As used in this chapter, the following terms shall have the meanings indicated:
Any person having any legal interest in the subject property.
The Planning Board of the Incorporated Village of Great Neck.
The duly designated Clerk of the Board.
The date of the receipt of the plat by the Village.
The plan or any part or parts thereof adopted pursuant to Article 6A of the Village Law of the State of New York.[1]
Planning Board Forms.
The final map showing the subdivider's plan of subdivision to be submitted to the Board for approval and which, if approved, will be duly filed, by the applicant, with the County Clerk.
The preliminary map prepared by a licensed land surveyor, showing the proposed subdivision layout to be presented to the Board for its consideration.
Any paper print which reproduces, legibly and exactly, the original tracing from which it was made.
MAJOR STREETOne which provides or is officially planned to provide six or more lanes for vehicular traffic.
SECONDARY OR FEEDER STREETOne intended to serve as a link or connection from a major street to a minor residential street or streets. A street upon which multiple dwellings, constructed for occupancy by more than two families, or business buildings, under the applicable zoning ordinance, are permitted to front shall be considered a secondary street unless it is a major street as defined by Subsection A above.
MINOR RESIDENTIAL STREETOne intended to serve and primarily for the use of the occupants of the residences fronting thereon.
SERVICE STREET or MARGINAL STREETOne adjacent to a major street and separated from same by a landscaped strip having a minimum width of four feet.
CUL-DE-SACA dead-end street terminating in a vehicular turnaround. A cul-de-sac shall be considered a minor residential street.
[1]
Editor's Note: This is now covered under § 7-700 of the Village Law.