As used in this chapter, except where the context clearly indicates
otherwise, the following words or phrases shall have the meanings
indicated as follows:
ABANDONED or ABANDONMENT
The cessation of a use of property (land and/or structures)
by the landowner for a period of one year, during which the landowner
neither occupied, resumed the use or transferred the rights of the
property to another person who used the property.
ACCESSIBLE
A site, building, facility, or portion thereof that incorporates
design for persons with disabilities and is compliant with the Americans
with Disabilities Act of 1990, as amended.
ACCESSORY BUILDING OR STRUCTURE
A building subordinate to the principal permitted building
which is located on the same lot as the principal permitted building
and used for purposes customarily incidental to those of the principal
permitted building.
ACCESSORY USE
A use, other than the principal use, of land or of a building
or portion thereof, customarily incidental and subordinate to the
principal use of the land or building and located on the same lot
with such principal use.
ADAPTIVE REUSE
The development of a new use for an older building or for
a building originally designed for a special or specific purpose which
it no longer serves.
ADVERSE IMPACTS
Results contributing to a harmful or degraded condition and/or
producing harm or degradation. Adverse impacts may include harmful
effects on surrounding land uses, such as the diminution of property
values or the degradation of historical resources; land use which
is contrary to the Comprehensive Plan and the intent of this chapter;
effects which may create a threat to the public health, safety and
general welfare; and effects on physical and biological resources
which will destroy flora and fauna, degrade water and air quality
or create excessive soil erosion or flooding.
ALLEY
A street which is used primarily for vehicular service access
to the rear or side of lots which is 20 feet or less in right-of-way
width.
ALTERATION
Any change or rearrangement in the supporting members of
an existing building, such as bearing walls, columns, beams, girders
or interior partitions, as well as any change in doors or windows,
or any enlargement to or diminution of a building or structure, whether
horizontally or vertically, or the moving of a building or structure
from one location to another.
ALTERNATIVES
Choices between or among two or more plans, layouts, approaches,
solutions and/or results.
APPLICANT
A landowner or developer as hereinafter defined who has filed
an application for development, including his heirs, successors and
assigns.
APPLICATION
Every application, whether tentative, preliminary or final,
required to be filed and approved prior to start of construction or
development, including, but not limited to, an application for a building
permit, for the approval of a subdivision plat or plan, or for the
approval of a development plan and for a zoning permit.
BASEMENT
A space with less than 1/2 of its floor-to-ceiling height
above the average finished grade of the adjoining ground or with a
floor-to-ceiling height of less than 7.5 feet.
BENEFICIAL IMPACTS
Results contributing to an improvement in condition and/or
producing favorable results, such as making a use more compatible
with the intent of this chapter and the goals of the Comprehensive
Plan, and promoting the public health, safety and general welfare.
BLOCK
A tract of land bounded by streets, public parks, railroad
rights-of-way, and/or corporate boundary lines of the City.
BOARD
The Zoning Hearing Board of the City of Easton, Northampton
County, Pennsylvania.
BUFFER
An area of required yard space not less in width than designated
in this chapter which is landscaped for its full width with plantings
such as evergreen and deciduous trees and shrubs and/or with fences
or walls which are permanently maintained. Buffers shall consist of
such enhancements as will create an effective screen of sufficient
density to provide a continuous visual buffer and shall be of sufficient
height to minimize visibility from abutting properties or districts
or from a distinct area of a lot.
BUILD-TO LINE
A line located parallel to, and measured from, the property
line along the street or streets on which a building fronts, which
defines the placement of the building and forms the street wall line
(see Figure A). On a corner lot, the build-to line is located on each
side of the lot abutting a street.
BUILDING
An enclosed structure or edifice built, erected and framed
of component structural parts, designed for the shelter, support or
enclosure of persons, animals or property of any kind. (See also,
"structure.")
BUILDING FOOTPRINT
The area covered by a building's outermost wall at ground
level (see Figure A).
BUILDING HEIGHT
(See also, "story.") The vertical distance of a building
or structure measured from the lowest elevation of the finished grade
of the building to:
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The highest point of the roof in the case of a flat roof.
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The mean height between eaves and ridge in the case of a pitched
roof (see Figure B).
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Exclusive of chimneys, mechanical towers, steeples and similar
fixtures.
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The above shall apply except that, in the case of a sloped site
where the slope is greater than 5%, the building height may be measured
separately for each forty-foot segment as measured along the primary
facade.
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Figure B: Building Height
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BUILDING OFFICIAL
The officer or other designated authority charged with the administration and enforcement of Chapter
245, Construction, the Municipal Building Code of the City of Easton, or a duly authorized representative.
BUILDING PERMIT
An official document issued by the Building Official that
authorizes the construction, alteration, repair, demolition, location,
maintenance or installation relating to a building, structure, elevator,
or equipment under the Uniform Construction Code as adopted by the
City of Easton.
BUILDING SETBACK LINE
The line bounding that portion of a lot not contained within
the required front, side, and rear yards, and within which the principal
building shall be located. For purposes of this chapter, a building
setback line along any street, except an alley, shall be considered
a build-to line (see Figure C).
Figure C: Building Setback Line
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CALIPER
The diameter of a tree trunk measured at a point 4 1/2
feet from the ground surface at the center of the base of the tree
for all existing trees. For all trees to be planted in accordance
with the requirements of this title, the tree trunk shall be measured
at a point six inches from the ground surface at the center of the
base of the tree.
CERTIFICATE OF USE AND OCCUPANCY
A statement based on an inspection by and signed by the Zoning
Administrator setting forth that the use or structure conforms with
the provisions of this chapter and may be lawfully employed for a
specific use.
CITY
The City of Easton, Northampton County, Pennsylvania.
CLEAR-CUTTING
The indiscriminate removal of all trees on a site or portion
of a site.
COLLEGE or UNIVERSITY
An institution of higher education and research authorized
by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania that provides associate, undergraduate,
or higher degrees.
COMMISSION
The Planning Commission of the City of Easton, Northampton
County, Pennsylvania.
COMMON OPEN SPACE
A parcel or parcels of land or an area of water, or a combination
of land and water, within a development site and designed and intended
for the use or enjoyment of residents of the development in which
it is located, not including streets, off-street parking areas and
areas set aside for public facilities.
COMPREHENSIVE PLAN
The adopted official plan of the City pertaining to the future
development of the City of Easton.
CONDOMINIUM
A building or group of buildings in which dwelling units,
offices or floor area are owned individually and the structure, common
areas, and facilities are owned by all the owners on a proportional,
undivided basis.
COUNCIL
The Council of the City of Easton, Northampton County, Pennsylvania.
COUNTY
Northampton County, Pennsylvania.
DECK
An unroofed platform, either freestanding or attached to
a building, that is commonly, but not necessarily, supported by pillars
or posts.
DESIGN PROFESSIONAL
An architect, engineer, landscape architect, or land planner that, as required, is certified or licensed to practice their respective profession in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and who prepares reports and/or plans which are described in this chapter according to specific requirements set forth herein and/or in Chapter
520, Subdivision and Land Development, of the Code of the City of Easton. The City will consider geologists, wetlands scientists, arborists, and other such experts to be certified design professionals for the purpose of conducting studies and preparing plans and reports respective to their area of expertise.
DEVELOPER
A landowner, agent of such landowner or tenant with the permission
of such landowner who makes or causes to be made a subdivision of
land or a land development.
DEVELOPMENT
Any man-made change to improved or unimproved real estate,
including, but not limited to, buildings or structures, mining, dredging,
filling, grading, paving, excavation or drilling operations, or timber
harvesting operations. Land development, as defined within this section,
shall be included in this definition.
(a)
INFILL DEVELOPMENTAny man-made change to unimproved vacant parcels, vacant parcels which have previously had buildings or structures, or surface parking lots, within built areas. These areas are already served by public infrastructure such as transportation, water, wastewater, and other utilities.
DRIVE-IN
Any use which is designed in such a way that the goods or
services offered can be received by the customer while remaining in
his/her vehicle.
DRIVEWAY
A private access to a parking area, such as a garage, parking
lot, parking pad, or similar.
DUMP
A lot or land or part thereof used primarily for disposal
by abandonment, dumping, burial, burning, incineration or any other
means for whatever purpose, of garbage, offal, sewage, trash, refuse,
junk, discarded machinery, vehicles or parts thereof, or waste material
of any kind.
DWELLING
A room or group of rooms providing complete independent living
facilities exclusively for one or more persons, including permanent
provisions for living, sleeping, eating, cooking and sanitation.
DWELLING UNIT
Any room or group of rooms located within a building and
forming a single, habitable unit with facilities used or intended
to be used for living, sleeping, cooking and eating by one or more
persons.
EASEMENT
A vested or acquired right, either in the public generally
or in private entities of persons, to the use of a parcel of land
for a special purpose, including the location of utilities, storm
drains or access, which right may include the use of the surface,
subsurface and/or the air space over such land.
ECONOMIC AND FISCAL CHARACTERISTICS
Characteristics related to the expenditures and revenues
in conjunction with the management of income of a household, private
business, community, association and/or government.
ENCLOSED
Surrounded or closed off on all sides, by walls, windows,
or the like. This shall not include insect screens, blinds, or other
retractable or otherwise openable fixtures that are intended to restrict
sunlight or insects but do not prohibit airflow when down or closed.
ENVIRONMENTALLY SENSITIVE LAND(S)
Any land that contains environmental resources reviewed or
regulated under this chapter, including, but not limited to:
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Floodplains;
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Wetlands;
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Wetland buffers;
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Steep slopes;
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Specimen trees;
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Riparian buffers;
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Carbonate bedrock; and
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Surface waters.
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FAMILY
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A single person occupying a dwelling unit and maintaining a
single housekeeping unit, including not more than one guest;
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Two or more persons related by blood or marriage occupying a
dwelling unit, living together and maintaining a single housekeeping
unit, including not more than one guest; or
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Not more than three unrelated persons occupying a dwelling unit,
living together and maintaining a single housekeeping unit. A single
housekeeping unit shall be deemed to exist if all members thereof
have access to living, sleeping, eating, cooking and sanitation areas
of the dwelling unit.
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FAST FOOD RESTAURANT
An establishment whose principal business is the sale of
a limited variety of pre-prepared or rapidly prepared food and beverages
directly to the consumer for consumption either on or off premises.
Food is generally not served to the customers' tables, but is more
often dispensed through a walk-up counter or drive-through or take-out
window.
FENESTRATION
Windows and other openings on a building facade.
FLOOR AREA
The sum of the gross horizontal areas of all of the floors
of a building or buildings, measured from the exterior faces of exterior
walls or from the center lines of walls separating two attached buildings:
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In particular, floor area includes:
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Basement space in residential buildings.
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Elevator shafts or stairwells at each floor.
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Floor space in penthouses.
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Attic space (whether or not a floor has been laid) providing
structural headroom of 7.5 feet or more.
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Floor space in interior balconies or mezzanines.
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Any other floor spaces used for dwelling purposes, no matter
where located within a building.
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Floor space in accessory buildings.
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Any other floor space not specifically excluded.
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However, the floor area of a building shall not include:
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Basement space in nonresidential buildings, except that basement
space used for retailing shall be included for the purpose of calculating
requirements for accessory off-street parking and loading.
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Elevator or stair bulkheads, accessory water tanks or cooling
towers.
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Uncovered steps.
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Floor space used for mechanical equipment.
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FORESTRY
The management of forests and timberlands when practiced
in accordance with accepted silvicultural principles, through developing,
cultivating, harvesting, transporting and selling trees for commercial
purposes, which does not involve any land development.
FRONT-LOADED (GARAGE)
A garage designed with the garage doors facing the same street
as the primary façade(s) of the dwelling to which the garage
is attached.
GRADE
The degree of the descent of a sloping surface.
GRADE, FINISHED
The final elevation of the ground surface after development.
HEDGE
A boundary or fence formed by closely growing bushes, shrubs,
or trees. Also referred to as a hedgerow.
HISTORIC RESOURCE(S)
Sites, areas, structures and districts which are valued due
to their significance as examples and/or locations of events, customs,
skills, and/or arts of the past as designated by the state, county
and/or City.
IMPACT
The power of an event or condition to produce direct or indirect
changes in other conditions. In the context of impact exerted on the
environment, changes that affect existing conditions and/or quality
of a natural resource are of greatest concern.
IMPACT ASSESSMENT AND MITIGATION REPORT
An assessment in accordance with §
595-35, which objectively describes, analyzes and documents the beneficial and adverse impacts of a proposed subdivision and/or land development, and the measures to be undertaken to mitigate adverse impacts.
IMPERVIOUS SURFACE
Any material which prevents absorption of stormwater into
the ground, including, but not limited to, buildings, covered decks,
patios, driveways, walkways, swimming pools and other similar ground
cover.
INFILL
The development of new housing or other uses on scattered
vacant sites in a built-up area.
JUNK
Any scrap, waste, reclaimable material or debris, whether
or not stored or used in conjunction with dismantling, processing,
salvage, storage, baling, disposal or other use or disposition, including,
but not limited to, vehicles, tires, vehicle parts, equipment, paper,
rags, metal, glass, building materials, household appliances, brush,
wood and lumber.
JUNKYARD
Any area, lot, land, parcel, building or structure or part
thereof used for the storage, collection, processing, purchase, sale
or abandonment of wastepaper, rags, scrap metal or other scrap or
discarded goods, materials, machinery or two or more unregistered,
inoperable motor vehicles or other type of junk.
LAND DEVELOPMENT
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The improvement of one lot or two or more contiguous lots, tracts
or parcels of land for any purpose involving:
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A group of two or more residential or nonresidential buildings,
whether proposed initially or cumulatively, or a single nonresidential
building on a lot or lots regardless of the number of occupants or
tenure; or
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The division or allocation of land or space, whether initially
or cumulatively, between or among two or more existing or prospective
occupants by means of or for the purpose of streets, common areas,
leaseholds, condominiums, building groups or other features.
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A subdivision of land.
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Provisions for the exclusion of certain land development from
the definition of land development only when such land development
involves:
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The conversion of an existing single-family detached dwelling
or single-family semidetached dwelling into not more than three residential
units, unless such units are intended to be condominium units;
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The addition of an accessory building, including farm buildings,
on a lot or lots subordinate to an existing principal building; or
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The addition or conversion of buildings or rides within the
confines of an enterprise which would be considered an amusement park.
For purposes of this section, an "amusement park" is defined as a
tract or area used principally as a location for permanent amusement
structures or rides. This exclusion shall not apply to newly acquired
acreage by an amusement park until initial plans for the expanded
area have been approved by proper authorities.
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LAND DISTURBANCE
A construction or other human activity which disturbs the
surface of the land, including, but not limited to, clearing and grubbing,
grading, excavations, embankments, road maintenance, building construction
and the moving, depositing, stockpiling or storing of soil, rock or
earth materials.
LANDOWNER
The legal or beneficial owner or owners of land, including
the holder of an option or contract to purchase, whether or not such
option or contract is subject to any condition. A lessee, if he/she
is authorized under the lease to exercise the rights of the landowner,
or other persons having a proprietary interest in land shall be deemed
to be a landowner for the purpose of this chapter.
LIMITED ACCESS HIGHWAY
A highway in respect to which owners or occupants of abutting
lands and other persons have no legal right of access except at points
and in the manner determined by the authority having jurisdiction
over the highway. Within the municipal and jurisdictional limits of
the City of Easton, this shall include, but is not necessarily limited
to, all portions of US-22 and I-78.
LOT
A designated parcel, tract or area of land established by
plat, subdivision or otherwise and permitted by law to be used, developed
or build upon as a unit. For the purpose of this chapter, a "lot"
is further identified as:
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The total of all lands described in a legal deed or record;
or
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The total of two or more contiguous parcels described in separate
legal deeds of record owned by the same person.
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LOT AREA
The total horizontal area of the lot lying within the lot
lines, excluding any existing or designated future street rights-of-way.
LOT LINE
A property boundary line of any lot held in single and separate
ownership. In the case of any lot abutting a street, the lot line
for such portion of the lot as abuts such street shall be deemed to
be the same as the street line.
LOT LINE, FRONT
The lot line abutting a street and coinciding with the street
line. In the case of a corner lot, both lot lines abutting a street
shall be deemed the front lot line.
LOT LINE, REAR
A lot line opposite and most distant from the front lot line.
In a case of an unconventional or odd-shaped lot, the rear lot line
shall be deemed to be a line wholly within the lot, 10 feet in length
between side lot lines, and parallel to and at the maximum distance
from the front lot line.
LOT LINE, SIDE
Any lot line that is not a front lot line or rear lot line.
LOT WIDTH
The horizontal distance between side lot lines as measured
along the build-to line.
LOT, CORNER
A lot or parcel of land abutting upon two or more streets
at their intersection or on two parts of the same street forming an
interior angle of less than 135°.
LOT, ODD SHAPED
A lot with an irregular configuration and unconventional
number of changes in direction (i.e., a lot that is not generally
pie-shaped or rectangular, has small projections or acute angles,
or has rear lines not generally parallel to street lines).
LOWEST FLOOR
The lowest floor of the lowest fully enclosed area (including
basement). An unfinished, flood-resistant, partially enclosed area,
used solely for parking of vehicles, building access, and incidental
storage, in an area other than a basement area is not considered the
lowest floor of a building, provided that such space is not designed
and built so that the structure is in violation of the applicable
nonelevation design requirements of this chapter.
MANUFACTURED HOME
A structure which complies with local and state building
codes and appropriate federal agencies and is certified by said agencies,
transportable in one or more sections, which is built on a permanent
chassis and is designed for use with or without a permanent foundation
when attached to the required utilities. The term includes park trailers,
travel trailers, recreational and other similar vehicles which are
placed on a site for more than 180 consecutive days.
MANUFACTURED HOME LOT
A parcel of land in a mobile home park improved with the
necessary utility connections and other appurtenances necessary for
the erections thereon of a single manufactured home.
MANUFACTURED HOME PARK
Any site, lot, field or tract of land, privately or publicly
owned or operated, upon which two or more manufactured homes, used
for living, eating or sleeping quarters by persons not related to
the proprietor or his agent, are or are intended to be located, whether
operated for or without compensation by whatsoever name or title they
are colloquially or commercially termed.
MITIGATION
The act of precluding a potentially adverse impact and/or
making a potentially adverse impact less severe through measures that
will improve a condition and/or lessen the impact.
MIXED-USE DEVELOPMENT
A combination of two or more uses located within one building
or on a lot and designed as an integrated building or development.
MONTH
A period of time between the same dates in successive calendar
months, ranging between 28 and 31 days.
OBSTRUCTION
Any dam, wall, wharf, embankment, levee, dike, pile, abutment,
projection, excavation, channel rectification, bridge, conduit, culvert,
building, wire, fence, rock, gravel, refuse, fill, structure or matter
in, along, across or projecting into any channel, watercourse or regulatory
floodway area which may impede, retard or change the direction of
the flow of water, either in itself or by catching or collecting debris
carried by such water, or that is placed where the flow of water might
carry the same downstream to the damage of life or property.
OWNER
An individual, firm, association, syndicate, partnership
or corporation.
PARKING AREA
Any public or private land area designed and used for parking
motor vehicles, including parking lots, parking pads, parking decks,
and garages.
PARKING LOT
An off-street ground-level area used for the temporary parking
of more than four motor vehicles and available for use by the public
whether for free, for compensation, or to accommodate employees, clients
or customers, but not including private driveways.
PLAT
The map or plan of a subdivision or land development, whether
preliminary or final.
POLICE FACILITY
A building or portion thereof which serves to accommodate
police officers and other members of Police Department staff. These
buildings often contain offices and accommodation for personnel and
vehicles, along with locker rooms, temporary holding cells and interview/interrogation
rooms.
PORCH
A roofed-over structure projecting from the front, side or
rear wall of a building.
PRIMARY FAÇADE
The exterior wall or walls of that portion of a building
that faces a street. For purposes of this definition, a wall facing
an alley shall not be considered a primary façade.
PRINCIPAL BUILDING
A building in which is conducted the principal use of the
lot on which it is situated, including all attached buildings such
as garages, breezeways, carports, decks and porches.
PRINCIPAL USE
The primary or predominant use of any lot. In the case of
mixed-use development or a college campus, there may be more than
one principal use on a lot.
PROJECT
A subdivision, land development or any development involving
the construction or alteration of buildings or structures or the grading
or excavation of land to accommodate a building, structure or use.
PUBLIC
Relating to or affecting all people; accessible to or shared
by all members of the community.
PUBLIC GROUNDS
Includes:
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Public open space, parks, playgrounds, trails, paths, and other
recreational or public areas;
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Sites for community facilities, schools, sewerage treatment,
refuse disposal and other publicly owned or operated facilities; and
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Publicly owned or operated scenic and historic sites.
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PUBLIC NOTICE
A notice published once a week for two successive weeks prior
to a Zoning Board hearing in a newspaper of general circulation in
the City. Such notice shall state the time and place of a public hearing
and the particular nature of the matter to be considered at the hearing.
PUBLIC OPEN SPACE
A parcel or parcels of land or an area of water, or a combination
of land and water, designed and intended for the use and enjoyment
of the general public, typically in the form of a park, plaza, playground,
playfield, promenade, trail or other similar area.
RIPARIAN BUFFER
A riparian buffer is an area typically vegetated with trees
and other vegetation adjacent to a watercourse that forms a transition
area between the aquatic and terrestrial environment. The riparian
buffer is designed to intercept runoff from upland sources for the
purpose of mitigating the effects of nutrients, sediment, organic
matter, pesticides or other pollutants prior to entry into surface
waters.
SECONDARY EFFECTS
The results of an indirect or nonimmediate influence of one
entity or condition on another.
SELECTIVE CUTTING
The felling of certain, but not all, trees in an area for
the purpose of removing dead, diseased, damaged, mature or marketable
timber or for improving the quality of a tree stand. The removal of
more than 35% of trees in an area shall be defined as timber harvesting,
and the requirements for a timber harvesting operation shall apply.
SETBACK
The minimum horizontal distance between the front, rear or
side lines of a lot and the respective front, rear or side lines of
a building or a projection thereof.
SINGLE HOUSEKEEPING UNIT
Any household whose members are a nontransient interactive
group of persons jointly occupying a dwelling unit, including joint
access to and use of all common areas, including living, kitchen and
eating areas within the dwelling unit, and sharing household activities
and responsibilities such as meals, chores, expenses and maintenance,
and whose makeup is determined by the members of the unit rather than
by the landlord, property manager, or other third party. This does
not include a boardinghouse or rooming house.
SLOPED LAND
A geographical area, whether natural or man-made, and whether
on one or more lots, which has a ratio of vertical distance to horizontal
distance of greater than or equal to 12%, based on two-foot contour
interval, and occurs over three consecutive two-foot contour intervals.
More specifically, this chapter defines or classifies sloped land
as follows:
(a)
MAN-MADE SLOPESLands that have been altered by development and can contain such features as cut slopes, fill slopes, rock slopes, retaining walls, and disturbed terrain features which include repairs to landslide scars or comprise a series of composite cut and/or fill slopes where the ground surface has been disturbed.
(b)
NATURAL SLOPESThe natural deviation of the surface of the land, usually expressed in percent or degrees.
(c)
STEEP SLOPESloped land that has a ratio of vertical distance to horizontal distance of greater than or equal to 12%, but less than 25%, based on a two-foot contour interval.
(d)
SEVERELY STEEP SLOPESloped land that has a ratio of vertical distance to horizontal distance of greater than or equal to 35%, based on a two-foot contour interval.
(e)
VERY STEEP SLOPESloped land that has a ratio of vertical distance to horizontal distance of greater than 25%, but less than 35%, based on a two-foot contour interval.
STORY
That portion of a building included between the surface of
any floor and the ceiling or surface of the floor next above it, which
ranges from 10 feet to 15 feet measured vertically.
STREET
Includes the rights-of-way and cartways of a street, avenue,
boulevard, road, roadway, highway, parkway, lane, alley, and any other
ways used or intended to be used by vehicular traffic or pedestrians,
whether public or private.
STREET LINES
The lines that form the boundary of the street right-of-way
as shown on the official City right-of-way map, or as amended and
on file in the office of the City Engineer.
STREET WALL
The wall formed by buildings or other elements, such as fences,
walls, pillars and colonnades, located along a build-to line.
STREET, ARTERIAL
A street which is used primarily for large volumes of traffic
and includes facilities classified as primary and secondary highways
by the State Department of Transportation.
[Added 9-24-2008 by Ord.
No. 5120]
STRUCTURE
Any man-made object having an ascertainable stationary location
on or in land or water, whether or not affixed to the land.
SUBDIVISION
The division or redivision of a lot, tract or parcel of land
by any means into two or more lots, tracts, parcels or other divisions
of land, including changes in existing lot lines for the purpose,
whether immediate or future, of lease, transfer of ownership or building
or lot development; provided, however that the subdivision by lease
of land for agricultural purposes into parcels of more than 10 acres
not involving any new street or easement of access or residential
dwellings shall be exempted.
SUBSTANTIAL DAMAGE
Damage from any cause sustained by a structure whereby the
cost of restoring the structure to its before-damaged condition would
equal or exceed 50% or more of the market value of the structure before
the damage occurred.
SUBSTANTIAL IMPROVEMENT
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Any repair, reconstruction, addition or other improvement of
a structure, the cost of which equals or exceeds 50% of the market
value of the structure before the start of construction of the improvement.
This term includes structures which have incurred substantial damage
or repetitive loss regardless of the actual repair work performed.
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For the purposes of this definition, "substantial improvement"
is considered to occur when the first alteration of any wall, ceiling,
floor or other structural part of the building commences, whether
or not that alteration affects the external dimensions of the structure.
The term does not, however, include any alteration of a structure
listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
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TOP OF BANK
A point above the mean water surface of a watercourse which
defines the maximum depth of channel flow in the watercourse. It is
either determined visually or computed as an elevation using the peak
rate of runoff from a two-year storm event.
TRADITIONAL NEIGHBORHOOD DEVELOPMENT
An area of land developed for a compatible mixture of residential
units for various income levels and nonresidential commercial and
workplace uses, including some structures that provide for a mix of
uses within the same building. Residences, shops, offices, workplaces,
public buildings, and parks are interwoven within the neighborhood
so that all are within relatively close proximity to each other. Traditional
neighborhood development is relatively compact, limited in size and
oriented toward pedestrian activity. It has an identifiable center
and a discernible edge. The center of the neighborhood is in the form
of a public park, commons, plaza, square or prominent intersection
of two or more major streets. Generally, there is a hierarchy of streets
laid out in a rectilinear or grid pattern of interconnecting streets
and blocks that provides multiple routes from origins to destinations
and are appropriately designed to serve the needs of pedestrians and
vehicles equally.
USE
The purpose for which a structure or tract of land may be
designed, arranged, intended, maintained or occupied and any activity,
occupation, business or operation carried on or intended to be carried
on in a structure, building or on a lot.
WETLAND BUFFER
The transitional area extending from the outer limit of a
wetland for a minimum width of 50 feet.
WETLANDS
All lands regulated as wetlands by the Pennsylvania Department
of Environmental Protection or the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. In
the event there is a conflict between the definitions of these agencies,
the more restrictive definition shall apply.
YARD
An open area on a lot extending along a lot line and inward
from such line. The minimum dimension of a required yard, as defined
for each district, shall measure as the shortest distance between
the lot line and a line parallel to such line. (See "building setback
line.")
YARD (FRONT, REAR, SIDE)
(a)
FRONT YARDThe yard nearest the street extending across the full width of the lot between the front lot line and the building setback line. (See "build-to line.")
(b)
REAR YARDA yard extending the full width of the lot between the rear lot line and the building setback line.
(c)
SIDE YARD(S)A yard between the adjacent side lot lines extending from the front yard to the rear yard and the building setback line.
ZONING ADMINISTRATOR
The agent or official charged by law with the administration
and enforcement of this chapter.
ZONING CODE
The Zoning Ordinance of the City of Easton and amendments
thereto enacted under the provision of Act 247 by City Council.
ZONING PERMIT
An official document issued by the Zoning Administrator that
authorizes the use or alteration of land, buildings, or structures
for a specified purpose.