The design of all new subdivisions in the Flexible Rural Development
District shall comply with the following minimum standards:
A. Site suitability. As demonstrated by the existing conditions/site analysis plan, the conceptual preliminary plan, and the detailed final plan (required to be performed as specified in Chapter
185, Subdivision and Land Development), all tracts shall be suitable for supporting development in terms of environmental conditions, size and configuration.
B. Ownership. The tract of land may be held in single and separate ownership
or in multiple ownership. However, when a tract is held in multiple
ownership, it shall be developed as a single entity with common undivided
authority, with a single applicant.
C. Combining the design options. The various layout and density options
described in this article may be combined, based upon the demonstration
by the applicant that such a combination would better meet the intent
of this chapter, as compared with applying a single development option
to the tract.
D. Intersections and access. Subdivisions containing less than 15 dwellings
shall not include more than one roadway entrance onto public roadways.
E. Sensitive area disturbance. Disturbance of the environmentally sensitive areas shown on the existing conditions/site analysis plan shall be limited according to the provisions of this article. Demonstration by the applicant that these features will be protected shall be a prerequisite to approval of both the detailed preliminary plan and the final plan as required Chapter
185, Subdivision and Land Development.
F. Community wastewater systems. In developments that are proposed to
be served by community wastewater disposal systems, the selection
of a wastewater treatment technique shall be based upon Newlin Township's
"Ordered List of Preferred Alternative Types of Community Wastewater
Systems" contained in the appendix to this chapter and any applicable
Township sewage facilities plan.
Land in the Flexible Rural Development District may be used
for the following purposes:
A. Single-family detached dwellings.
(1) On tracts six acres or more single-family detached dwellings are permitted under the provisions of §§
240-15 and
240-16 of this chapter.
(2) On tracts less than six acres existing on the date of adoption of this chapter, single-family detached dwellings are permitted under the provisions of Option 1 found in §§
240-15 and
240-16 of this chapter or under the provisions of §
240-22 of this chapter.
B. Greenway land. Greenway lands comprising a portion of a residential development are permitted, as specified above and according to requirements of §§
240-17,
240-18 and
240-19 of this chapter. Greenway land may contain:
(1) Agricultural uses, including pasture land, horticulture, wholesale
nurseries, and the raising of crops, and related buildings.
[Amended 3-20-2017 by Ord. No. 2017-01]
(2) Woodlots, arboreta, and other similar silvicultural uses.
(3) Woodland preserve, game preserve, wildlife sanctuary, or other similar
conservation uses.
(4) Municipal or public uses; public park or recreation area; governmental
or public utility building or use; not to include business facilities,
storage of materials, trucking or repair facilities, the housing of
repair crews, municipal sanitary landfills. Utility buildings shall
be set back 60 feet from any front, side or rear lot line of any residential
lot.
C. Agricultural uses.
[Amended 10-13-2014 by Ord. No. 2014-01]
(1) Agricultural uses, including horticulture, wholesale nurseries, and the raising of crops, related buildings, and other uses listed in §
240-14B(1) through
(3) of this chapter above, including a CAO and a CAFO.
[Amended 3-20-2017 by Ord. No. 2017-01]
(2) Uses permitted in §
240-61 of this chapter.
D. Accessory uses.
(1) Accessory dwelling units (ADU). Accessory dwelling units on lots greater than two acres subject to the provisions in §
240-36.
[Amended 3-20-2017 by Ord. No. 2017-01]
(2) Professional home occupations in attached or detached dwellings.
(3) Garden sheds, swimming pools for use by the occupants of the dwelling,
and similar individual recreational facilities.
E. Special exception uses.
(1) Village Overlay District. Special exception uses in the Village Overlay District, according to the conditions of §
240-66 of this chapter.
(2) Other special exception uses as specified in Article
VII of this chapter.
F. Conditional uses. Conditional uses are permitted as specified in Article
VIII of this chapter.
Protected greenway land in all subdivisions shall meet the following
standards:
A. Uses permitted on greenway lands.
(1) Conservation of open land in its natural state (i.e., woodland, fallow
field, or meadow);
(2) Agricultural operations, including raising of crops or livestock,
wholesale nurseries, associated buildings, including residences that
are specifically needed to support an active, viable agricultural
or horticultural operation. Specifically excluded are commercial hog
and chicken livestock operations, CAOs and CAFOs.
[Amended 3-20-2017 by Ord. No. 2017-01]
(3) Pastureland or areas for horses. Equestrian facilities shall not
occupy more than 50% of the minimum required greenway land.
(4) Silviculture, in keeping with established standards for selective
harvesting and sustained-yield forestry.
(5) Neighborhood open space uses such as village greens, commons, picnic
areas, community gardens, trails, and similar passive recreational
uses, specifically excluding wheeled vehicles (except for agricultural
vehicles), and rifle ranges.
(6) Active noncommercial recreation areas, such as playing fields, playgrounds,
and courts, provided such areas do not occupy more than half of the
minimum required greenway land or five acres, whichever is less. Playing
fields, playgrounds, and courts shall not be located within 100 feet
of abutting properties. Parking facilities for the same shall also
be permitted, and they should be gravel-surfaced, unlighted, properly
drained, provide safe ingress and egress, and contain no more than
10 parking spaces.
(7) Water supply and sewage disposal systems and stormwater detention
areas designed, landscaped, and available for use as an integral part
of the greenway.
(8) Easements for drainage, access, sewer or water lines, or other public
purposes.
(9) Underground utility rights-of-way. Aboveground utility and street
rights-of-way may traverse conservation areas but shall not count
toward the minimum required greenway land.
B. Greenway design standards.
(1) Greenway lands shall be laid out in general accordance with the Newlin Township Open Space, Recreation and Environmental Resources Plan to ensure that an interconnected network of open space (within and surrounding the tract) will be provided. The required greenway land consists of a mixture of primary conservation areas (PCAs), all of which must be included, and secondary conservation areas (SCAs), as required in Chapter
185, Subdivision and Land Development. PCAs comprise those areas listed in §
240-15B(1) (Table 2) as being subtracted from the total parcel acreage to produce the adjusted tract acreage. SCAs should include special features of the property that would ordinarily be overlooked or ignored during the design process. Examples of such features are listed and described in the greenway design review standards in Chapter
185, Subdivision and Land Development.
(2) Greenway land should generally remain undivided and may be owned
and maintained by a homeowners' association, land trust, another
conservation organization recognized by the Township, or by a private
individual as a conservancy lot. Not less than 30% of the land comprising
the adjusted tract acreage shall be available for the common use and
passive enjoyment of the subdivision residents. These ownership options
may be combined so that different parts of the greenway land may be
owned by different entities.
(3) Not more than 5% of the total tract acreage in any of the options
may be subject to the Township's public land dedication requirement.
(4) Where a proposed development adjoins public parkland, a natural greenway
buffer not less than 150 feet deep shall be provided within the development
along its common boundary with the parkland, within which no new structures
shall be constructed, nor shall any clearing of trees or understory
growth be permitted (except as may be necessary for street or trail
construction or for safety purposes). Where this buffer is not forested,
the Township may require vegetative screening to be planted, or that
it be managed to encourage natural forest succession.
(5) Greens.
(a)
Two percent of the required open space shall be in greens when
the average lot size is 15,000 square feet or more.
(b)
Three percent of the required open space shall be in greens
when the average lot size is less than 15,000 square feet.
(c)
Greens shall be 5,000 to 20,000 square feet in area and shall
be created and maintained as the open space around which dwellings
are arranged. Dwellings shall face the green with the front facade
of the dwelling.
(6) At least 50% of the dwellings shall face the required open space
with the front facade of the dwelling, either directly or across the
street.
C. Other requirements.
(1) No portion of any building lot may be used for meeting the minimum
required greenway land. However, active agricultural land with farm
buildings, excluding areas used for residences, may be used to meet
the minimum required greenway land.
(2) Pedestrian and maintenance access, excluding lands used for agricultural or horticultural purposes in accordance with §
240-14C of this chapter, shall be provided to greenway land in accordance with the following requirements:
(a)
Each neighborhood shall provide one centrally located access
point for each 15 lots, not less than 35 feet in width.
(b)
Access to greenway land used for agriculture may be appropriately
restricted for public safety and to prevent interference with agricultural
operations.
(3) All greenway areas that are not wooded or farmed shall be landscaped in accordance with Chapter
185, Subdivision and Land Development.
(4) The applicant shall provide a plan for the long-term management of
the greenway.
Land dedication for public recreational use and the fee-in-lieu
alternative. The following standards shall apply to new subdivisions:
A. Applications for 10 or more dwellings. Applicants for residential
developments shall dedicate to the Township not less than 5% of the
gross tract acreage of each proposed development for use as public
recreational facilities subject to the provisions of § 503(11)
of the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code. Such land shall be suitable for active and/or passive
recreation, with not less than 50% of the land suitable for active
recreation use, where such facilities are required by the Newlin Township
Open Space, Recreation and Environmental Resources Plan.
B. Alternatives. In lieu of the dedication of land, the applicant may choose between two alternatives in §
240-19B(1) and
(2) below:
(1) The applicant may offer a dedication of land allowing recreational
usage exclusively by the residents of the proposed subdivision. Such
land areas shall be permanently protected through a conservation easement
enforceable by the Township and/or a land trust, prohibiting future
nonrecreational (or commercial recreational) uses.
(2) The applicant may offer to pay a fee to the Township instead of any
dedication of recreational land. The Township may accept this fee
upon determination that the provision of land would not result in
a public benefit.
(3) The decision whether to accept a fee-in-lieu offer by the applicant
shall lie with the Township. The amount of the fee shall based upon
the fair market value of land that is similar in area, location and
in other attributes to land which would otherwise have been dedicated
by the developer to satisfy the provisions of this section. The determination
of fair market value shall be made by a person familiar with land
values in the Township, and who is mutually acceptable to the Township
and to the applicant. Such fees shall be based on actual land values
at the time of development of the applicant's parcel. All such
fees collected shall be deposited in an interest-bearing account identifying
the specific recreation facilities for which the fee was received.
Upon request of any person who paid any fee under this section, the
Township shall refund such fee, plus interest accumulated thereon
from the date of payment, if the Township had failed to utilize the
fee paid for the purposes set forth in this section within three years
from the date such fee was paid.
C. Option 1 subdivisions. In Option 1 subdivisions with not more than
10 dwellings, where the Township determines that there would be no
specific public benefit accruing from a public dedication (as described
above), the recreational land that is part of the requirement for
undivided open space shall be designated for private shared recreational
usage among the subdivision lot owners, pursuant to a homeowners'
association approved by the Board of Supervisors.
Additional density may be permitted when the Township Supervisors
determine that one of the following public benefits will occur:
A. Public usage of greenway land. The Township may allow a density bonus
not to exceed one dwelling unit per five acres of greenway land that
becomes publicly accessible and available (including active and passive
recreation areas, spray irrigation areas, municipal buildings, etc.).
The decision to accept an applicant's offer to dedicate greenway
land to public usage within a proposed subdivision shall be at the
discretion of the Township, when it determines that a public benefit
will occur.
B. Endowment for greenway maintenance.
(1) Density bonus. The Township may allow a density bonus up to 10% to
facilitate the creation of a permanent fund to offset continuing costs
of maintaining greenway land (involving activities such as mowing,
removing exotic species, meeting insurance premiums and local taxes,
etc.), and costs associated with active or passive recreation facilities.
Expenditures from this fund should be restricted to disbursements
of interest so that the principal may be preserved. The minimum amount
of the fund shall be adequate to ensure continued maintenance of the
greenway lands, and the amount shall be determined by an agency, firm,
or organization with experience in managing conservation land and
recreational facilities and which is acceptable to the Township.
(2) Cost of maintaining greenway lands. Greenway land that is not accessible
by the subdivision residents is not required to be included when estimating
ongoing maintenance costs. (Such lands would typically include areas
designated on the Final Plan for future agricultural, horticultural,
silvicultural, or equestrian uses, which may be leased or sold to
another party for those express purposes, and which are protected
from future development by a permanent conservation easement.)
C. Provision of least-cost housing. A density increase is permitted
where the applicant provides on-site or off-site housing opportunities
for low- or moderate-income families. For each such new least-cost
housing unit provided under this section, one additional building
lot or dwelling unit shall be permitted, not to exceed an increase
of 15%. When off-site least-cost housing provision is proposed, the
Township shall require evidence that these units will be available
not later than the time at which the applicant's proposal is
completed or at the first phase of the development, whichever first
occurs. The least-cost housing cost shall be determined by the Chester
County Department of Housing and Community Development.
D. Implementation. These density bonuses may be implemented by reducing
the amount of required greenway land by not more than 10%, reducing
the minimum lot area requirements by not more than 10%, or by a combination
of these approaches, at the discretion of the Township.
For proposals not defined as a land development and for proposed land development as permitted in §
240-14A(2), improvements to the tract shall be regulated according to the following standards:
A. Bulk and lot requirements.
Table 7 - Bulk and Lot Requirements for Tracts Created Prior
to Effective Date of Chapter
|
---|
Regulation
|
Single-Family Detached Dwellings
|
All Other Uses*
|
---|
Minimum lot size
|
2 acres
|
2 acres
|
Minimum lot width at building setback line
|
175 feet
|
175 feet
|
Minimum front yard
|
60 feet
|
60 feet
|
Minimum side yard (each)
|
60 feet
|
60 feet
|
Minimum rear yard
|
60 feet
|
60 feet
|
Maximum building coverage
|
5%
|
5%
|
Maximum height
|
35 feet
|
35 feet, except 100 feet for agricultural uses
|
Minimum setback for accessory structures
|
15 feet
|
20 feet
|
*
|
In case of conflict with other sections in this chapter, the
most restrictive standards shall apply.
|
Land may be transferred between two adjoining parcels for the
intent of enlarging one of the parcels, subject to the following conditions:
A. No additional lots shall be created.
B. The provisions of §§
240-14 through
240-21 of this article shall not apply.
C. The four-step design process shall not be required.
D. No parcel shall be reduced in size below any applicable requirement
of this chapter.
E. All residential parcels shall meet the requirements of §
240-22. If either parcel is an existing nonconforming lot, the nonconformity shall not be farther exceeded through the lot add-on.
Notwithstanding the provisions of other sections in this chapter
to the contrary, not more than one nonfarm residential lot may be
subdivided from any parent tract within any consecutive five-year
period, subject to the following conditions:
A. The tract from which the new lot is created shall not be less than
10 acres prior to the subdivision.
B. The new lot shall not be less than two acres in size.
C. Lots may be created for agricultural purposes at any time, provided
that no lots shall be less than 50 acres.
D. The provisions of §§
240-14 through
240-21 of this article shall not apply.
E. The four-step design process shall not be required.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. I)]
Certain structures and activities due to their size and scope must comply with the stormwater calculation requirements in Chapter
185, Subdivision and Land Development, and Chapter
170, Stormwater Management.