[Ord. No. 10702, 2-18-2021]
(a) Purpose. The landscaping and buffering requirements as set forth
in this section have been established to encourage quality development
within the City, to provide a smooth transition between adjoining
properties; to screen loading zones, dumpster enclosures, parking
lots and other areas; to facilitate the buffering of one land use
from other land uses; and to encourage harmonious relationships between
buildings.
(b) Applicability. The following landscaping requirements apply to all new planting materials within the City of Kirkwood unless specifically listed in §
25-59(a). If existing site landscaping is altered, it shall be replaced with materials in conformance with §
25-58(d).
(c) Landscaping plan. All applications submitted to the Planning and Zoning Commission that are subject to §
25-58(b), shall submit a landscaping plan and tree preservation plan (per Chapter
24, Article
II) in conjunction with the submittal application. All other applications that are not subject to Planning and Zoning Commission review, yet are subject to §
25-58(b), shall submit a landscape plan and tree preservation plan in conjunction with the administrative site plan review and building permit application.
(d) Planting requirements. A list of desirable and undesirable tree species
can be found in the document titled "Street Tree Selections for Kirkwood,"
a copy of which can be obtained from the Department of Public Services.
The use and maintenance of native plant materials is encouraged. All
new and preserved landscaping materials that are proposed to meet
the requirements of this article shall meet the following criteria:
(1)
Canopy trees: two-inch minimum caliper.
(2)
Understory trees: one-and-one-half-inch minimum caliper.
(3)
Evergreen trees: eight feet minimum height.
(4)
Deciduous and/or evergreen shrubs:
(i)
Type A: less than 18 inches in height.
(ii)
Type B: 18 inches to 24 inches in height.
(iii) Type C: greater than 18 inches in height.
(5)
Ground cover. Suitable ground cover shall be provided throughout
the site. Ground cover shall be construed to include any combination
of low plants that cover the ground: grass, wood chips, bark mulch,
crushed stone and similar substances.
(e) Irrigation. Automated irrigation systems are required for landscaping
in new construction projects. These systems are not required for renovations,
additions, or change of use.
(f) Continued maintenance. It is the responsibility of the property owner
or his/her agent to ensure all trees, plants, ground cover or any
other material required by this section or included on the landscape
plan, whether on private property or in an abutting right-of-way,
shall remain in a healthy and growing condition. Any trees, plants,
ground cover or other material or equipment required in this section
that does not survive, function properly or is in need of repair shall
be replaced within 30 days of its demise or damage, or as otherwise
approved by the Director of Public Services due to weather or other
conditions that prevent planting.
[Ord. No. 10702, 2-18-2021]
(a) Exceptions. The following shall be exempt from the regulations of §
25-59:
(1)
Infill single-family residential uses and their accessory structures; however, said projects are subject to Chapter
24 of the Municipal Code.
(2)
Single-family residential uses and their accessory structures
that are part of an approved subdivision plat with a landscaping plan.
(b) New parking lots and parking lot additions. Landscaping shall be
required in new parking lots with seven or more spaces and additions
to existing parking lots that add seven or more spaces. This shall
include paved areas and access aisles for vehicular movement as follows:
(1)
Perimeter landscaping.
(i)
The outside perimeter shall include a landscaped area a minimum
10 feet in width along front lot lines and seven feet in width when
adjacent to side or rear property lines that must contain:
a.
At least one canopy tree per every 40 feet, which may be substituted
with one understory tree per every 25 feet where conflicts with overhead
utilities exist; and
b.
At least one Type A or Type B deciduous and/or evergreen shrub
per every 10 feet and shall be provided in groupings.
(ii)
The use of earthen berms is encouraged in addition to live planting
material.
(iii) Portions of parking lots, paved areas, or access aisles adjacent to a landscaped buffer as required per §
25-60, are not subject to perimeter landscaping as required §
25-59(b)(1), above.
(2)
Interior landscaping.
(i)
Curbed islands with a minimum width of seven feet shall be located
at the ends of all parking aisles.
a.
At the ends of a single row of parking, each island shall have
a minimum area of 120 square feet and shall contain a minimum of one
canopy tree, which may be substituted with one understory tree if
conflicts with overhead utilities exist.
b.
At the ends of a double row of parking, each island shall have
a minimum area of 240 square feet and shall contain a minimum of two
canopy trees planted at nineteen-foot centers, including appropriate
ground cover. Understory trees may be substituted if conflicts with
overhead utilities exist.
(ii)
Parking rows shall be interrupted by an intermediary landscaped
island every 20 contiguous side-by-side spaces, with the island meeting
the minimum landscape width, area, and tree count as per §
25-59(b)(2).
(iii) Open space for the interior of parking lot areas
shall be determined by the number of proposed parking spaces as shown
in
Table 59-1. Said open space requirement shall include all required landscape islands and any nonvehicular area not fulfilling a separate buffer requirement per §
25-60.
Table 59-1
Parking Lot Interior Open Space
|
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Number of Parking Spaces
|
Required Open Space
(square feet)
|
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Less than 10
|
200
|
11 to 20
|
400
|
21 to 30
|
600
|
31 to 40
|
800
|
41 to 50
|
1,200
|
51 or more
|
1,200 plus an additional 100 for each 10 spaces over 50
|
(c) Landscaping for new development. Any portion of a new development site that is not subject to §
25-59(b) or §
25-60 shall be landscaped in conformance with the following:
(1)
Along all street frontages, there shall be a landscaped area
a minimum of seven feet in width that contains at least one canopy
tree per every 40 feet of frontage, excluding driveway openings and
required sight-distance triangle areas. If conflicts with overhead
utilities exist, understory trees may be substituted at one tree per
every 25 feet. In the Downtown Master Plan Study Area, trees planted
in the right-of-way will count towards this requirement, if approved
by the Director of Public Services.
(2)
Along all required side and rear yards, there shall be a landscaped
area a minimum of seven feet in width that contains a minimum of one
canopy tree or understory tree every 40 linear feet or a minimum of
one canopy tree and one evergreen tree for each 50 feet with evergreen
trees clustered in groups of two or more.
(d) Building additions. When a building addition is being constructed on a site where the landscaping requirements set forth in §
25-59 are not already met, additional landscaping shall be required for every 100 linear feet of exterior building addition, footprint, or portion thereof. A minimum of two canopy trees, one understory tree, and five Type C shrubs shall be incorporated in the general area of the building addition.
(e) Accessory structures and trash enclosures. The following landscaping requirements apply in addition to any requirements set forth in §
25-59 or
25-60:
(1)
All accessory structures and/or mechanical equipment visible
from the right-of-way or a public access aisle shall be required to
be landscaped around their respective footprints with a continuous
screen of Type C evergreen shrubs.
(2)
All exterior trash areas shall be enclosed in accordance with §
25-53 and, if visible from the right-of-way or a public access aisle, shall be required to be surrounded by landscaping on three sides consisting of a continuous combination of Type A, B, and C deciduous and/or evergreen shrubs.
[Ord. No. 10702, 2-18-2021]
(a) Table 60-1 establishes the buffering standards that apply to all
new construction as subject to the applicability standards of this
article. Buffering standards are not required for renovations, additions,
or change of use.
(b) Where buffering is required in accordance with Table 60-1, the buffering
shall be required to be installed by the applicant on the property
that is subject to the proposed development.
Table 60-1
Buffering Standards
|
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Zoning of Adjacent Development
|
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Zoning of Proposed Development1
|
R-1, R-2, R-3, R-4, R-MM2
|
R-5, R-62
|
B-1, B-2, B-3, B-4, B-5 or Downtown Master Plan Study Area
|
---|
R-5, R-6
|
Type D
|
|
|
B-1, B-2
|
Type C
|
Type C
|
|
B-3, B-4, B-5
|
Type A
|
Type A
|
|
I-1
|
Type B
|
Type B
|
Type C
|
NOTES:
|
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1
|
Buffer requirements for the B-4 and B-5 Districts may be modified by City Council as part of the development plan review process in § 25-18.
|
2
|
Buffers for B Districts only apply where the rear or side yard
of a proposed development abuts a residential zoning district.
|
(1)
Type A buffer. A Type A buffer shall include:
(i)
Sound-mitigating and sightproof wall or fence not less than
eight feet in height. The fence shall terminate 10 feet from the street
right-of-way line; and
(ii)
Landscaped buffer 20 feet in width consisting of no less than
one deciduous tree every 50 feet, one evergreen tree every 25 feet,
and one shrub every 10 feet provided in groupings.
(2)
Type B buffer. A Type B buffer shall include:
(i)
Sound-mitigating and sightproof wall or fence not less than
six feet in height. The fence shall terminate 10 feet from the street
right-of-way line; and
(ii)
Landscaped buffer 20 feet in width consisting of no less than
one deciduous tree every 50 feet, one evergreen tree every 25 feet,
and one shrub every 10 feet provided in groupings.
(3)
Type C buffer. A Type C buffer shall include:
(i)
Sound-mitigating and sightproof wall or fence not less than
six feet in height. The fence shall terminate 10 feet from the street
right-of-way line; and
(ii)
Landscaped buffer 10 feet in width consisting of no less than
one deciduous tree every 50 feet, one evergreen tree every 25 feet,
and one shrub every 10 feet provided in groupings.
(4)
Type D buffer. A Type D buffer shall include:
(i)
Sound-mitigating and sightproof wall or fence not less than
six feet in height. The fence shall terminate 10 feet from the street
right-of-way line; and
(ii)
Landscaped buffer seven feet in width consisting of no less
than one evergreen tree every 25 feet and one shrub every 10 feet
provided in groupings.
[Ord. No. 10702, 2-18-2021]
(a) Frontage tree plantings. The subdivider shall plant trees in front of the building line but not within the public right-of-way approximately five to 10 feet from the public right-of-way along all streets in new residential subdivisions that are not located in wooded areas or where existing trees cannot be preserved in the development of the subdivision. The trees shall be provided in a ratio of not less than one tree for each 50 feet of frontage. At street corners, the nearest tree shall be located a minimum of 25 feet from the intersection of the street right-of-way lines. Preserved existing trees that meet the minimum requirements of §
25-58(d) shall be included in the above requirement.
(b) Planting screens. Within areas designated on the improvement plan
for screen planting, a continuous planting of evergreens and deciduous
trees shall be provided consisting of a minimum of one two-inch diameter
deciduous tree, two one-and-one-half-inch diameter understory trees,
and six feet to eight feet tall evergreens for each 100 feet of such
screen.
(c) Total tree density requirement for residential subdivisions.
(1)
The subdivider shall provide new and/or existing trees throughout
the subdivision to the average minimum of one tree per 2,000 square
feet of site area less street rights-of-way. This excludes frontage
trees and screening trees.
(2)
Trees shall be spaced so that each lot has a minimum tree canopy
coverage area of 350 square feet per 1,000 square feet of lot area
(35% coverage). The developer shall provide a landscaping plan that
locates and identifies by species new and existing trees to be counted
as fulfilling the tree requirements. The tree canopy area shall be
shown on the final landscaping plans. The canopy for each tree shall
be drawn in accordance with the canopy sizes for mature trees shown
on the acceptable plant material list available from the City of Kirkwood.
(3)
Significant existing trees shall be live, healthy trees of a
species suitable for the urban environment having a diameter of eight
inches or greater, as approved by the Planning and Zoning Commission.
(4)
The final improvement plans shall show significant trees designated by the Planning and Zoning Commission to be saved by the subdivider. If a significant tree or trees designated in the final improvement plans to be saved is lost for any reason by the time of the final inspection of the subdivision, the lost tree(s) shall be replaced by trees equal to the number of trees lost and shall meet the requirements of §
25-58(d).
(5)
The City may require the value of trees to be preserved to be
included in the subdivision's performance guarantee. Should these
designated saved trees be lost due to willful actions or neglect of
the developer, the developer shall provide landscaping and trees in
the subdivision to replace those trees that have been removed or forfeit
the amount to the general revenue of the City of Kirkwood.
(6)
If the trees designated to be saved are lost due to the willful actions or neglect of the developer, he shall be in violation of and be subject to the penalties under §
1-8 of the City of Kirkwood Municipal Code. If any significant tree as identified in the tree study to be saved dies, is destroyed, or removed and the developer failed to conform to any special provisions of the subdivision approval ordinance regarding the protection of the trees, his actions shall be considered prima facie evidence of neglect and willful.
(7)
Where it is determined that removal of significant trees has
occurred within two years prior to the filing of the preliminary plat,
the Planning and Zoning Commission and/or City Council may require
plantings in excess of the above requirements up to 1 1/2 times
the number of trees that would otherwise be required.
(8)
In the center island of a cul-de-sac, ground cover shall be
restricted to a maximum height of 30 inches above grade. Trees shall
be only of a deciduous type trimmed to provide a minimum clearance
to all limbs of six feet above grade.