[Amended 5-14-1985 by Ord. No. 641; 9-26-1989 by Ord. No. 703]
The following principles of subdivision and land development,
general requirements, and minimum standards of design shall be observed
by the applicant in all instances.
A. All portions of a tract being subdivided shall be taken up in lots,
streets, public lands or other proposed uses so that remnants and
landlocked areas shall not be created.
B. Whenever possible, applicants shall preserve trees, groves, waterways,
scenic points, historic spots and other community assets and landmarks.
C. Subdivision and land developments should be laid out so as to avoid
the necessity for excessive cut or fill unless specifically warranted
by terrain or location.
D. Applicants shall observe the ultimate rights-of-way for contiguous existing streets as prescribed by the Official Street Map for the Borough. Additional portions of the corridors for such streets shall be offered to the government agency having jurisdiction at the time the subdivision or land development is consummated. Applicable building setback lines, as defined by Chapter
475, Zoning, shall be delineated as measured from the street line or ultimate right-of-way.
E. The standards of design in this chapter will be used to judge the
adequacy of subdivision and land development proposals. The standards
included in these regulations are minimum design requirements. The
Borough Council reserves the right in any case to request that development
features exceed these standards if conditions so warrant.
F. The Borough Council may modify or adjust the standards to permit
reasonable utilization of property while securing substantial conformance
with the objectives of the regulations. All requests for a modification
shall:
(1) Be in writing and part of an application for subdivision and/or land
development;
(2) State the grounds and facts of unreasonableness or hardship on which
the request is based;
(3) List the provision(s) of the ordinance involved; and
(4) State the minimum modification necessary.
G. Developers and subdividers shall, if deemed necessary by Borough
Council, provide areas and easements for schools and other public
buildings, parks, playgrounds, and playfields, and rights-of-way and
easements for storm and sanitary sewer facilities in any area that
cannot immediately be joined to the existing storm and sanitary sewer
systems of the Borough.
H. Areas provided or reserved for such community facilities should be
adequate to provide for building sites, landscaping and off-street
parking as appropriate for the proposed use. Borough Council reserves
the right to accept or refuse offers of dedication for public uses.
In reviewing subdivision or land development plans, the Borough
Council shall refer such plans to the Borough Planning Commission
for recommendations concerning the adequacy of existing and proposed
community facilities to serve the additional dwellings proposed by
the subdivision or land development.
In accordance with the Borough Code, all new streets and culs-de-sac, and widened portions of all existing rights-of-way, intended for public use shall be dedicated to the Borough subject to final acceptance based on compliance with the following requirements and §
420-47 of these regulations.
A. Street system.
(1) Conformance with adopted plans. The proposed street pattern shall
conform to existing streets, to any Borough Official Street Map, and
to such county and state road and highway plans as have been duly
adopted by said agencies.
(2) Arrangement. Streets shall be arranged in a manner which is consistent
with both existing and planned streets and located so as to allow
proper development of surrounding properties. Collector streets and
primary arterials shall be connected with such existing streets and
highways to form continuations thereof. Residential streets shall
be laid out so as to discourage their use as collector streets or
primary arterials. Where, in the opinion of Borough Council, it is
desirable to provide for street access to adjoining property, streets
shall be extended by dedication to the boundary of such property.
(3) Conformity with topography. Streets shall be adjusted to the contour
of the land so as to produce usable lots and streets of reasonable
grade, alignment and drainage.
(4) Grading. The street shall be graded to the full width of the right-of-way
and provision made for slopes beyond the right-of-way in conformance
with Borough specifications.
(5) Provisions of streets for future development. Access shall be given
to all lots and portions of the tract in the subdivision and to adjacent
unsubdivided territory. Streets giving such access shall be improved
to the limits of the subdivision. Remnants, reserve strips and landlocked
areas shall not be created.
(6) New streets. New streets shall be designed to continue existing streets
at equal or greater right-of-way and cartway width, where practical.
(7) Dead-end streets. Dead-end streets are prohibited unless designed
for access exclusively to neighboring tracts.
(8) Street names. Continuations of existing streets shall be known by
the same name. Names for new streets shall not duplicate or closely
resemble names of existing streets. All street names are subject to
the approval of Borough Council.
(9) Half street. The dedication of half streets at the edges of a new
subdivision is prohibited. If circumstances render this impracticable,
adequate provision for the concurrent dedication of the remaining
half of the street must be furnished by the subdivider, developer
or builder. When there exists a half street in an adjoining subdivision,
the remaining half shall be provided by the proposed development.
(10)
Private street. Whenever a subdivider or developer proposes
to establish a street which is not offered for dedication to public
use, Borough Council shall require the applicant to submit, and also
to record with the plan, a copy of the agreement made with the Borough
on behalf of his heirs and assigns. This agreement must be signed
by the Borough Solicitor and shall establish the conditions under
which the street may later be offered for dedication. The agreement
should stipulate:
(a)
That the street shall conform to the Borough's specifications
or that the owner of the abutting lot shall include with the offer
of dedication sufficient money, as estimated by the Borough Engineer,
to restore the street to conformance with Borough specifications.
(b)
That an offer to dedicate the street shall be made only for
the street as a whole.
(c)
That agreement by the owners of 51% of the front footage shall
be binding on the owners of the remaining lots. Such condition shall
be noted in the deeds for these properties.
(d)
When, in the determination of Borough Council, it becomes necessary
for the Borough to assume responsibility for a private street in order
to maintain the health, safety and welfare of the residents, the Borough
may do so.
(11)
Streets in floodplains. The finished elevations of any proposed
street shall not be more than one foot below the regulatory flood
elevation. The Borough Council may require, where necessary, profiles
and elevations of streets to determine compliance with the requirements.
Drainage openings shall be sufficient to discharge flood flows without
unduly increasing flood heights.
B. Street alignment.
(1) Sight distance. For all streets, a sight distance of 200 feet should
be maintained. Sight distance should be measured at the center line
of the street and at a driver's eye height of 3.75 feet.
(2) Street grades.
(a)
There shall be a minimum grade of at least 1% on all streets.
(b)
Grades in excess of 5% shall be avoided where possible, and
no grade shall exceed 10% without approval of Borough Council. The
grade shall be measured along the center line.
(c)
All streets shall be graded to the grades shown on the street
profile and cross section plan submitted and approved with the preliminary
plan of subdivision or land development. They shall be inspected and
checked for accuracy by the Borough Engineer.
C. Right-of-way width, paving width, and curbing.
(1) Street. The minimum widths of the right-of-way and the paving, and
the requirements for curbing, shall not be less than those of an existing
street of which the new street is to be a continuation, nor less than
the following:
Type of Street
|
ROW Width
(feet)
|
Paving Width
(feet)
|
Curbing
|
---|
Primary arterial
|
80
|
50
|
Required
|
Collector
|
60
|
40
|
Required
|
Residential
|
53
|
33
|
Required
|
Cul-de-sac
|
53
|
33
|
Required
|
(2) Additional widths may be required by the Borough:
(a)
Where necessary for public safety and convenience.
(b)
For parking in commercial or industrial areas.
(c)
Where old streets do not provide the proper width and additional
dedication is necessary.
(3) Minimum right-of-way width for development along existing streets
shall correspond with the Official Street Map.
(4) The area between an existing right-of-way line and ultimate right-of-way
line should be offered for dedication to the authority having jurisdiction
over the road when land is subdivided or developed along an existing
right-of-way.
(5) Islands, medial strips, and channelization may be required in any
area where traffic volumes warrant their use for safety and efficiency
and may be permitted in any area at the discretion of the Borough
Council. Such devices on state roads must meet or exceed the requirements
of the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation.
(6) A cul-de-sac will not be approved when a through street is practicable.
The developer or subdivider shall have the burden of showing the impracticability
of the through street in order to justify a cul-de-sac. A cul-de-sac
shall not be more than 500 feet in length, except in cases approved
by Borough Council where conditions of the land so warrant the increase
in length. A cul-de-sac shall have a right-of-way of 50 feet and shall
have a circular turnaround with a minimum right-of-way radius of 50
feet and an outer paving radius of 40 feet.
(7) Where it is proposed that a street be constructed to an abutting
property line with the intention that such a street will be extended
onto the property at a future date, a temporary circular turnabout
shall be built, wholly within the right-of-way. The right-of-way whether
permanent or temporary shall have a minimum radius of 50 feet, and
the cartway of the turnabout shall have a radius of 40 feet.
(8) The developer extending a temporary cul-de-sac is responsible for
removing the excess paving beyond the width of the normal cartway
and regarding the area to match the surrounding grade. The extension
of any driveways or walkways or planting of the area shall also be
the responsibility of the developer. The area of a temporary cul-de-sac
beyond the normal right-of-way width shall revert back to the adjacent
property owners when the cul-de-sac is extended.
(9) No fences, hedges, trees, shrubbery, walls, plantings, or other obstructions
shall be located or be permitted within the right-of-way, except for
ground covers such as grass, ivy, crown-vetch, or horizontally spreading
shrubs less than one-foot high, or retaining walls necessitated by
street widening and constructed by the authority having jurisdiction
over the street.
D. Street intersections.
(1) Number of intersections. No more than two streets shall cross at
the same point. Four-way intersections are to be avoided in the layout
of minor streets in residential areas when three-way or T-intersections
can be utilized. When existing streets intersect at odd angles, or
have more than four approaches, the subdivider, developer or builder
shall be required to make corrective changes to eliminate the odd
angle or reduce the number of approaches to the intersection by curving
the lesser street.
(2) Minimum angle of intersection. Right-angle intersections shall be
used whenever practicable. There shall be no intersection angle, measured
at the center line, of less than 60°.
(3) Center line. Where center lines of streets open into opposite sides
of a major artery within 100 feet of each other, they shall be made
to coincide by curving the minor street or streets.
(4) Sight distance. Proper sight lines should be maintained at all intersections
of streets. There shall be measured along the center line a minimum
clear sight triangle of 75 feet from the point of intersection. No
building, trees, hedge, shrubbery or other obstruction whatsoever
shall be permitted in this area. Any obstruction to sight shall be
removed at the time a building or structure is erected, whichever
shall first occur.
(5) Approach alignment. Approaches to an intersection shall follow a
straight line for a minimum of 100 feet.
(6) Approach grades. All approaches to an intersection shall not exceed
3% for a distance of 50 feet measured from the nearest right-of-way
line of intersecting street.
(7) Radii of pavement and right-of-way at intersections. Street intersections
shall be rounded with tangential arcs at pavement edge (curbline)
and right-of-way lines as listed below. Where two streets of different
right-of-way widths intersect, the radii of curvature for the widest
street shall apply.
Type of Street
|
Minimum Radius of Arc at Intersection of Pavement Edge or Curbline
(feet)
|
Minimum Radius of Arc at Intersection of Right-of-Way Line
(feet)
|
---|
Primary arterial
|
40 (or more as may be required)
|
20
|
Collector
|
30
|
20
|
Residential
|
25
|
15
|
Cul-de-sac
|
25
|
15
|
All sidewalks and curbs shall be constructed in accordance with
the following regulations.
A. Sidewalks. Sidewalks shall be constructed to the following minimum
specifications.
(1) Sidewalks shall conform to the standards in Chapter
415, Streets and Sidewalks, Article
II, Sidewalk and Curb Construction and Repair, of the Code of the Borough of Royersford.
(2) In land developments with common areas, sidewalks should be located
appropriately to serve as access between parking areas and buildings
and in common areas to serve as internal site circulation.
(3) Sidewalks shall be located as prescribed by the Chapter
415, Streets and Sidewalks, Article
II, Sidewalk and Curb Construction and Repair.
(4) Crosswalks not less than 10 feet wide, and with concrete or asphalt
paving not less than four feet wide, may be required where necessary
to provide access to schools, churches, parks and commercial areas.
They shall be maintained by the abutting property owners in the same
manner as sidewalks on public streets.
(5) Sidewalks shall be constructed so as to discharge drainage to the
street.
(6) All construction and materials to be in conformance with PennDOT
Form 408.
B. Curbs. Curbs shall be constructed to the following minimum specifications.
(1) Concrete curbs shall be installed along each side of every street.
(2) Curbing shall be built in twenty-foot lengths, and an approved expansion
joint shall be used at each joint.
[Amended 1-10-2023 by Ord. No. 924]
(3) All concrete used in the construction of improvements shall meet the requirements of Chapter
415, Streets and Sidewalks, Article
II, Sidewalk and Curb Construction and Repair.
(4) Concrete shall be placed in forms that are straight and securely
braced. Care shall be taken to control the water content to prevent
separation of the aggregates. All concrete shall be thoroughly tamped
into the forms. After the concrete has set sufficiently, the form
shall be removed and the exposed surface shall be rubbed to provide
an even finish. All edges shall be furnished with an approved edging
tool.
(5) To provide for driveways, depressions in the curbing may be constructed
and finished during the time of pouring.
(6) All construction and materials to be in accordance with PennDOT Form
408.
[Amended 11-8-2011 by Ord. No. 848]
A. Area. All lots must conform to the zoning district requirements applicable
to the parcel being subdivided. All lots shall be no smaller than
the minimum lot area requirements of the applicable zoning classification.
B. Depth and irregular configuration.
(1) A lot may not be created whose depth is greater than two times its
width.
(2) A lot may not be created that is excessively irregular unless reasonably
dictated by the topography of the land or other natural features.
An excessively irregular lot is one that is not four-sided or that
has a boundary line the length of which is more than 2.5 times the
width of the opposite or adjacent boundary line.
C. Narrow lots. Narrow lots may be created only when authorized by the Borough Council as a conditional use under the provisions of §
475-30 of Article
IV of Chapter
475, Zoning, of the Code of the Borough of Royersford.
D. Floodplain districts. No lot shall be approved for a subdivision
where the access crosses a floodplain district, unless approved by
the Zoning Hearing Board, or where access could be gained only by
violating the standards for driveways contained within this chapter
or where the lot does not contain sufficient legal buildable area
for the intended use.
E. Width. The minimum width of a lot shall be that width that is measured
at the building line, in feet, specified for the applicable zoning
district.
F. Corner lots. All corner lots shall be of sufficient size to comply
with all yard and frontage (i.e., lot width) requirements of the applicable
zoning district.
G. Frontage. The frontage of a lot shall not be less than the minimum requirements set forth in Chapter
475, Zoning.
H. Side lines. The side lines of a lot shall be set at right angles
or radial to the right-of-way lines and shall follow a straight course.
I. Building lines. Building lines for all lots shall be in conformance
with the minimum front, side and rear yard requirements of the applicable
zoning district.
J. Through lots. Double-frontage lots shall not be permitted except
where reversed frontage is desired away from a major thoroughfare
to a street of lesser traffic volume.
K. Lot numbers. For the purposes of development, each subdivision may
have an overall system of lot numbers, the number one being assigned
to a lot in the first section to be developed. (Such system of lot
numbers shall not be confused with the regular house or building numbering
system based on a Borough-wide plan.)
L. Building numbers. House or building numbers shall be assigned by
the Borough based on an overall street plan. Numbers will be assigned
in such a way as to allow for vacant parcels and future development.
M. Consolidation. Adjacent lots owned by the same person may be consolidated
by recording a deed describing the lots as a single parcel, without
subdivision plan approval, where the only change being made to a lot
line is the elimination of one or more of them, subject to administrative
review by the Zoning Officer. This exemption from the approval procedures
set forth in this chapter shall be subject to the following:
(1) A statement must be placed in the deed acknowledging that it is a
deed of consolidation intended to merge the lots and that any future
independent use of the lots would require subdivision approval.
(2) The application to register the deed shall constitute an application
to amend the Borough's plan of properties to show the consolidation.
(3) Prior to registering such deed, the Borough Manager shall notify
the Zoning Officer of the consolidation.
(4) Each deed submitted for registration and recording shall have attached
thereto a plan, prepared, signed and sealed by a registered surveyor,
showing the metes and bounds, gross and net (after deducting the rights-of-way
of any public or private street) areas and error of closure of the
consolidated lot. The error of closure shall not be greater than one
part in 5,000.
(5) Upon merger by deed, use or subdivision approval, adjacent lots shall
lose their separate identity for all purposes relating to their development.
Except in the case of a residential building with more than
one dwelling unit that is held in single and separate ownership and
where the proposed subdivision line(s) logically divides the dwelling
units, no subdivision or land development will be approved with a
property line extending through any portion of any existing structure.
A. If structure(s) is to remain.
(1) In residential zoning districts of the Borough, the lot and lot dimensions
of the newly created lot containing the structure(s) must be in scale
with the height and bulk of the structure, even if this requires a
lot area and/or dimensions exceeding the minimum zoning requirements
for that district.
(2) In cases where the principal building has not been used as a dwelling, its conversion to a dwelling shall comply with all of the requirements of the Chapter
475, Zoning, and the Building Code of the Borough.
B. If existing structure(s) is to be removed. Final subdivision or land development approval will be issued upon the condition' of the expeditious removal of existing structures in complete conformity to all other Borough procedural requirements. In commercial and industrial areas, plots of land that have been cleared, as well as the existing vacant portions of such lands, should be developed in conformance with the long-range needs of the area, to the greatest extent possible, and all developmental requirements of the Building Code and Chapter
475, Zoning.
C. If existing structure is to be replaced or is to be added on to.
Demolition plans and/or construction plans must be detailed as part
of the subdivision plan review and any subsequent subdivision approval
will be conditional upon compliance with said proposed details. Renovation
work to the remaining portion of a structure following partial demolition
must be completed promptly and expeditiously.
[Added at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General Provisions,
Art. I)]
All subdivision and land development shall be required to meet the conditions of Chapter
408, Stormwater Management, for the design of stormwater management controls, including but not limited to, stormwater-carrying structures, debris or sediment basins, retention and detention structures, and infiltration facilities.
Whenever practicable, provision shall be made for suitable open
space for parks, playgrounds, and recreational facilities and areas.
In commercial areas, provisions shall be made for suitable open space
for walkways (connecting parking facilities with commercial structures),
malls, sitting areas, etc. Due consideration shall be given to the
preservation of natural features, including large trees, groves, waterways,
scenic areas, historical buildings or areas, and other amenity areas.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. I)]
Building sites in the floodway shall meet the conditions of Chapter
248, Floodplain Management. No waivers shall be granted from this section.