[Added 10-14-2016 by Ord. No. 2016-05]
The following design standards shall be required in all Town Center commercial developments, and shall supersede the standards of §
129-1404, Design standards, of Chapter
129, Zoning, where they are in conflict with the provisions of that section.
A. Town center commercial development architectural design standards. The architectural style of a Town Center commercial development shall be designed to avoid the massive scale and uniform appearance of a "big box" commercial center through various measures as set forth below, including facade articulation on sides of buildings with customer entrances. Such articulation may include building offsets, window treatments, variation in rooflines, entry treatments and upgraded building materials. In order to implement these goals, the following standards shall apply to all Town Center commercial developments:
(1) First-floor activities that promote multiple pedestrian destinations, such as retail, restaurant, banking, and entertainment uses, are to be encouraged.
(2) Building facades measuring greater than 150 feet in length and which have customer entrances, including separate buildings that are attached, shall have recesses or projections of at least 24 inches extending over at least 20% of the length of the facades. There shall be no uninterrupted length of the facade which exceeds 150 feet on any building facade on which there is a customer entrance. Such recesses or projections shall create architectural interest by articulating building planes and surfaces to create an interplay of light and shadow over each 100 feet in length of each building facade having a customer entrance.
(3) First floor facades of buildings within the main street component of a Town Center commercial development which have or are intended to have customer entrances shall have display windows, arcades, awnings, pilasters, masonry banding, or other such features along no less than 60% of the horizontal length of that facade.
(4) The customer entrance (if any) on each building facade exceeding 150 feet in length shall have clearly defined features, as follows:
(a) Architectural details such as articulated masonry patterns, pilasters, articulated window heads and sills, and cornices which are integrated into the building structure and design.
(b) Within the main street component of a Town Center commercial development, weather protection features such as awnings shall be installed within 30 feet of all customer entrances.
(5) Variations in roof parapet heights shall be used to provide interest and reduce the scale of large buildings. Roofs visible from the perspective of individuals facing those building facades which have or are intended to have customer entrance shall have at least one of the following features:
(a) Sloping roofs with overhanging eaves.
(6) At least one building within a Town Center commercial development shall have a clock tower.
(7) Exterior building materials and colors contribute significantly to the visual impact of a building. The exterior building material on all facades which have customer entrances, or which are immediately adjacent to pedestrian walkways, may include:
(d) Cast stone or cultured stone.
(e) Concrete masonry unit (CMU), but only as split face block or block molded with a textured surface.
(f) Glass. Warm and cool tones.
(g) Stucco and synthetic stucco.
(8) The exterior building material on all facades which have customer entrances, or which are immediately adjacent to pedestrian walkways, may not include:
(d) Exposed aggregate panels.
(9) Dominant building and roof colors must be low reflectance. The use of high intensity colors is prohibited. Building trim and accents, however, may feature brighter colors. Lighting of any type may not be used for building trim or accent.
B. Building siting; loading facilities; center plazas. Buildings shall be sited to form a progression of pedestrian-oriented open spaces or promenades, with visual and pedestrian connections between such spaces. Vehicular circulation and, in the main street component of a Town Center commercial development, limited parking directly on internal drive-aisles and accessways are permitted through these spaces. Open air pedestrian-oriented spaces shall act as connectors between buildings within the main street component of a Town Center commercial development, and shall contain amenities such as seating walls, tree grates, benches, bicycle racks, hitching posts, and opportunities for entertainment to provide a sense of place and orientation for their users.
(1) The main street component of a Town Center commercial development shall be designed to provide a pedestrian-friendly orientation of buildings which have the appearance or functionality of small, traditional main street retail shops.
(2) Loading docks and trash collection facilities for individual buildings within a Town Center commercial development with more than 25,000 square feet of floor area shall be screened in a fashion which is not visually or functionally obtrusive to patrons using the parking areas. Such screening may include, but shall not necessarily be limited to, masonry screen walls, berming, landscaping, retaining walls, and roofless enclosures for trucks.
(3) A center square or plaza is meant to identify places where people would congregate within the main street component of a Town Center commercial development. Such places shall be designed and built as a gathering place and, if an outdoor space, marked with special pavements, trees in tree grates, benches, hitching posts, kiosks and/or bicycle racks and shall meet the following criteria:
(a) At least one Main Street component in each Town Center commercial development shall include one or more center square(s) or plaza(s), the area of which shall be equal to not less than 1% of the floor area of all buildings within the Town Center commercial development. The center square or plaza area shall not be included in the allowable building area of an entire Town Center commercial development.
(b) For Town Center commercial developments having (or contemplated to have at full build-out) 400,000 or more square feet of floor area, the required plaza area may be divided into two or more noncontiguous spaces, provided that none is smaller in area than 2,000 square feet.
(c) When determining the area of a plaza, the only area that shall be included shall be the contiguous space which does not contain permanent buildings; provided, however, that buildings or portions of buildings which are used for maintenance functions may also occupy a portion of the plaza, provided further that such buildings or portions of buildings do not exceed 200 square feet in floor area.
(d) Up to 60% of the plaza area may be used for outdoor cafe seating or for moveable carts used to sell handcrafts, flowers, snacks and similar wares.
C. Town Center commercial development site amenity standards. The following standards shall apply with regard to the referenced site amenities within Town Center commercial developments:
(1) Awnings. Awnings shall be constructed of all weather material and, when used, shall be attached to buildings in such a manner as to provide at minimum vertical clearance of eight feet.
(2) Benches. Benches installed within a Town Center commercial development shall comply with the following standards:
(a) Benches shall be at least six feet in length.
(b) At least one bench shall be provided for each 25,000 square feet of floor area within the Town Center commercial development which is open and accessible on a regular basis to members of the general public.
(c) Benches shall be installed within the Town Center commercial development in locations which serve the greatest function for pedestrian-oriented buildings.
(d) Five linear feet of seat wall (and/or similar structure) may be substituted for every one bench otherwise required within a town center commercial development.
(3) Bicycle racks. Bicycle racks shall be installed within the Main Street component of the Town Center commercial development. Bicycle racks shall be installed such that secure rack spaces are provided for not less than five bicycles for every 100,000 square feet of gross building floor area in the Town Center commercial development.
(4) Bus stops. Bus stops installed within a Town Center commercial development shall comply with the following standards:
(a) A bus stop shall be required, and shall be situated within the Town Center commercial development at the location as may be recommended by the operator of such service; provided, however, that if such location shall be outside of a public right-of-way, such operator shall enter into an agreement on terms reasonably acceptable to the application with regard to the use and operation of such bus shelter. The area of a bus stop shall not be included in the overall building area of the Town Center commercial development.
(b) In the event the Town Center commercial development is not served by public transportation, weather shelters shall not be required.
(5) Horse and carriage parking sheds. Sadsbury Township retains its rural character, and is located within a region that is home to people that regularly use nonautomotive means of transportation. In recognition of that tradition, a Town Center commercial development shall include one parking space for a horse and carriage for each 100,000 square feet of gross floor area within the Town Center commercial development that is open and accessible on a regular basis to members of the general public. Parking spaces for horses and carriages shall be covered by a roof that is large enough to completely cover the horse. Hitching posts shall be constructed of material of sufficient strength and height to secure one mature horse and an attached carriage.
(6) Kiosks. Kiosks installed within a Town Center commercial development shall comply with the following standards:
(a) Kiosks shall be installed within the Main Street component of the Town Center commercial development, and shall be constructed with weather protection eaves and vandalproof covering materials shall be used to protect papers posted on the kiosk.
(b) Kiosks shall not exceed eight feet in height as measured to the top of the reading board portion of the kiosk.
(7) Lightpoles. Lightpoles shall be installed within the non-off-street parking areas of the main street component of a Town Center commercial development pursuant to the following standards:
(a) Lightpoles shall be designed in a manner consistent with that depicted in the design guidelines and standards.
(b) Lightpoles shall be installed throughout the main street component of the Town Center commercial development at intervals no greater than an average of 40 feet along vehicular and pedestrian ways.
(8) Tree grates. Tree grates shall be installed within the main street component of a town center commercial development at intervals no greater than an average of 40 feet along walkways between building facades with customer entrances and off-street parking spaces and where street trees would otherwise be required but, in no event, within green spaces measuring at least 200 square feet in area.
(9) Waste receptacles. Waste receptacles shall be situated throughout the Town Center commercial development.
(10) Signage. Signs within a Town Center commercial development shall comply with Article
XV, Signs, of Chapter
129, Zoning.
(11) Design guidelines and standards. The applicant with regard to any Town Center commercial development shall submit during a conditional use hearing with regard to such development a manual of design guidelines and standards for site amenities required pursuant to this chapter or which may otherwise, at the discretion of the developer, be included within a Town Center commercial development. The contents of the design guidelines and standards shall be subject to the review of the Board of Supervisors as part of its deliberations with regard to the conditional use hearing with regard to the Town Center commercial development and, if a Final land development plan submitted pursuant to an approved conditional use application is approved, shall be referred to and, by such reference, incorporated into such plan and thereby constitute a covenant running with the Town Center commercial development.
D. Lighting. Lighting in Town Center commercial developments shall be designed and implemented to minimize from nuisance glare and stray light from poorly adjusted, placed, applied or shielded light sources.
(1) All outdoor lighting, whether or not required by this chapter or by the design guidelines and standards presented pursuant to §
109-428 of this chapter shall be adjusted, located, designed, and maintained so as to not present a hazard to drivers or pedestrians by impairing their ability to safely traverse (disabling glare) and so as to not create a nuisance by directly projecting or reflecting onto neighboring properties light not typically associated with the uses within town center commercial development.
(2) Floodlights or spotlights, when utilized, shall be installed and adjusted so as to not project their output into structures on adjacent lots used for residential purposes, skyward or onto adjacent roadways existing at the time that an application for conditional use approval for a Town Center commercial development is submitted.
(3) Vegetative screens shall not be used as a means for controlling glare. Rather, glare control shall be achieved primarily through the use such means as cutoff fixtures (meeting IESNA's "cutoff" criteria), shields and baffles and appropriate application of fixture mounting, height, wattage, aiming angle and fixture placement.
(4) Lighting fixtures used to illuminate parking areas, roadways, off-street loading areas, bank drive-through lanes, and customer entrances, shall be adjusted, located, designed and maintained to be aimed straight down and shall be required to meet IESNA's "cutoff" criteria.
(5) The Township may require that grade-level windows be internally or externally illuminated during hours of darkness to facilitate police activities.
(6) Point-by-point photometric calculations on a ten-foot by ten-foot grid and statistical calculations shall be provided for all off-street parking areas.
(7) Parking facility and vehicular and pedestrian lighting (except for safety and security applications) shall, within one hour of the latest closing of a retail sales operation within the Town Center commercial development, be dimmed to not more than 50% of the average illumination levels achieved during operating hours; provided, however, that the foregoing shall not apply to parking facilities and vehicular and pedestrian ways associated with nonretail uses within the Town Center commercial development.
E. Walkways; crosswalks. Walkways and crosswalks in and around a Town Center commercial development shall comply with the following criteria:
(1) The width of all walkways and crosswalks shall comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, as the same may be applicable to the Town Center commercial development, and shall be comprised of either poured or stamped concrete or brick pavers separate and distinct in texture and color from drive aisles.
(2) Walkways or crosswalks shall be provided along or between:
(a) Any building facade fronting upon an area of off-street parking space;
(b) Any building facade that adjoins a connecting passageway from a parking area to a center square or plaza;
(c) Any building facade that has or is intended to have a customer entrance; and
(d) Any areas intended to serve as a connection between the Main Street component(s) and in-line retail component(s) of a Town Center commercial development and between the Main Street component of a Town Center commercial development and other uses within the Town Center commercial development.
(3) In the event that a Town Center commercial development is located within 500 feet of a residential development consisting of at least 10 dwelling units, a walkway shall be installed on the Town Center commercial development parcel to provide for a pedestrian link between the residential development and the Town Center commercial development. The location of such walkway shall be determined during the conditional use hearing with regard to a Town Center commercial development.
(4) Crosswalks shall be provided at all intersections of internal accessways within a Town Center commercial development.
F. Landscaping; screening and buffering. Landscaping, screening and buffering within a Town Center commercial development shall comply with the following criteria:
(1) In order to provide for enhanced buffering between a Town Center commercial development and adjacent residential development, the developer of a town center commercial development may elect to locate up to 25% of the required site landscaping and screening and buffering along the property line of the Town Center commercial development parcel closest to that residential development.
(2) In the event that any wholly or partially enclosed loading area, any loading related portion of a structure, or any privacy wall shall be placed at or adjacent to the rear line of a building (as defined in Chapter
129, Zoning), site screening and buffering between such rear line of a building and the rear property line shall include elements to mitigate the actual adverse effects, if any, of such placement which shall be reviewed by the Board of Supervisors during the conditional use hearing with regard to the town center commercial development.