[Amended 3-3-1962 by Art. 23; 3-7-1964 by Art. 38; 4-3-1982 by Art. 1; 4-3-1982 by Art. 14; 6-18-1984 by Art. 7; 6-18-1984 by Art. 8; 4-8-1985 by Art. 41; 3-27-1993 by Art. 23; 3-31-2001 by Art. 22; 11-17-2003 by Art. 16; 3-27-2004 by Art. 7; 4-1-2006 by Art. 18; 5-12-2012; 5-21-2012 by Arts. 23 and 25; 4-30-2018 ATM by Art. 20; 11-13-2023 STM by Art. 14]
A. 
No new building or other structure may be erected, and no new lot may be created or developed, except in conformity with the applicable dimensional requirements set forth in this Article 5 or as may be expressly provided elsewhere in this Zoning Bylaw.
B. 
No existing lot on which a building is located may be reduced or changed in size or shape, nor may the building be moved or changed so that either the building or lot fails to comply with the dimensional requirements, or other provisions of this Zoning Bylaw, applicable to said lot or to the construction of such building on said lot, except:
(1) 
When a portion of a lot is taken or conveyed for public purpose; or
(2) 
When, pursuant to statute, a lot on which more than one dwelling in existence prior to July 1, 1955, and not abandoned, is divided so that one such dwelling will be located on each lot resulting from the division.
The basic dimensional requirements pertaining to development and use of land and structures in each zoning district are set forth in the § 300-5.3, Table of Dimensional Regulations. For purposes of interpreting said dimensional requirements, the following rules will apply:
A. 
Lot area. The calculation of minimum lot area may not include any land within the limits of an abutting street or private way, or any portion of the lot below mean high water.
B. 
Lot frontage. Minimum lot frontage is measured along a continuous length of the street line. On corner and through lots, minimum frontage is measured along one street line only.
C. 
Lot width.
(1) 
The required minimum lot width specified in the § 300-5.3 Table of Dimensional Regulations is measured between the sidelines of the lot, along a line which is parallel to the center line of the abutting street and touches the point of the principal building nearest to the front lot line, which measurement line may or may not coincide with the required front setback line.
(2) 
The portion of the lot between the front yard setback line and the front lot line may have a lesser lot width than the minimum lot width specified in § 300-5.3, provided the lot width of said portion is equal to or greater than the required frontage distance at all points.
D. 
Setbacks.
(1) 
Front, side, and rear yard setbacks must conform to the yard definitions set forth in Article 2 of this Zoning Bylaw.
(2) 
The minimum required front yard setback for a building is measured from the front lot line and extends the full width of the lot between the side lot lines.
(3) 
For the purpose of determining front yard setback requirements, all yards bounding on a street, including but not limited to through lots and corner lots, will be considered front yards.
(4) 
When measuring the setback distance between a building and a property line, the following permitted building projections shall be disregarded:
(a) 
Construction elements that extend no more than two feet from the building wall surface, including but not limited to eaves, chimneys, bay windows that do not provide additional floor area, and belt courses; and
(b) 
Unenclosed entry porches, unenclosed steps, and bulkheads, provided that they do not exceed 30 square feet in area, and do not project more than six feet from the foundation wall of the building.
E. 
Lot coverage. The lot area measurement used to calculate lot coverage by buildings and other impervious surfaces may not include more than 50% of any wetlands, water bodies, and land with slopes greater than 45% within the lot boundaries.
Table of Dimensional Regulations
District
Min. Lot Area
(square feet)
Min. Lot Frontage
(feet)
Min. Lot Width
(feet)
Min. Setbacks
(feet)
Max. Height
(feet)
Max. % Lot Coverage
Front
Side
Rear
Principal
Accessory1
Total
By Buildings
R-A
18,0002
50
100
20
153
154
35
25
30
205
R-B
35,0006
50
125
30
207
208
35
25
30
20R-
R-C
60,0009
50
150
30
2010
3011
35
25
30
20
DB
5,00013
5014
5015
15
10
15
35
25
8016
WB
20
20
15
10
15
35
25
80
VB
5,000
50
50
15
10
15
35
25
80
HB
10,00017
5018
10019
5020
2021
2022
35
25
60
2523
LI
80,000
200
200
5024
30
30
45
25
60
25
TB
80,000
200
200
50
30
30
45
25
60
25
OS
30
20
30
35
25
25
NOTES:
1
Except where the Zoning Bylaw otherwise expressly limits the heights of certain accessory structures such as, but not limited to, signs, fences, solar energy installations, or communication structures.
2
Plus 6,000 square feet for each additional dwelling unit created in a two-family conversion or a multifamily conversion.
3
Except 10 feet for any portion of a principal building with less than 15 feet in height, and three feet for any accessory building with less than 15 feet in height and set back at least 75 feet from the front lot line.
4
Except three feet for any accessory building with less than 15 feet in height and set back setback of at least 75 feet from the front lot line.
5
Except the lesser of 25% of the lot area or 3,600 square feet for a lawfully preexisting nonconforming lot containing less than 18,000 square feet of area.
6
Forty-eight thousand square feet for a two-family conversion; 48,000 square feet for the first two dwelling units in a multifamily conversion plus 8,000 square feet for each additional dwelling unit.
7
Except 15 feet for any portion of a principal building with less than 15 feet in height, and six feet for any accessory building with less than 15 feet in height and set back at least 100 feet from the front lot line.
8
Except six feet for any accessory building with less than 15 feet in height and set back at least 100 feet from the front lot line.
9
Eighty thousand square feet for a two-family conversion; 80,000 square feet for the first two dwelling units in a multifamily conversion plus 10,000 square feet for each additional dwelling unit.
10
Except 15 feet for any portion of a principal building with less than 15 feet in height, and six feet for any accessory building with less than 15 feet in height and set back at least 100 feet from the front lot line.
11
Except six feet for any accessory building with less than 15 feet in height and set back at least 100 feet from the front lot line.
12
Except where the Zoning Bylaw otherwise expressly limits the height of certain accessory structures such as, but not limited to, signs, fences, solar energy installations, or communication structures.
13
Forty thousand square feet for any dwelling containing two dwelling units, plus 4,000 square feet for each additional dwelling unit.
14
Twenty feet for any dwelling containing two or more dwelling units.
15
Twenty feet for any dwelling containing two or more dwelling units.
16
Twenty-five percent if the lot is used for a dwelling containing two or more dwelling units.
17
Eighty-eight thousand square feet for any dwelling containing two dwelling units, plus 4,000 square feet for each additional dwelling unit.
18
Two hundred feet for any dwelling containing two or more dwelling units.
19
Two hundred feet for any dwelling containing two or more dwelling units.
20
Fifteen feet for an accessory freestanding sign; 100 feet for any dwelling containing two or more dwelling units.
21
Fifty feet for any dwelling containing two or more dwelling units.
22
Fifty feet for any dwelling containing two or more dwelling units.
23
No maximum building coverage if the lot is used for a dwelling containing two or more dwelling units.
24
Fifteen feet for an accessory freestanding sign.
The following regulations supplement the basic dimensional requirements set forth in the § 300-5.3 Table of Dimensional Regulations.
A. 
The maximum gross floor area of any single story in any building is 80,000 square feet.
B. 
No open storage or display of goods, products, materials, or equipment, no gasoline pump, vending machine, or similar commercial device, and no other structure except as permitted under § 300-5.4D may be located nearer to any side or rear lot line than the required setback distance for a building on the lot, or 15 feet, whichever is less.
C. 
No structure may be located within a required front yard except as provided in § 300-5.4D.
D. 
Subject to the clear vision requirements for corner lots set forth in § 300-5.4E, the following structures may be located within a required side, rear or front yard, subject to the clear vision safety requirement for corner lots set forth in:
(1) 
A fence not exceeding six feet in height, a flagpole, a utility pole, a mailbox, and an accessory sign permitted under Article 6.
(2) 
A retaining or perimeter wall not exceeding three feet in height.
E. 
A fence, hedge, wall, or similar enclosing structure located within a front yard of a corner lot may be no higher than three feet above the grade of the center lines of the abutting streets at any point within the clear vision safety triangle formed by a straight line across the lot which connects the two street lines at points measured 25 feet from the point of intersection of said street lines.
F. 
For buildings and other structures in a DB, VB, or WB District, the required ten-foot side yard setback will not apply where the wall adjoining a side lot line is a party wall.
G. 
The Zoning Board of Appeals may grant a special permit to allow a reduction in the minimum side yard setback requirements specified in the Table of Dimensional Regulations for the DB and WB Districts.
H. 
The Planning Board may grant a special permit to allow a reduction in the minimum side, front or rear yard setback requirements specified in the Table of Dimensional Regulations for the VB District.
I. 
Minimum side yard requirements will not apply in the DB or VB District where the side lot line abuts a railroad right-of-way. The minimum rear yard requirements will not apply in the LI District where the rear lot line abuts a railroad right-of-way.
J. 
In any district except the HB and LI Districts, as an alternative to the minimum front setback requirements specified in the Table of Dimensional Regulations, a building may be set back from the street line a distance equal to the average setbacks of the principal buildings located within 200 feet on either side the building in question. If no principal building is located within said 200 feet, the intervening space will be counted as a building meeting the minimum front setback specified in the table (whether or not said space is laid out as a separate lot).
K. 
Within the HB, TB, and LI Districts, no building or other structure may be built within 100 feet of a residence district boundary, except where the district boundary is a street, in which case the required distance will be reduced to 50 feet.
L. 
In the VB District, no new building may be located closer than 30 feet to any R-A or R- B District boundary, provided, that where a lot is located only partially within the VB District, this requirement will be satisfied if all new buildings on the lot are located at least 30 feet from any property boundary line which abuts an R-A or R-B zoned lot.
M. 
Within the HB, TB, and LI Districts, a green strip not less than 35 feet wide must be maintained along the street frontage of any developed lot. Such green strip must be landscaped with grass, trees and/or shrubs. No paved areas except driveways, and no structures except permitted signs, are allowed within the required green strip.
N. 
Within the HB, TB, and LI Districts, a green strip not less than 30 feet wide must be maintained along any property line abutting land residentially zoned land. The green strip may not be built upon or used for any purpose other than to serve as a vegetative buffer on which grass, bushes, flowers, or trees are grown and maintained. No structures or pavement are allowed within the required green strip.
O. 
In the VB District, the municipal parking lot shown on the Assessor's Map as Parcels 18-004 and 18-014 may be used to satisfy the minimum lot frontage requirements specified in the Table of Dimensional Regulations, provided that the length of the property line bounding on the municipal parking lot is at least equal to the minimum frontage length specified in the table.
P. 
Notwithstanding the height limitations set forth in the Table of Dimensional Regulations, the Zoning Board of Appeals may grant a special permit to allow light poles and lighting facilities to be erected to a height of 70 feet in the HB and LI Districts, for the sole purpose of illuminating athletic fields for night sporting events.
Q. 
Landfill height limit. The vertical distance above the mean level of the ground within 10 feet of the horizontal limit of a landfill to the top surface of the landfill, including any final cap or covering material, may not exceed 45 feet.
R. 
The minimum width of a legal service driveway is 12 feet.
A. 
Applicability.
i) 
Unless the Building Inspector is in receipt of a written statement from the Planning Board that it has reviewed and approved an application for large house review in accordance with the provisions of this section, no building permit may issue for i) new construction of a single-family detached dwelling or building accessory to such a dwelling, or ii) any exterior alteration, expansion, reconstruction, or replacement of an existing single-family detached dwelling or building accessory to such dwelling, if the resulting residential gross floor area (RGFA) on the lot will exceed the greater of 4,000 square feet or an RGFA equal to 10% of the area of a lot.
ii) 
This RGFA threshold for large house plan review applicability is not intended to alter or nullify the applicability of any other regulations set forth in Article 5 that may or may not affect the calculation of RGFA.
B. 
Application requirements.
(1) 
A person applying for a large house plan review must file an application with the Planning Board, together with the filing fee, the RGFA calculation certified by a registered architect or engineer, and the following plans and documentation:
(a) 
A site plan showing the location of the subject house, and the existing and proposed site conditions, topography, building elevations, setbacks, lot coverages, floor area ratios, grading, and landscape design;
(b) 
For an existing house, photographs of all sides, and for both existing and proposed houses, a drawn or computer-generated depiction of how the house is proposed to appear post-construction, including exterior materials;
(c) 
A context map with a narrative description of the surrounding neighborhood with data regarding house styles, sizes, dimensions, building siding materials, and context photographs of all within a 300-foot radius of the proposed house location.
(d) 
Not less than two permanent survey monuments must be located on the property in question and shown on the plan, unless waived by the Planning Board.
(2) 
The application, supporting plans, and documentation must address the design standards described in § 300-5.5C and must include such further information as the Planning Board may require.
(3) 
For any subsequent applications concerning the same subject premises, the Planning Board may waive the filing of plans and documents to the extent they duplicate those previously filed.
C. 
Planning Board review. An important purpose of the large house plan review process is to provide an opportunity for the Planning Board to discuss large house plan with the applicant and the abutters, toward the objective of making the proposed plan harmonious with, rather than harmful, injurious or objectionable to, existing properties and uses in the area.
(1) 
Among the factors the Planning Board will consider in reviewing a proposed project is the degree to which the proposed construction conforms to following design standards:
(a) 
Scale of buildings. The scale of the proposed construction should be appropriate in relation to the scale of other buildings in its vicinity. The construction plans should employ appropriate massing, screening, lighting, building and siding materials and other architectural techniques such as variation in detail, form and siting. The plans should address the need for vegetated buffers or screening, and the arrangement of structures to minimize casting shadows onto abutting property.
(b) 
Preservation of landscape. The construction plan should minimize soil removal, as well as changes to wetlands, floodplains, hilltops, existing grades and existing vegetation on the site, and should preserve unique natural areas, topographic features such as ledge outcrops, significant trees and landscaping, and historic features.
(c) 
Lighting. Exterior lighting should be limited to only that necessary to accomplish safety and design objectives and must be arranged to minimize the impact on neighboring properties.
(d) 
Circulation. Walkways, drives and parking must be designed be safe and convenient and, insofar as practicable, should be designed and located in a manner that will not have adverse effects on the use and enjoyment of adjacent properties or on any Town streets abutting the premises.
(2) 
In addition to the above design standards, the Planning Board may consider other factors based on previous reviews and decisions, on recommendations received from other Town boards or agencies, and by the requirements of other permits that have already issued or that may be required for the proposed construction.
D. 
Procedure.
(1) 
The Planning Board shall hold a hearing within 35 days of the filing of an application for a large house plan review.
(2) 
The Planning Board shall, within one week of receipt of the application, transmit copies of the application and supporting materials to appropriate Town boards and departments for review.
(3) 
The Planning Board shall give notice of such hearing to the applicant and to all owners of abutting lots in the manner called for in the Planning Board rules and regulations.
(4) 
Within 14 days after the conclusion of the public hearing, the Planning Board shall either approve the application or approve the application with conditions and send a written statement of this final decision to the applicant and to the owners of abutting lots by regular mail. The Planning Board shall also transmit a copy of the final decision to the Building Inspector.
E. 
Post approval. Any building, reconstruction or expansion following the Planning Board's approval of a large house plan must conform with any conditions in the statement of approval, and in all other respects with the application, plan, supporting documents and other representations of the applicant.
F. 
Any changes or design deviations from the reviewed project must be resubmitted to the Planning Board for a subsequent, additional review unless determined by the Building Inspector to be minor or insubstantial in nature.
In any business district, the Zoning Board of Appeals may grant a special permit to authorize the erection and maintenance of a temporary building or structure that does not conform to the requirements of this Zoning Bylaw, provided the Board finds that the temporary structure will not be detrimental or injurious to persons, property or improvements in the neighborhood or the Town. Such authorization may not be for more than one year and may not be extended.