(A) Living
Coverage Required.
Required landscaped open areas and
non-paved areas between the front of building(s) and any street right-of-way
line must be completely covered with living plant material. Landscaping
materials, such as wood chips and gravel, may be used under trees,
shrubs, and other plants, but must not comprise a significant portion
of the total landscaped area. Any additional landscaped (pervious)
areas that are in excess of the required landscaped area must also
be covered with either living plant material, such as turf grass or
other groundcover or landscape materials such as rock, wood chips
or mulch, or an alternative approved by the Planning Director.
(B) Plant
Material Standards.
Plant materials required by this GDC must be of a species listed in the Approved Plant List for the City of Garland (see Division
7 of this Article 3), and all plant materials installed on a development or redevelopment site must conform with the most recent edition (at the time of development or redevelopment) of the “American Standard for Nursery Stock” (as amended), published by the American Association of Nurserymen. Grass seed, sod, and other material must be clean and reasonably free of weeds, noxious pests, and insects.
(C) Tree
Size at Installation.
Large canopy trees (see Table 4-1 in the Approved Plant List, Division
7 of this Article 3) and street trees in the DT district must be a minimum of three inches in caliper (measured twelve inches above the ground) and seven feet in planted height at time of installation. Small ornamental trees (see Table 4-2 in the Approved Plant List, Division
7 of this Article 3) must be a minimum of one and one-half inch in caliper (measured six inches above the ground) and five feet in planted height at time of installation.
(D) Shrub
Size at Installation and Coverage at Maturity.
Shrubs
that are not of a “dwarf” variety must be a minimum of
two feet in planted height at time of installation. Hedges or shrub
massings, where installed for screening purposes, must be planted
and maintained so as to form a continuous, unbroken, solid visual
screen that will be at least six feet high within three years following
installation (except for parking lot headlight screens, which must
form a continuous, solid visual screen at least three feet high within
two years following installation). Shrubs that are of a “dwarf”
or “miniature” variety must be a minimum of one foot in
planted height at time of installation unless that particular variety
and size of shrub is typically less than one foot in planted height
in North Central Texas.
(E) Vines.
Vines must be a minimum of two feet in height (vine length)
upon installation, and may be used in conjunction with decorative
fences, screens, or walls to meet landscape screening requirements
if approved by the Planning Director as part of the review of screening
and landscaping plans.
(F) Turf
Areas.
Proposed turf areas for new developments, and for the redevelopment of a property that is subject to this Article (see Section
4.29), must be sodded, plugged, sprigged, hydro-mulched, or seeded, except that solid sod Bermuda turf grass (or other good coverage evergreen groundcover, if approved by the Planning Director as part of the review of screening and landscaping plans) must be used in all street and alley rights-of-way, in drainage swales, on earthen berms, and in other areas that may be subject to erosion or will likely be subject to high foot traffic. The requirement to use solid sod is limited to those areas where the surface soil is disturbed during the development (or redevelopment) of the property, and does not apply in the case of a single-family residence where the soil surface is not disturbed in the street right-of-way.
(G) Turf
and Groundcover Coverage.
Turf and groundcover areas
must be planted in a manner that presents a finished appearance and
reasonably complete coverage within one year following installation.
(H) Irrigation
Required.
Required landscaped areas must be equipped
with, and 100% covered by, an automatic, underground irrigation system
that is continually on and in good working order so as to provide
this coverage, and with freeze- and moisture-sensors to prevent watering
at inappropriate times. The Planning Director may waive the requirement
for an underground irrigation system and accept an alternative irrigation
system or device if one or more of the following apply to a development
site:
(1) If
attractive and hardy, pest-resistant, and disease-resistant xeriscape
planting materials are utilized (these techniques are encouraged by
the City, if designed and sufficiently maintained); or
(2) If
the amount of landscaped area and materials is very limited and the
landscaped area is located further than two hundred feet from a water
source or meter.
(I) Irrigation
Water Conservation.
Irrigation facilities within medians
or adjacent to curbs must be designed and installed with low gallonage
and low angle nozzles (or using a subsurface tubing system provided
that the system provides even watering and full coverage) to prevent
water overflow into the street. Freeze- and moisture-sensors must
be used with each controller to prevent irrigation systems from activating
during freezing weather (creating unsafe spillage and ice on roads
and sidewalks) and during other impractical times, such as rainy periods.
(J) Irrigation
Design.
Irrigation devices must not be visible from public
streets or walkways (except for underground irrigation systems whose
sprinkler heads are designed to “pop up” during use and
retract when finished). Underground systems that are designed to irrigate
portions of public right-of-way and street parkways (such as, the
area between sidewalks and the street curb) must designed so that
main irrigation water lines are at least three feet away from the
street curb (where practical, single sprinkler head serving lateral
lines must “T” out from the main line toward the street
curb – this minimizes damage to the irrigation system if a vehicle
jumps the curb into the parkway area).
(K) Landscape
Area Protection and Viability.
Landscaping (including
xeriscape landscaping) areas, within or adjacent to parking areas,
must be protected by a six-inch monolithic concrete curb (or by wheel
stops, perforated curbing, or other appropriate protection device,
if approved by the Planning Director as part of the review of screening
and landscaping plans, as a means to allow paved areas to drain into
landscaped areas for stormwater management purposes). All landscaping
areas must be maintained in a healthy, living, growing, and thriving
condition. All landscaped and open space areas, including parking
lots, must be kept free of trash, litter, and other similar debris.
(L) Berms.
Earthen berms must have side slopes not to exceed thirty-three
and one-third percent (3:1 slope; three feet of horizontal distance
for each one foot of vertical height). Berms must be completely covered
with evergreen vegetation to prevent erosion, and must include any
other necessary drainage or erosion prevention measures as may be
reasonably required by the Director of Engineering.
(M) Protection
of Preserved Trees.
Existing trees that must be preserved pursuant to Chapter
4, Article 4 of this GDC, must have an undisturbed, permeable surface area under (and extending outward to) the existing drip line of the tree. New trees must have a permeable surface area under the drip line that is a minimum diameter of five feet around the trunk of the tree. No paving or impervious surface material may be placed closer than five feet from the trunk of any tree (unless approved by the Planning Director as part of the review of screening and landscaping plans, and provided that appropriate root barriers or other root containment techniques are used to prevent long-term damage to paving, particularly sidewalks, by root growth and spreading).
(N) Trees
Near Rights-of-Way and Utility Easements.
Planting trees
closer than four feet to a street or alley right-of-way line (except
in the mixed-use districts) is prohibited (unless no other alternative
is available, as determined by the Planning Director). Planting trees
closer than eight feet to a public utility line (water or sewer) is
also prohibited (unless no other alternative is available, as determined
by the Planning Director). Further, a landscaping area in which trees
are to be provided must not conflict with a utility easement (unless
no other alternative is available, as determined by the Planning Director).
The degree of landscape buffer and utility easement overlap must be
minimized, and plant materials must be placed so as to not conflict
with utility lines, facilities or easements.
(O) Tree
Clearance Heights.
Trees must be maintained by the property
owner (or by the immediately adjacent property owner where trees are
located within public right-of-way) to sufficiently allow a clear
height of at least eight feet over sidewalks and other pedestrian
pathways, and a clear height of at least fourteen feet over streets,
drive aisles, and other vehicular traffic ways.
(P) Landscape
Installation and Maintenance.
(1) Trees and landscape materials that are planted pursuant to this Article 3 (from the City’s Approved Plant List, Division
7 of this Article 3) must be installed in accordance with professional installation standards.
(2) The
property owner must sufficiently maintain trees and landscape materials
so that they remain in a health, living, growing, and thriving condition.
(3) Property
owners may be require to replace trees and landscape materials that
are not healthy or which have died.
(4) Irrigation
Systems.
(a) All irrigation systems must be maintained and kept fully operable.
(b) Any leaks in the irrigation system, whether above or below ground,
must be promptly repaired.
(c) Irrigation systems must have freeze and moisture sensors.
(d) Irrigation systems must be calibrated and set to provide periodic
watering in an amount sufficient to maintain all trees and landscape
materials.
(Q) Trees
Under Overhead Utility Lines and Near Easements.
Only
small ornamental trees, shrubs, and groundcovers (no large canopy
trees) are permitted within ten feet of existing or proposed overhead
utility lines or within any water, wastewater, storm drainage, or
utility easement (unless an alternative is approved by the Director
of Engineering and by the Planning Director on the screening and landscaping
plan review).
(R) Driveways
Through Landscaped Areas.
Paving, other than on an approved
driveway, is prohibited in required landscaped areas.
(S) Variety
of Species Required.
In order to achieve a variety of landscape materials and color throughout the seasons, selected plant materials (including trees) used to meet the requirements of this Article 3 must not include more than fifty percent of any single tree or shrub species from the Approved Plant List (Division
7 of this Article 3).
(Ordinance 6773 adopted 5/19/15; Ordinance 7107, sec. 63, adopted 12/3/19)
Nonresidential, multifamily, and senior living developments
must comply with the following site and perimeter landscaping provisions:
(A) Total
Landscape Area Requirement.
Landscape materials must cover a minimum of ten percent of the total site area, except as provided below in this Section
4.34 for multifamily and senior living developments. The ground must be completely covered with grass or other vegetation to count towards meeting this landscape area requirement. Required landscape buffers and internal landscaping areas shall count towards meeting the total landscape area requirement.
Multifamily, Senior Living, and Related Developments. A minimum of forty percent of the gross platted area of the site
of any multifamily or senior living facility must be devoted to landscaping,
open space areas, pools, and similar outdoor recreational activity
areas.
(B) Landscape
Buffers.
The landscape buffers of nonresidential, multifamily,
or senior living developments must comply with the following provisions:
(1) Adjacent
to Major Thoroughfares.
(a) A landscape buffer, twenty feet in depth (from the property line),
is required in nonresidential yards adjacent to any thoroughfare designated
as AA or larger on the City’s adopted Major Thoroughfare
Plan.
(b) A landscape buffer, fifteen feet in depth (from the property line)
is required in nonresidential yards adjacent to Type A through D thoroughfares,
as designated on the City’s adopted Major Thoroughfare
Plan.
(c) Each of the above buffers may be reduced up to five feet in depth if plant materials within the buffer area are provided at a rate of one and one-half times the minimum requirements as defined in Subsection
4.34(B)(3) below.
(2) Adjacent
to All Other Public Streets.
A landscape buffer that
is ten feet in depth (from the property line), is required in yards
adjacent to public streets, other than major thoroughfares. The buffer
may be decreased from ten feet to eight feet provided that at least
one and one-half times the minimum required buffer plant materials
are provided.
(3) Buffer
Plant Materials.
Trees may be grouped or clustered to facilitate site design. The City encourages staggered or non-linear placement of plant material in the landscape buffer. Plant material in required landscape buffers must comply with the following provisions in this Subsection
(3) and in Section
4.33:
(a) Adjacent to Major Thoroughfares (Type AA through D).
For every thirty lineal feet, or fraction thereof, of required landscape
buffer, one large canopy tree is required, along with seven shrubs
or ornamental grasses.
(b) Adjacent to All Other Public Streets.
For every thirty
lineal feet, or fraction thereof, of required landscape buffer, one
large canopy tree is required.
(c) Groundcover.
Turf (grass) must provide a maximum of seventy-five percent of coverage within the landscape buffer. The remaining twenty-five percent of groundcover must be selected from a species listed in Table 4-5 in Division
7 of this Article 3. This groundcover must be arranged in a curvilinear fashion throughout the landscape buffer.
(d) Substitutions.
For property having less than one hundred
and twenty feet of street frontage, up to forty percent of the required
number of large canopy trees within the buffers may be replaced. For
property having one hundred and twenty feet or more street frontage,
up to twenty-five percent of the required number of large canopy trees
within buffers may be replaced by small ornamental trees, at a rate
of three small ornamental trees for each large canopy tree. Substituted
vegetation must be placed in a clustered, non-linear design.
(4) Buffer
in Relation to Sidewalks & Easements.
Landscape buffers
must remain free and clear of permanent objects with the exception
of pedestrian elements (such as, sidewalks or benches), existing utility
poles or structures, and freestanding signs. Further, landscape buffers
must comply with the following provisions:
(a) The depth of the required landscape buffer (from the property line) may include placement of sidewalks, as required in Chapter
3, Article 5, Division
13 of this GDC, so long as the width of the larger portion of the buffer bifurcated by the sidewalk is a minimum of six feet to allow for adequate space for required plant material, and the required depth of the landscape buffer is provided in addition to the required sidewalk (see Illustration 4-1); and
(b) Where an easement, either pedestrian or utility, is required pursuant to Chapter
3, Sections 33.93(C) or 3.72(B)(1) of this GDC, the easement is permitted to overlap the required landscape buffer, so long as the required depth (from the property line) of the landscape buffer is provided. Where a landscape buffer and easement overlap, there must be a minimum depth of six feet of landscaped area that is not within the easement area to allow adequate space for plant material, while avoiding future conflict between installation, service or repair of utilities and plant materials. Every reasonable effort must be made to avoid the placement of plantings within the buffer-easement overlap area that may interfere with utilities. The Director of Engineering shall make the determination as to whether plantings may interfere with the use of the easement.
Illustration 4-1 Landscape Buffer in Relation to the Pedestrian
& Utility Easement and Sidewalk
(two scenarios)
|
(Ordinance 6773 adopted 5/19/15; Ordinance 7107, sec. 64, adopted 12/3/19)
Nonresidential, multifamily, and senior living developments
must comply with the following parking area landscaping provisions:
(A) General.
Landscaped areas must generally be dispersed throughout parking
areas, located to define parking areas, assist in clarifying appropriate
traffic circulation patterns, and comply with the following provisions,
where applicable:
(1) Living
landscape materials must cover a minimum of five percent of the total
parking lot area.
(2) Persons
owning parking lots that are only one bay wide, or that are only two
bays with a single central drive aisle, may place the required parking
area landscaping along the perimeter of the parking lot. However,
any perimeter landscaped area used to satisfy the parking area landscaping
requirement may not be counted toward meeting other landscape requirements
or located in other landscaped buffer areas, and the perimeter landscape
area must be a minimum of seven feet wide where there is a two-foot
bumper overhang, or five feet wide where there is no bumper overhang.
(B) Specific
Regulations.
(1) A landscaped island must be located at the terminus of each parking row, and must contain a minimum of one large canopy tree, except as otherwise provided for automobile sales establishments in Subsection
(7) below.
(2) Subject to above Section
4.35(A), landscaped islands must be a minimum of six feet by eighteen feet, or one hundred and eight square feet, in order to provide adequate permeable area for large tree root growth and for maintenance of landscaping.
(3) There must be a minimum of one large canopy tree within sixty-five feet of every parking space, except as provided for automobile sales establishments in Subsection
(7) below.
(4) One
large canopy tree is required for every ten parking spaces.
(5) Up to thirty-five percent of the required large canopy trees may be substituted with small ornamental trees in accordance with Subsection
4.34(B)(3)(d). Small ornamental trees must be clustered in groups of three or more to provide a continuous canopy.
(6) Design of parking areas to direct stormwater runoff to landscaped areas is highly encouraged. Innovative designs (such as, punctured or discontinuous curbing around parking lots draining to landscaped areas) can be approved using the alternative compliance process (see Article 1, Division
2 in this Chapter
4) or using the City’s sustainable stormwater practices procedures (see Chapter
3, Article 5, Division
1 in this GDC).
(7) For automobile sales operations (new or used), the required interior parking lot islands and trees, as required in Section
4.35(B)(1) and Section
4.35(B)(3) above, may be clustered together on larger and fewer islands provided that the islands are placed and generally distributed within the portions of parking lots that are located between the building(s) and a street right-of-way line.
(Ordinance 6773 adopted 5/19/15)
The landscaping and tree planting requirements for the UR, UB, and DT mixed-use districts are the same as the Downtown district (DT), and provided for in the Form-Based Code (see Chapter
7 in this GDC). All other general provisions for landscaping and screening in this Article 3, including plan submission and approval (Division
2), installation and maintenance (Division
3), landscaping standards (Section
4.33), screening requirements (Division
5), approved plant materials (Division
7), tree credits (Division
8), and approval of alternatives (Division
9) apply within the mixed-use districts, unless otherwise approved during the establishment of a mixed-use district, or during the development review process.
(Ordinance 6773 adopted 5/19/15)
Landscaping within residential districts must comply with the
following provisions, as applicable:
(A) Single-Family
Detached & Duplex Lots.
(1) Two
large canopy trees are required on all single-family detached and
duplex residential lots and at least one of which must be located
within the front yard. Two large canopy trees are required within
the front yard of all duplex lots (that is, one tree within the front
yard of each dwelling unit).
(2) Single-family
detached and duplex yards adjacent to streets must be planted with
a solid covering of turf. An approved means of soil erosion control
in the rear or side yards is also required.
(B) Townhouse
Developments.
Townhouse developments must comply with
the following provisions:
(1) At least one tree is required for each townhouse unit and must be placed either on that lot or within fifty feet of that unit. For each townhouse structure, at least fifty percent of the required trees must be large canopy trees. The remainder of the required trees may be small ornamental trees. Trees required in this Subsection are separate from, and in addition to, the common area tree requirement described in Subsection
(2) below.
(2) At
least one tree is required for every two thousand five hundred square
feet of townhouse common areas not covered by a building or other
impervious amenity. At least fifty percent of the required trees must
be large canopy trees (that is, a minimum three-inch caliper upon
planting). The remainder of the required trees may be small ornamental
trees.
(3) Required trees must be selected from the Approved Plant List (for each respective tree type) in Division
7 of this Article 3 (see Table 4-1 and Table 4-2).
(Ordinance 6773 adopted 5/19/15)
Trees, ornamental grasses, shrubs, and groundcover are required
around the perimeter of a detention and retention pond, located within
one hundred feet of a Type D or larger thoroughfare, as shown on the
City’s adopted Major Thoroughfare Plan, to
minimize the visual impact as viewed from the street. Based on a site
evaluation, the Planning Director may waive the requirement to screen
detention and retention ponds.
(Ordinance 6773 adopted 5/19/15)