[Amended 3-18-2024]
Subdivisions shall conform with the Comprehensive Plan, other
policy statements of the City, the Zoning Ordinance, the TDCSM and all pertinent federal, state and local codes
and ordinances.
If the proposed subdivision contains any historical or archeological
sites, or any areas identified in the Comprehensive Plan or by the
Maine Critical Areas Program as rare and irreplaceable natural areas,
these areas shall be suitability protected by appropriate covenants
and management plans.
For construction on slopes greater than 15%, the applicant shall
submit a description of slope stabilization practices for review by
the Planning Board. The Planning Board shall not approve as building
sites such portions of any proposed subdivision that:
A. Are situated below the normal high-water mark of any water body;
B. Are part of a right-of-way, or easement, including utility easements,
or temporary cul-de-sac;
C. Are located within the 100-year floodplain as identified by the Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), unless the applicant shows proof
through the submittal of materials prepared by a registered land surveyor
which shows that the property in question lies at least two feet above
the 100-year floodplain; The elevation is not to include filled or
made land.
D. Are located on land which must be filled or drained or on land created
by diverting a watercourse; the Planning Board may grant approval
if a central sewage collection and treatment system is provided. In
no instance shall the Planning Board approve any part of a subdivision
located on filled tidal wetlands or filled or drained great ponds
(natural body of water 10 acres or more in size).
E. Include buildings or roads, other than limited crossings, that would
be built on wetlands;
F. Have a water table within 10 inches of the surface for at least three
months of the year as identified in the county soil survey, unless
further soil study proves the county soil survey wrong, or if the
applicant can demonstrate to the Planning Board's satisfaction that
engineering techniques can sufficiently lower the water table to enable
the site to be utilized. In cases where the Planning Board does not
permit such drainage, the subdivider may use such lands in lot area
calculations if City sewer is provided and if the lot(s) are to be
deed restricted to prohibit buildings with basements or require basement
floor elevations one foot above the seasonal water table.
Streets shall be designed to the following standards:
A. Street classification. During preliminary plan review, streets shall
be classified for the purpose of establishing the applicable design
and construction standards according to below definitions.
(1)
Arterial streets. An arterial street is any street that carries
or is designed to carry through traffic between parts of Saco, other
arterial streets in Saco, between Saco and other communities, or industrial
zones (100+ dwellings).
(2)
Secondary City street. A secondary street is any City street
used solely for access to the abutting lots (two to 100 dwellings).
(3)
Mobile home parks. All streets within mobile home parks shall
be built in conformance with the standards of this section. Streets
within a park shall be designed by a professional engineer licensed
in the State of Maine.
(a)
Streets within mobile home parks shall meet the following design
standards.
[1]
Maximum right-of-way width: 23 feet.
[2]
Maximum paved width of traveled way: 20 feet.
[3]
The standards of the Manufactured Housing Board.
(b)
The first 75 feet of any mobile home park street which intersects
with a City street shall meet all geometric design standards except
width, all standards related to sight distance, and all standards
related to adequacy of access.
(c)
No individual lot within a park shall have direct vehicular
access onto a numbered highway.
B. Street design. Streets in subdivisions shall be designed to provide
safe vehicular travel. Streets shall be designed as through streets
or future through streets unless waived by the Planning Board. The
design of streets shall conform to the City of Saco's Technical Design
and Construction Standards Manual (TDCSM).
C. Location and alignment.
(1)
Projections. Provisions satisfactory to the Planning Board shall
be made for the proper projection of streets for access to adjoining
property that is not yet subdivided, or for connection with future
streets. The street right-of-way for such extension of any proposed
street shall extend to the boundary of the subdivision, be labeled
as reserved for street extension, and dedicated to the City at the
time that the streets in the subdivision are dedicated and offered
for public acceptance.
(2)
Reserve strips. Reserve strips of land prohibiting access to
streets or adjoining property shall not be permitted, except where,
in the opinion of the Planning Board, such strips shall be in the
public interest.
(3)
Dead ends.
(a)
Dead-end City streets shall not be longer than 1,000 feet, unless,
in the opinion of the Planning Board, a greater length is necessitated
by topography or other local conditions. In any instance, no more
than 15 dwellings shall be allowed on a dead-end street.
(b)
Dead-end streets shall be constructed with an adequate turnaround
in accordance with TDCSM.
(4)
Sidewalks.
(a)
Sidewalks in mobile home parks. Sidewalks are required on one
side of mobile home park streets. Sidewalks shall have a five-foot-wide
paved surface and a grassy esplanade at least five feet wide between
the street and the sidewalk. A right-of-way at least as wide as the
sidewalk and the esplanade shall be provided.
(b)
Sidewalks are required along all subdivision streets and along
frontage of any street which abuts the subdivision or gives access
to it. The Planning Board may require that the sidewalk be extended
for a reasonable distance to connect with existing sidewalks or destinations,
such as bus stops and/or schools.
D. Street names. Streets which join and are in alignment with streets
of abutting or neighboring properties shall bear the same name. Applicants
shall propose a street name to the City for review for any new streets
that do not join, align with, or abut existing streets. The name of
the street shall not be so similar to the name of other streets or
locations in the City, as determined by the E-911 Addressing Officer.
The City reserves the right to designate any name for the road, and
number it in accordance with E-911 standards.
E. Street name signs, stop signs, and other street signs shall be purchased
from the Department of Public Works (DPW) and installed by the developer.
The size and location shall be subject to DPW approval.
F. Streetlighting shall be installed as required by the DPW and energized
prior to street acceptance. All streetlighting is to be supplied and
installed in conformance with TDCSM specifications.
G. Street access. Provision shall be made for vehicular access to the subdivision in such a manner as to safeguard against traffic hazards and danger to pedestrians in the subdivision and in existing streets, to minimize congestion, to provide safe and convenient circulation, and to provide for efficient access by the City's public safety vehicles. All lots in all subdivisions shall have frontage and access from a public street or from a proposed street shown on a subdivision plan and designed to City specifications, intended for future acceptance by the City, or by a private road designed to standards outlined in Article
XI of Chapter
230 and the TDCSM. The following standards and design criteria shall also be followed:
[Amended 3-18-2024]
(1)
Where a lot has frontage on two or more streets, access to the
lot shall be provided from the street with less potential for traffic
congestion and hazard.
(2)
The street giving access to the subdivision and neighboring
streets which carry traffic to the subdivision shall have capacity
or be suitably improved to accommodate the amount and type of traffic
generated by the proposed subdivision. No subdivision shall decrease
the level of service (LOS) below D at study area intersections. However,
at signalized intersections where the level of service is already
below LOS D, or at signalized intersections predicted to drop below
LOS D where physical improvements cannot be made to attain LOS D,
or, at unsignalized intersections, where physical improvements cannot
be made to improve the level of service to LOS D, and provided that
warrants for a traffic signal are not met, or signal installation
is not desirable, the Planning Board may approve the subdivision if
it finds that adequate provisions for safety can be attained through
imposing conditions of approval, such as upgrades in signalization,
one-way driveways, prohibiting certain turning movements, construction
of turning lanes, or other improvements, or through a program of transportation
demand management measures, or a traffic mitigation fee is assessed
for a future improvement project, or monitoring is to be performed.
(3)
Where necessary to safeguard against hazards to vehicles and
pedestrians and to avoid congestion, provision shall be made for turning
lanes, traffic islands, frontage roads, and traffic lights within
public streets, or other necessary improvements.
(4)
Road accesses shall be designed with sufficient capacity to
avoid causing stacking in the travel way of an arterial.
(5)
Unless otherwise specified in these regulations, road improvements
shall conform with TDCSM. Where a subdivision borders a public street
having a right-of-way that is less than that identified in Table 7-2,
the subdivider shall set aside 1/2 of the additional right-of-way
required to bring the street up to this standard. The area to be set
aside shall be shown on the subdivision plan, labeled "reserved for
road realignment (or widening) purposes," and dedicated to the City
for use as a public street. Land reserved for such purposes may not
be counted in satisfying setback or yard or area requirements of the
Zoning Ordinance.
Table 7-2 - Right-of-Way Width for Roadway Classes
|
---|
Roadway Class
|
Right-of-Way
(feet)
|
---|
Arterial or collector or rural collector as identified in the
Comprehensive Plan
|
70
|
Local street
|
50
|
(6)
Where a subdivision abuts or contains an existing or proposed
arterial street, the Planning Board may require frontage and reverse
frontage, with screen planting in a nonaccess reservation along the
property line, or other treatments if they are necessary to afford
separation of through and local traffic.
(7)
The capacity of a road to move traffic is related inversely
to the amount of access provided to abutting properties. To maintain
capacity of the City's principal road network, creation of new residential
lots as part of a subdivision which front on or obtain their vehicular
access from any of the following roads in Table 7-3 is prohibited
except as provided below. Vehicular access to any new residential
lot shall be limited to the street frontage used to meet the requirements
of this section, unless alternate access is approved by the Planning
Board.
Table 7-3 - Roads Which New Residential Subdivision Lots May
Not Front Or Use For Vehicular Access
|
---|
Ash Swamp
|
Flag Pond
|
Jenkins
|
Old Orchard
|
Bradley
|
Hearn
|
Louden
|
Portland Road
|
Buxton
|
Heath
|
Mast Hill
|
Ferry Road
|
Cascade
|
Holmes
|
New County
|
|
(8)
Waiver of access limitation. Any lot shown on property Tax Maps
of the City of Saco as of October 13, 1988, shall be permitted one
vehicular access point to any adjacent public road notwithstanding
the provisions of the section above. No residential lot created after
the adoption of this section, that is part of a subdivision, shall
have its required street frontage on a road listed above unless the
Planning Board determines that conditions particular to the parcel
justify allowing access to the road. Access shall be granted only
if the Planning Board finds that one of the following conditions is
met:
(a)
There is too little road frontage to reasonably allow for the
creation of a local street or private road; or
(b)
The shape or physical condition of the parcel does not permit
access to or the creation of a local street or private road; or
(c)
There will be no further subdivision of the parcel.
A location within the subdivision shall be provided for a centralized
mailbox, also referred to as a "cluster box unit," that meets the
standards of the United States Postal Service, approved by the DPW.
See TDCSM for details.