co-locate antennas on tower-based WCFs where technically and economically
feasible. To the extent permissible under state and federal law, the
owner of a tower-based WCF shall not install any additional antennas
without obtaining the prior written approval of the Borough.
11) Wind and Ice. Any tower-based WCF structures shall
be designed to withstand the effects of wind gusts and ice to the
standard designed by the American National Standards Institute as
prepared by the Engineering Departments of the Electronics Industry
Association and Telecommunications Industry Association (ANSI/EIA/TIA-222,
as amended).
12) Height. Any tower-based WCF shall be designed at
the minimum functional height. The maximum total height of a tower-based
WCF which is not located in the public ROW shall not exceed 100 feet,
as measured vertically from the ground level to the highest point
on the structure, including antennas and subsequent alterations.
13) Accessory Equipment. Either one single-story wireless
communications equipment building not exceeding 500 square feet in
area or up to five metal boxes placed on a concrete pad not exceeding
10 feet by 20 feet in area housing the receiving and transmitting
equipment may be located on the site for each unrelated company sharing
commercial communications antenna(s) space on the tower-based wireless
communications facility greater than 40 feet.
14) Public Safety Communications. No tower-based WCF
shall interfere with public safety communications or the reception
of broadband, television, radio or other communication services enjoyed
by occupants of nearby properties.
15) Maintenance. The following maintenance requirements
shall apply:
a) Any tower-based WCF shall be fully automated and
unattended on a daily basis and shall be visited only for maintenance
or emergency repair.
b) Such maintenance shall be performed to ensure the
upkeep of the WCF in order to promote the safety and security of the
Borough's residents and shall utilize the best available technology
for preventing failures and accidents.
16) Radio Frequency Emissions. A tower-based WCF shall
not, by itself or in conjunction with other WCFs, generate radio frequency
emissions in excess of the standards and regulations of the FCC, including,
but not limited to, the FCC Office of Engineering Technology Bulletin
65, entitled "Evaluating Compliance with FCC Guidelines for Human
Exposure to Radio Frequency Electromagnetic Fields," as amended.
17) Historic Buildings or Districts. A tower-based
WCF shall not be located upon a property and/or on a building or structure
that is listed on either the National or Pennsylvania Register of
Historic Places, or is eligible to be so listed, or is included in
the official historic structures and/or historic districts list maintained
by the Borough or located in the Bristol Historic Overlay District.
18) Signs. All tower-based WCFs shall post a sign in
a readily visible location identifying the name and phone number of
a party to contact in the event of an emergency. The only other signage
permitted on the WCF shall be that required by the FCC or any other
federal or state agency.
19) Lighting. No tower-based WCF shall be artificially
lighted, except as required by law. If lighting is required, the WCF
applicant shall provide a detailed plan for sufficient lighting, demonstrating
as unobtrusive and inoffensive an effect as is permissible under state
and federal regulations. The WCF applicant shall promptly report any
outage or malfunction of FAA-mandated lighting to the appropriate
governmental authorities and to the Borough Secretary.
20) Noise. Tower-based WCFs shall be operated and maintained
so as not to produce noise in excess of applicable noise standards
under state law and the Borough Code, except in emergency situations
requiring the use of a backup generator, where such noise standards
may be exceeded on a temporary basis only.
21) Aviation Safety. Tower-based WCFs shall comply
with all federal and state laws and regulations concerning aviation
safety.
22) Retention of Experts. The Borough may hire any
consultant and/or expert necessary to assist the Borough in reviewing
and evaluating the application for approval of the tower-based WCFs
and, once approved, in reviewing and evaluating any potential violations
of the terms and conditions of these provisions. The WCF applicant
and/or owner of the WCF shall reimburse the Borough for all costs
of the Borough's consultant(s) in providing expert evaluation and
consultation regarding these activities.
23) Timing of Approval. Within 30 calendar days of
the date that an application for a tower-based WCF is filed with the
Borough, the Borough shall notify the WCF applicant, in writing, of
any information that may be required to complete such application.
All applications for tower-based WCFs shall be acted upon within 150
days of the receipt of a fully completed application for the approval
of such tower-based WCF, and the Borough shall advise the WCF applicant,
in writing, of its decision. If additional information was requested
by the Borough to complete an application, the time required by the
WCF applicant to provide the information shall not be counted toward
the one-hundred-fifty-day review period.
24) Nonconforming Uses. Nonconforming tower-based WCFs
which are hereafter damaged or destroyed due to any reason or cause
may be repaired and restored at their former location but must otherwise
comply with the terms and conditions of this section. The co-location
of antennas is permitted on nonconforming structures.
25) Removal. In the event that use of a tower-based
WCF is planned to be discontinued, the owner shall provide written
notice to the Borough of its intent to discontinue use and the date
when the use shall be discontinued. Unused or abandoned WCFs or portions
of WCFs shall be removed as follows:
a) All unused or abandoned tower-based WCFs and accessory
facilities shall be removed within 180 days of the cessation of operations
at the site, unless a time extension is approved by the Borough.
b) If the WCF and/or accessory facility is not removed
within 180 days of the cessation of operations at a site, or within
any longer period approved by the Borough, the WCF and accessory facilities
and equipment may be removed by the Borough and the cost of removal
assessed against the owner of the WCF.
c) Any unused portions of tower-based WCFs, including
antennas, shall be removed within 180 days of the time of cessation
of operations. The Borough must approve all replacements of portions
of a tower-based WCF previously removed.
26) Permit Fees. The Borough may assess appropriate
and reasonable permit fees directly related to the Borough's actual
costs in reviewing and processing the application for approval of
a tower-based WCF, as well as related inspection, monitoring, and
related costs.
27) FCC License. Each person that owns or operates
a tower-based WCF over 40 feet in height shall submit a copy of its
current FCC license, including the name, address, and emergency telephone
number for the operator of the facility.
28) Insurance. Each person that owns or operates a
tower-based WCF greater than 40 feet in height shall provide the Borough
with a certificate of insurance evidencing general liability coverage
in the minimum amount of $5,000,000 per occurrence and property damage
coverage in the minimum amount of $5,000,000 per occurrence covering
the tower-based WCF. Each person that owns or operates a tower-based
WCF 40 feet or less in height shall provide the Borough with a certificate
of insurance evidencing general liability coverage in the minimum
amount of $1,000,000 per occurrence and property damage coverage in
the minimum amount of $1,000,000 per occurrence covering each tower-based
WCF.
29) Indemnification. Each person that owns or operates
a tower-based WCF shall, at its sole cost and expense, indemnify,
defend and hold harmless the Borough, its elected and appointed officials,
employees and agents at all times against any and all claims for personal
injury, including death, and property damage arising in whole or in
part from, caused by or connected with any act or omission of the
person, its officers, agents, employees or contractors arising out
of, but not limited to, the construction, installation, operation,
maintenance or removal of the tower-based WCF. Each person that owns
or operates a tower-based WCF shall defend any actions or proceedings
against the Borough in which it is claimed that personal injury, including
death, or property damage was caused by the construction, installation,
operation, maintenance or removal of tower-based WCFs. The obligation
to indemnify, hold harmless and defend shall include, but not be limited
to, the obligation to pay judgments, injuries, liabilities, damages,
reasonable attorneys' fees, reasonable expert fees, court costs and
all other costs of indemnification.
30) Engineer Signature. All plans and drawings for
a tower-based WCF shall contain a seal and signature of a professional
structural engineer licensed in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
31) Financial Security. Prior to receipt of a zoning
permit for the construction or placement of a tower-based WCF, the
WCF applicant shall provide to the Borough financial security sufficient
to guarantee the removal of the tower-based WCF. Said financial security
shall remain in place until the tower-based WCF is removed.
(4)
Tower-Based Wireless Communications Facilities Outside the Public
Rights-of-Way. The following regulations shall apply to tower-based
wireless communications facilities located outside the public rights-of-way
that do not meet the definition of a small WCF:
[Amended by Ord. No. 1331, 9/9/2019]
(a)
Development Regulations.
1)
Tower-based WCFs shall not be located in, or within 50 feet
of, an area in which utilities are primarily located underground.
2)
Tower-based WCFs are permitted outside the public rights-of-way
in the following zoning districts by special exception, subject to
the above prohibition:
b) II Intermediate Industrial.
3)
Sole Use on a Lot. A tower-based WCF shall be permitted as a
sole use on a lot, provided that the underlying lot is a minimum of
one acre. The minimum distance between the base of a tower-based WCF
and any adjoining property line or street right-of-way line shall
equal 100% of the proposed WCF structure's height.
4)
Combined With Another Use. A tower-based WCF may be permitted
on a property with an existing use, or on a vacant parcel in combination
with another use, except residential, subject to the following conditions:
a) The existing use on the property may be any permitted
use in the applicable district and need not be affiliated with the
WCF.
b) Minimum Lot Area. The minimum lot shall comply with
the requirements for the applicable district and shall be the area
needed to accommodate the tower-based WCF and guy wires, the equipment
building, security fence, and buffer planting if the proposed WCF
is greater than 40 feet in height.
c) Minimum Setbacks. The minimum distance between the
base of a tower-based WCF and any adjoining property line or street
right-of-way line shall equal 100% of the proposed WCF structure height
or the minimum setback of the underlying zoning district, whichever
is greater. Where the site on which a tower-based WCF is proposed
to be located is contiguous to an educational use, child day-care
facility or residential use, the minimum distance between the base
of a tower-based WCF and any such adjoining uses shall equal 110%
of the proposed height of the tower-based WCF, unless it is demonstrated
to the reasonable satisfaction of Council that, in the event of failure,
the WCF is designed to collapse upon itself within a setback area
less than the required minimum setback without endangering such adjoining
uses and their occupants.
(b)
Design Regulations.
1)
The WCF shall employ the most-current stealth technology available
in an effort to appropriately blend into the surrounding environment
and minimize aesthetic impact. Application of the stealth technology
chosen by the WCF applicant shall be subject to the approval of the
Borough.
2)
To the extent permissible by law, any height extensions to an
existing tower-based WCF shall require prior approval of the Borough.
3)
Any proposed tower-based WCF shall be designed structurally,
electrically, and in all respects to accommodate both the WCF applicant's
antennas and comparable antennas for future users.
4)
Any tower-based WCF over 40 feet in height shall be equipped
with an anti-climbing device, as approved by the manufacturer.
(c)
Surrounding Environs.
1)
The WCF applicant shall ensure that the existing vegetation,
trees and shrubs located within proximity to the WCF structure shall
be preserved to the maximum extent possible.
2)
The WCF applicant shall submit a soil report to the Borough
complying with the standards of Appendix I: Geotechnical Investigations,
ANSI/EIA/TIA-222, as amended, to document and verify the design specifications
of the foundation of the tower-based WCF, and anchors for guy wires,
if used.
(d)
Fence/Screen.
1)
A security fence having a height of not less than eight feet
shall completely surround any tower-based WCF greater than 40 feet
in height, as well as guy wires, or any building housing WCF equipment.
2)
Landscaping shall consist of a screen of evergreen trees planted
eight feet on center, each at least four feet in height, and staggered
in two rows, located along the perimeter of the security fence. Existing
vegetation shall be preserved to the maximum extent possible.
(e)
Accessory Equipment.
1)
Ground-mounted accessory equipment associated, or connected,
with a tower-based WCF shall be placed underground or screened from
public view using stealth technologies, as described above.
2)
All accessory equipment, utility buildings and accessory structures
shall be architecturally designed to blend into the environment in
which they are situated and shall meet the minimum setback requirements
of the underlying zoning district.
(f)
Access Road. An access road, turnaround space and parking shall
be provided to ensure adequate emergency and service access to tower-based
WCF. Maximum use of existing roads, whether public or private, shall
be made to the extent practicable. Road grades shall closely follow
natural contours to assure minimal visual disturbance and minimize
soil erosion. Where applicable, the WCF owner shall present documentation
to the Borough that the property owner has granted an easement for
the proposed facility.
(g)
Parking. For each tower-based WCF greater than 40 feet in height,
there shall be two off-street parking spaces.
(h)
Inspection. The Borough reserves the right to inspect any tower-based
WCF to ensure compliance with this chapter and any other provisions
found within the Borough Code or state or federal law. The Borough
and/or its agents shall have the authority to enter the property upon
which a WCF is located at any time, upon reasonable notice to the
operator, to ensure such compliance.
(5)
Regulations Applicable to all Small Wireless Communications
Facilities. The following regulations shall apply to small wireless
communications facilities:
[Amended by Ord. No. 1331, 9/9/2019]
(a)
Location and development standards.
1)
Small WCF are permitted by administrative approval by the Borough Zoning Officer in all Borough zoning districts, subject to the requirements of this §
27-320, Subsection
5A(5).
2)
Small WCF in the public ROW requiring the installation of a
new wireless support structure shall not be located directly in front
of any building entrance or exit such that it would interfere with
ingress or egress.
3)
All small WCF shall comply with the applicable requirements
of the Americans with Disabilities Act.
4)
All small WCF shall comply with all applicable Borough Code requirements pertaining to streets and sidewalks, as codified in Chapter
21 of the Borough Code.
(b)
Nonconforming wireless support structures. Small WCF shall be
permitted to co-locate upon nonconforming tower-based WCF and other
nonconforming structures. Co-location of WCF upon existing tower-based
WCF is encouraged even if the tower-based WCF is nonconforming as
to use within a zoning district.
(c)
Standard of care. Any small WCF shall be designed, constructed,
operated, maintained, repaired, modified and removed in strict compliance
with all current applicable technical, safety and safety-related codes,
including but not limited to the most recent editions of the American
National Standards Institute (ANSI) Code, National Electrical Safety
Code, National Electrical Code, or to the industry standard applicable
to the structure. Any WCF shall at all times be kept and maintained
in good condition, order and repair by qualified maintenance and construction
personnel, so that the same shall not endanger the life of any person
or damage any property in the Borough.
(d)
Wind and ice. All small WCF shall be designed to withstand the
effects of wind gusts and ice to the standard designed by the American
National Standards Institute as prepared by the engineering departments
of the Electronics Industry Association, and Telecommunications Industry
Association (ANSI/TIA-222, as amended), or to the industry standard
applicable to the structure.
(e)
Public safety communications. Small WCF shall not interfere
with public safety communications or the reception of broadband, television,
radio or other communication services enjoyed by occupants of nearby
properties.
(f)
Radio frequency emissions. A small WCF shall not, by itself
or in conjunction with other WCFs existing on the same structure at
the time of installation, generate radio frequency emissions in excess
of the standards and regulations of the FCC, including but not limited
to, the FCC Office of Engineering Technology Bulletin 65 entitled
"Evaluating Compliance with FCC Guidelines for Human Exposure to Radio
Frequency Electromagnetic Fields," as amended.
(g)
Time, place and manner. The Borough Zoning Officer shall determine
the time, place and manner of construction, maintenance, repair and/or
removal of all small WCF in the ROW based on public safety, traffic
management, physical burden on the ROW, and related considerations.
(h)
Accessory equipment. Small WCF and accessory equipment shall
be located so as not to cause any physical or visual obstruction to
pedestrian or vehicular traffic, create safety hazards to pedestrians
and/or motorists, or to otherwise inconvenience public use of the
ROW as determined by the Borough.
(i)
Graffiti. Any graffiti on the small WCF or on any accessory
equipment shall be removed at the sole expense of the owner within
30 days of notification by the Borough.
(j)
Design regulations. All small WCF shall be designed to meet
the requirements of the Borough "Small Wireless Communications Facility
Design Manual," a copy of which is kept on file at the Borough Planning
and Zoning Department and available on the Borough's website.
(k)
Timing of approval.
1)
Within 60 days of receipt of a complete application for co-location
of a small WCF on a preexisting wireless support structure, the Borough
Zoning Officer shall make a final decision on whether to approve the
application and shall notify the WCF applicant in writing of such
decision.
2)
Within 90 days of receipt of an application for a small WCF
requiring the installation of a new wireless support structure, the
Borough Zoning Officer shall make a final decision on whether to approve
the application and shall notify the WCF applicant in writing of such
decision.
3)
Within 10 days of receipt of an application for a small WCF,
the Borough Zoning Officer shall inform the WCF applicant of any additional
information required to complete the small WCF application. Such notice
shall toll the applicable FCC shot clock until such time as the WCF
applicant submits the information required to complete the small WCF
application.
(l)
Relocation or removal of facilities.
1)
Within 90 days following written notice from the Borough, or
such longer period as the Borough determines is reasonably necessary
or such shorter period in the case of an emergency, an owner of a
small WCF in the ROW shall, at its own expense, temporarily or permanently
remove, relocate, change or alter the position of any WCF when the
Borough, consistent with its police powers and applicable Public Utility
Commission regulations, shall determine that such removal, relocation,
change or alteration is reasonably necessary under the following circumstances:
a) The construction, repair, maintenance or installation
of any Borough or other public improvement in the right-of-way;
b) The operations of the Borough or other governmental
entity in the right-of-way;
c) Vacation of a street or road or the release of a
utility easement; or
d) An emergency as determined by the Borough.
2)
In such cases the Borough will make reasonable efforts to assist
the WCF owner in identifying and permitting an alternate location
for the WCF.
(m)
Reimbursement. In addition to permit fees as described in this
section, every small WCF in the ROW is subject to the Borough's right
to recover its actual costs incurred as a result of the small WCF's
presence in the ROW, including, but not limited to, the costs of the
administration and performance of all reviewing, inspecting, permitting,
supervising and other ROW management activities by the Borough. The
owner of each small WCF shall reimburse the Borough for the Borough's
costs reasonably incurred in connection with the activities described
above. All fees shall comply with applicable state and federal law
and not exceed amounts presumed reasonable by the FCC.
B. Emergency Services. Fire station, ambulance, or rescue squad station
for emergency services. Such use may also be permitted as an accessory
use to Use 2G Hospital.
(1)
Such use shall be located on a lot abutting an arterial or collector
street.
(2)
All equipment shall be stored within an enclosed building.
(3)
A community meeting room is permitted as accessory to the emergency
services use.
(4)
In the R1, R1A and R2 Districts, the following requirements
shall be met:
(a)
Silent alarms only shall be installed.
(b)
No community meeting room shall be permitted, nor shall group
functions be permitted.
(c)
Any building or structure erected for this use shall be residential
in scale, materials, and appearance.
(d)
The use of exterior lighting shall be limited during the hours
when the facility is not in use.
C. Heliport. An area of land which is used or intended to be used for
landing and take-off of private, noncommercial helicopters or similar
aircraft.
(1)
Approval of the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, Bureau
of Aviation, and any other applicable licensing agencies of the federal
and state governments shall be secured.
(2)
The Federal Aviation Administration shall have granted approval
for the use of the air space.
(3)
A minimum landing area of at least 50 feet in radius shall be
provided.
(4)
The entire landing area shall be surrounded by a fence at least
four feet in height constructed of such material and designed in such
a manner as to effectively neutralize the horizontal rotor air flow.
(5)
Roof top landing areas or other landing areas having existing barriers which perform the function of fencing described in Subsection
4 above need not provide fencing nor provide a landing area more than 20 feet in radius where such barriers exist. If existing barriers do not completely surround the landing area then the fencing requirements of Subsection
4 above shall be required on those exposures where there are no existing barriers.
(6)
No fueling, refueling, service or storage facilities shall be
provided.
D. Parking Garage or Area. A lot of record upon which the parking or
storing of motor vehicles is the primary use.
(1)
No sale, rental, service or repair operation of vehicles shall
be performed.
(2)
The parking or storage of heavy trucks (exceeding one ton) or
trailers shall not be permitted.
(3)
All parking lots shall meet the design standards for automobile parking facilities in the Borough Subdivision and Land Development Ordinance [Chapter
22].
(4)
All parking garages shall meet the design standards in §
27-703, Subsection
1D, of this chapter.
E. Transit Station. A building used by bus and/or railroad passengers
for transportation related services.
(1)
Where parking areas associated with a transit station abut a residential district or use, a ten-foot wide buffer planting strip consistent with the buffer planting requirements in §
27-404, Subsection
4, shall be provided.
F. Utilities. Transformer station, pumping station, wastewater treatment
facility, or other operation station or facility necessary to provide
electrical, water supply, or wastewater conveyance or treatment services.
Utility services include, but are not limited to, electricity, gas,
telephone, water, sewerage, and bulk pipelines. In addition to public
utilities, this use includes private utilities in a subdivision or
land development. A utility use shall include appurtenances used in
connection with the supplying of such services including, but not
limited to, buildings, pedestals, cables, wires, pipes, poles, and
the like, but does not include incinerators, telecommunications facilities,
or public or private landfills.
(1)
Such use shall be screened by a twenty-foot planted buffer yard in accordance with §
27-404, Subsection
4, of this chapter.
(2)
In residential districts, a utility shall be essential to serve
such residential district.
(3)
Except in commercial and industrial zoning districts, no public
business office or any storage yard or storage building shall be operated
in connection with the utility.
(4)
The following minimum setbacks from all property lines shall
be provided, unless the Borough or the Public Utility Commission requires
a greater dimension:
|
Electrical substation
|
50 feet
|
|
Well facility
|
100 feet
|
|
Sewer pumping station
|
40 feet
|
|
Water treatment facility
|
100 feet
|
|
Wastewater treatment plan
|
100 feet
|
|
All other utilities
|
50 feet
|
6. Industrial Uses.
A. Building Materials, Supplies, Sales, Service. Establishments such
as lumber yards and those offering for sale finished products used
in building and construction. This use does not include a home improvement
center where other types of products and goods are sold. This use
is limited to the sale of wood and lumber and ancillary woodworking
products, but does not include consumer, household or electronic products.
(1)
Millworking and planing are included in this use.
(2)
Storage yards shall be fully enclosed by fencing and landscaping.
(3)
The storage of flammable or toxic gases and liquids and the
production and mixing of asphalt and concrete is prohibited.
B. Contractor Offices and Shops. Use where the primary business provides
services related to excavating, building construction, cement, masonry,
painting, roofing, siding, landscaping, paving, HVAC, plumbing, electrical,
carpentry, or uses of similar nature.
(1)
Outside storage areas for materials, equipment, and business
vehicles shall be enclosed by fencing having a minimum height of six
feet and a maximum height of eight feet. The requirements of Accessory
Use 7N Outside Storage or Display shall be met.
C. Crafts. Upholstery, cabinet making, furniture making and similar
crafts.
(1)
Retail sales of items produced on the premises are permitted.
D. Flex Space. Flexible building space that can be used for either office,
light manufacturing, assembly or warehousing.
(1)
Each flex space area shall have no less than 20% of the area
devoted to an office use. Warehousing, light manufacturing or assembly
shall occupy no more than 80% of the flex space area.
(2)
The following uses shall be permitted: Use 3D Office; Use 6B
Contractor Offices and Shops; Use 6G Light Manufacturing; Use 6H Manufacturing;
Use 6J Motor Freight Terminal; Use 6R Warehouse.
E. Industrial Park. A planned development of industrial and related
uses which includes improvements for internal streets, coordinated
utilities, landscaping and buffering.
(1)
Industrial uses may be located in detached or attached structures.
(2)
Dimensional requirements:
|
Minimum site area:
|
10 acres
|
|
Minimum setbacks from street and property lines-site:
|
100 feet
|
|
Minimum frontage at street lines-site:
|
150 feet
|
|
Minimum building spacing:
|
100 feet
|
|
Maximum height:
|
24 feet
|
|
Minimum setbacks-internal street:
|
50 feet
|
(3)
At least 70% of the total floor space of the park must be used
for industrial uses.
(4)
Accessory outside storage of materials, goods or refuse must
be buffered around the area devoted to storage either by a six-foot
cedar or spruce fence or a hedge row at least three feet in height
with appropriate material as planted on three-foot centers.
(5)
Lighting facilities shall be provided and arranged in a manner
which will protect the highway and neighboring properties from direct
glare or hazardous interference of any kind.
(6)
Applicable buffer requirements in §
27-404, Subsection
4, of this chapter shall be met.
(7)
No use shall emit noise in such quantity as to be audible beyond
its lot lines. In addition, the nuisance standards of this chapter
shall be met.
(8)
All uses within the industrial park shall take access from an
interior roadway. Access for the park shall be from an arterial or
collector highway.
(9)
All parking, loading facilities and outside storage areas shall
be located to the rear or side of buildings.
(10)
Interior roadways shall have street trees in accordance with
the requirements of this chapter.
(11)
A transportation impact study and water impact study shall be
required.
(12)
All commonly owned elements shall be owned and maintained in
accordance with the Pennsylvania Uniform Condominium Act, 68 Pa.C.S.A.
§ 3101 et seq., or other ownership arrangement approved
by the Borough Council.
(13)
The applicant shall submit a plan for the overall design and
improvements for the industrial park.
F. Junkyard (Salvage Yard). Any land or structure where junk or salvage
is discarded, bought, sold, exchanged, stored, baled, cleaned, packed,
disassembled or handled. "Junkyard" does not include those structures
where used furniture or household equipment is stored, bought or sold,
not those structures or land where automobiles not abandoned are stored,
bought or sold.
(1)
A minimum lot area of 10 acres shall be required for this use.
(2)
Such use shall be a minimum of 100 feet from any street line
or property line.
(3)
The land area used for junkyard purposes shall not be exposed
to public view from any public street or residence.
(4)
A junkyard shall be entirely enclosed by a solid fence or wall,
at least eight feet but not more than 10 feet high, constructed of
plank boards, brick, cinder block or concrete, with access only through
solid gates. Such gates shall be locked at all times when the junkyard
is not in operation. Such fence or wall shall be kept in good repair
and neatly painted in a uniform color.
(5)
A dense evergreen buffer shall be provided on the outside perimeter
of the fenced area. The buffer yard shall be 100 feet in width. Evergreens
shall be four to five feet in height and planted on ten-foot staggered
centers.
(6)
The contents of a junkyard shall not be placed or deposited
to a height greater than eight feet.
(7)
All paper, rags, cloth, and other fibers and activities involving
the same, other than loading and unloading, shall be within fully
enclosed buildings.
(8)
The storage of toxic chemicals or nuclear wastes shall be prohibited.
(9)
Dumping of trash or landfill operations and burning of any materials
shall be prohibited.
(10)
No material shall be placed in a junkyard in such a manner that
it is capable of being transferred out of the junkyard by wind, water,
or other natural causes.
(11)
All materials shall be stored in such a manner as to prevent
the breeding or harboring of rats, insects, or other vermin. When
necessary, this shall be accomplished by enclosure in containers,
raising of materials above the ground, separating of types of material,
preventing the collection of stagnant water, extermination procedures,
or other means.
(12)
All vehicles must be drained of all liquids before they are
placed in the junkyard. An impervious base, free of cracks and sufficiently
large for draining liquids from all vehicles, shall be provided. The
base should be sloped to drain to a sump or holding tank and liquid
shall be removed from the site as often as is necessary to prevent
overflow of the system. Curbing around the pad must be able to retain
run-off from a one-hundred-year, twenty-four-hour storm. All hazardous
liquids shall be properly disposed of according to the Department
of Environmental Resources' rules and regulations.
(13)
A zoning permit shall be obtained on an annual basis with application
made by January 15 of each year. The permit shall be issued only after
an inspection by the Zoning Officer to certify that this use meets
all provisions of this and other ordinances.
G. Light Manufacturing. Industrial activities that include the following specific uses listed below from Subsection
6G(1)(a) to
(l):
(1)
Permitted Uses.
(a)
Manufacture of products requiring light metal processing including
finishing, grinding, polishing, heat treating and stamping.
(b)
Manufacture of jewelry, clocks, watches, toys, novelties, precision
instruments, optical goods and similar products.
(c)
Manufacture and assembly of electrical or electronic devices;
home commercial and industrial appliances and instruments; and electrical
supplies, including such equipment and supplies as: computers, lighting
fixtures, fans, home radio and television receivers, electric switches,
lamps, washing machines, refrigerators and air conditioners.
(d)
Manufacture or assembly of articles or merchandise from the
following previously prepared materials: plastics, bone, canvas, cellophane,
cork, feathers, fiber, glass, horn, leather and fur (excluding tanning,
curing and dyeing), precious or semi-precious metals or stones, shell,
textiles and tobacco.
(e)
Manufacture of pottery and figurines or other similar ceramic
products using only previously pulverized clay and kilns fired only
by electricity or gas.
(f)
Manufacture of small rubber products and synthetic treated fabrics
(excluding all rubber and synthetic processing).
(g)
Manufacture of textiles (including spinning and weaving, but
not including wool scouring and pulling, or jute or burlap processing
or reconditioning).
(h)
Manufacture of wood products (excluding planing mills and bulk
processing of wood and lumber).
(i)
Manufacture of paper or cardboard boxes, envelopes, containers
and novelties from previously prepared paper or cardboard.
(j)
Manufacture, fabrication and maintenance of very light sheet
metal products, including heating and ventilating ducts and equipment;
cornices, eaves and the like.
(k)
Publishing, printing, lithographing, bookbinding or similar
establishment.
(l)
Research laboratory (research, engineering, medical, or testing
laboratories).
(2)
No facility shall be permitted which constitutes a danger to
the community because of medical or biological wastes, explosive,
highly flammable, combustible, chemical, corrosive, oxidizing or radioactive
materials.
H. Manufacturing. The production, processing, assembly, cleaning, testing
and distribution of materials, goods, foodstuff and products, not
including uses specifically listed within the definition of light
manufacturing. Specific industries considered under this use include,
but are not limited to, the following: bottling industry; circuit
board manufacturing; dry cleaning plant; food processing and packaging;
injection molding process; stone cutting and monument manufacture
and sales; and, tire recapping, repair, warehousing.
(1)
No facility shall be permitted which constitutes a danger to
the community because of medical or biological wastes, explosive,
highly flammable, combustible, chemical, corrosive, oxidizing or radioactive
materials.
(2)
All manufacturing uses shall provide assurances of compliance with the environmental protection standards in Part
5 of this chapter.
I. Mini-Warehouse. A building or group of buildings situated in a controlled
access compound which are divided into individual separate access
units which are rented or leased for the storage of tangible personal
property.
(1)
Individual Storage Units. No individual storage units shall
be greater than 200 square feet. All such units shall be fireproof
and waterproof. Each storage unit shall have separate ingress and
egress secured by the user.
(2)
Outdoor Storage. It is limited to RVs, campers, boats on trailers,
automobiles and trucks (2 tons or less in capacity) and trailers (noncommercial
only). It must be parked on paved areas. All such items must be licensed
and inspected (if applicable), and in operable condition. Parking
for such vehicles shall not interfere with traffic movement through
the complex and such vehicles must not be visible from the street.
(3)
Prohibitions. The following shall be prohibited:
(a)
No storage of trash, garbage, refuse, explosive or flammable
materials, hazardous substances, animal, animal carcasses or skins.
(b)
No storage in interior traffic aisles, off-street parking areas,
loading areas, or driveway areas.
(c)
No servicing or repairing of boats, vehicles, trailers, lawn
mowers or any similar equipment.
(d)
No storage permitted other than dead storage.
(4)
Inspection. All fire chiefs, fire marshals, police, building
inspectors, and Department of Health inspectors of the Borough of
Bristol and County of Bucks, shall have the right to inspect each
unit within the self-storage facility at such times as such inspections
are determined necessary by the Borough Manager and the above-mentioned
officials for the protection of the health, safety and welfare of
the Borough residents and the facility users. The persons in control
of the facility shall have available, at all times, the means of obtaining
ingress to each separate storage unit.
(5)
Off-Street Parking Requirements and Standards. One off-street
parking space shall be required for each employee (full or part-time).
One off-street parking space shall also be provided for every five
storage units. These latter spaces, for use by the tenants, shall
be equitably distributed throughout the complex. There shall also
be one off-street parking space for every 25 storage units.
(a)
These spaces shall be adjacent to the entrance and to the manager's
office for use by guests and business invitees.
(b)
Parking lanes shall be 10 feet wide. Two-way travel lanes shall
be 26 feet wide. Non-vehicular travel lanes shall be 20 feet wide.
(6)
Height. Maximum building height is 15 feet.
(7)
Fencing. A six-foot high chain link security fence or block
wall of equivalent height shall be provided.
(8)
Lighting. Adequate lighting to illuminate the area but directed
away from all residential areas or so shielded to reflect light away
shall be provided.
(9)
Security. A continual security guard shall be provided during
hours of access. At all other times electronic security shall be provided.
(10)
Screen Planting. A screen planting next to the security fencing or wall shall be established in accordance with the requirements in §
27-404, Subsection
4H, of this chapter. It shall be of sufficient type, kind and quality so as to completely screen out the security fencing within three to five years.
J. Motor Freight Terminal. The building plus contiguous space to which
freight is brought for transfer, assembly and storage for shipment
by motor truck.
(1)
Short-term warehousing of less than 30 days may be permitted
under this use.
(2)
The truck terminal shall be licensed by the Pennsylvania Public
Utilities Commission.
(3)
Trucks with compressors running 24 hours a day shall be located
within a quadrangle of buildings or walls.
K. Oil and Petroleum Storage and Shipping. Facility for the storage, distribution, and sale of oil and petroleum. This use does not include auto service station as defined by Subsection
4E of this section.
(1)
Approval shall be secured from the Pennsylvania State Police
Fire Marshal and the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection
(PaDEP) for the storage of fuel. All storage tanks (and associated
pumps and piping) construction, installation, and containment shall,
as a minimum, meet the requirements of the Pennsylvania Department
of Environmental Protection and the Federal Environmental Protection
Agency.
(2)
No retail sales shall be permitted on the premises.
(3)
The facility and accessory storage areas shall be set back a
minimum of 100 feet from the ultimate right-of-way and from all other
property lines.
(4)
All storage tanks, associated pumps and piping and leak detection
systems shall be designed and constructed using "state of the art"
industry technology. The leak detection system shall be a continuously
monitored and automated system.
(5)
The applicant shall present a plan to demonstrate the methods
by which any leaks or spills of liquids will be continuously monitored
and contained and shall also demonstrate that the stormwater management
system is designed to capture volatile organic compounds, oils, and
solids. The applicant shall also provide to the Borough a copy of
a maintenance agreement setting forth the terms for the management
of the facilities.
(6)
This use shall not be permitted within 1,000 feet of any preexisting
public or private drinking water supply source.
(7)
Storage of materials shall be screened along all property lines by a thirty-foot planted buffer (fifty-foot buffer yard) in accordance with §
27-404, Subsection
4, of this chapter.
L. Outside Storage. Principal use of the site is for outside storage
of items such as automobiles, boats, and tractor trailers.
(1)
No part of the street right-of-way, no sidewalks or other areas
intended or designed for pedestrian use, no required parking area,
and no part of the front yard shall be occupied by outside storage.
(2)
Outside storage and display areas shall be shielded from view
from all public streets and adjacent lots.
(3)
A thirty-foot planted buffer (fifty-foot buffer yard), in accordance with the standards in §
27-404, Subsection
4, of this chapter, shall be provided along all adjacent uses.
M. Repair Shop. A business for the repair of appliances, lawn mowers,
watches, bicycles, locks, small business machines and other light
equipment, but not including automobiles, motorcycles, trucks and
heavy equipment.
N. Resource Recovery. A facility or land that is used for any one or
a combination of the following: composting, incineration, material
separation, recycling or trash transfer. Related definitions include:
COMPOSTING FACILITY
A facility for the composting of the organic matter in municipal
solid waste.
INCINERATOR
A facility designed to reduce any types of solid waste by
combustion including municipal, commercial, industrial wastes and
including crematoriums. This use may or may not include heat exchange
equipment for energy recovery.
MUNICIPAL SOLID WASTE
The unseparated and/or unprocessed combination of residential
and commercial solid waste materials generated in a municipality.
RECYCLING FACILITY
A business that accumulates material such as paper, glass,
aluminum and/or plastic that is no longer useful for its intended
purpose. The materials are then sold to another business as a raw
material which can be used to manufacture a new product.
TRANSFER STATION
A facility where municipal solid waste is delivered for the
purpose of compacting the material into larger vehicles for transport
to a final disposal site or processing facility. (A transfer station
may include the separation and collection of material for the purpose
for recycling.)
(1)
Minimum lot area: 10 acres.
(2)
Any such use shall be a minimum of 300 feet from any public
road as measured from the ultimate right-of-way of the road and 300
feet from any property line. Additionally, an incinerator or transfer
station shall be a minimum of 1,000 feet from any residential zoning
district or occupied residential dwelling unit.
(3)
Parking areas shall be a minimum of 100 feet from any property
line.
(4)
Operation of a resource recovery facility shall at all times
be in full compliance with the statutes of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
and the rules and regulations of the Department of Environmental Protection
(PaDEP) and the provisions of this chapter. In the event that any
of the provisions of this chapter are less restrictive than any present
or future rules or regulations of PaDEP, the more restrictive PaDEP
regulations shall supersede and control.
(5)
Access to the site shall be limited to those posted times when
an attendant is on duty. In order to protect against indiscriminate
and unauthorized dumping, every resource recovery facility shall be
protected by locked barricades, fences, gates or other positive means
designed to deny access to the area at unauthorized times or locations.
Such barricade shall be at least six feet high and shall be kept in
good repair and neatly painted in a uniform color.
(6)
Unloading of municipal solid waste shall be continuously supervised
by a facility operator.
(7)
Hazardous waste as included on the list of hazardous waste as
maintained by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection
shall not be disposed of in a resource recovery facility.
(8)
Litter control shall be exercised to confine blowing litter
to the work area and a working plan for clean up of litter shall be
submitted to the Borough. To control blowing paper, there shall be
erected a fence having a minimum height of six feet with openings
not more than three inches along all boundaries. The entire area shall
be kept clean and orderly.
(9)
All parts of the process-unloading, handling and storage of
municipal solid waste-shall occur within a building. However, certain
separated recyclable materials like glass, aluminum and other metals
may be stored outdoors.
(10)
The storage of paper shall be within a building.
(11)
Any materials stored outdoors shall be properly screened so
as not to be visible from any adjacent streets or property.
(12)
No material shall be placed or deposited to a height greater
than the height of the fence or wall herein prescribed.
(13)
No municipal solid waste shall be processed or stored at a recycling
facility. For all other types of resource recovery facilities, municipal
solid waste shall not be stored on the site for more than 72 hours.
(14)
A contingency plan for disposal of municipal solid waste during
a plant shutdown must be submitted to the Borough and approved by
the Borough Council.
(15)
Leachate from the municipal solid waste and water used to wash
vehicles or any part of the operation shall be disposed of in a manner
in compliance with the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protections'
(PaDEP) regulations. If the leachate is to be discharged to a municipal
sewage treatment plant appropriate permits shall be obtained from
the applicable agencies and authorities. In no event shall the leachate
be disposed of in a storm sewer, to the ground, or in any other manner
inconsistent with the PaDEP regulations.
(16)
Waste from the resource recovery facility process (such as,
but not limited to, ash from an incinerator) shall be stored in such
a manner as to prevent it from being carried from the site by wind
or water. This process waste shall be located at least 100 feet from
any property line and stored in leak proof and vector proof containers.
Such process waste shall be disposed of in a sanitary landfill approved
by PaDEP or in another manner approved by PaDEP.
(17)
A dense evergreen buffer shall be provided on the outside perimeter of the fenced area. Evergreens shall be four to five feet in height and planted on ten-foot staggered centers. In addition; the buffer requirements in §
27-404, Subsection
4, of this chapter shall be met.
(18)
Solid waste landfill operations and open burning of any materials
shall specifically be prohibited.
(19)
No use shall emit noise in such quantity as to be audible beyond its lot lines. In addition, the nuisance standards in §§
27-504 through
27-513 of this chapter shall be met.
(20)
A traffic impact study and water impact study shall be required.
(21)
A zoning permit shall be obtained on an annual basis.
O. Sheet Metal Fabrication. Manufacture and fabrication of sheet metal
products utilizing various processes such as forging, bending, forming,
machining, welding, and assembling. This use generally utilizes heavy
industrial processes in larger scale manufacturing plants and differs
from the manufacture and fabrication of very light sheet metal products
included under Use 6G Light Manufacturing.
P. Solid Waste Landfill. A land site on which engineering principles
are utilized to bury deposits or solid waste without creating public
health or safety hazards, nuisances, pollution or environmental degradation.
(1)
Minimum lot area: 10 acres.
(2)
The solid waste landfill operation shall be setback from any
property line or street right-of-way line at least 100 feet.
(3)
Direct access shall be required for the operation of a solid
waste landfill.
(4)
A traffic impact study shall be required following standards
set forth in this chapter.
(5)
Operation of any solid waste landfill shall at all times be
in full compliance with the Statutes of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
and the rules and regulations of the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental
Protection and the Provisions of this chapter. In the event that any
of the provisions of this chapter are less restrictive than any present
or future rules or regulations of the Department, the more restrictive
Department rules or regulations shall supersede and control in the
operation of such solid waste landfill.
(6)
Suitable measures shall be taken to prevent fires by means and
devices mutually agreeable to the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental
Protection and the Borough.
(7)
A solid waste landfill operation shall be under the direction
at all times of a responsible individual who is qualified by experience
or training to operate a landfill.
(8)
Access to the site shall be limited to those posted times when
an attendant is on duty. In order to protect against indiscriminate
and unauthorized dumping, every solid waste landfill shall be protected
by locked barricades, fences, gates or other positive means designed
to deny access to the area at unauthorized times or locations.
(9)
Unloading of waste shall be continuously supervised.
(10)
Measures shall be provided to control dust. To control blowing
paper, there shall be erected a fence having a minimum height of six
feet, with openings not more than three inches by three inches along
any boundary over which such a nuisance may be spread. The entire
area shall be kept clean and orderly. Cracks in, depressions in or
erosion of cover shall be repaired daily.
(11)
Hazardous materials, including, but not limited to, highly flammable
materials, explosives, pathological wastes, radioactive materials,
liquids and sewage, shall not be disposed of in a solid waste landfill.
(12)
The disposal of sewage liquids and solids and other liquids
shall be specifically prohibited in a solid waste landfill.
(13)
Litter control shall be exercised to confine blowing litter
to the work area and a working plan of clean up of litter shall be
accomplished.
(14)
Salvaging shall be conducted by the operator only and shall
be organized so that it will not interfere with prompt sanitary disposal
of waste or create unsightliness or health hazards. The storage of
salvage shall be controlled in a manner that will not permit the inhabitation
or reproduction of deleterious vectors.
(15)
The entire site, including the fill surface, shall be graded
and provided with drainage facilities to minimize runoff onto and
into the fill, to prevent erosion or washing of the fill, to drain
off rainwater falling onto the fill and to prevent the collection
of standing water. The operator shall comply with the requirements
of Chapter 75 and Chapter 102 of Title 25, Pa. Code, and applicable
Borough ordinances so that there is no adverse off-site impact from
the drainage of surface water.
(16)
Operation of any solid waste landfill shall at all times be
in full compliance with the Pennsylvania Clean Streams Law, 35 P.S.
§ 691.1 et seq., as amended.
(17)
Such use shall be screened by a fifty-foot buffer yard in accordance with §
27-404, Subsection
4, of this chapter.
(18)
A zoning permit shall be obtained on an annual basis.
(19)
A final inspection of the entire site shall be made by the Department
of Environmental Protection and the Borough and their authorized representatives
to determine compliance with approved plans and specifications before
the earth-moving equipment is removed from the site. Any necessary
corrective work shall be performed before the solid waste landfill
project is accepted as completed. Arrangements shall be made for the
repair of all cracked, eroded and uneven areas in the final cover
during the first two years following completion of the solid waste
landfill. A bond shall be posted to ensure that all corrective work
is completed.
Q. Truck Repair. A facility for the repair of trucks and heavy equipment.
(1)
All repair work shall be performed within a fully enclosed building.
R. Warehouse. A building or group of buildings primarily used for the
commercial storage, transfer, and distribution of products and materials.
(1)
No explosive, toxic, radioactive, corrosive, oxidizing or highly
flammable or combustible materials and chemicals shall be stored on
the premises.
(2)
Storage of materials shall be screened along all property lines by a ten-foot wide planted buffer in accordance with §
27-404, Subsection
4E, of this chapter.
(3)
Tractor trailers, cargo boxes, or other vehicles or structures
meant to be transportable shall not be permitted to be used as accessory
buildings for storage.
S. Wholesale Trade. Establishments engaged primarily in the selling
of merchandise to retailers, to industrial, commercial, institutional
users or to other wholesalers, and which render services incidental
to the sale of merchandise.
(1)
No explosive, toxic, radioactive, corrosive, oxidizing or highly
flammable or combustible materials and chemicals shall be stored on
the premises.
7. Accessory Uses. Accessory uses are permitted only where there is
an existing principal use to which the accessory use is secondary
and incidental. Every accessory use shall comply with the yard regulations
for the district in which it is located, except as otherwise specifically
provided in this chapter. Each accessory use shall comply with all
of the following standards listed for that use:
A. Arcade, Accessory. A place of business where up to two coin-operated
games such as video screen game machines, pool tables and pinball
machines are located.
B. Bus Shelter. An open, semi-enclosed or enclosed structure in which
people can stand or sit while waiting for a bus.
(1)
Such structures shall be located at least five feet from any street line and 15 feet from any lot line. In addition, such structures shall meet the requirements of §
27-404, Subsection
3, of this chapter regarding traffic visibility across corners.
(2)
No signs or advertising shall be permitted on the structure.
C. Day Care Center. A facility where care is provided at any one time
for seven or more children under the age of 12, where the child care
area(s) are not being used as a family residence, and where full-time
adult supervision is provided.
(1)
No more than one day care center shall be permitted in any Use
3E Planned Business Park.
(2)
The use shall not occupy more than 5% of the total floor area
of the office building or planned business park.
(3)
Day-care facilities shall comply with all state licensing requirements
in effect for this use at the time of application.
D. Drive-Through Facility. A drive-through facility shall be an accessory
use and is defined as any facility through which a service is provided,
or goods, food or beverage are sold to the operator of, or passengers
in, a motor vehicle without the necessity of the operator or passengers
disembarking from the vehicle. Drive-through facilities are permitted
as accessory uses only for restaurants with drive-through facilities,
banks, pharmacies, and no others. All drive-through facilities shall
meet the following requirements.
(1)
The following definitions shall apply.
BYPASS LANE/ESCAPE LANE
Vehicular lane allowing traffic to pass the drive-through
lane and/or allowing vehicles, because of emergencies or mistakenly
entering the drive-through lane, to exit the drive-through lane.
DRIVE-THROUGH CANOPY
Overhead structures intended to protect patrons from the
weather while stationed at the drive-through service area/facility.
DRIVE-THROUGH LANE
Vehicular lane allowing the stationing and stacking of vehicles
while ordering and waiting for goods and services.
(2)
Requirements. A drive-through facility is subject to the following
standards:
(a)
The drive-through facility shall be designed so there will be
no pedestrian/vehicular conflicts.
(b)
Hours of operation shall be set as a condition of the land development
approval to minimize the impacts of drive-through facilities located
adjacent to residential uses.
(c)
Drive-through facilities are not permitted on sites abutting
schools, parks, playgrounds, libraries, churches and other uses that
have substantial pedestrian traffic.
(d)
Minimum lot frontage on at least one street shall be 150 feet
for all principal uses with accessory drive-through facilities to
ensure adequate room for access drives.
(e)
Drive-through facilities shall abut only arterial streets. Access
shall not be taken from local streets.
(f)
The driveway entrance and exit lane of a drive-through facility
must be setback at least 100 feet from any intersection.
(g)
A bypass lane/escape lane shall be provided.
(h)
The design of a drive-through lane and bypass lane/escape lane
shall minimize the blocking, crossing or passing through of off-street
parking areas and minimize crossing of or the need to be crossed by
pedestrian access ways for patrons.
(i)
The drive-through lane shall not be the sole ingress and egress
to the site.
(j)
Drive-through lanes shall be marked by signs that indicate the
entrance and exit for the drive-through lane. The direction of traffic
flow for the drive-through lane and bypass lane/escape lane shall
be marked clearly.
(k)
Drive-through lanes are to be separated from the bypass lane/escape
lane and parking aisles by painted lines.
(l)
Lane Separation. An on-site circulation pattern is to be provided
for drive-through facility traffic that separates such traffic from
that of walk-in patrons.
(m)
A stacking area is to be provided for vehicles waiting for service
in the drive-through lane that is separated from other traffic circulation
on the site. Stacking shall not be provided in parking aisles or in
driveways provided for on-site circulation. Stacking distance for
each lane shall be at least 120 feet in length.
(n)
The total height for any overhead drive-through canopy shall
not exceed 15 feet.
E. Family Day Care Center. A facility in which care is provided for
four to six children or up to four disabled and/or elderly persons
at any one time, who are not relatives of the caregiver, where the
child or adult care areas are being used as a family residence.
(1)
Family day care center shall be permitted only when granted
as a special exception by the Zoning Hearing Board. Prior to the final
approval of the use by the Zoning Hearing Board and the issuing of
a permit by the Zoning Officer, the applicant must obtain a registration
certificate from the Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare, and/or
the Pennsylvania Department of Aging.
(2)
This use shall be conducted in a building designed for residential
occupancy and for the safety and well-being of the occupants.
(3)
A minimum outdoor play area of 200 square feet of contiguous
areas shall be provided for each child as a recreational area for
the children. An outdoor recreation area of 100 square feet of contiguous
area shall be provided for each disabled and/or elderly person. This
area shall not include any impervious surface or parking areas.
(4)
The outdoor play or recreation area must be enclosed by a four-foot
high fence which is deemed appropriate by the Borough.
(5)
The outdoor play or recreation areas shall be located to the
side or rear of the property.
(6)
No more than one person other than resident members of the immediate
family may be employed.
F. Flea Market. A periodic sales activity held within a building and/or
outdoors, where transient retail merchants offer goods, new or used,
for sale to the public.
(1)
Outdoor sales areas shall not be located in the minimum front,
side, or rear yards and shall be set back at least 25 feet from any
lot line or street line.
(2)
Sales directly from vehicles shall be prohibited.
(3)
Tables and other accessories which are used for outdoor sales
shall be stored within a completely enclosed building when the flea
market is not in use.
(4)
Goods for sale must be removed from the site when the flea market
is not in use.
(5)
A flea market shall not be open more than three days in any
one week.
(6)
Outdoor sales areas shall not encroach upon required parking
areas and shall be separated from traffic movement on the site.
(7)
The proposed flea market shall be served by adequate water and
sewage disposal facilities, the adequacy of which shall be demonstrated
and guaranteed to the satisfaction of the Borough Council.
G. Home Occupation. An accessory use that is customarily carried on
within a dwelling unit or accessory building by one or more occupants
of such dwelling and which is clearly incidental and subordinate to
its use for residential purposes by its occupants.
(1)
No more than one home occupation shall be permitted per dwelling
unit.
(2)
The home occupation shall be carried on only by owner-inhabitants
of the dwelling and not more than one additional employee.
(3)
The floor area devoted exclusively to a home occupation, whether
within the principle structure or an accessory structure, shall not
be more than 25% of the ground floor area of the principal residential
structure, or 500 square feet, whichever is less.
(4)
A sign indicating products made or services rendered shall not
exceed 200 square inches in any district. Only one on-premises sign
is permitted.
(5)
Parking and Loading. Adequate space for off-street parking in accordance with §
27-701, Subsection
1A, and Table 27-7-A and loading (where applicable) shall be provided.
(6)
There shall be no outdoor storage or display and no change in the existing outside appearance of the building or premises or other visible evidence of the conduct of such home occupation or home professional office other than a sign in accordance with the regulation in Subsection
7G(4) above.
(7)
No equipment or process shall be permitted that produces noise,
odor, vibration, glare, fumes, light, or electrical interference at
the property line and no equipment or process shall be used which
creates visual or audible interference in any radio or television
receiver of the lot or causes fluctuations in fine voltage off the
lot.
(8)
No trucks or similar vehicles for pickup or delivery are allowed.
(9)
Only articles that are produced on the premises shall be sold
on the premises. Articles produced elsewhere shall not be sold on
the premises.
(10)
Permitted and Prohibited Uses.
(a)
The use may include: fine arts studios, office, medical office,
dressmaking, beauty parlors, barber shops, real estate offices, insurance
offices and similar occupations.
(b)
The use may not include: animal hospital, commercial stables,
kennels, or any occupation that may customarily require the use of
a panel truck or delivery truck or similar vehicle.
H. Keeping of Animals. The keeping of dogs, cats, or other small animals
ordinarily kept in the home as pets.
(1)
No more than four customary household pets or domestic animals
(e.g., dogs, cats, etc.) ordinarily kept in the home shall be kept
under the permanent care of the occupants.
(2)
Five or more adult dogs or cats shall constitute a kennel.
(3)
Commercial Use. Commercial breeding or use of these pets shall
not be permitted under this use.
(4)
A zoning permit shall not be required for this use.
I. Microwave or Satellite Dish. A dish antenna or any other type of
antenna used to receive radio, television, or electromagnetic waves
from an overhead satellite or transmission tower. This use shall not
be construed to permit as a permissible accessory use a microwave
antenna for satellite communication used or intended to be used for
the propagation or transmission of radio or electromagnetic waves,
such being permitted only as Use 5A Telecommunications Facilities.
(1)
A microwave or satellite dish shall not be permitted in a front
or side yard.
(2)
A microwave or satellite dish must be located within governing
setback lines.
(3)
Maximum height of any satellite dish shall not exceed 10 feet
from the base of dish to its highest point. Dish may not be more than
15 feet above ground level.
(4)
The diameter of the microwave or satellite dish shall not exceed
two feet.
(5)
No roof mounted dish is permitted unless dish is less than two
feet in diameter and unless installation of a dish on ground level
is not practical because of interference with reception from adjoining
buildings. If reception is not possible from a ground mounted dish,
the lowest roof available shall be utilized for the installation of
the dish. A roof-mounted satellite dish shall be located on a portion
of the roof sloping away from the front of the lot and shall not project
above the ridge line of the roof.
(6)
No more than one dish shall be permitted on any lot.
J. No-Impact Home-Based Business. A business or commercial activity
administered or conducted as an accessory use which is clearly secondary
to the use as a residential dwelling and which involves no customer,
client or patient traffic, whether vehicular or pedestrian, pickup,
delivery or removal functions to or from the premises, in excess of
those normally associated with residential use. It is permitted on
the same lot with and must be clearly incidental to a permitted dwelling
in which the operator of the home business resides and may be permitted
where it meets the following regulations: The business or commercial
activity must satisfy the following requirements:
(1)
The business activity shall be compatible with the residential
use of the property and surrounding residential uses.
(2)
The business shall employ no employees other than family members
residing in the dwelling.
(3)
There shall be no display or sale of retail goods and no stockpiling
or inventory of a substantial nature.
(4)
There shall be no outside appearance of a business use including,
but not limited to, parking, signs or lights.
(5)
The business activity may not use any equipment or process which
creates noise, vibration, glare, fumes, odors or electrical or electronic
interference at the property line, and no equipment or process shall
be used which creates visual or audible interference in any radio
or television or telephone receiver off the lot or causes fluctuations
in line voltage off the lot.
(6)
The business activity may not generate any solid waste or sewage
discharge, in volume or type, which is not normally associated with
residential use.
(7)
The business activity shall be conducted only within the dwelling
and may not occupy more than 25% of the habitable floor area of the
principal residential structure.
(8)
No home business shall be located in an area needed to meet
the off-street parking requirements of the principal residence.
(9)
The business may not involve any illegal activity.
K. Noncommercial Swimming Pool. A noncommercial swimming pool or other
structure designed to contain a water depth of 24 inches or more and
intended for swimming or recreational purposes. This use may only
be permitted as an accessory to a residential use and includes in-ground
pool, above-ground/on-ground pool, hot tub/spa, and any other type
of swimming pool meeting the description in the preceding sentence.
Such use shall not be located, constructed, or maintained on any lot
or land area except in conformity with the following requirements:
(1)
A zoning permit shall be required to locate, construct or maintain
a noncommercial swimming pool.
(2)
No pool shall be located in front of the principal building.
Pools must be a minimum of 10 feet from the principal building. No
above or in-ground pool shall be located within two feet of the side
or rear lot line in residential zoning districts or be under any electrical
lines (including service lines), or within 10 feet of such power lines,
or over any on-lot sewage disposal field. No portion of any walkway
or pool appurtenance structure shall be closer than one foot to any
lot line.
(3)
Permanent swimming pools above or below grade, except for hot
tubs/spas, must be completely enclosed with a minimum four-foot high
chain link, stockade, picket (not exceeding two-inch spacing), solid
wood fence, building wall, or such other material as may be acceptable,
at the discretion of the building inspector, to carry out the intent
of this chapter. All gates or doors opening through such enclosure
shall be kept securely closed and locked at all times when the pool
is not in actual use and locks or latches shall be placed so as to
be inaccessible to children. All Pennsylvania Uniform Construction
Code (PaUCC) requirements for the securing and fencing of pools shall
be followed, provided that if a discrepancy exists between the PaUCC
requirements and those specified in this chapter, the strictest standards
shall govern.
(4)
Access to Above-Ground Pools. All detachable ladders shall be
removed when the pool is not in use.
(5)
If the water for such pool is supplied from a private well,
there shall be no cross-connection with the public water supply system.
If the water for such pool is supplied from the public water supply
system, the inlet shall be above the overflow level of said pool.
(6)
The draining of all pools shall comply with environmental protection requirements of Part
5 of this chapter.
(7)
No loudspeaker or amplifying device shall be permitted which
will project sound beyond the boundaries of the property or lot where
such pool is located.
(8)
No lighting or spot light shall be permitted which will shine
directly upon or beyond the bounds of the property or lot where such
pool is located. If underwater lighting is used for pool illumination,
such lighting shall be in compliance with the applicable National
Electric Code.
(9)
The Borough Zoning Officer shall inspect each pool annually
to ensure continued compliance with this chapter.
(10)
The pool shall comply with the applicable sections of the Bristol
Borough Code of Ordinances, regulating the construction, operation
and maintenance of swimming pools.
(11)
All hot tubs/spas shall have lockable covers.
L. Nonresidential Accessory Building or Structure. Accessory building,
or structure, or use customarily incidental to the uses permitted
within the zoning district, except outside storage or display and
drive-through facilities. If a use is permitted by special exception
or conditional use, the accessory use shall only be permitted as a
special exception or conditional use.
(1)
Nonresidential accessory buildings shall meet the minimum setbacks
for the principal use.
(2)
Additional parking shall conform to the requirements of the
most closely related use.
(3)
Nonresidential accessory building or structure is permitted
wherever the principal use to which it is accessible to, is permitted.
(4)
Except where specifically required for specific uses in this
chapter, fences and walls in the required side and rear yard areas
shall not exceed six feet in height and shall be no closer than the
property line.
(5)
Fences and walls placed in the required front yard shall not
exceed four feet in height and shall be no closer than the property
line.
M. Outdoor Eating Accessory to Food Service. Outdoor eating accessory
to food service is permitted as a use accessory to restaurant uses
subject to the following requirements:
[Amended by Ord. No. 1341, 7/13/2020]
(1)
The outdoor eating area shall be open to the sky with the exception
that it may have a retractable awning, umbrella, or tents, and may
contain furniture including tables, chairs, and planters that are
readily moveable.
(2)
Location of outdoor eating areas:
(a)
No outdoor eating or food service shall be permitted within
the right-of-way of any street or within the sidewalk area, except
as provided below.
(b)
All outdoor eating areas shall be located a minimum of 10 feet
from a side or rear property line where the restaurant abuts or is
adjacent to a residential zoning district.
(3)
No outdoor service shall be provided before 6:00 a.m. or after
11:00 p.m.
(4)
No amplified music or sound is permitted. All activities, including
the playing of music, shall comply with the noise regulations of this
chapter.
(5)
The carrying of any open container of alcoholic beverages is
prohibited outside the delineated area of the outdoor eating area.
(6)
No outdoor eating area shall interfere with safe pedestrian
and vehicular traffic on or in the vicinity of the restaurant or lot.
(7)
Outdoor food preparation is prohibited and there shall be no
outdoor bar for beverage service.
(8)
All trash shall be removed from the outdoor eating area and
from the area surrounding the outdoor eating area on at least a daily
basis.
(9)
Temporary outdoor dining area, as an accessory use to restaurant
uses, provided the following conditions are met:
(a)
Outdoor dining areas shall have a continuous, unobstructed pathway
between the seating area and any obstacle (e.g., tree, pole, post,
sign, or planting area) which provides a width sufficient for a safe
passage of pedestrians and wheelchairs.
(b)
The outdoor dining area shall be situated a sufficient distance
from any pedestrian crossing, fire hydrant, driveway, or in a manner
which does not visually obstruct vehicular traffic sightlines, traffic
control devices, or signs.
(c)
No outdoor dining area may be permanently located within the
sidewalk area by means of a raised platform, fence, wall, or other
structures or enclosed by a fixed wall.
(d)
Outdoor tables, chairs, furniture and decorative items shall
be of uniform design and shall be removed from public property November
1 through March 31.
(e)
The outdoor dining area may be located in the street cart way
adjacent to the applicant's property so long as the respective street
owner (PennDOT, County, Borough) grants permission, and the applicable
rules and regulations are complied with by the applicant.
(10)
The outdoor eating area may not occupy areas that are required
by the establishment to meet the parking requirements of this chapter.
N. Outdoor Storage or Display. Outside storage or display, other than
storage as a primary use of the land, necessary but incidental to
the normal operation of a principal nonresidential use.
(1)
Outside storage or display areas shall not occupy any part of
the street right-of-way, any area intended or designed for pedestrian
use or any required parking area.
(2)
Outside storage or display areas shall occupy an area of up
to 20% of the lot, but no more than 50% of the existing building coverage,
whichever is less. A special exception may be authorized by the Zoning
Hearing Board for no more than 25% of the lot area to be used for
outdoor storage or display.
(3)
Any outdoor storage and display area shall be located a minimum
of 10 feet from the street right-of-way.
(4)
No outdoor storage shall occupy any portion of the minimum required
yard setbacks on the lot.
O. Parking or Storage of Recreational Vehicles and Other Recreational
Equipment. A vehicle or piece of equipment, whether self-powered or
designed to be pulled or carried, intended primarily for leisure time
or recreational use. Recreation vehicles or units include, but are
not limited to, the following: travel trailers, truck-mounted campers,
motor homes, folding tent campers, autos, buses or trucks adapted
for vacation use, snowmobiles, minibikes, all-terrain vehicles, go-carts,
boats, boat trailers, and utility trailers.
(1)
Recreational vehicles or units shall be parked and/or stored
on lot and shall be parked and/or stored on impervious surface, either
in a driveway along the rear or side of the dwelling, in a garage,
or in a roofed structure.
(2)
Parking and storage of recreational vehicles shall comply with the standards for parking and storage of certain vehicles in §
27-702, Subsection
8A, of this chapter.
P. Residential Accessory Building, Structure or Use. Permitted residential
accessory buildings, structures or uses include:
(1)
Parking Spaces and Garages. Shall comply with Part
7 of this chapter.
(2)
Fences and Walls.
(a)
Fences and walls in the required side and rear yard areas shall
not exceed six feet in height (except tennis court fences which shall
not exceed 10 feet in height), and shall be no closer than the property
line.
(b)
Fences or walls placed in the required front yard shall not
exceed four feet in height and shall be no closer than the property
line.
(c)
No fences or walls may be placed in the right-of-way or in drainage
easements or swales but may occupy required yard areas.
(3)
Freestanding, Separate Structures.
(a)
Structures (such as garages, greenhouses, boathouses, carports,
canopies, and storage sheds) shall not exceed 15 feet in height and
a total of 500 square feet in area. Such structures shall not be located
within two feet from a side lot line nor within two feet of a rear
lot line. Provided, however, that where a building on an adjacent
lot abuts the property line nearest to the proposed structure that
the structure may be located on the property in line next to the building
on the adjacent lot. Structures may only be located to the rear of
the principal building, the closest edge of which must be at least
10 feet from the rear of the principal building. When residential
detached accessory structures are placed three feet or closer from
a property line, the residential detached accessory structures must
have an impervious surface (such as concrete, asphalt, impervious
pavers, etc.) between the property line and the residential detached
accessory structure, so vegetation cannot grow.
(b)
A tennis court may be permitted accessory residential use provided:
(i) such court may only be located to the rear of the principal building,
the closest edge of which must be at least 10 feet from the rear of
the principal building; (ii) such court may not be located within
any required minimum yard areas; (iii) no lighting shall shine directly
beyond a boundary of the lot where the tennis court is located.
Q. Retail Space within Office Buildings.
(1)
No more than three retail establishments for the support of
the building occupants will be permitted within a building as an accessory
use.
(2)
The use shall not occupy more than 10% of the total floor area
of the office building or planned business park.
R. Solar Energy System. An energy system which converts solar energy
to usable thermal, mechanical, chemical or electrical energy to meet
all or a significant part of a building's energy requirements.
(1)
No solar energy system shall deny solar access on adjacent lots.
(2)
Solar energy systems accessory to residential uses shall meet
the setback requirements for Use 7P Residential Accessory Building,
Structure, or Use.
(3)
Solar energy systems accessory to nonresidential uses shall
meet the setback requirements for Use 7L Nonresidential Accessory
Building or Structure.
S. Temporary Structure or Use. A temporary permit may be issued by the
Zoning Officer for structures or uses necessary during construction
or other special circumstances of a nonrecurring nature subject to
the following additional provisions:
(1)
Except for temporary structures regulated in Subsection
7S(4) below, the life of such permit shall not exceed one year and may be renewed for an aggregate period of not more than six months.
(2)
Such structure or use shall be removed completely upon expiration
of the permit without cost to the Borough.
(3)
No residential parcel may be issued more than one permit for
the placement of any temporary structure on the property during any
twelve-month period.
(4)
If the structure is a temporary storage container, an outdoor
container commonly referred to as a "POD," or a similar type container,
the following standards must be met:
(a)
Temporary storage containers shall not exceed 20 feet in length.
(b)
Temporary storage containers may only be located within the
front yard of any property provided that such containers are set back
a minimum of 20 feet from the edge of the sidewalk, or where a sidewalk
does not exist, a minimum of 20 feet from the edge of the road. If
the required front yard setback is less than 20 feet, the temporary
storage container shall be no less than and no greater than 20 feet
from the edge of the sidewalk, or where a sidewalk does not exist,
a minimum of 20 feet from the edge of the road.
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If there is insufficient room in the front yard due to the size
or positioning of the building, a temporary storage container may
be located in the rear yard if access by alley or road is provided,
but must be set back from the rear property line a minimum of 10 feet.
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(c)
No more than one temporary storage container may be placed on
any residential parcel at one time.
(d)
Permits for a temporary storage container, an outdoor container
commonly referred to as a "POD," or a similar type container may be
granted for 30 days and, upon application for an extension, may be
renewed for an additional 30 days.
T. Vending Machines. Vending and service machines are permitted as accessory
uses in the following zoning districts only: TC, HC-1, HC-2, NC and
GC. No vending or service machine shall be permitted outside a completely
enclosed building.
U. Windmill. A wind energy conversion system is a device which converts
wind energy to mechanical or electrical energy, and is subject to
the following:
(1)
No windmill shall be located in front of the principal building.
A windmill shall be set back from any property line, above-ground
utility line, or other windmill a distance greater than either: its
overall height, including blades plus 50%; or, the minimum yard requirement,
whichever is greater.
(2)
No windmill shall exceed 55 feet in height.
(3)
All windmills shall be enclosed by a fence at least four feet
in height which is located at least five feet from the base of such
windmill. Any gate that may exist shall be a self-closing, lockable
gate.
(4)
No windmill shall be permitted the design of which permits any
vane, sail or rotor blade to pass within 10 feet of the ground.
(5)
All electrical wiring leading to and from a windmill shall be
located underground.
(6)
The ground level equipment and structures shall be adequately
buffered from adjacent properties and street rights-of-way with landscaping
or fencing.
(7)
A windmill shall primarily serve on-site generation needs. If
hookups to a public utility system are proposed, electrical plans
must be prepared by a certified electrical engineer, at the applicant's
expense, and submitted to the public utility for approval.
(8)
The design of a proposed windmill shall be such that it will
operate safely, without loss of structural integrity and certified
by a licensed engineer, under the following conditions:
(a)
Loss of utility power (shall not backfeed dead utility line).
(b)
High wind speed (shall brake of feather below survival wind
speed).
(c)
Blade imbalance (shall support added blade weight of at least
10%).
(9)
A minimum of one sign shall be posted near ground level or on
the structure warning of high voltage.
(10)
A windmill shall not interfere with the reception of any radio,
television or other communications equipment.
V. Non-Household Swimming Pool. A swimming pool or other structure designed
to contain a water depth of 24 inches or more and intended for swimming
or recreational purposes as an accessory to certain nonresidential
uses. This use includes in-ground pool, above-ground/on-ground pool,
hot tub/spa, and any other type of swimming pool meeting the description
in the preceding sentence. Such use shall not be located, constructed,
or maintained on any lot or land area except in conformity with the
following requirements:
(1)
A zoning permit shall be required to locate, construct or maintain
a non-household swimming pool.
(2)
Non-household swimming pools must be located a minimum of 15
feet from any lot line and may not be located under or within 15 feet
of electric lines (including service lines), or over any on-lot sewage
disposal field. No portion of any walkway or pool appurtenance structure
shall be closer than five feet to any lot line.
(3)
All non-household swimming pools shall be entirely enclosed
by a minimum seven-foot high chain link, stockade, picket (not exceeding
two-inch spacing), solid wood fence, building wall, or such other
material as may be acceptable, at the discretion of the building inspector,
to carry out the intent of this chapter. All gates or doors opening
through such enclosure shall be kept securely closed and locked at
all times when the pool is not in actual use and locks or latches
shall be placed so as to be inaccessible to children. All other Pennsylvania
Uniform Construction Code requirements for the securing and fencing
of pools shall be followed.
(4)
Access to Above-Ground Pools. All detachable ladders shall be
removed when the pool is not in use.
(5)
No loudspeaker or amplifying device shall be permitted which
will project sound beyond the boundaries of the property or lot where
such pool is located.
(6)
No lighting or spot light shall be permitted which will shine
directly upon or beyond the bounds of the property or lot where such
pool is located. If underwater lighting is used for pool illumination,
such lighting shall be in compliance with the applicable National
Electric Code.
(7)
If the water for such pool is supplied from a private well,
there shall be no cross-connection with the public water supply system.
If the water for such pool is supplied from the public water supply
system, the inlet shall be above the overflow level of said pool.
(8)
The draining of all pools shall comply with the environmental protection requirements of Part
6 of this chapter.
(9)
All pools shall meet the applicable state and federal public
bathing requirements.
(10)
The Borough Zoning Officer shall inspect each pool annually
to ensure continued compliance with this chapter.
(11)
The pool shall comply with the applicable sections of the Bristol
Borough Code of Ordinances, regulating the construction, operation
and maintenance of swimming pools.
W. Meeting/Special Event Facility. Boardroom, seminar and meeting rooms
that are used by or rented out to groups for meetings, press conferences,
presentations, and lectures. Cooking and food preparation is not a
permitted activity in this type of facility, however, catered food
and drink items may be delivered for on-site consumption.
(1)
Such space may be equipped with white board walls, video streaming,
video conferencing capabilities and other audio video and presentation
equipment.
(2)
The facility may contain a warming kitchen with a refrigerator,
microwave, ice machine, coffee pot and countertop space.