(A) Purpose.
It is the purpose of this Article 6 to provide regulations which
ensure that buildings and structures in Garland are appropriately
designed to create an aesthetically pleasing, quality environment.
(B) Applicability.
(1) The
requirements contained within this Article 6 are minimum standards
and apply to all new residential and nonresidential buildings and
structures, as specified, within the City of Garland.
(3)
Existing buildings and sites that are being expanded or redeveloped may be eligible to request exterior construction alternatives through the alternative compliance process as set forth in Section
4.85 of this Article 6, and in Article 1, Division
2 of this Chapter
4.
(C) Allowable
materials.
Buildings may be constructed of any material
approved for a given usage in a Relevant Model Code.
(Ordinance 6773 adopted 5/19/15; Ordinance 7079, sec. 39, adopted 8/20/19)
(A) Architectural
Elements.
(1) All
nonresidential and multifamily buildings must incorporate design elements
that create character or reflect regional architecture by including
at least six of the following elements (for which photos and examples
are provided below the list):
(h) Ornamental window headers/lintels;
(j) Distinctive lighting features;
(l) Benches for outdoor seating;
(B) Facade
Articulation.
(1) Horizontal
building articulation (facade depth) and vertical building articulation
(facade height) is required on all street-facing facades of all nonresidential
and multifamily buildings in the manner and in conformity with the
standards provided in Illustration 4-7.
(2) Facade
offsets must be shown, along with calculations verifying that the
building elevations meet the above requirements, on a building Facade
(elevation) Plan. The building Facade Plan must be submitted for review
at the time of the initial development application along with the
building elevations.
(3) Canopies,
arches, and covered colonnades count toward applicable facade depth
or height articulation requirements.
(4) Visual
examples of acceptable facade articulation are provided in the photos
which are provided below.
(C) Parking
Structures.
(1) All
above-grade parking structures must be designed to blend in with the
architectural style of the main building(s), and must incorporate
at least two of the following design elements:
(a) Distinctive architectural elements such as cornices, piers, columns, friezes, quoins, mullions, fenestration, pilasters, rustication, or accentuating belt courses. Examples of such distinctive architectural elements may be found in Illustration 2-8 in Chapter
2 of this GDC;
(b) Variation in wall planes such as wall openings, canopies, articulations, wall convexities, wall concavities, balconies, or awnings. Examples of such variation in wall planes may be found in Illustration 2-8 in Chapter
2 of this GDC; and
(c) Change in materials. Such a change must involve a minimum of two
separate, compatible materials, excluding glazing. Each area covered
by the separate material must cover at least twenty percent of each
facade’s surface area, excluding glazing.
(d) Change in colors. Such a change must involve a minimum of two, compatible
color changes, excluding glazing. Each area covered by the color change
must cover at least twenty percent of each facade’s surface
area, excluding glazing.
(2) All
above-grade parking structures must be designed with a distinguishable
first floor, upper facades, and roofs. Parking garage first floors
must be designed at human scale with pedestrian-scale elements such
as awnings, canopies, window breaks, and door openings.
(3) Above-grade
parking garages may be designed using decorative metal elements such
as ornate meshes, screens, and the like, but must not be allowed to
have non-decorative steel guard cables that are visible to the public
or to adjacent properties.
(D) Windows.
Highly reflective mirror glass may not be installed as an exterior
building material on any building or structure unless the installation
is done in such a manner as to ensure that the material will not reflect
light upon any other real property (whether public or privately owned),
building, or structure. However, in order to encourage energy efficiency,
the use of tinted or inward facing mirrored glass is allowed and encouraged.
Illustration 4-7 Horizontal and Vertical Building Articulation
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Illustration 4-7 cont’d. Horizontal and Vertical
Building Articulation (how to measure 30' increments)
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Examples of Acceptable Facade Articulation
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(E) Canopies.
All canopies that are intended to shelter vehicles or vehicular
traffic such as a building’s porte cochere, a bank’s drive-through
canopy, or a fuel station canopy, must have support columns constructed
with the same type of masonry construction material used on the main
building(s) facades, if any, or otherwise are in a manner architecturally
compatible with the main building’s facade.
(Ordinance 6773 adopted 5/19/15; Ordinance 7079, sec. 40, adopted 8/20/19; Ordinance 7107, sec. 78, adopted 12/3/19; Ordinance 7404 adopted 2/21/2023)
(A) Design
Standards.
(1) Required
Standards.
All single-family, two-family, and townhouse residential structures must be designed in accordance with the following design standards, unless otherwise approved as Planned Development (PD) zoning or pursuant to Subsection
4.85 of this Article 6.
(2) Garages.
(a) The face of a garage door must be at least twenty feet from the street
or alley right-of-way line that the garage door faces (twenty-four
feet if facing an interior lot/property line), and must have at least
one of the following designs, as depicted in Illustrations 4-9 through
4-13:
ii. “J” drives, for front entry properties;
iii. “Swing” drives, for side entry properties; or
iv. Offset front entry with the garage door set back at least five feet
behind the front building face.
(3) Architectural
Requirements.
Each dwelling unit must be designed and
built in accordance with the following minimum criteria:
(a) Architectural Relief.
No facade of a dwelling unit facing
a public street or any portion of an interior side or rear facade
above the first story of a dwelling unit may contain a flat, unarticulated
or uninterrupted wall length of greater than twenty percent of the
horizontal length of the facade. Any such facade section must contain
an offset of at least two or more feet. Illustrations 4-14 and 4-15
below are examples of dwelling units which do not meet this standard
and which would be unacceptable.
(b) Minimum Number of Elevations.
The front building elevation
of a dwelling must not be duplicated on the three adjacent houses
on both sides, or on the four houses directly across the street. This
requirement may be waived by the Building Official if the building
materials and the architectural elements, such as windows, dormers,
facade offsets, or overhangs, of a home are significant enough to
make the front facade of the home look substantially different from
its neighboring structures.
(c) Minimum Number of Design Elements.
A minimum of three
of the following elements, as depicted in Illustrations 4-16 and 4-17,
must be incorporated into the design of each dwelling unit:
i. Multiple pane windows featuring either divided light or simulated
divided light;
ii. A front porch area enclosed by a railing at least thirty inches in
height, and containing decorative columns at least six inches in diameter;
v. Bay windows with a minimum projection of twenty-four inches;
vii. Split garage doors with a separate door for each vehicle bay; or
viii.
Front covered porch with at least forty square feet of usable
space, and a minimum depth of five feet.
(d) Walls & Windows.
Windows and doors must comprise
at least twenty-five percent of the wall area of the front building
face of a dwelling.
(e) Roof Design.
i. A roof pitch of at least 6:12 is required for each dwelling unit.
ii. Each dwelling unit must be constructed with a roof overhang of not
less than eighteen inches, as measured from the finished exterior
building facade to the soffit.
(4) Carports.
Carports must meet the building materials and design requirements contained in Section
2.59 in Chapter
2 of this GDC.
(5) Exemptions.
The following are exempt from the architectural requirements
of this Section:
(a) Residential Accessory Buildings, as may be provided in Article 5, Division
4 of Chapter
2 of this GDC; and
(b) Temporary buildings, but only if approved during the alternative compliance review process as set forth in Section
4.85 of this Article 6, or in Article 1, Division
2 of this Chapter
4.
Illustration 4-9 Rear Entry
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Illustration 4-10 “J” Drive
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Illustration 4-11 “Swing” Drive
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Illustration 4-12 “J” Drive
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Illustration 4-13 Offset Front Entry
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(Ordinance 6773 adopted 5/19/15; Ordinance 7079, sec. 41, adopted 8/20/19; Ordinance 7107, sec. 79, adopted 12/3/19)
Unless stated otherwise in this GDC, a building may use a material
approved by the applicable Relevant Model Code for a given application.
(Ordinance 6773 adopted 5/19/15; Ordinance 7079, sec. 42, adopted 8/20/19)