[Amended 6-21-2005 by Ord. No. 37-2005; 11-14-2005 by Ord. No. 53-20056-20-2006 by Ord. No. 68-2006; 6-16-2009 by Ord. No. 183-2009; 3-3-2020 by Ord. No. 388-2020; 9-19-2023 by Ord. No. 506-2023; 2-20-2024 by Ord. No. 525-2024; 5-7-2024 by Ord. No. 531-2024; 7-15-2025 by Ord. No. 570-2025]
The following design standards are applicable to any plan for development:
A. Physical setting and building location.
(1) The natural terrain and existing attractive features of the site shall be incorporated into the development when possible.
(2) Buildings shall not be physically located to unnecessarily concentrate activity in one portion of the lot creating traffic congestion, stormwater drainage, or other possible problems in supplying necessary utilities.
(3) Except as otherwise specifically permitted pursuant to §
525-20, RC Residential Cluster, §
525-28, HO Harbor Overlay, or Subsection
A(4), Average percent of front yard setbacks, and except for permitted accessory buildings, each building shall comply with all area and bulk requirements for the district in which it is located. Buildings must be designed as one structure.
(4) Average percent of front yard setbacks. In a block where 50 percent of all lots that front on the same street as the subject lot have been developed and have nonconforming front yard setbacks, a new or existing structure may be constructed or expanded so as to provide a front yard equal in depth to the average front yard of the existing buildings of four lots that are contiguous to the property. The new setback is to be no greater than 10 feet past the front of any adjacent structures. Computation of the average front yards of contiguous lots shall be performed in accordance with the following requirements:
(a) Computation shall be based upon the arithmetic mean distance calculated for the four properties that are contiguous with the property, on the same side of the street and in the same block as the property.
(b) Porches and steps shall be included in the calculation of the front yard setback.
(c) Certification of the average front yard setback shall be provided by a New Jersey licensed land surveyor.
B. Access and traffic control. Driveways and street servicing uses permitted by this chapter are subject to approval of the design as part of the review by the Planning Board. No design may be approved which is likely to create substantial traffic hazards endangering the public safety. Safety requirements which may be imposed in such a review shall include traffic control devices, acceleration or deceleration lanes, turning lanes, traffic and land markings, and signs.
C. Interior circulation. The interior circulation of traffic shall be subject to design review as in Subsection
B, so that driveways or streets providing parking spaces shall be consistent with the flow of traffic. No driveway or street used for interior circulation shall have traffic lanes less than 10 feet in width. Areas for loading shall be separate from parking areas.
D. Parking and paved areas. All pedestrian walks and parking areas shall be paved with an all-weather surface in accordance with City building regulations. Curbing shall be provided to separate parking areas, streets and driveways. A parking lot which is accessory to a permitted use and has a capacity of less than five vehicles may be allowed to provide one of the following pavement surfaces: concrete strips with stone or grass infill between the strips, concrete checker block, brick pavers or crushed stone.
E. Off-street parking design standards.
(1) Parking spaces shall be clearly delineated by painted lines or markers.
(2) Stalls shall be provided with bumper guards or wheel stops when necessary for safety or protection to adjacent structures or landscaped area.
(3) All vehicular entrances and exits to parking areas shall be clearly designated for all conditions.
(4) Short-term visitor parking spaces shall be differentiated from long-term employee spaces by suitable markings.
(5) If spaces are used during evening hours, appropriate lighting shall be provided.
(6) All parking shall be located behind required building lines, except in the case of one- and two-family dwellings where driveways may be used for parking within the setback line.
(7) Curb cuts required for off-street parking shall be limited to those necessary for entrances and exits. In no instance may the curb cut extend the full length of the parking area.
(8) Off-street parking shall be limited to approved areas. See §§
525-49 and
525-57B.
(9) Landscaping in parking and loading areas shall be shown on the landscaping plan. Trees shall be staggered and/or spaced so as not to interfere with driver vision, have branches no lower than six feet, and placed at the rate of at least one tree for every 20 parking spaces. All areas between the parking area and the building shall be landscaped with trees, shrubs and ground cover. Any plantings which do not live shall be replaced within two years or two growing seasons. A majority of the parking areas shall be obscured from streets by buildings, landscaped berms, natural ground elevations, or plantings, singularly or in combination.
F. Lighting of parking area. All parking areas, driveways, and loading areas shall be provided with a lighting system which shall furnish a minimum of 1 1/2 footcandles at any point during hours of operation, with lighting standards in parking areas being located not farther than 100 feet apart, provided that, in residential zones and for residential uses, a lighting system which shall furnish 0.05 footcandle shall be utilized. All lighting shall be completely shielded from traffic on any public right-of-way and from any residential district.
G. Outdoor storage.
(1) Outdoor storage of any type, including, without limitation, trash dumpsters or similar containers for the collection of trash, garbage or refuse, shall not be permitted unless storage is a part of the normal operations conducted on the premises subject to design and performance standards for the prevailing zoning district.
(2) Any article or material stored temporarily outside an enclosed building as an incidental part of the primary operation shall be so screened by opaque ornamental fencing, walls, or evergreen planting that it cannot be seen from adjoining public streets or adjacent lots when viewed by a person standing on the ground level. All organic rubbish or storage shall be contained in airtight, verminproof containers which shall also be screened from public view. All such storage shall be located behind the building setback line.
(3) Any establishment which furnishes carts or mobile baskets as an adjunct to shopping shall provide definite areas within the required parking space areas for storage of carts. Each designed storage area shall be clearly marked for storage of shopping carts.
H. Screening.
(1) A planted visual barrier, or landscape screen, shall be provided and maintained by the owner or lessee of a property between any district and contiguous residentially zoned district, except where natural or physical man-made barriers exist or where separated by a public right-of-way. This screen shall be composed of plants and trees arranged to form both a low level and a high level screen. The high level screen shall consist of trees planted with specimens no younger than three years in age, and planted at intervals of not more than 10 feet. The low level screen shall consist of shrubs or hedges planted at an initial height of not less than two feet and spaced at intervals of not more than five feet. The low level screen shall be placed in alternating rows to produce a more effective barrier. All plants not surviving three years after planting must be replaced.
(2) Any existing business affected by these regulations at the time of passage of this chapter shall not be required to comply with the above screening requirements except in case of enlargement or major alteration of such business.
I. Landscaping.
(1) Any part or portion of the site which is not used for buildings, or other structures, loading or parking space and aisles, sidewalks and designated storage areas shall be landscaped. Landscaping shall be integrated into the building arrangement, topography, parking and buffering requirements. Landscaping shall include trees, bushes, shrubs, ground cover, perennials, annuals, plants, sculpture, art and the use of building and paving materials in an imaginative and aesthetic manner.
(2) Regulations.
(a) Natural topography and vegetation. The applicant shall use natural topography and vegetation where possible. Large parking areas are not to be stripped of vegetation without requiring reseeding or replanting of all unpaved areas.
(b) Saving of trees. Every attempt shall be made by the applicant to save existing trees even at the loss of parking spaces. Clumps of trees shall be saved over single trees. Care shall be taken by the approving authority to properly evaluate site clearing proposals recognizing that wild trees often do not survive when their habitat is drastically altered. Where loss of trees is suggested, replacement shall be required.
(c) Slopes. Slopes in excess of 3:1 shall be avoided unless necessitated by unusual site limitations. All slopes shall be stabilized in a manner acceptable to the approving authority engineer.
(d) Parking areas in front of buildings. Parking lots located in front of buildings shall be landscaped to separate them from adjacent roadways.
(e) Screen areas and buffers. Tall dense screens are required along Nonpenetrable side lines, rear property lines and where commercial or industrial parking areas abut residences or residential zones. Evergreens such as, but not limited to, white pine, Austrial pine, Canadian hemlock, Servian spruce, Arborvitae, and upright yews may be used, provided they meet specified height requirements.
(f) Driveways. The areas adjacent to the driveways shall be planted with low plants or grass. Appropriate low plants include, but are not limited to, butterfly bush, Sargent juniper, inkberry, Japanese barberry or shrubby cinquefoil.
(g) Other required landscaping areas. Where a development plan indicates raised walkways between opposing rows of cars, areas at the end of bays, or where proposed or required by the approving authority, specific planting islands are indicated, these areas shall be landscaped. Planting strips may be as narrow as five feet, with a fifteen- to twenty-foot width most desirable. All shall be raised and protected by permanent concrete curbing. The applicant shall landscape 5% to 10% of the parking areas provided.
(h) Natural setting. In proposing a landscaping plan, an applicant shall take care, and the approving authority in reviewing shall require, that a natural setting consistent with prevailing community standards be preserved. Recognizing that a major community asset lies in the preservation of the natural condition of property, all efforts in the area of landscaping shall be exercised to provide consistent landscaping proposals with existing foliage.
(3) Landscaping and vegetation plan.
(a) Prior to the issuance of any construction permit for additions to any existing structure which increases the lot coverage in excess of 10% or the construction of a new dwelling unit or the removal of more than 40% of the vegetation covering of a lot, a landscaping and vegetation plan for the parcel in question must be submitted to and approved by the City of Cape May Construction/Zoning Official to ensure substantial compliance with the criteria and requirements set forth in this section, which landscaping and vegetation plan shall constitute the total of the unimproved site area, as regulated by the existing bulk regulations and incorporating the parameters of Subsection
I (3)(d) hereafter.
(b) The landscaping and vegetation plan must be either left in its natural state or covered in vegetation. The utilization of natural indigenous vegetation is encouraged.
(c) The Construction/Zoning Official may require such information as is reasonably necessary to enable him to make the determination required under the provision of this chapter. Any landscaping or vegetation plan proposing removal of any tree shall be referred to the Shade Tree Commission (STC) for review and recommendation. In the case of the landscaping and vegetation plan being reviewed as part of a Zoning Board or Planning Board application, the recommendation of the Shade Tree Commission shall be considered advisory and any final decision on removal and replacement may be made by the Zoning Board or Planning Board as part of the application to either board. In any other case (for example, applications for development that require only Zoning Officer or HPC review), the determination of the STC to grant or deny tree removal shall be binding.
(d) Trees. Removal and replacement of any trees shall conform to replacement obligations set forth in Chapter
482 of the City Code.
(e) Except as otherwise herein provided, the landscaping and vegetation plan shall retain as much of the natural vegetation as is possible.
(f) Nothing herein is to be interpreted as indication that an applicant is prohibited from planting additional trees, bushes, grasses or flowers.
(g) Any existing improved lots with structures shall be allowed to exist in their current state together with routine maintenance, expansion, trimming, planting and replanting of vegetation.
(h) In lieu of replacing bushes, vines and grasses, the applicant shall plant or leave in place one tree at approximately twenty-foot intervals along the side yard and rear yard, which trees shall be at least two inches in diameter, or the applicant shall plant two bushes of a minimum of two feet in diameter in lieu of every second replacement tree. The requirements of this subsection are in addition to other tree requirements.
(i) In the case of the issuance of a construction permit for alteration or construction, the property owner shall be required to plant any new vegetation provided for by the landscaping and vegetation plan within six months of the issuance of a certificate of occupancy for such structure. In the case of the issuance of a permit only for the removal of natural vegetation, the property owners will be required to plant any new vegetation provided for by the landscaping and vegetation plan within six months of the issuance of said permit.
(j) Any property owner or person aggrieved by a determination of the Construction/Zoning Official under the provisions of this chapter may appeal to the City of Cape May Zoning Board of Adjustment; provided, however, that said appeal is filed, in writing, within 45 days after said property owner or person receives notice of the decision by the Zoning/Construction Official.
J. Exterior design.
(1) The architectural design of motel, hotel, attached dwelling, multifamily dwelling, commercial and industrial buildings shall be of a design befitting the neighborhood in which construction will take place, and shall be approved by the Planning Board.
(2) Motel, hotel, attached dwelling, multifamily dwelling, commercial and industrial buildings facing onto two or more rights-of-way facing onto a residential use shall have uniform exterior architectural treatment as approved by the Planning Board.
(3) Within any residential district, no building with a permitted professional office shall be constructed or altered so as to be inharmonious with the residential character of the adjacent residential areas.
(4) Attached dwellings shall be constructed so that building facades are offset by architectural detailing resulting in at least a two-foot change in the building plane not less than once every 24 feet. The minimum width of attached dwellings shall be 24 feet, and no more than six units shall be permitted in an unbroken row. No attached dwelling building shall be less than 20 feet from any other attached dwelling building.
(5) Multifamily dwellings shall be constructed so that the predominant plane of a building in any one direction shall not exceed 100 feet without a ninety-degree change in the direction of the predominant building plane for at least 35 feet. No multifamily dwelling building shall be less than 25 feet from any other multifamily dwelling building.
(6) No residential structure shall be constructed with a roof having a pitch less than four inches in 12 nor greater than 12 inches in 12; provided that this Subsection
J(6) shall not apply to the construction of a mansard roof.
K. Laundry facilities. All motels, hotels and multifamily-dwelling apartment buildings shall provide facilities for laundry and for drying of bathing suits, and the space for drying such laundry and bathing suits shall be suitably screened.
L. Apartments over commercial uses. Apartments over commercial uses shall be provided with separate entrances.
M. Exterior mechanical systems. Exterior mechanical systems, including, without limitation, central air-conditioner units and propane tanks, shall be located no closer to any adjacent right-of way or street line than the face of the primary structure and except where natural or physical man-made barriers surround such system(s) shall be surrounded by a planted visual barrier or landscaping screen. The face of the primary structure shall not include sun parlors, foyers, bay windows, porches, projecting eaves, dormers, gutters, steps, appurtenant structural or mechanical systems or any other solid projections. In the R4 zone, air conditioning equipment and condensers are not permitted to be installed on the roof of any structure.
N. Flood prevention. All tracts fully or partially located within areas of special flood hazard shall be subject to the provisions of Chapter
258, Flood Damage Prevention, as amended.
O. Street trees. All land development devoid of major trees, along collector streets of a development and along proposed roads and rights-of-way where natural woods are not present and where, due to construction, the entire right-of-way is cleared, the following provisions shall apply:
(1) Trees shall be planted along both sides of all streets at a distance from the curbline as approved by the approving authority.
(2) Street trees shall be planted at minimum intervals as follows, or an equivalent number shall be planted in an informal arrangement.
Tree Size (feet) | Planting Interval (feet) |
|---|
Large trees (40+) | 50-70 |
Medium-sized trees (30-40) | 40-50 |
Small trees (to 30) | 30-40 |
(3) At intersections when the spacing interval exceeds 40 feet, small trees shall be spaced between the larger trees. Trees shall not be located closer than 30 feet from the intersection of the street right-of-way lines, except when the standards increase the distance for sight.
(4) The caliper of the trees shall be two inches measured 12 inches above the ground. The standing height shall be a minimum of 10 feet. All trees shall be brought to the sight balled and burlapped or other acceptable means, free from insects and disease and true to species and variety.
(5) Stripping trees or filling more than six inches around trees shall not be permitted unless it can be shown that construction requirements necessitate removal of trees, in which case those lots shall be replanted with trees to reestablish the tone of the area and to conform to adjacent lots.
(6) Dead or dying trees which have been transplanted by virtue of the requirements of this section shall be replaced by the developer during the next recommended planting season.
(7) There shall be a minimum of three deciduous shade trees, not including street trees, per lot for all residential developments where the site is devoid of trees or at the discretion and recommendation of the approving authority when adequate shade or canopy has not been provided naturally.
(8) Street tree plans shall include a planting schedule which describes the quantity, common name, botanical name, size, and comments for each species.
(9) Ornamental trees need not have straight trunks, but must conform in other respects to the provisions for trees and tree plantings outlined in this section.
(10) Street tree plans shall include a graphic tree planting detail which shall address the following:
(a) The thinning of branches and foliage by 1/3. The leader shall not be cut.
(b) The staking of a deciduous tree by two stakes. The minimum size of stakes shall be two by three inches.
(c) The support of a tree shall be a double strand of No. 12 gauge wire. A tree shall be protected from injury due to wire by a rubber hose or acceptable equal material.
(d) The trunk shall be protected by a tree wrap.
(e) A tree shall be mulched with three inches of approved organic material.
(f) A three-inch saucer shall be constructed around the planting area.
(g) The top of the burlap tie shall be removed.
(h) The ball shall sit on compacted soil.
(i) The diameter of the hole shall be two feet larger than the diameter of the ball.
(11) The species of tree may vary depending upon overall effect desired, but generally, all trees shall be the same kind on a street to achieve special effects.
P. Fire escapes. Existing commercial structures and existing uses only (renovations, expansion or change of use not included) metal construction only.
(1) The Construction Official, Zoning Officer and Fire Subcode Official shall review and approve plans for fire escapes and evaluate the impact of the structure on the surrounding properties.
(2) In order to preserve the aesthetic value of existing buildings, especially those in historic districts, proposed fire escapes for existing buildings should, whenever possible, be constructed on the side or rear facades of the building.
(3) Development applications not requiring site plan review or HPC approval may also be exempted from variance relief from setback and lot coverage requirements, provided that:
(a) The side and rear setbacks may be encroached upon only if no other conforming location is available.
(b) A sealed survey and architectural plans must be submitted.
(4) All fire escapes are subject to the following:
(a) No structure shall encroach within five feet of the front property line.
(b) No structure shall encroach upon adjoining property lines or a City right-of-way.
Q. Fences and walls. Fences and walls shall be constructed so that the exterior side, facing the street, shall consist of a smooth surface, and that braces, struts or other supporting materials are located on the interior side of the fence, facing the property.
R. Flagpoles are permitted in all zoning districts. Flagpoles must be set back a minimum of five feet from all lot lines and may not exceed 35 feet in height.
S. Artificial turf.
(1) The installation of artificial turf as an alternative to natural landscaping is prohibited in the City of Cape May. As used in this section, "artificial turf" means any of various synthetic, carpet-like materials made to resemble turf or grass and used as a substitute for grass or other natural substances as a lawn, or other similar applications. Any installations of artificial turf existing in the City of Cape May at the time of the adoption of this section may be maintained but may not be expanded in any fashion. At the end of the artificial turf installation's useful life, the artificial turf must be replaced by grass or other permitted ground covering.
(2) Exceptions. a) The prohibition on use of artificial turf shall not apply to commercial miniature golf courses. b) Projects undertaken by the City on City owned property are exempt from these provisions but remain subject to HPC advisory review pursuant to §
525-37, if applicable.