The following rules are necessary to reduce
the adverse effects of overcrowding and poorly planned shoreline and
bluff area development, to prevent pollution and contamination of
surface waters and groundwaters and soil erosion, to provide sufficient
space on lots for sanitary facilities, to minimize flood damage, to
maintain property values, and to preserve and maintain the exceptional
scenic, cultural and natural characteristics of the water and related
land of the Lower St. Croix riverway in a manner consistent with the
National Wild and Scenic Rivers Act (P.L. 90-542), the Federal Lower
St. Croix River Act of 1972 (P.L. 92-560) and the Wisconsin Lower
St. Croix River Act (§ 30.27, Wis. Stats.).
Section 30.27 of the Wisconsin Statutes is hereby
adopted by reference. This chapter also incorporates by reference
the Standards for the Lower St. Croix National Scenic Riverway (NR
118). This chapter is intended to supplement the regulation of activities
within the District as provided by NR 118 and shall be administered
in strict conformity with NR 118.
As used in this chapter, the following terms
shall have the meanings indicated:
ACCESSORY STRUCTURE
A subordinate structure, the use of which is incidental to,
and customarily found in connection with, the principal structure
or use of the property. Accessory structures include, but are not
limited to, detached garages, sheds, barns, gazebos, patios, decks
(both detached and attached), swimming pools, hot tubs, fences, retaining
walls, driveways, parking lots, sidewalks, detached stairways, and
lifts.
ACCESSORY USE
A use subordinate to and serving the principal use on the
same lot and customarily incidental thereto.
AGRICULTURE
Beekeeping; livestock grazing; orchards; raising of grain,
grass or seed crops; raising of fruits, nuts or berries; placing land
in federal programs in return for payments in kind; owning land, at
least 35 acres of which is enrolled in the conservation reserve program
under 16 USC 3831 to 3836; and vegetable raising.
ANTENNA
Any device or equipment used for the transmission or reception
of electromagnetic waves, which may include an omnidirectional antenna
(rod), a directional antenna (panel) or a parabolic antenna (disc).
BED-AND-BREAKFAST OPERATION
A place of lodging for transient guests that is the owner's
personal residence, that is occupied by the owner at the time of rental,
and in which the only meal served to guests is breakfast.
BLUFFLINE
A line along the top of the slope preservation zone.
BUILDING LINE
A line measured across the width of a lot at that point where
the principal structure is placed in accordance with setback provisions.
CAMOUFLAGE DESIGN
A wireless communication service facility that is disguised,
hidden or screened, but remains recognizable as a tower or antenna.
COMPLIANT BUILDING LOCATION
An area on a lot where a building could be located in compliance
with all applicable ordinance requirements.
CONDITIONAL USE
A use that is specifically listed in a local zoning ordinance
as either a conditional use or special exception and that may only
be permitted if the local zoning authority determines that the conditions
specified in the ordinance for that use are satisfied.
DEPARTMENT
The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.
DISABLED
Having a physical or mental impairment that substantially
limits one or more major life activities.
EARTH-TONE
Colors that harmonize with the natural surroundings on the
site during leaf-on conditions.
EXPANSION
An addition to an existing structure regardless of whether
the addition is vertical or horizontal or both.
FOOTPRINT
The land area covered by a structure at ground level, measured
on a horizontal plane. The footprint of a residence includes attached
garages and porches, but excludes decks, patios, carports, and roof
overhangs.
FOUNDATION
The underlying base of a building or other structure, including
but not limited to pillars, footings, and concrete and masonry walls.
HISTORIC DISTRICT
An area designated by the Village Board, on recommendation
of the Commission, that contains two or more historic improvements
or sites.
HISTORIC SITE
Any parcel of land of historic significance due to a substantial
value in tracing the history or prehistory of man, or upon which an
historic event has occurred, and which has been designated as an historic
site under this chapter, or an improvement parcel, or part thereof,
on which is situated an historic structure and any abutting improvement
parcel, or part thereof, used as and constituting part of the premises
on which the historic structure is situated.
HISTORIC STRUCTURE
Any improvement which has a special character or special
historic interest or value as part of the development, heritage or
cultural characteristics of Osceola, the state or nation and which
has been designated as an historic structure pursuant to the provisions
of this chapter.
HUMAN HABITATION
The use of a building or other structure for human occupancy,
including but not limited to cooking, eating, bathing, and sleeping.
IMPROVEMENT
Any building, structure, place, work of art or other object
constituting a physical betterment of real property or any part of
such betterment, including streets, alleys, sidewalks, curbs, lighting
fixtures, signs and the like.
LAND DIVISION
Any division of a parcel of land by the owner or the owner's
agent, for the purpose of transfer of ownership or building development,
which creates one or more parcels or building sites of 20 acres or
less.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT
A person who has graduated with a major in landscape architecture
from a college accredited by the American Society of Landscape Architects.
LIFT
A mechanical device, either temporary or permanent, containing
a mobile open-top car including hand or guard rails, a track upon
which the open-top car moves, and a mechanical device to provide power
to the open-top car.
LOCAL ZONING ORDINANCE
Any county, town, city or village zoning ordinance, portion
of an ordinance, or amendments thereto, adopted by a village, with
authority from state enabling legislation, which regulates the use
of land within the Lower St. Croix riverway.
LOT
A contiguous parcel of land with described boundaries.
MANAGEMENT ZONES
The Lower St. Croix riverway management zones established
in NR 118.04.
MITIGATION
Action taken to minimize the adverse impacts of development.
The term "mitigation" includes, but is not limited to, the installation
of vegetative buffers, the removal of nonconforming structures from
the shoreland setback area, and the implementation of best management
practices for erosion control and stormwater management.
NET PROJECT AREA
Developable land area minus slope preservation zones, floodplains,
road rights-of-way and wetlands.
NONCONFORMING STRUCTURE
A building or other structure whose location, dimensions
or other physical characteristics do not conform to the standards
in the current local zoning ordinance but which was legally constructed
or placed in its current location prior to the adoption of the ordinance
or ordinance amendment that made it nonconforming.
NONCONFORMING USE
The use of land, a structure, or other premises that does
not conform to the land use restrictions in the current local zoning
ordinance, but which was legally established prior to the adoption
of the ordinance or ordinance amendment that made it nonconforming.
ORDINARY HIGH WATER MARK
Has been defined by the Wisconsin Supreme Court to mean the
point on the bank or shore up to which the presence and action of
surface water is so continuous as to leave a distinctive mark such
as by erosion, destruction or prevention of terrestrial vegetation,
predominance of aquatic vegetation, or other easily recognized characteristic.
Where the bank or shore at any particular place is of such character
that it is difficult or impossible to ascertain where the point of
ordinary high water mark is, recourse may be had to the opposite bank
of a stream or to other places on the shore of a lake or flowage to
determine whether a given stage of water is above or below the ordinary
high water mark.
ORDINARY MAINTENANCE AND REPAIR
Any work done on a nonconforming structure that does not
constitute expansion, structural alteration, or reconstruction and
does not involve the replacement, alteration, or improvement of any
portion of the structure's foundation.
PLANNED CLUSTER DEVELOPMENT
A pattern of development that places residences into compact
groupings as a means of preserving open space.
PORCH
A building walkway with a roof over it, providing access
to a building entrance.
PRINCIPAL STRUCTURE
The main building or other structure on a lot that is utilized
for the property's principal use. The term "principal structure" includes
attached garages and porches.
REASONABLE ACCOMMODATION
Allowing a disabled person to deviate from the strict requirements
of the county's zoning ordinances if an accommodation is necessary
and reasonable, in order not to unlawfully discriminate against the
disabled person and to allow him or her equal housing opportunity.
RECONSTRUCTION
The replacement of all or substantially all of the components
of a structure other than the foundation.
SELECTION CUTTING
The removal of selected trees throughout the range of merchantable
sizes at regular intervals, either singly or in small groups, leaving
a uniformly distributed stocking of desirable tree and shrub size
classes.
SETBACK
The minimum horizontal distance between a structure and either
the ordinary high water mark or the bluffline.
SHELTERWOOD CUT
A partial removal of mature trees leaving trees of desirable
species and form to provide shade, seed source, and a desirable seedbed
for natural regeneration with the final removal of the overstory after
adequate regeneration is established.
SLOPE PRESERVATION ZONE
The area riverward from the bluffline where the slope towards
the river is 12% or more, as measured horizontally for a distance
of not more than 50 feet or less than 25 feet.
SMALL REGENERATION CUT
A harvest of not more than one-third of the contiguous forested
ownership within a ten-year period with each opening not exceeding
six acres in size and not closer than 75 feet at their closest points.
STEALTH DESIGN
A wireless communication service facility that models or
mimics in size or shape and color something in the surrounding landscape,
such as silos in farm settings and trees in forested lands, and are
unrecognizable year round as an antenna or antenna mount.
STRUCTURAL ALTERATION
The replacement or alteration of one or more of the structural
components of any of a nonconforming structure's exterior walls.
STRUCTURAL COMPONENT
Any part of the framework of a building or other structure.
The structural components of a building's exterior walls include the
vertical studs, top and bottom plates, and window and doorsills and
headers. A structural component may be non-load-bearing, such as the
framework of a wall at the gable end of a one-story house. Wall-coverings,
such as siding on the exterior and dry wall on the interior, are not
included in the definition of structural component.
STRUCTURE
Any man-made object with form, shape and utility, that is
constructed or otherwise erected, attached to or permanently or temporarily
placed, either upon the ground, a riverbed, streambed, or lakebed
or upon another structure. For the purposes of this chapter, the term
"structure" includes swimming pools, hot tubs, patios, decks and retaining
walls, but does not include landscaping or earthwork such as graded
areas, filled areas, ditches, berms, or earthen terraces. The term
"structure" does not include small objects that are easily moved by
hand, such as lawn chairs, portable grills, portable picnic tables,
bird feeders, birdhouses, and birdbaths.
SUBSTANDARD LOT
A lot with dimensions that do not conform to all of the requirements
of the local zoning ordinance.
TRANSMISSION SERVICES
Electric power lines, telephone and telegraph lines, communication
towers, cables, sewage lift stations, sewer and water pipes, and other
pipes, conduits and accessory structures that are used to transport
power, convey information or transport material between two points,
other than wireless communication service facilities.
VISUALLY INCONSPICUOUS
Difficult to see, or not readily noticeable, in summer months
as viewed from at or near the mid-line of the Lower St. Croix River.
WETLAND
Has the meaning found in § 23.32(1), Wis. Stats.
Note: Section 23.32 (1), Wis. Stats., defines
wetland to mean an area where water is at, near, or above the land
surface long enough to be capable of supporting aquatic or hydrophytic
vegetation and which has soils indicative of wet conditions.
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The conditional uses and structures listed in
NR 118.05(2) may be permitted if the requirements in NR 118.06 and
the following standards are met:
A. Land divisions. A conditional use permit may be granted
to divide property into lots if all of the following conditions are
met:
(1) All lots proposed to be built on shall meet the minimum
lot size requirements in NR 118.06(1)(a) and (c), and shall be suitable
for residential development in their existing condition without the
need for a variance.
(2) All lots are suitable for their proposed use and will
not be subject to the potential for flooding, inadequate drainage,
severe erosion, inadequate water supply, or inadequate sewage disposal
capabilities.
(3) Use of the lots will not be limited by unfavorable
soil and rock formations, unfavorable topography, or any other feature
which is likely to result in harm to the health, safety, or welfare
of future residents of the lots or of the local community.
(4) The local zoning authority shall consult with the
state historical society concerning potential impacts to archeological
sites. If the property is found to contain an archeological site,
the Village and the applicant shall develop and implement a plan to
avoid or mitigate impacts to the archeological site with the assistance
from the state historical society.
B. Planned cluster unit developments. A conditional use
permit may be issued for a planned cluster development for single-family
residences if all of the following criteria are met:
(1) The proposed clustering provides a better means of
preserving scenic views, open space, and shoreline than a traditional
single-family residential subdivision.
(2) The proposed structures comply with the minimum ordinary
high water mark and bluffline setbacks and height standards in NR
118.06(1).
(3) Exceptions to the standards in NR 118.06(1)(a) and
(c) may be allowed for planned cluster developments, provided that
the total number of single-family residences may not exceed 50% more
than the total number of single-family residences allowed if the development
complied with all standards in NR 118.06(1)(a) and (c).
(4) On any lots that abut the river, all of the standards
in NR 118.06(1) shall be met.
(5) If lands are divided, the land division meets the requirements of Subsection
B(1).
C. Transmission services. A conditional use permit may
be issued for the construction, updating, maintenance, or reconstruction
of transmission services if all of the following conditions are met:
(1) All new, updated, or reconstructed transmission services
shall be placed underground, if underground placement is determined
to be technically feasible by the Village. If an applicant seeks to
establish that underground placement is technically infeasible, the
application shall explain what factors make it infeasible.
(2) If underground placement is determined to be technically
infeasible, overhead or aboveground transmission services may be permitted,
but shall be designed to minimize the adverse visual impact on the
scenic character of the riverway.
(3) New, updated or reconstructed transmission services
shall be constructed and maintained using minimally invasive techniques
for construction and maintenance, including erosion control. Existing
transmission facilities shall be maintained using minimally invasive
techniques for maintenance, including erosion control.
(4) Cutting or clearing of vegetation for transmission
service maintenance may be conducted; however, an understory layer
of vegetation shall be maintained to prevent erosion and allow succession.
Vegetation management shall protect the quality and diversity of the
plant community and prevent erosion. Herbicide use shall be limited
to direct topical application to cut stems to prevent regrowth. The
pruning of normal tree growth for safety reasons or to prevent interference
with the transmission service and removal of noxious weeds is allowed.
D. Wireless communication service facilities. A conditional
use permit may be issued for the installation, reconstruction, modification,
and replacement of wireless communication service facilities if all
of the following criteria are met:
(1) Construction and maintenance shall be conducted using
techniques which minimize the cutting or pruning of vegetation in
order to preserve mature vegetation and provide screening of the facilities.
Erosion control measures shall be used.
(2) Wireless communication service facilities shall use
building materials, colors, textures, screening and landscaping that
blend the facilities in with surrounding natural features or nearby
structures and shall be visually inconspicuous.
(3) Wireless communication service facilities shall be
of camouflage or stealth design, unless placed on existing structures.
(4) In the River Town and Small Town Historic Management
Zones, the facilities shall be of a height designed to blend in with
the historic character of the community.
(5) Wireless communication service facilities in the Rural
Residential or Conservation Management Zones may not exceed a height
of 50 feet or not more than 20 feet above the tallest structure or
tree canopy within a three-hundred-foot radius of the proposed wireless
communication service facilities as measured horizontally, whichever
is higher.
(6) New or reconstructed wireless communication service
facilities may not be placed in slope preservation zones, floodplains,
or wetlands.
E. Filling and grading activities.
(1) A conditional use permit may be issued for filling and grading activities in the following areas if the conditions in Subsection
E(2) are satisfied:
(a)
In slope preservation zones that do not directly
face the river and do not drain directly to the river.
(b)
Outside of slope preservation zones when more
than 10,000 square feet of land is proposed to be disturbed by filling
or grading activity.
(c)
Within 40 feet of a slope preservation zone.
(2) A conditional use permit may be issued for filling and grading in the areas described in Subsection
E(1) if all of the following conditions are met:
(a)
Filling and grading activities do not disturb
more than 10,000 square feet of land within a slope preservation zone.
(b)
No wetlands are filled or graded.
(c)
Any vegetation that is removed is replaced with
native vegetation.
(d)
Filling and grading activities are designed
and implemented in a manner to minimize erosion, sedimentation, and
impairment of fish and wildlife habitat.
(e)
As part of an erosion control plan, Wisconsin
construction site best management practices are implemented.
F. Structural erosion control measures in slope preservation
zones. A conditional use permit may be issued for the construction,
updating, maintenance, or reconstruction of structural erosion control
measures in slope preservation zones if all of the following conditions
are met:
(1) The local zoning authority determines that structural
erosion control measures are necessary to address significant ongoing
erosion that nonstructural erosion control measures cannot control.
(2) The structural erosion control measure is constructed
of natural materials and is made as visually inconspicuous as possible.
(3) The person seeking to construct the structural erosion
control measure submits a detailed construction plan, an erosion control
plan and a vegetative management plan, showing how the structural
erosion control measure will be constructed, what land-disturbing
activities will take place, what, if any, vegetation will be removed,
and how new native, vegetation will be reestablished. Construction
may not proceed until the local zoning authority has approved the
plans.
G. Docks and piers. Docks and piers may be permitted
if the following standards are met:
(1) Docks and piers associated with riparian residential
developments shall be allowed from May 1 through November 1.
(2) Docks and piers shall only extend into the water the
minimum distance necessary to allow the launching and mooring of watercraft.
(3) Docks and piers shall be parallel to the shoreline
whenever possible.
(4) Docks and piers shall not exceed the resource limitations
of the site.
(5) Docks and piers shall not extend beyond the slow speed
shore zone.
(6) No covered slips or framed canopies shall be constructed.
(7) Docks and piers shall be in earth tones.
(8) Lighting of dock or pier areas is permitted only if
required by federal, state, or local laws or for lighting municipal
facilities in incorporated areas only for health and safety reasons.
(9) All other federal and state requirements related to
the installation of docks and piers on the St. Croix River are met.
H. Stairways. A conditional use permit may be issued
for a stairway if all of the following standards are met:
(1) The stairway is required to provide pedestrian access
to the river because of steep, rocky, unstable, or wet site conditions.
(2) The tread width of the stairway may not exceed 36
inches.
(3) Landings are located at a vertical interval of not
less than 20 feet and may not exceed 40 square feet in area.
(4) Hand rails may be permitted in conjunction with stairways.
(5) Railings or handrails are permitted in conjunction
with stairs and shall be painted or stained the same color as the
stairways.
(6) Canopies and roofs are not allowed on stairways.
(7) Stairways, handrails and landings shall be anchored
and supported above grade with pilings or footings.
(8) Stairways shall be constructed of unfinished wood
or stone, or shall be painted or stained with earth-tone materials.
(9) Stairways shall be visually inconspicuous and shall
be located in the most visually inconspicuous portion of the lot.
(10) Native vegetation plantings shall be used to form
a vegetative canopy to screen the stairway from the river. Vegetation
shall be planted to effectively screen stairs within five years or
the stairs shall be removed.
(11) Existing vegetation may be removed within one foot
of either side of the stairway route and up to eight feet above the
stairway floor.
(12) Only one stairway may be permitted on a lot that abuts
the Lower St. Croix River.
(13) No construction shall begin until the applicant has
submitted a plan for the stairway to the Building Inspector showing
all necessary construction data, including location, design, dimensions,
color, construction materials and other pertinent information. The
plan shall contain a certification by a registered professional engineer
or architect that the stairway components are securely anchored to
prevent them from shifting and from causing accelerated erosion.
I. Lift standards. A conditional use permit may be issued
for a lift on soil face bluffs only if all of the following requirements
are met:
(1) The lift is required to provide pedestrian access
to the river because of steep, rocky, unstable, or wet site conditions.
(2) No lift shall be designated and utilized for the transport
of boats or machinery up or down the bluff face.
(3) The car of the lift may not exceed four feet by six
feet.
(4) Canopies and roofs are not allowed.
(5) All visible parts of the lift shall be painted or
finished in earth-tone, nonreflective materials and shall be visually
inconspicuous
(6) Lifts and their transporting device or power source
shall be visually inconspicuous and shall be located in the most visually
inconspicuous portion of the lot.
(7) Native vegetation plantings shall be used to form
a vegetative canopy to screen the lift from the river. Vegetation
shall be planted to effectively screen the lift within five years
or the lift shall be removed.
(8) Existing vegetation may be removed within one foot
on either side of the lift route and up to eight feet above the lift
floor.
(9) Only one lift may be permitted on a lot that abuts
the Lower St. Croix River.
(10) No construction shall begin on any lift until the
applicant has provided the Building Inspector with a plan showing
all necessary construction data, including the location of the lift,
design, size, color, dimensions, and other pertinent information.
The plan shall contain a certification by a registered professional
engineer or architect that the lift components are securely anchored
to prevent them from shifting and from causing accelerated erosion.
J. Public roads and private roads serving two or more
properties or single-family residences. A conditional use permit may
be issued for the construction, reconstruction, or right-of-way maintenance
for public roads and private roads serving two or more properties
or single-family residences if all of the following conditions are
met:
(1) No new road may be constructed in slope preservation
zones, in an area 40 feet landward of blufflines, within 200 feet
of the river, within 100 feet of tributary watercourses or in wetlands.
(2) Route design and construction or reconstruction shall
minimize visual impacts by using terrain features to blend the road
into the landscape, avoiding cuts and fills as much as feasible.
(3) New roads shall be visually inconspicuous. Reconstruction
of existing roads shall be performed in a manner that does not increase
visibility of the road from the river.
(4) Cutting or clearing vegetation for road right-of-way
maintenance shall be conducted in accordance with the following requirements:
(a)
Vegetation shall be managed to allow an understory
layer to remain in place to prevent erosion and allow succession.
Vegetation may not be disturbed in such a way that there would be
reduced quality or diversity of the plant community or increased potential
for erosion.
(b)
Herbicide use shall be limited to direct topical
application to cut stems to prevent regrowth. The pruning of normal
tree growth for safety reasons or to prevent interference with infrastructure
and the removal of noxious weeds is permitted.
(c)
Mowing of a safety zone from the edge of the
pavement back 15 feet or to the ditch bottom, whichever is less, and
clearing intersection vision triangles is allowed. Other parts of
the right-of-way may be mowed to control noxious weeds and undesirable
brush only after July 15 of each year to avoid impacts to ground-nesting
birds.
(d)
Cutting of trees more than four inches in diameter
at breast height is prohibited, except that trees that pose a hazard
to public health or safety may be removed.
K. Bed-and-breakfast operations. A conditional use permit
may be issued for a bed-and-breakfast operation if all of the following
requirements are met:
(1) The bed-and-breakfast operation provides four or fewer
rooms for rent to transient visitors.
(2) The bed-and-breakfast operation has sufficient parking
spaces on its lot or on public roads for the guests.
L. Home occupations. A conditional use permit may be
issued for the use of a single-family residence for a home occupation
if all of the following requirements are met:
(1) The owner or person who rents the residence on a full-time
basis conducts the home occupation.
(2) The home occupation is conducted inside of the residence
and is subordinate to the use of the home as a principal residence.
(3) The home occupation will not cause environmental pollution.
(4) If the home occupation causes additional persons to
visit the residence, sufficient parking is provided on the lot or
on public streets.
M. Nature-oriented educational, nonprofit facilities.
A conditional use permit may be issued for a nature-oriented educational,
nonprofit facility if all of the following requirements are met:
(1) The facility will not cause environmental pollution
or erosion.
(2) The facility has sufficient parking on its property
or on public streets for patrons to park.
N. Reasonable accommodations for disabled people. Persons who claim to be disabled and who are requesting that they be allowed to take action because of their disability that would otherwise be prohibited under the zoning ordinance may apply for a variance pursuant to the procedures for a variance outlined in §
217-13. In order to allow a disabled person who is entitled to reasonable accommodations under the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Federal Fair Housing Act or the Wisconsin Open Housing Law to take action that would otherwise violate the requirements of a Lower St. Croix River District zoning ordinance, the Village shall issue an administrative permit to the disabled person. The Village may not issue variances to disabled persons unless the statutory variance criteria in § 59.694(7)(c), Wis. Stats., or § 62.23(7)(e)7, Wis. Stats., are satisfied. Any exterior structures that are constructed under an administrative permit must be removed within 90 days after the structures is no longer necessary as a "reasonable accommodation".
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Note: The Americans with Disabilities Act ("ADA"),
42 USC 12101 to 12213, requires states and local units of government
to take action to avoid discriminating against disabled persons in
their employment practices, in public accommodations and in all programs,
activities and services provided by the governmental entity. The Federal
Fair Housing Act, 42 USC 3601 to 3631, and the Wisconsin Open Housing
Law, § 106.50, Wis. Stats., require local governments to
make "reasonable accommodations" in the application of zoning ordinances
in order to provide equal opportunity to housing to disabled persons.
However, the issuance of a variance is not the appropriate mechanism
for granting reasonable accommodations that are required because of
a person's disabilities because, under Wisconsin law, variances can
only be granted based on the unique characteristics of the property.
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The St. Croix River District is intended to
be an overlay district for purposes of interpreting the Village's
Zoning Code. The intent and purpose of the district shall be to protect
and strengthen desirable and unique physical features, design characteristics,
and recognized identity, charm and flavor associated with living within
the Riverway. The primary emphasis is given to the preservation of
existing historic buildings and to ensure that all future erection,
construction, reconstruction, or additions to primary and accessory
structures meet the historic theme architectural standards. The design
of new structures should enhance and contribute to the aesthetic character
and function of the property and the surrounding neighborhood.
Any person violating any provision of this chapter or any rule, regulation or order made hereunder shall be subject to a penalty as provided in §
1-19 of this Code.