The Council hereby repeals the existing redevelopment plan adopted
by Ordinance No. 1999-05, §§ 103-84 through 103-96
of the 1974 Code of the Township of Eastampton, and adopts the redevelopment
plan as set forth herein.
The following definitions are pertinent to this redevelopment
plan:
REDEVELOPMENT
Clearance, replanning, development and redevelopment; the
conservation and rehabilitation of any structure or improvement; the
construction and provision for construction of residential, commercial,
industrial, public or other structures; and the grant or dedication
of spaces as may be appropriate or necessary in the interest of the
general welfare for streets, parks, playgrounds, or other public purposes,
including recreational and other facilities incidental or appurtenant
thereto, in accordance with a redevelopment plan.
REDEVELOPMENT PLAN
A plan adopted by the governing body of a municipality for
the redevelopment or rehabilitation of all or any part of a redevelopment
area, or an area in need of rehabilitation, which plan shall be sufficiently
complete to indicate its relationship to definite municipal objectives
as to appropriate land uses, public transportation and utilities,
recreational and municipal facilities, and other public improvements
and to indicate proposed land uses and building requirements in the
redevelopment area or area in need of rehabilitation, or both.
REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT
Any work or undertaking pursuant to a redevelopment plan;
such undertaking may include any buildings, land, including demolition,
clearance or removal of buildings from land, equipment, facilities,
or other real or personal properties which are necessary, convenient,
or desirable appurtenances, such as but not limited to streets, sewers,
utilities, parks, site preparation, landscaping and administrative,
community, health, recreational, educational, and welfare facilities.
REHABILITATION
An undertaking, by means of extensive repair, reconstruction
or renovation of existing structures, with or without the introduction
of new construction or the enlargement of existing structures, in
any area that has been determined to be in need of rehabilitation
or redevelopment, to eliminate substandard structural or housing conditions
and arrest the deterioration of that area.
TRANSECT-BASED ZONING
A system of zoning where each zone is a graduated and complementary
member of a zoning continuum. This differs from the predominate zoning
system in place since the early 1950's, which focused on a largely
random system of single-purpose zones. Transect zoning is characterized
by a series of mixed-use zones, whereby each zone provides for a continuum
of building, that range from the lowest density and intensity of types
of uses at the community edge and intensities as one moves from the
edge to the core. The various transects include the core (T-1), center
(T-2), general (T-3), reserve (T-4) and preserve (T-5). Transects
are focused on the establishment of vibrant neighborhoods, particularly
in the core, center and general transects that provide for a range
of appropriate uses and housing types arranged around civic spaces
such as greens, commons, and plazas.
Introduction. In N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-7a, the Redevelopment and
Housing Law requires all development plans to "include an outline
for the planning, development, redevelopment, or rehabilitation of
the project area..." The Redevelopment and Housing Law requires the
outline to include the following:
A. The relationship of the redevelopment plan to definite local objectives.
B. The proposed land uses and building requirements in the redevelopment
area.
C. Adequate provision for temporary and permanent relocation of residents
from a project in the redevelopment area as necessary.
D. The identification of property located in the redevelopment area
which is to be acquired according to the redevelopment plan.
E. The relationship of the redevelopment plan to intergovernmental planning.
[Amended 5-29-2007 by Ord. No. 2007-05; 11-10-2008 by Ord. No.
2008-26; 2-23-2009 by Ord. No. 2009-02; 2-28-2011 by Ord. No.
2011-6]
A. Description and plan. The areas along Woodlane Road, approaching
from the east, at the intersection of Smithville Road marks the gateway
into the developed core of the Township. Redevelopment of this area
provides an opportunity to establish a foundation for a transect pattern
of development.
B. Tax Map identification:
(1) Block 600, Lots 5.02, 5.03, 6, 6.01.
C. Permitted principal uses in the TCM2 District for Block 600, Lots
5.02, 5.03, 6, 6.01, Block 600.01, Lot 1:
(1) Permitted commercial uses.
(a)
Commercial buildings for multiple occupants ranging from 7,000 to 40,000 square feet of leasable space. Retail uses shall be restricted to the ground floor. Building requirements are the same as those provided under §
540-99.
(b)
See other permitted uses as stated in §
540-99A.
D. Permitted conditional uses in the TCM2 District for Block 600, Lots
5.02, 5.03, 6, 6.01, and Blocks 600.01, 600.02, 600.03 and 600.04:
(1) Traditional neighborhood development on a minimum tract of 10 acres,
provided that there be no more than one dwelling unit per 115 square
feet of commercial space, in accordance with the following percentages
of total units:
|
Type
|
Percentage of Total Units
|
---|
|
Single-family village homes
|
0% to 5%
|
|
Narrow lot cottages
|
5% to 10%
|
|
Attached townhomes
|
10% to 30%
|
|
Multifamily condominiums
|
30% to 70%
|
|
Age-restricted (55 and over)
|
|
|
Apartments above commercial
|
|
|
|
0% to 5%
|
(2) The permitted number of housing units shall be calculated based on
a density of 5.5 units per gross acre of the tract to be developed.
E. Area and yard requirements in the TCM2 District: as set forth in §
540-99.
F. Refer to §
540-100 for the regulations governing the TCVO District, T-3, Block 1100.14, Lot 16, and Block 1100.15, Lot 18.
G. Accessory
uses.
[Added 3-22-2021 by Ord. No. 2021-3]
[Amended 11-10-2008 by Ord. No. 2008-26; 2-28-2011 by Ord. No.
2011-6]
A. Description and plan. This plan is intended to direct the development
of a thirty-six-acre parcel of Township-owned land located in the
heart of the redevelopment area and the Town Center District. In accordance
with the traditional neighborhood development principles used in the
2004 Town Center Design Plan (TCDP), this area will be developed with
a mix of commercial, civic and residential uses. The centerpiece of
this plan and a key element of the vision for the future of Eastampton
Township's central area will be a "Township green" surrounded by pedestrian-scale
structures. It is a critical element of creating a sense of place
and fostering the community's smart growth goals. The Township Council,
based on a recommendation of the Land Use Planning Board, will determine
if a proposal meets the following directives for this parcel in advance
of any authorization to transfer ownership. The appropriate redevelopment
agreement documents will be prepared to guarantee implementation according
to the plan.
B. Tax Map identification: Block 600, Lot 2.07 (formerly Lot 2.02 and
portions of Lot 2).
C. Permitted principal uses. The selection and number of uses shall
replicate, to the extent possible, the list of uses entitled "Town
Center Program" in the TCDP:
(1) Community/Township green. All proposals for the development of this
area must include a community or Township green meeting the following
guidelines/standards:
(a)
The green will have an area of approximately 1 1/2 to 2
acres, and all portions of this open space must be interconnected
by pedestrian and/or bicycle paths.
(b)
At least two accent features, e.g., clock tower, pavilion, etc.,
must be provided, with at least one of these features located along
Woodlane Road.
(c)
It must have continuous frontage on Woodlane Road for a distance
of at least 200 feet.
(2) Permitted/required commercial uses. Overview plan. Any proposed plan
must include 40,000 to 65,000 square feet of first-floor commercial
uses primarily oriented to retail/services uses which depend on walk-in
pedestrian activity. No more than 10% of first-floor space may be
used for office use. Thirty thousand square feet to 50,000 square
feet of second-floor commercial space, primarily office, shall be
provided. Commercial uses shall be the predominant uses for first-floor
space in buildings facing upon the green.
(3) Conditional uses.
(a)
Residential uses.
[1]
The site and building design for all residential uses will be
in accordance with traditional neighborhood development principles
as included in the TCDP and as utilized in the approved plans for
Transect 2. Residential units may not be located on the first floor
of any commercially used building. The mix of unit types shall be
in accordance with the following percentages of total units:
|
Type
|
Percentage of Total Units
|
---|
|
Single-family village homes
|
5% to 15%
|
|
Narrow lot cottages
|
10% to 20%
|
|
Attached townhomes
|
15% to 25%
|
|
Age-restricted (55 and over)
|
15% to 20%
|
|
Residential units above commercial
|
15% to 20%
|
|
Live/work flex units
|
0% to 5%
|
[2]
The permitted number of housing units shall be calculated based
on a maximum density of 4.0 units per gross acre of the tract. The
maximum number of units permitted is 145. The actual number of units
shall be equal to one dwelling unit per 800 square feet of commercial
space.
D. Area and yard requirements: as set forth in §
540-99.
E. Conditions: as set forth in §
540-99.
F. Accessory
uses.
[Added 3-22-2021 by Ord. No. 2021-3]
[Amended 11-10-2008 by Ord. No. 2008-26; 2-28-2011 by Ord. No.
2011-6]
A. Description and plan. This area contains most of the Township's most
significant commercial properties. This plan is intended to direct
the development of parcels known as "Block 300, Lots 13, 14 and 15,"
and the adjacent properties. In accordance with the traditional neighborhood
development principles, this area will be developed with a mix of
commercial, civic and residential uses. The appropriate redevelopment
agreement documents will be prepared to guarantee implementation according
to the plan.
(1) Between the Town Center Apartment, Block 300, Lot 2.02, and Block
300, Lots 13, 14 and 15, there are approximately seven to 10 acres
of vacant developable land.
(2) Block 300, Lot 13, contains a single-story seventy-thousand-square-foot
building that served the greater Mount Holly area as a department
store through most of the 1960's, 1970's and 1980's before it started
to decline in the 1990's and is now in need of rehabilitation.
(3) Directly across Woodlane Road from Block 300, Lot 13, are approximately
25 single-story private residences. These residents lack proper sidewalks
and buffering from loud traffic along Woodlane Road.
(4) The intersection of Woodlane Road and Monmouth Road contains a new
gas station at the northeastern corner, a new CVS Pharmacy on the
southeastern corner, which is adjacent to nine to 12 acres of vacant
and largely developable land.
(5) The buildings in 503 Block contain marginal office and residential
uses, are in various stages of physical decline and suffer from faulty
site organization. The point of the 503 Block at the Woodlane and
Monmouth Road intersection is an important focal point in the core
transect and has been identified as an appropriate location for a
significant architectural element such a clock tower and/or fountain.
(6) Continuing easterly along Woodlane in the 600 Block, there are a
collection of buildings and uses that suffer faulty site design and
incompatible uses. There are two strip malls and a liquor store that
share a common parking facility which is poorly defined and lacks
a unifying landscaping, lighting and sign plan. Adjacent to these
parcels is a storage and moving company with many acres of land that
are underutilized or used for parking of tractor-trailers, which is
incompatible and conflicts with an adjacent apartment complex. The
apartment complex is in need of significant upgrades.
B. Tax Map identification.
(1) The following block and lots are located in the TCM1 District of
Transect 1:
(a)
Block 300, Lots 13 through 15, 17 through 25.
(b)
Block 300, Lots 27 through 31, 34 through 37.
(2) The following block and lots are located in the TCO District of Transect
1:
(b)
Block 600, Lots 1, 2.01, 2.05, 7, 7.01, 7.02, 8.
(c)
Block 900.01, Lots 12.01, 12.02, 12.03, 12.04, 12.05, 12.06,
13, 14.02.
C. Permitted principal uses in the TCM1 Zone of the T-1 Transect District.
(1) Community green. All proposals for the development of this area must
include open space/green areas as a focal point of the development,
except Block 300, Lots 27 through 31, 34 through 37, and Block 400,
Lots 22 and 23.
(2) Permitted/required commercial uses. Overview plan. Any proposed plan
must include 50,000 to 75,000 square feet of first-floor commercial
and office uses. Thirty thousand square feet to 60,000 square feet
of second-floor commercial space, primarily office, shall be provided.
(3) Other uses as set forth in §
540-99A are permitted.
D. Conditional uses in the TCM1 Zone of the T-1 Transect District:
(1) Residential uses.
(a)
The site and building design for all residential uses will be
in accordance with traditional neighborhood development principles.
Residential units may not be located on the first floor of any commercially
used building. The mix of unit types shall be in accordance with the
following percentages of total units:
|
Type
|
Percentage of Total Units
|
---|
|
Single-family village homes
|
5% to 15%
|
|
Narrow lot cottages
|
10% to 20%
|
|
Attached townhomes
|
15% to 25%
|
|
Age-restricted (55 and over)
|
15% to 20%
|
|
Residential units above commercial
|
15% to 20%
|
|
Live/work flex units
|
0% to 5%
|
(b)
The permitted number of housing units shall be calculated based
on a maximum density of 6.0 units per gross acre of the tract. The
maximum number of units permitted is 100. The actual number of units
shall be equal to one dwelling unit per 1,250 square feet of commercial
space.
E. Permitted principal uses in the TCO Zone of the T-1 Transect District:
(1) Permitted commercial uses:
(a)
Restaurants, cafes, coffeehouses and eateries, except as specifically prohibited in Subsection
E(3).
(b)
Personal service establishments, having their primary function
the rendering of a service to a client within a building. Such services
may include, but are not limited to, barbershops and beauty shops,
dry-cleaning establishments, self-service laundromats, tailor shops,
weight-loss centers, portrait studios, interior decorating services,
video rental, and mail centers.
(c)
Business service establishments, having as their primary function
the rendering of service to a business client. Such services may include,
but are not limited to, document reproduction, duplication, and administrative
services.
(d)
Business offices, including, but not limited to, insurance agents,
travel agents, realtors, finance and investment companies, and tax
preparation services.
(e)
Instructional studios, fitness centers, and billiard parlors.
(f)
Banks and other financial institutions, excluding check-cashing
businesses, but including automated teller machines (ATM).
(g)
Professional offices, including, but not limited to, offices
for architects, artists, authors, dentists, doctors, lawyers, ministers,
musicians, engineers, optometrists, opticians, and such other similar
professions.
(2) Mixed-use buildings that may include residential apartments or flats
above commercial or office uses. Residential apartments and offices
may be permitted on the second story, with the exceptions that these
two uses are not permitted on the same floor for parcels of land in
Blocks 503 and 600 in the TCO Zone of Transect T-1 and are permitted
on the same floor for parcels of land located in Block 900.01 in the
TCO Zone of Transect T-1 in accordance with the following provisions:
[Amended 6-25-2012 by Ord. No. 2012-6]
(a) For parcels of land consisting of at least 11 contiguous acres in
Block 900.01 in the TCO Zone of Transect T-1, the following mixed-use
buildings are permitted:
[1] Residential apartments or flats above commercial or office uses.
[2] Residential apartments or flats and offices on the second floor,
with the exception that these two uses are not permitted on the same
floor.
[3] Mixed-use buildings fronting along Woodlane Road that may include
residential apartments or flats and commercial or office uses on the
first floor, provided that the residential uses avoid sharing common
exterior entrances and internal corridors with the commercial or office
uses and the commercial or office uses occupy at least 5,600 square
feet of gross floor area on the first floor.
(3) Prohibited uses:
(a)
Use requiring storage or display of goods outside a fully enclosed building, except as provided in §
540-98E(5)(c)[5].
[Amended 2-26-2018 by Ord. No. 2018-1]
(c)
Any freestanding, single-occupant and single-use building in excess of 7,000 square feet of gross floor area, except as provided in §
540-98E(5)(c).
[Amended 2-26-2018 by Ord. No. 2018-1]
(d)
Sexually oriented businesses, including establishments that
are commonly marketed as adult (male or female) entertainment clubs
featuring exotic dancing, and adult book, video and/or gift stores,
and massage parlors.
(e)
Tattoo, body-piercing or branding establishments.
(f)
Manufacturing and other commercial uses deemed to be hazardous
in the Building Code.
(g)
Automobile sales, services, pumping stations, parts sales, car
washes, and detailing shops.
(h)
Restaurants with exterior drive-up window service.
(i)
Kennels, veterinary hospitals and facilities for the boarding
and grooming of animals.
(4) For parcels of land consisting of at least 11 contiguous acres in
Block 900.01, Lots 12.01, 12.05 and 12.06, in the TCO Zone of Transect T-1, the following
principal uses are permitted:
[Amended 5-23-2016 by Ord. No. 2016-6]
(b) Buildings that may include residential apartments or flats, provided
that the buildings do not front along Woodlane Road, and further provided
that the apartment or flat buildings are part of a larger overall
mixed-use development.
(c) Commercial and office uses shall comply with permitted principal uses in the TCO Zone of the Transect T-1 as set forth in §
540-98E(1)(a) to
(g).
(d) Maximum density for all residential uses: 12.0 dwelling units per
acre.
(e) Minimum gross floor area for permitted nonresidential uses as part
of a mixed-use building: 5,600 square feet.
(5) Parcels of land consisting of at least seven contiguous acres in
Block 600, Lots 2.05 and 7 in the TCO Zone of Transect -1, the following
principal uses are permitted:
[Added 2-26-2018 by Ord.
No. 2018-1]
(a)
The following mixed-use buildings are permitted:
[1]
Residential apartments or flats above commercial or office uses.
[2]
Residential apartments or flats and offices on the second floor,
with the exception that these two uses are not permitted on the same
floor.
[3]
Mixed-use buildings fronting along and Monmouth Road and Woodlane
Road that may include residential apartments or flats and commercial
or office uses on the first floor, provided that the residential uses
avoid sharing common exterior entrances and internal corridors with
the commercial or office uses and the commercial or office uses occupy
at least 5,600 square feet of gross floor area on the first floor.
[4]
Maximum density for all residential uses: 12.0 dwellings per
acre.
[5]
Minimum gross floor area for permitted nonresidential uses as
part of a mixed-use building: 5,000 square feet.
(b)
Commercial and office uses shall comply with permitted principal uses in the TCO Zone of the Transect T-1 as set forth in §
540-98E(1)(a) to
(g).
(c)
The following warehouse and office uses are permitted:
[1]
Warehouse uses that store and distribute nonhazardous, nonexplosive
and noncorrosive material as identified in the Building Code.
[2]
Maximum gross floor area for warehouse uses shall not exceed
20% of the gross site area.
[3]
Office uses that support warehouse operations; such office uses
may be located within a common building used for warehouse operations
or may be located within a separate building.
[4]
Office uses for general business activities and headquarters.
[5]
Outdoor storage of material shall be permitted provided: the
height of the material stored outdoors shall not exceed seven feet;
an eight-foot high solid fence shall screen the material stored outdoors;
the material stored outdoors shall not visible to the public from
any road right-of-way; and no more than 25% of the gross site area
shall be used for outdoor storage.
F. Conditional uses in the TCO Zone of the T-1 Transect District:
(1) Class 5 Cannabis Retailer, which shall be restricted to being a microbusiness,
shall comply with the following requirements:
[Added 7-19-2021 by Ord. No. 2021-12]
(a)
The cannabis retail establishment shall be restricted to the
ground floor of a commercial building or a mixed-use building.
(b)
The gross floor area of the cannabis retail establishment shall
not exceed 2,500 square feet.
(c)
Signage identifying the cannabis retail establishment shall
be restricted in the following manner:
[1]
Signage shall be limited to a facade sign that shall not exceed
5% of the area of the facade of the building on which the sign is
attached or 50 square feet, whichever is less.
[2]
Window and temporary signs shall be prohibited.
[3]
Door signs shall be limited to the name of the business, street
address, and days and hours of operation.
[4]
Exterior and interior signage shall be prohibited from containing
text and/or images that promote excessive consumption of legal cannabis
products.
(d)
A Class 5 Cannabis Retailer shall not be located within a distance
of 1,000 feet from the boundaries of the property on which the retail
operation is located to the boundaries of the property on which the
following land uses are located: a public or private school, including
elementary, vocational, or secondary schools, colleges, and universities;
a state-licensed child-care center; a house of worship; and a state-licensed
addiction recovery facility.
(e)
A Class 5 Cannabis Retailer shall not be located within a distance
of 500 feet from the boundaries of the property on which the retail
operation is located to the boundaries of the property on which another
Class 5 Cannabis Retailer is located.
(f)
The days and hours of operation for a Class 5 Cannabis Retailer
shall be: Monday through Saturday, 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m., and Sunday,
9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
(g)
The cannabis retail establishment shall be duly licensed as
a Class 5 Cannabis Retailer by the State of New Jersey with its license
maintained in good standing.
(h)
On-site sales of alcohol or tobacco products are prohibited.
(i)
On-site consumption of food, alcohol, tobacco, or cannabis products
by patrons is prohibited.
(j)
Security Requirements for Class 5 Cannabis Retailers:
[1]
All licensed retail establishments shall be equipped with security
cameras covering all exterior parking and loading areas, all points
of entry into the facilities, and interior spaces that are open to
the public and that are used to store cannabis products.
[a] Security cameras shall be installed to monitor
and record all areas of the premises, except in restrooms, and where
persons may gain or attempt to gain access to cannabis products or
cash maintained by the Cannabis Retailer. Cameras shall record operations
of the business and all potential areas of ingress and egress to the
facility with sufficient detail to identify facial features and clothing.
Recordings from security cameras shall be maintained for a minimum
of 40 days in a secure off-site location or through a service over
a network that provides on-demand access, commonly referred to as
a "cloud." The off-site location shall be submitted to the Eastampton
Township Police Department and shall be updated within 48 hours of
any change of such location.
[2]
All licensed retail establishments shall provide the Eastampton
Township Police Department with access to recorded security footage
immediately upon request by the Department.
[3]
All licensed retail establishments shall have at least one officer
of the Eastampton Township Police Department stationed at each facility
during operation and when the facility is open to the public. The
expense of providing the police officer shall be paid by the cannabis
establishment.
[4]
All licensed retail establishments shall provide a dimensioned
floor plan, clearly labeled, showing: the layout of the structure
and floor plan in which the retail operation is to be located; the
principal uses of the floor area depicted on the floor plan, including,
but not limited to, public areas, retail areas, storage areas and
restricted areas where cannabis products will be located; all points
of entry into the facility; and the locations of all security cameras
that will be positioned within the facility.
[5]
All licensed retail establishments shall provide a plan for
exterior lighting for security purposes.
[6]
All licensed retail establishments shall install and use a safe
for storage of any cannabis products and cash on the premises when
the business is closed to the public. The safe shall be incorporated
into the building structure or securely attached thereto as approved
by the Eastampton Township Police Department and Construction Official.
[7]
All licensed retail establishments shall install and use an
alarm system that is monitored by a company that is staffed 24 hours
a day, seven days a week. The name, location and contact information
of the company monitoring the alarm shall be provided to the Eastampton
Police Department and shall be updated within 48 hours of any change
of monitoring company. If the alarm system includes a panic alarm,
an operable dedicated phone for Eastampton Police Department to respond
to the alarm shall be and remain on the premises at all times.
G. Area, bulk and yard requirements as set forth in §
540-99 with the following exceptions:
[Amended 10-22-2012 by Ord. No. 2012-14; 6-25-2012 by Ord. No. 2012-6; 5-23-2016 by Ord. No. 2016-6; 2-26-2018 by Ord. No. 2018-1]
(1) Parcels of land consisting of at least 11 contiguous acres in Block
900.01, Lots 12.01, 12.05 and 12.06 in the TCO Zone of Transect T-1
that are to be developed as a residential apartment and mixed-use
complex shall comply with the following requirements:
(a)
Minimum lot area: 11 acres.
(b)
Minimum lot frontage: 350 feet.
(c)
Minimum lot width: 350 feet.
(d)
Minimum lot depth: 690 feet.
(f)
Minimum side yard setback: 20 feet.
(g)
Minimum rear yard setback: 30 feet.
(h)
Maximum building height:
[2]
Three stories; four stories for buildings fronting along Woodland
Road.
(i)
Maximum impervious coverage: 75%.
(j)
Maximum building coverage: 35%.
(k)
Maximum building length: 375 feet.
(l)
Permitted encroachments:
[1]
Architectural features such as porches, platforms, steps or
landing places which do not extend above the first-floor level and
which have no wall more than 30 inches in height may project into
a required front yard setback, except for setbacks from zero feet
to four feet, a distance of no more than four feet.
[2]
Architectural features such as chimneys, bay windows, cornices
and eaves may project no more than three feet into a required side
or rear yard setback and a required front yard setback, except for
setbacks from zero feet to three feet, a distance of no more than
three feet.
[3]
Architectural features such as balconies may project no more
than five feet into a required side or rear yard setback and a required
front yard setback, except for setbacks from zero feet to five feet,
a distance of no more than five feet.
(2) Parcels of land consisting of at least seven contiguous acres in
Block 600, Lots 2.05 and 7 in the TCO Zone of Transect T-1 that are
to be developed as a warehouse and office use shall comply with the
following requirements:
(a)
Minimum lot area: seven acres.
(b)
Minimum lot frontage: 250 feet.
(c)
Minimum lot width: 250 feet.
(d)
Minimum lot depth: 350 feet.
(e)
Maximum front yard setback: 100 feet.
(f)
Minimum side yard setback: 20 feet.
(g)
Minimum rear yard setback: 50 feet.
(h)
Maximum building heights:
[1]
Warehouse and office in common building: 45 feet, one story
with mezzanine for office.
[2]
Office in separate building: 48 feet, four stories.
(i)
Maximum impervious coverage: 70%.
(j)
Maximum building coverage: 30%.
H. General design standards: as set forth in:
(2) Chapter
460, Article
IX, Architectural Design Standards Applicable to All Zones, §
460-79.
I. Parking and loading requirements shall comply with §
540-57, 58 and 59 and §
540-99C(13), except for parcels of land consisting of at least 11 contiguous acres in Block 900.01 in the TCO Zone of Transect T-1 shall comply with the following requirements:
[Added 6-25-2012 by Ord.
No. 2012-6; amended 10-22-2012 by Ord. No. 2012-14; 2-26-2018 by Ord. No. 2018-1]
(2) On-street parking may be used to meet the total parking requirement
counting only those spaces directly in front or side of the mixed-use
building(s).
(3) Parking lots shall be placed in the rear of the building(s) that
front(s) along Woodland Road and may be located around buildings that
are situated internally on a site. Rear parking lots must be screened
with a fence and/or vegetative hedge (minimum of 3 1/2 feet high)
which is at least 75% visually impervious at the time of installation,
except when a rear parking lot is adjacent to another parking area
on an adjoining lot, the fence and/or vegetative hedge shall be at
least 35% visually impervious at the time of installation. The internal
surfaces of the parking lot must have one shade tree for every 10
parking spaces.
J. Design standards.
[Added 6-25-2012 by Ord. No. 2012-6]
K. Accessory
uses.
[Added 3-22-2021 by Ord. No. 2021-3]
[Added 11-10-2008 by Ord. No. 2008-26; amended 2-23-2009 by Ord. No.
2009-02; 2-28-2011 by Ord. No. 2011-6]
A. Uses. The following uses are permitted in the TCM1, TCM2 and TCO
Overlay Districts located in the T-1, T-2 and T-3 Village Transect
Districts, as well as the TCR, TCVO and TCC Overlay Districts, subject
to applicable standards set forth as follows:
(1) Permitted commercial uses:
(a)
Commercial buildings for multiple occupants with various areas of leasable space. Retail uses shall be restricted to the ground floor. Building requirements are the same as those provided under §
540-96B.
(b)
Restaurants, cafes, coffeehouses and eateries, except as specifically prohibited in Subsection
A(8).
(c)
Personal service establishments, having their primary function
the rendering of a service to a client within a building. Such services
may include, but are not limited to, barbershops and beauty shops,
dry-cleaning establishments, self-service laundromats, tailor shops,
weight-loss centers, portrait studios, interior decorating services,
video rental, and mail centers.
(d)
Business service establishments, having as their primary function
the rendering of service to a business client. Such services may include,
but are not limited to, document reproduction, duplication, and administrative
services.
(e)
Product service establishments, having as their primary function
the servicing or repair of a product, including, but not limited to,
the repair and servicing of shoes, audio and visual equipment, appliances,
jewelry and watches. Such service establishments shall not include
motor vehicle maintenance and/or body shops.
(f)
Business offices, including, but not limited to, insurance agents,
travel agents, realtors, finance and investment companies, and tax
preparation services.
(g)
Instructional studios, fitness centers, and billiard parlors.
(h)
Banks and other financial institutions, excluding check-cashing
businesses, but including automated teller machines (ATM).
(i)
Professional offices, including, but not limited to, offices
for architects, artists, authors, dentists, doctors, lawyers, ministers,
musicians, engineers, optometrists, opticians, and such other similar
professions.
(j)
Public and semipublic uses, including parks and playgrounds,
conservation areas, and structures and facilities constructed as part
of this principal use.
(2) Public, private and parochial schools for academic instruction.
(3) Mixed-use buildings that may include residential apartments or flats
above commercial or office uses. Residential apartments and offices
may be permitted on the second story, with the exception that these
two uses are not permitted on the same floor.
(4) Day-care centers (elderly and child).
(5) Churches, temples and other places of worship.
(6) Post office and library facilities.
(7) Cultural facilities, such as museums, auditoriums and conservatories.
(8) Prohibited uses:
(a)
Use requiring storage or display of goods outside a fully enclosed building, except as provided in §
540-98E(5)(c)[5].
[Amended 2-26-2018 by Ord. No. 2018-1]
(c)
Any freestanding, single-occupant and single-use building in
excess of 7,000 square feet of gross floor area.
(d)
Sexually oriented businesses, including establishments that
are commonly marketed as adult (male or female) entertainment clubs
featuring exotic dancing, and adult book, video and/or gift stores,
and massage parlors.
(e)
Tattoo, body-piercing or branding establishments.
(f)
Manufacturing and other commercial uses deemed to be hazardous
in the Building Code.
(g)
Automobile sales, services, pumping stations, parts sales, car
washes, and detailing shops.
(h)
Restaurants with exterior drive-up window service.
(i)
Kennels, veterinary hospitals and facilities for the boarding
and grooming of animals.
(9) Conditional uses:
(b)
Life cycle housing.
[1]
A minimum of 25% of the combined total of single-family village
homes, narrow lot cottages and attached townhomes shall provide a
ground floor master bedroom in the TCM1, TCO Districts.
[2]
A minimum of 10% of the combined total of single-family village
homes, narrow lot cottages and attached townhomes shall provide a
ground floor master bedroom in the TCM2 District.
(c)
Live-work units, provided the following conditions apply:
[1]
Any business operated from a live-work unit must be a principal
permitted or conditional use.
[2]
The parking and loading requirements for the proposed business
use shall be consistent with the parking and loading requirements
of this chapter. On-street parking may be considered in the provision
of an appropriate number of parking spaces, depending on the expected
parking demand and frequency of customer visits. In any case, there
shall be at least one parking space per live-work unit dedicated solely
to the commercial use.
[3]
Business operations involving client visits shall be limited
to the hours between 8:00 a.m. and 9:00 p.m.
[4]
There shall be an interior connection between the live and work
portions of the unit.
[5]
All signage shall comply with applicable standards contained
in this chapter.
(d)
Home-based professional offices, provided the following conditions
apply:
[1]
The home-based office is located in a single-family or attached
townhouse dwelling unit for professional home office use such as lawyers,
engineers, architects, artists, writers, mental health professionals
and other similar professions.
[2]
Real estate offices, medical, dental, and other personal services
such as hair, nail, tattooing, piercing and physical fitness services
shall not be permitted as home offices uses.
(e)
Nothing in this section shall be interpreted as allowing for
the outdoor storage of business-related equipment, the cleaning and
maintenance of equipment or transfer of equipment and freight that
may or may not be related to a home office use. For example, on-site
storage of landscape equipment, construction trailers, and dump trucks
or any other equipment related to a building trade is prohibited.
(f)
In addition to the family members occupying the dwelling containing
the home office, there shall not be more than one outside employee
in the home office.
(g)
The employees and clients shall use on-street curbside parking
spaces.
(h)
Client visits to home-based offices shall be scheduled so as
to not overlap, and there shall be no more than two business-related
guests or clients at the home-based office at any one time.
(i)
Permitted signage area is limited to one wall-mounted nonflashing
nameplate sign situated within the property lines and limited to one
square foot in area.
(j)
The home office shall not exceed 1,000 square feet, or 25% of
the total habitable square footage of the dwelling exclusive of any
basement, or can be located in an accessory building not to exceed
500 square feet.
(k)
All exterior aspects of the home office operation shall not
disrupt the residential integrity of the dwelling unit.
(l)
Studio or guest rooms above a garage, provided the following
conditions apply:
[1]
The studio room or guest room shall be on the second floor of
a detached garage.
[2]
The studio room or guest room shall not have separate kitchen
facilities.
[3]
Any professional or home-based office must meet the conditional use standards for home-based offices contained in §
540-65.
(10)
Permitted accessory uses:
(a)
Residential detached garages which shall not be subject to conversion
to any other use except as may be specifically permitted in this chapter.
(b)
Sheds shall be permitted in rear and side yards only and shall
be limited to 100 square feet and be set back a minimum of three feet
from any property line and shall be permitted in the rear yard only.
(c)
All other accessory uses, buildings or structures shall be set
back a minimum of three feet from any property line and shall be permitted
in the rear yard only.
(d)
All accessory uses shall be architecturally compatible with
the principal structure.
(e) Signs, subject to the provisions of §§
540-48 through
540-53.
[Added 3-22-2021 by Ord. No. 2021-3]
B. Area and yard requirements:
(1) Commercial and mixed-use buildings:
(a)
Lot area: minimum of 30,000 square feet and maximum of 90,000
square feet.
(b)
Lot width (at front yard setback line): minimum of 150 feet.
(c)
Minimum lot depth: 150 feet.
(d)
Front yard setback: zero feet minimum and 20 feet maximum from
property line. When property fronts onto county highways, the front
yard shall be measured from the edge of the right-of-way. Sidewalks
and planting strips along county highways shall be outside the right-of-way
if necessary to accommodate sidewalk design standards. Zero setback
is permitted only where the county will allow construction of sidewalks
and other streetscape improvements within the county right-of-way.
(e)
Side yard: zero feet when attached and 20 feet when detached
from property line. When the property side yard fronts on a county
highway, the side yard shall be measured from the edge of the right-of-way.
Sidewalks and planting strips along county highways shall be outside
the right-of-way if necessary to accommodate sidewalk design standards.
Zero setback is permitted only where the county will allow construction
of sidewalks and other streetscape improvements within the county
right-of-way.
(f)
Height: two stories or 20 feet minimum and three stories or
35 feet maximum from sidewalk level. Finished first floor should be
as close to level with the sidewalk as practicable.
(g)
Maximum impervious coverage: 70%.
(h)
Maximum building length: 250 feet.
(i)
Parking:
[2]
On-street parking can be used to meet the total parking requirement,
counting only those spaces directly in the front or side of the mixed-use
building(s).
[3]
Parking lots shall be placed in the rear of the building(s).
Rear parking lots must be screened with a fence or vegetative hedge
(minimum of 3 1/2 feet high) which is at least 75% visually impervious
at the time of planting. The internal surface of the parking lot must
have one tree for every 10 parking spaces.
(j)
Street trees shall be planted at thirty-foot intervals in a
grass planting strip that is a minimum of five feet wide between the
edge of the road and sidewalk. In retail areas where a planting strip
may not be suitable, trees shall be planted in grates, pavement openings
or planter structures of sufficient size to accommodate the species
utilized.
(k)
Streetlighting. Lighting shall be uniform throughout the community,
pedestrian-scaled and located in the planting strip or near the edge
of the road. The fixtures shall not exceed 12 feet in height and shall
be provided on both sides of the street intersections. The minimum
spacing shall be 80 feet on center.
(l)
Sidewalks fronting commercial property shall be a minimum of
10 feet and a maximum of 16 feet in width.
(2) Single-family village homes:
(a)
Lot area: minimum of 6,000 square feet and maximum of 15,000
square feet.
(b)
Lot width: 60 feet minimum.
(c)
Lot depth: 100 feet minimum.
(d)
Front yard setback: 15 feet minimum and 25 feet maximum from
property line. When property fronts on county highways where future
road widening may be required, the front yard shall be measured from
the edge of the future right-of-way. Sidewalks and planting strips
along county highways shall be outside the right-of-way if necessary
to accommodate sidewalk design standards.
(e)
Side yard: five feet minimum, 12 feet combined. A minimum of
12 feet shall be provided between dwellings.
(f)
Rear yard: 35 feet minimum.
(g)
Height: 2 1/2 stories or 35 feet.
(h)
Maximum building coverage: 45%.
(i)
Minimum nonimpervious area: 30%.
(3) Narrow lot cottages:
(a)
Lot area: minimum of 4,500 square feet.
(b)
Lot width: 45 feet minimum.
(c)
Lot depth: 100 feet minimum.
(d)
Front yard setback: 15 feet minimum and 25 feet maximum from
property line. When property fronts on county highways where future
road widening may be required, the front yard shall be measured from
the edge of the future right-of-way. Sidewalks and planting strips
along county highways shall be outside the right-of-way if necessary
to accommodate sidewalk design standards.
(e)
Side yard setback: five feet minimum, 12 feet combined. A minimum
of 12 feet shall be provided between dwellings.
(f)
Rear yard: 35 feet minimum.
(g)
Height: 2 1/2 stories or 35 feet.
(h)
Maximum building coverage: 45%.
(i)
Minimum nonimpervious area: 30%.
(4) Attached townhome units:
(a)
Lot area: minimum of 2,000 square feet per dwelling unit.
(b)
Lot width: at front yard setback, a minimum of 20 feet per dwelling
unit.
(c)
Lot depth: 100 feet minimum.
(d)
Front yard: five feet minimum and 15 feet maximum from property
line. When property fronts on county highways where future road widening
may be required, the front yard shall be measured from the edge of
the future right-of-way. Sidewalks and planting strips along county
highways shall be outside the right-of-way if necessary to accommodate
sidewalk design standards.
(e)
Side yard: at end of each row, a minimum of five feet and maximum
of 12 feet.
(f)
Rear yard: 35 feet minimum.
(g)
Height: 2 1/2 stories or 35 feet.
(h)
Maximum building size: four dwelling units in a row and 150
feet in length.
(i)
Maximum impervious coverage: 70%.
(j)
Garage: if provided, to be in rear yard and accessed through an alley; subject to the requirements of §
540-99C(13)(i).
(5) Multifamily dwelling units:
(a)
Minimum lot area: 30,000 square feet.
(b)
Lot width: minimum of 100 feet.
(c)
Lot depth: minimum of 150 feet.
(d)
Front yard: minimum of 10 feet.
(e)
Side yard: minimum of 10 feet; 20 feet between buildings.
(f)
Rear yard: minimum of 50 feet.
(g)
Building height:
[1]
Three stories, not to exceed 45 feet in the TCM1, TCO Districts.
[2]
Three stories, not to exceed 49 feet in the TCM2 District.
(h)
Maximum impervious coverage: 60%.
(i)
Rear yard parking and alley access are required.
(6) Live/work flex units:
(a)
Lot area: minimum of 3,500 square feet and a maximum of 7,500
square feet.
(b)
Lot width: minimum of 35 feet.
(c)
Lot depth: minimum of 100 feet.
(d)
Front yard: minimum of 15 feet and a maximum of 25 feet.
(e)
Side yard: five feet minimum, 12 feet combined. A minimum of
12 feet shall be provided between dwellings.
(f)
Rear yard: minimum of 35 feet.
(g)
Height: 2 1/2 stories or 35 feet.
(h)
Maximum impervious coverage: 60%.
(7) Permitted encroachments:
(a)
Architectural features such as porches, platforms, steps or
landing places which do not extend above the first-floor level and
which have no wall more than 30 inches in height may project into
a required front or rear yard setback a distance of no more than four
feet.
(b)
Architectural features such as chimneys, bay windows, cornices
and eaves may project no more than three feet into a required front,
side or rear yard setback.
C. Design standards for all zones in the Town Center District.
(1) A mix of dwelling unit types shall be distributed throughout the
Town Center Districts.
(2) The developer shall provide a building option for a "senior cottage,"
defined as a dwelling unit with a master bedroom on the ground floor
and other amenities and efficiencies designed to appeal to people
in the fifty-five-and-older age bracket.
(3) Building variation. Building designs shall vary in terms of footprint,
architectural elevations, window placement, type of roof, height,
front entrance, and porch locations. Colors, materials, and architectural
details should establish a harmonious and unified theme.
(4) The street pattern shall be generally consistent with the Eastampton
Township Town Center Design Plan, prepared by A. Nelessen Associates,
2004, as it relates to the location of residential lanes and alleys
and the interconnections between adjacent parcels in the Village Center
as shown on Schedule C of this chapter.
(5) Buildings and front facades shall be oriented to the street.
(6) Fences, decorative walls and hedges.
(a)
Walls and fences shall be architecturally compatible with the
style, materials and colors of the principal building on the same
lot. Front yards may have the following treatments: brick walls with
a stone or cast-stone cap, or synthetic picket fences, and decorative
metal or cast-iron fences.
(b)
Front yard fences shall be set back a minimum of three feet
from the paved sidewalk and shall be located on private property.
(c)
Front yard fences, hedges and walls shall be limited to a maximum
of 3 1/2 feet in height above ground level and be a minimum of
60% solid.
(d)
Fences shall not conflict with the site distance requirements. Where driveways and private parking is off of an arterial or collector street, as defined in §
460-4 of the Eastampton Township Code, a zoning permit for a fence shall be reviewed by the Township Engineer to certify compliance with all site distance requirements.
(e)
Side and rear yard fences shall not exceed six feet above ground
level.
(f)
Hedges may be used instead of fences.
(g)
Highway-style guardrail, stockade or contemporary
security fencing such as chain-link, barbed or razor wire are prohibited.
(h)
Side and rear yards may be defined by a masonry wall, wooden
or synthetic fence, trellis or lattice, vegetative hedge, garage and/or
outbuilding walls, or some combination thereof. The height of such
yard or patio enclosure shall not exceed six feet above ground level
and shall be suitable to provide privacy and screen views of neighboring
uses, trash receptacles/containers or recycling bins.
(i)
On corner lots, such fences shall not be closer to the street
side property line than the building setback line.
(j)
Gates in fences shall be built of the fence material.
(k)
Walls shall be built of brick to match the principal building.
(l)
Gates in walls may be of steel or wrought iron.
(7) Decks, patios and terraces.
(a)
Decks, patios and terraces shall complement the architectural
style and design of the dwelling units and the overall project design.
(b)
Decks shall be constructed no higher than 36 inches from the
rear yard grade immediately adjacent to the side and rear wall of
the home.
(c)
Decks shall not be constructed closer than 10 feet to the side
and rear property lines for single-family homes and three feet for
townhomes.
(d)
Patios constructed at grade shall not be constructed closer
than five feet from the side or rear property line.
(8) Pools and spas.
(a)
All swimming pools shall be an in-ground type, with a maximum
of 21 inches above adjacent grade.
(b)
Pools or spas shall not be constructed closer than 10 feet from
the side and rear property lines for single-family homes and five
feet for townhomes.
(c)
All swimming pools shall be fenced in accordance with applicable
Township zoning regulations.
(9) Gazebo, arbor, trellis or pergolas.
(a)
Gazebos or other similar freestanding accessory structures are
permitted in the rear yard only. Maximum height shall not exceed 12
feet above adjacent grade, excluding rooftop ornaments; it shall be
constructed of wood and shall have a maximum size of 150 square feet.
(b)
Trellises, arbors and gate arbors are permitted in the side
and rear yards.
(c)
Trellises, arbors and gate arbors shall be proportionately sized
for the overall area of the yard and shall not exceed eight feet in
height, five feet in width and three feet in depth. They shall be
constructed of wood and compliment the architectural style, type and
design of the fence or dwelling.
(10)
Accessory porches.
(a)
Any porch built by the property owner and not provided by the
builder at the time of initial construction shall be considered an
accessory porch.
(b)
Accessory porches shall complement the architectural style and
design of the dwelling units and the overall project design.
(c)
Front accessory porches shall have a minimum depth of six feet
and shall be subject to Township ordinance requirements.
(11)
Residential interior lots. Adjacent residential lots may be
divided by a six-foot-high fence along side property lines. Portions
of fencing above five feet in height must be made of a trellis or
other semitransparent top piece.
(12)
Residential corner lot. Side streets should be treated the same
as front streets. The front porch encroachment may wrap around the
corner on a corner lot house. Subject to the specific architecture
of the unit, rear yard fencing may extend along the side street and
may be between five feet and six feet high only from the rear property
line to a point that is either half of the depth of the unit or the
location of the side entry, provided it does not interfere with the
sight triangle.
(13)
Off-street and on-street parking. The overall intent for the
provision of parking in the Town Center Districts is to balance the
use mix with available parking opportunities both on and off street.
(a)
Off-street parking shall be provided according to minimum requirements
as specified below:
|
Use
|
Required Off-Street Parking
|
---|
|
Village single-family
|
See Residential Site Improvement Standards
|
|
Narrow single-family
|
See Residential Site Improvement Standards
|
|
Townhouse
|
See Residential Site Improvement Standards
|
|
Apartment dwelling
|
See Residential Site Improvement Standards
|
|
Accessory dwellings
|
1 space per unit
|
|
Retail
|
Minimum 1 space per 300 square feet1
|
|
Office uses
|
Minimum 1 space per 300 square feet1
|
|
Institutional/churches
|
Minimum 1 space per 3 seats
|
|
NOTES:
|
---|
|
The minimum requirement of 1 space per 300 square feet is permitted if shared parking is proposed as specified in Subsection C(13)(g) below. If shared parking is not proposed, the parking shall be as required in § 540-58.
|
(b)
Parking is prohibited within the front setback between the front
of the building and the front property line.
(c)
Parking lots and/or associated driveways may abut and overlap
property lines that abut other nonresidential Town Center District
uses, predicated upon establishing an appropriate access easement
that clearly defines all associated maintenance responsibilities.
(d)
Parking spaces and/or associated driveways shall be located
a minimum of 10 feet from any side or rear property line which abuts
a Town Center residential use.
(e)
Off-street parking for commercial uses shall be sufficient to
provide parking for the employees of all proposed uses as well as
long-term customer parking. Spaces reserved for employees shall be
designated as such by means of striping and signage. Off-street parking
lots shall be prohibited in any front yard setback area, shall be
located at the rear of buildings on the interior of lots whenever
possible, and shall be accessed by means of common driveways. Cross-access
easements for adjacent lots with interconnected parking lots shall
be required, in language acceptable to the Township Council and Planning
Board Attorney.
(f)
In addition to the off-street parking requirements specified
above, on-street parking shall be provided to serve customers of commercial
uses. Where permitted, commercial on-street parking shall be provided
as curbside, parallel, or angle parking located along both sides of
the streets on all blocks upon which commercial uses front.
(g)
Shared parking shall be encouraged for all commercial parking
lots and particularly for those serving mixed-use commercial and residential
buildings. Where necessary, in parking lots which are serving mixed-use
commercial and residential buildings, the Land Use Planning Board
may, in its discretion, permit a limited amount of parking to be reserved
either for residential or specified commercial uses only or may restrict
the hours that certain spaces are to be used for residential or commercial
uses only. In exercising its discretion to allow any limitations to
be placed on the use of any parking spaces, the Land Use Planning
Board shall do so with the intent to limit such restrictive use in
order to advance the objective of encouraging shared parking.
(h)
Parking lot landscaping, buffering and screening.
[1]
Lots for apartment and nonresidential uses shall balance the
functional requirements of parking with the provision of pedestrian
amenities. Transition areas between parking and civic, commercial,
or residential uses shall be designed with textured paving, landscaping,
and street furniture approved by the Land Use Planning Board.
[2]
Parking lot layout, landscaping, buffering, and screening shall
be provided to minimize direct views of parked vehicles from streets
and sidewalks, avoid spillover light, glare, noise, or exhaust fumes
onto adjacent properties, in particular residential properties, and
provide the parking area with a reasonable measure of shade when trees
reach maturity. In order to achieve these objectives, parking lots
exposed to the public view shall be surrounded by a minimum of a three-foot-high,
year-round, visually impervious screen, hedge or wall. However, where
these buffers are used to screen driveways or approach sidewalks or
walkways, the walls will be located in a manner to provide adequate
visibility of pedestrians from motor vehicles and shall not interfere
with clear sight triangle requirements.
[3]
The interior of all parking lots shall be landscaped to provide shade and visual relief. This is best achieved by protected planting islands or peninsulas within the perimeter of the parking lot. Refer to §
540-54 for additional landscaping requirements.
[4]
Parking lot layout shall take into consideration pedestrian
circulation. Pedestrian crosswalks shall be provided, where necessary
and appropriate, shall be distinguished by textured paving, and shall
be integrated into the wider network of pedestrian walkways. Pavement
textures shall be required on pedestrian accessways and strongly encouraged
elsewhere in the parking lot as surfacing materials or when used as
accents and as approved by the Land Use Planning Board.
(i)
Residential garage and parking design standards.
[1]
With the exception of lots that do not back up to alleys or
lanes, driveways and driveway access shall be prohibited in any front
yard area.
[2]
Driveways that are accessed through the front yard area shall
be no wider than 10 feet, and parking for all dwelling units shall
be prohibited within the front yard setback.
[3]
Parking for all dwelling units shall be prohibited in front
yard setback areas, with the exception of lots that do not back up
to alleys or lanes. Driveways and driveway access shall be permitted
in the front yard area, provided that the garage is recessed at least
10 feet from the main portion of the dwelling unit. Driveways shall
be set back a minimum of three feet from the side of dwelling units.
The location of a garage shall be set back a minimum of three feet
from side and five feet from rear property lines.
[4]
Garages, driveways and parking areas shall have a minimum setback
of three feet from any side property line.
[5]
Driveways shall be set back a minimum of three feet from any
side property line, unless such driveway is shared by dwellings on
two adjacent lots, in which case the driveway may be located with
the driveway center line on the common side lot line. Parking for
townhouses shall be provided as driveways or garages with access from
a rear lane.
[6]
Garages shall only be located to the rear of the principal building,
with the exception of where access to a rear alley is not provided.
[7]
The garage setback from the right-of-way of the rear lane shall
be governed by the following. No parking is permitted within the driveway
accessing the garage, in which case the garage shall be set back no
less than 10 feet, with a six-inch tolerance, from the right-of-way
of the rear lane, or parking may occur within the driveway leading
to the garage, in which case said garage shall be set back no less
than 20 feet from the right-of-way of the rear lane. No vehicle parked
in a driveway or parking area shall encroach into the public right-of-way.
[8]
Two adjacent lots may share a driveway along their common property
line, subject to a cross-access easement.
[9]
Residential lots may require on-site parking spaces adjacent
to the garage in order to meet the minimum off-street parking requirements
if sufficient spaces are not provided within the garage and the driveway
to the garage.
[10] The maximum width of a driveway throat shall not
exceed 24 feet. There shall be no more than one driveway apron per
lot.
[11] Garages on single-family or duplex corner lots
are permitted direct access to the side street, provided the entrance
of said garage has a setback 10 feet further than the sidewall of
the dwelling unit.
[12] Required residential off-street parking spaces
shall abut the side of the on-site garage and have a depth between
25 and 26 feet from the alley right-of-way and a minimum designated
parking width of eight feet contained on said lot. A clear width of
11 feet, free of fence, shrub, etc., shall be provided for parking
spaces to accommodate vehicle access. On lots that cannot accommodate
the full eleven-foot designated parking area width, an access easement
on the adjacent lot shall be required to accommodate door openings
only. When necessary, due to abutting garages and/or minimal lot widths,
driveways and parking areas may abut the adjacent lot's property line.
[13] Driveways may be constructed of brick pavers,
two-foot-wide concrete wheel tracks, or stone pavers.
[14] All townhouse driveways and parking spaces shall
only be accessed from the rear lane, with the exception of end unit
townhomes.
[15] Required parking for multifamily buildings may
be located in common parking lots located on a lot other than that
containing the apartment building entrances. Parking shall be located
within 300 feet of the urban apartment building entrance in order
to minimize parking off site.
[16] For attached garages which are accessed from an
alley, not from the front of the house, the minimum setback for the
garage shall be three feet from the side yard and five feet from the
rear yard.
D. Commercial design standards for all zones in the Town Center District.
(1) Pedestrian connections shall be provided to abutting open space areas
and abutting Town Center commercial sites.
(2) Restaurants and cafes shall be permitted to operate outdoor dining
areas on sidewalks, including areas within the public right-of-way
and in courtyards, provided pedestrian circulation and access to store
entrances shall not be impaired, and the following standards and guidelines
are met:
(a)
To allow for pedestrian circulation, a minimum of five feet
of sidewalk along the curb and to the entrance of the establishment
shall be maintained free of tables and other encumbrances.
(b)
Planters, posts with ropes, wrought iron railings, or other
removable enclosures are encouraged and shall be used as a way of
defining the area occupied by the cafe.
(c)
Extended awnings, canopies, or large umbrellas shall be permitted
and located to provide shade. Colors shall complement building colors.
(d)
Outdoor cafes shall be required to provide additional outdoor
trash receptacles.
(e)
Tables, chairs, planters, trash receptacles, and other elements
of street furniture shall be compatible with the architectural character
of the building where the establishment is located.
(f)
Operators or owners of establishments will be responsible for
trash pickup and maintain a litter-free and well-kept appearance within
and immediately adjacent to the area of their activities.
(3) Drive-through banking facilities shall be located and screened with
planting and/or architectural walls to minimize their visibility and
may be located under upper-story cantilevered floors. In all cases,
drive-through facilities must be located in the rear of the building.
(4) Required loading and service areas. When required, loading docks,
solid waste facilities, recycling facilities, and other service areas
shall be placed to the rear or side of buildings in visually unobtrusive
locations. Screening and landscaping shall be provided to minimize
direct views of the loading areas and their driveways from adjacent
properties or from the public right-of-way. Screening and landscaping
shall also be provided to minimize spillover glare, noise, or exhaust
fumes. Screening and buffering shall be achieved through walls, fences,
and landscaping. Screening shall be a minimum of five feet tall, shall
be visually impervious and keep receptacles completely out of view.
Recesses in the building, or depressed access ramps, may be used.
[Added 11-10-2008 by Ord. No. 2008-27]
A. Permitted principal uses. The following principal uses are permitted
in TCVO Districts:
(1)
Municipal buildings and other governmental and/or public uses.
(2)
Churches, temples and other houses of worship.
(5)
Cultural facilities, such as museums, auditoriums and conservatories.
B. Accessory uses. The following accessory uses are permitted in the
TCVO Districts:
(1)
Signs, subject to the provisions of §§
540-48 through
540-53.
[Amended 3-22-2021 by Ord. No. 2021-3]
(2)
Fences and landscaping, subject to the provisions of §§
540-55 and
540-56.
(3)
Off-street parking facilities, subject to the provisions of §§
540-57 and
540-58.
(4)
Loading and unloading ramps and structures, subject to the provisions of §
540-59.
C. Area and yard requirements:
(1)
Minimum lot area: four acres.
(2)
Minimum lot frontage: 400 feet.
(3)
Minimum lot width: 400 feet.
(4)
Minimum lot depth: 200 feet.
(5)
Minimum setbacks:
(b)
Accessory building:
[1]
Distance to sideline: 20 feet.
[2]
Distance to rear line: 20 feet.
[3]
Distance to other building: 20 feet.
(6)
Maximum building coverage: 20%.
(7)
Maximum site coverage: 65%.
(8)
Building coverage of accessory building(s): 2%.
D. Miscellaneous. Signs, landscaping, parking, lighting and other criteria shall be as set forth in §
540-24.
[Added 11-10-2008 by Ord. No. 2008-28]
A. Permitted uses:
(1)
Single-family residential dwellings.
(2)
Single-family village homes.
(3)
Single-family narrow lot cottages.
B. Permitted accessory uses:
(1)
Residential detached garages, which shall not be subject to
conversion to any other use except as may be specifically permitted
in this chapter.
(2)
Sheds shall be permitted in rear and side yards only and shall
be limited to 100 square feet and be set back a minimum of three feet
from any property line and shall be permitted in the rear yard only.
(3)
All other accessory uses, buildings or structures shall be set
back a minimum of three feet from any property line and shall be permitted
in the rear yard only.
(4)
All accessory uses shall be architecturally compatible with
the principal structure.
(6)
Homecrafts, subject to the provisions of §
540-64.
(7) Signs, subject to the provisions of §§
540-48 through
540-53.
[Added 3-22-2021 by Ord. No. 2021-3]
C. Conditional uses. The following conditional uses are permitted in
the TCR District:
(1)
Home professional occupations, subject to the provisions of §
540-65.
D. Area and bulk requirements.
(1)
Area and bulk requirements are in accordance with the following:
(a)
Single-family village homes shall be in accordance with the area and bulk requirements contained in §
540-99B(2).
(b)
Single-family narrow lot cottages shall be in accordance with the area and bulk requirements contained in §
540-99B(3).
(c)
Attached townhome units shall be in accordance with the area and bulk requirements contained in §
540-99B(4).
(2)
Area and bulk requirements for the single-family residential dwellings shall be in accordance with the area and bulk requirements of the R-M Zoning District in §
540-18D.
The redevelopment activities that would necessitate the relocation
of residents, business owners and other property owners is not foreseen
in the redevelopment plan at this time. Therefore, no relocation is
anticipated in Eastampton.
The redevelopment activities that would necessitate the acquisition
of property is not foreseen in the redevelopment plan at this time.
Therefore, no properties are being proposed for acquisition.
The redevelopment plan is consistent with the Master Plan of the Township of Eastampton in a number of ways. Section
540-94 provides specific details about this relationship.
A. Goals and objectives. The plan either achieves or contributes to
the following objectives contained in the Master Plan:
(1)
Conserve natural resources and systems.
(2)
Preserve and enhance areas with historic, cultural, scenic,
open space and recreational value.
(3)
Promote beneficial economic growth and development.
(4)
Protect the environment and prevent and clean up pollution.
(5)
Provide adequate public facilities and services.
(6)
Adopt the purposes of the New Jersey Municipal Land Use Law
(N.J.S.A. 40:55D-2) to be the goals and objectives of Eastampton Township.
B. Recommended use purposes. The Master Plan recommended much of the
redevelopment area remain designated for mixed-use commercial residential
(TCD). The redevelopment plan incorporates these uses, but better
defines the preferred pattern of development.
[Amended 11-10-2008 by Ord. No. 2008-14]
C. The 2001 Land Use Element revision and Open Space Element call for
leaving most of Block 600 in some form of open space and designating
the area as ACR (Agricultural/Commercial/Recreation). However, the
existing zoning standards for the area are BP/ACR (Business Park/Agricultural
Commercial Recreation). The redevelopment plan
recognizes the successful completion of the open space plan and the
input of citizens through the state-funded smart growth grant concept
plan.