Overlay districts shall be used in accordance with the following:
A. For the purposes of this chapter, the sections within this article
shall be overlays to the underlying districts as shown on the Easttown
Township Zoning Map, and as such, the provision for each of these sections
shall serve as supplements to the underlying zoning district provisions.
B. In those areas of the Township where a section of this article applies,
the provisions of the section shall be imposed in addition to the
requirements of the underlying zoning district(s). In the event that
a conflict exists between a section of this article and the underlying
district(s), the provisions of this article shall apply.
[Amended 12-13-2016 by Ord. No. 427-16; 1-15-2018 by Ord. No. 433-18]
C. Should the boundaries or delineations of any section of this article
be revised as a result of legislative or administrative actions or
judicial decision, the zoning requirements of the underlying zoning
district and other applicable section of this article shall continue
to apply.
The establishment and administration of the provisions governing natural resources shall be governed by the provisions of the following articles of Chapter
274, Natural Resources Protection, which are incorporated by reference as if set forth fully herein, as may be amended from time to time in accordance with the procedures set forth in Article
XVII of this chapter and the Municipalities Planning Code:
B. Article
IV, Wetlands and Watercourses.
C. Section
274-18 of Article
V, Riparian Buffer Zone (RBZ).
[Added 12-13-2016 by Ord.
No. 427-16]
A. Purpose and application of regulations. The Devon Center Overlay
District is intended to provide for the development of a variety of
compatible commercial uses in a manner which employs unified design
and architectural principals while creating a sense of place in close
proximity to public transportation that promotes walkability while
employing parking, circulation and mobility strategies that maximize
efficiency and safety. When it is proposed that a tract or tracts
be developed in accordance with the underlying zoning, the provisions
of this section shall not apply.
B. Use regulations. A building or a unified group of buildings may be erected and used and a lot may be used or occupied for any of the following purposes and no other, when approved as a conditional use under Article
XIV:
(1)
Conditional use. The following use shall be permitted as a conditional use when authorized by the Board of Supervisors subject to the procedures and requirements of Article
XIV, compliance with the area and bulk regulations of this §
455-33.1 and the other applicable provisions of this Zoning Ordinance:
(2)
Accessory uses. Accessory uses, accessory structures, and accessory buildings on the same lot with and customarily incidental to the foregoing permitted uses including a parking garage for a unified development and in accordance with §
455-48.
C. Area and bulk regulations.
(1)
For a unified development.
(a)
Minimum net tract area: five acres.
(b)
Minimum tract width at the street line: 100 feet.
(c)
Minimum building and structure setbacks from ultimate rights-of-way:
[1] From arterial street right-of-way: 20 feet.
[2] From collector and local street right-of-way outside
of the DC Overlay District: 40 feet.
(d)
Minimum building and structure setbacks from local street cartway
within the DC Overlay District or on-street parking: twelve-foot minimum.
(e)
Minimum building or structure setback from any existing residential
use or lot zoned residential not located in the DC Overlay District:
20 feet.
(f)
Minimum building or structure setback from any lot not part
of the unified development but located in the DC Overlay District:
10 feet.
(g)
Minimum building or structure setback from any lot located outside
the DC Overlay District which is not zoned residential and which does
not contain a residential use: 10 feet.
(h)
Maximum building coverage (percentage of net tract area): 40%.
(i)
Maximum imperious coverage (percentage of net tract area): 85%.
(j)
Minimum green area (percentage of net tract area): 15%.
(k)
Maximum building height:
[1] Thirty-five feet except as set forth in § 455-33.1D(4)(a)[4][c](vi).
[2] Structured parking: Maximum of 30 feet to the top
of the parapet.
D. Devon Center design standards.
(1)
Off-street parking. Each building, structure, or use constructed, established, erected, enlarged, modified or altered in the Devon Center Overlay District shall provide and satisfactorily maintain off-street parking spaces in accordance with the requirements of Article
X, except as otherwise provided in this article.
(a)
Perpendicular spaces shall have minimum dimensions of nine feet
wide by 18 feet long.
(b)
Minimum surface parking lot setbacks from ultimate right-of-way:
[1] From local street right-of-way not located in the
DC Overlay District: 10 feet.
[2] From all other street rights-of-way: five feet.
[3] A landscaped area shall be provided, consisting
of an area at least six feet wide located behind the adjacent sidewalk.
(c)
Surface parking lots shall be set back from side and rear lot
lines a minimum of five feet.
(2)
Landscaping. Surface parking areas shall be landscaped in accordance with §
274-43A through
J and
L(1) through
(3).
(3)
Screening and buffering. Screening and buffering shall be consistent with the provisions of Article
X of Chapter
274, Natural Resources Protection, applicable to the PBO Planned Business Office District, except that the buffer widths shall not be required to exceed the depth of the setbacks specified in this §
455-33.1.
(a)
When a unified development is located adjacent to an exterior
local street outside of the DC Overlay District a screen buffer shall
be provided.
(4)
Site and building design/development guidelines within a unified
development.
(a)
The applicant shall adhere to the following development design
standards:
[1] Purpose. The purpose of this subsection is to establish requirements that promote communal gathering spaces and pedestrian scaled design within the unified development. Adherence to these standards will carry out the purposes of the District as set forth in §
455-33.1. Principles guiding the administration of these standards are as follows:
[a] Buildings shall be pedestrian-focused, with windows
and doors on the street facing facades that are well-placed and in
scale with the street zone.
[b] Emphasis shall be on creating a pedestrian-friendly
walkable town center including:
[i] Shared public courtyards, plazas and greens;
[ii] Sidewalk and pedestrian walkways shall be required
to foster pedestrian connectivity to the train station, transit stops
and from adjacent districts.
[c] In multitenant buildings, each tenant or use shall
have its own separate entrance to ensure secure, proper and easy access
for pedestrians at street level.
[d] Architectural expression shall be provided in windows,
doors, walls and roofs.
[e] Pedestrian pathways and sidewalks that are safe
and attractive shall be provided.
[f] Street trees, shade trees, and landscape features
shall be employed to enhance development and the pedestrian experience.
[2] Facade composition. Facade composition is the arrangement
of materials and details to distinguish the components of the building.
All development shall comply with the following design standards:
[a] Primary facades are those which face streets, public
courtyards, plazas and greens and shall be most prominent.
[b] Except for mechanical louvers, fans and utility
meters, no wall-mounted mechanical louvers, electrical cabinet or
service equipment shall be placed on building facades. Mechanical
equipment shall be located on the building rooftop or areas that are
screened from view to the greatest extent feasible. Utility meters,
mechanical louvers, electrical cabinets and fans that are visible
from the street shall be screened to the greatest extent feasible.
[c] Building mass should be de-emphasized through the
use of shade structures, windows, projecting and recessing of building
elements, change in building materials, colors, and texture, change
in building height and roof lines, and the creation of intimate pedestrian
environments to reduce the overall bulk and volume, enhance the visual
aesthetic, and promote a human-scale development pattern.
[3] Ground floor facade. The ground floor is the primary
zone of interaction for pedestrians on the street or public courtyard.
All development shall comply with the following design standards:
[a] Main building entrances shall face the street,
public courtyards, plazas and greens.
[b] Building lobbies and retail spaces shall be clearly
connected to the outdoor public space and visible from the street.
[c] Windows must be at street level and allow pedestrians
to see activity within the building from the street, public courtyards,
plazas, greens and primary pedestrian ways.
[4] Architectural elements. Architectural elements
are the unique details and component parts that, together, form the
architectural style of buildings and structures.
[a] Windows and doors on the ground floor of a building
which faces a street shall comply with the criteria set forth below.
A building which faces a street that is set back a minimum of 40 feet
from the ultimate right-of-way shall not be required to comply with
the following standards, when there is a minimum landscape area of
five feet in width abutting the building.
[i] The facade shall contain a minimum of 50% clear
glass windows and doors.
[ii] Highly reflective glass, bronze glass, tinted
glass, black glass, or smoked glass is prohibited.
[iii] Windows and door openings shall be pedestrian-oriented
and should be arranged in such a way as to enhance the pedestrian
experience.
[iv] The maximum sill height above the adjacent sidewalk
should be four feet or lower.
[v] Window heads should be eight feet to 14 feet above
adjacent sidewalk elevation.
[vi] The top of display window(s) shall be at least
as high as the door height.
[b] Exterior wall materials.
[i] There shall be one dominant material. Dominant
materials shall include stone, wood, brick, stucco, plaster, parge,
fiber cement siding, or other approved materials.
[ii] Secondary material may include stucco or any of
the dominant materials.
[c] Roofs.
[i] Tops of buildings must express the roofline and
have either pitched roofs with overhanging eaves or flat roofs with
a parapet.
[ii] Fasciae, dormers, and gables or similar architectural
features can be employed to provide visual interest.
[iii] Primary pitched roofs should have minimum slope
of 4:12.
[iv] Pitched roof material may include:
[A] Slate, either natural or man-made.
[B] Shingle, either wood or asphalt composition.
[C] Metal formed to resemble standing seams, corrugated,
or other similar materials.
[D] Polycarbonate materials may be used in lieu of
safety glass on greenhouses and greenhouse-like structures.
[v] All rooftop mechanical equipment should be screened
visually and acoustically, consistent with the noise regulations in
this chapter. Such screening shall be integrated into the architectural
design of the building.
[vi] For buildings and structures that are set back
a minimum of 100 feet from the right-of-way of a local road which
abuts residential uses or lots zoned residential outside of the DC
Overlay District, 10% of the footprint of the roof may be increased
to 45 feet in height provided that the roof is a gable roof and the
slope of that heightened roof is at least 8:12 but not more than 14:12.
[5] Structured parking facilities in the unified development
should abide by the following standards:
[a] The primary building facade of parking structures
should contain elements of architectural design that emulate pedestrian-scaled
commercial buildings within the district. This appearance may be achieved
by integrating structured parking within or behind actual commercial
or structures, or by the construction of building facades on parking
structures that employ the same dominant and secondary building materials
included herein for such buildings.
[b] Vehicle headlights in structured parking facilities
shall not be visible from the street or adjacent residential structures.
[c] Vehicle access to parking structures must be gained
from either an interior driveway or local street within the unified
development. Vehicular access to parking structures is not permitted
from an arterial road within the unified development or a local, collector
or arterial street which abuts the DC Overlay District.
[d] Vehicles in parking garages shall not be visible
from any local street adjacent to the DC Overlay District to the greatest
extent feasible.
[6] Parking lot screening and greening standards. All parking and loading areas fronting public streets or sidewalks and all parking and loading areas abutting residential districts or uses in the unified development should abide by the standards contained in §
274-43L.
(b)
Sidewalks along arterial roads within or adjacent to the DC
Overlay District shall consist of a minimum of 12 feet of hardscape
and be constructed to include two bands. A minimum six-foot brick
paver area shall be located at the curbside with adjacent concrete
pedestrian walkways of a minimum width of six feet.
(c)
Sidewalks along local roads within and collector roads adjacent
to and within the DC Overlay District shall consist of a minimum of
seven feet of hardscape and be constructed to include two bands. A
minimum three-foot brick paver area shall be located at the curbside
with adjacent pedestrian walkways of a minimum width of four feet.
(d)
Street lights, site furniture and other obstructions shall be
placed in this paver band. Sidewalk design shall conform with PennDOT
standards.
(e)
Sidewalks along local roads adjacent to the DC Overlay District
shall be a minimum of four feet in width with a four-foot-wide green
strip along the street edge.
(f)
Walkways and pedestrian areas shall include streetlights, coordinated
site furniture including benches and trash receptacles, bicycle racks
or similar features throughout the district.
(g)
The applicant shall provide interconnecting walkways and crosswalks
throughout the DC Overlay District. Crosswalk connections shall be
provided from the DC Overlay District to adjacent districts in appropriate
locations to allow pedestrian connectivity to the DC Overlay District.
(h)
The Board of Supervisors may approve the use of architectural standards and designs that differ from those set forth in this §
455-33.1D(4) if the applicant demonstrates to the satisfaction of the Board that such standards and designs are consistent with the legislative intent of the DC Overlay District.
(5)
Outdoor cafes. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this
chapter, an outdoor cafe in the DC Overlay District which is located
a minimum of 200 feet from a lot outside of the DC Overlay District
which is used for a residential use or zoned residential shall stop
serving customers by 9:00 p.m. and clear all tables of food, beverages
(both alcoholic and nonalcoholic) and customers on or before 10:00
p.m. Sunday through Thursday. On Friday and Saturday, customer service
shall stop at 11:00 p.m. and all tables shall be cleared of food,
beverage (both alcoholic and nonalcoholic) and customers on or before
12:00 midnight.
(6)
Zero lot line unit development. Individual units, buildings,
or parcels of land within the development tract may be subdivided,
leased, purchased, sold, mortgaged, and developed as individual zero
lot line units without meeting the tract width, tract size, impervious
coverage, building coverage, green area, and setbacks from internal
parking and building lines for each individual zero lot line unit;
provided, however, that the tract shall comply with the applicable
area and bulk standards for the proposed unified development.
(7)
Signs in DC Overlay District.
(a)
The following types of signs shall be permitted in the DC Overlay
District:
[1] Any sign permitted in residential districts which
relates to a use permitted in the district.
[2] Real estate and development signs advertising the
sale, rental, or development of premises, provided that:
[a] The sign area shall not exceed eight square feet
and, if freestanding, shall not exceed a sign height of eight feet
above mean grade.
[b] No more than one sign shall be erected for each
500 feet of street frontage.
[c] Signs shall not be illuminated.
[d] Off-premises signs advertising the sale, rental
or development of premises shall be prohibited within these districts.
[3] Business or related signs in accordance with the
following regulations:
[a] Sign area. The total sign area of all signs placed
on a lot or on any one premises shall not exceed 1.5 square feet for
each one linear foot of the front building facade. Where a building
fronts on more than one street, only one street frontage may be used
to calculate the total allowable sign area. The total sign area for
any one sign in the DC Overlay District shall not exceed 75 square
feet, unless otherwise specified in this section. Permanent window
signs shall not be included in the computation of total permitted
sign area. The total area of all window signs, including both temporary
and permanent window signs, shall be limited to 25% of the glass area
and such signs shall not obscure views from the outside to the interior
of retail establishments.
[b] Wall signs. A total of three wall signs shall be
permitted per premises in a building, with one such sign on any building
facade that fronts on a street. The total sign area for any one wall
sign shall not exceed 75 square feet. No wall sign shall exceed a
sign height of 25 feet above existing grade or project above any cornice,
parapet wall, roofline, or building facade.
[4] Freestanding ground signs.
[a] For a unified development identification sign,
one freestanding ground sign shall be permitted. Where the unified
development fronts a tract exterior arterial or collector street,
one freestanding ground sign shall be permitted for each arterial
or collector street frontage, provided that a minimum street frontage
of 150 feet is maintained between signs. Unified development identification
signs are not permitted on a tract's exterior local street.
[i] Freestanding ground signs shall not exceed a sign
area of six square feet or a sign height of six feet above mean grade.
[ii] A unified development identification freestanding
ground sign shall contain only the name, address, logo, and/or telephone
number of the unified development.
[b] For a tenant identification sign, a maximum of
four freestanding ground signs, identifying tenants within a unified
development shall be permitted.
[i] One sign shall be permitted to be a maximum area
of 75 square feet along a tract's exterior arterial street. The other
three signs shall not exceed a maximum area of 45 square feet each
and shall only be permitted within the tract or along a tract's exterior
collector street. Tenant identification signs are not permitted on
a tract's exterior local street.
[ii] Tenant identification signs shall be a maximum
of eight feet in height above mean grade.
[iii] A tenant identification freestanding ground sign
shall contain only the name and logo of the tenant and may identify
the location of parking.
[c] A freestanding ground sign shall not be located
within the right-of-way and shall be set back a minimum distance of
10 feet from the street cartway. No sign shall be so located as to
present a hazard to motorists or pedestrians.
[5] Sidewalk signs. A limit of one portable sidewalk
sign per business shall be permitted and may be placed within the
sidewalk, so long as each portable sign shall not exceed nine square
feet, and a minimum clear walking width of four feet shall be maintained
on the sidewalk. Sidewalk signs shall be constructed of weather-resistant
materials, such as wood, plastic or metal. No sidewalk sign shall
contain foil, mirrors, bare metal, or other materials that could create
hazardous conditions to motorists, bicyclists, or pedestrians. No
sidewalk sign may contain lights of any kind. Sidewalk signs must
be sufficiently weighted or constructed to keep the sign in the approved
location. All sidewalk signs shall be taken indoors at the close of
each business day. The area of sidewalk signs shall not be included
in the computation of total permitted sign area.
[6] Temporary advertising signs for special events,
including banners or displays on private property within the DC Overlay
District constructed of cloth, light fabric, or similar materials
when approved by the Zoning Officer for a period of not more than
30 cumulative days in any one calendar year. Such signs, when added
to the sign area of any other signs on the premises, shall not accumulate
in size to exceed 30% of the sign area permitted for permanent signs
within the district where located or be in a position, or of a color,
that presents a hazard to pedestrians or motorists.
[7] Parking garage signs. One parking garage wall sign
not facing the tract's external street shall be permitted per side
on a parking garage serving a unified development. The sign shall
be a maximum area of 30 square feet and may identify tenants served
by the parking garage. No parking garage wall sign shall exceed a
sign height of 17 feet above existing grade or project above the parapet
wall.
[8] Projecting signs. One projecting sign shall be permitted per premises on a building facade facing an interior courtyard. The total sign area for any one projecting sign shall not exceed five square feet. No part of the sign shall be less than eight nor more than 12 feet above ground or walkway level. Projecting signs may not be internally illuminated, but may be indirectly illuminated in accordance with the provisions of Article
XI.