For the purpose of this article, the following terms, phrases and words shall have meanings respectively ascribed to them by this section:
The administrative official or the designated representative charged with the responsibility of enforcement of this article.
Approved by the code official or the city council.
A lot situated at the intersection of two (2) streets, the interior angle of such intersection not to exceed one hundred thirty-five (135) degrees.
Any wall, berm or structure more than two and one-half (2-1/2) feet in height erected or maintained for the purpose of enclosing, screening, restricting access to or decorating the surrounding lot, parcel, building or structure, located entirely on private property.
An open, unoccupied space on a lot facing a street and extending from the building or the required building line across the front of a lot.
Measured from ground level at the base of the fence to the uppermost part of the fence.
A lot other than a corner lot.
The side yard lot line that is adjacent to a corner lot or an interior lot’s side yard line.
A yard extending across the rear of a lot between the side lot lines and being the minimum horizontal distance between the rear lot line and the rear of the principal buildings.
A corner lot where the rear lot line is adjacent to a side lot line of an adjoining lot or across an alley from such side lot line.
An open unoccupied space on the same lot with the building, extending from the building or the required building line and the same [side] lot line.
For the purpose of this article, shall refer to public and private streets.
A building lot not a corner lot, where both the front and rear lot lines adjoin street lines. For the purpose of this section, both street lines shall be deemed front lot lines.
That imaginary area created by measuring along two (2) intersecting property lines a distance as indicated below, then drawing a line diagonally. A fence or fences in these vision triangles shall not exceed two and one-half (2-1/2) feet in height.
Street-street intersections.
The vision [triangle] is determined by measuring back from the intersecting point of the two (2) property lines parallel to the intersecting streets a distance of twenty-five (25) feet, and drawing an imaginary line across these two (2) points.
Alley intersections.
The vision triangle is determined by measuring back from the intersecting point of the two (2) property lines parallel to the intersecting alley a distance of ten (10) feet, and drawing an imaginary line across the two (2) points. (See figure 5 at the end of this article.)
(Ordinance 2011-03-06 adopted 3/14/11)




