[Added 12-19-1989]
No preliminary or final site plan application
shall be accepted and no preliminary or final site plan approval shall
be granted where the Building Inspector has found a violation of this
chapter and where such violation has not been corrected.
The Planning Board shall not approve a duly
submitted preliminary or final site plan, unless it shall find that
such plan conforms to the requirements of this chapter. In reviewing
the site plan, the Planning Board shall also take into consideration
the public health, safety and general welfare and shall set appropriate
conditions and safeguards which are in harmony with the general purpose
and intent of these regulations, particularly in regard to achieving
the following:
A. An adequate, convenient and safe vehicular and pedestrian
circulation system, so that traffic generated by the development will
be properly handled both within the site and in relation to the adjoining
street system.
B. A site layout that will have the minimum adverse effect
upon the established character or potential use of any adjoining properties.
C. The reasonable screening at all seasons of the year
from the view of adjacent residential properties and streets of all
parking and loading areas or other features that, in the opinion of
the Planning Board, require such screening.
D. A drainage system which, to the satisfaction of the
Town Engineer, is designed to accommodate expected loads from the
tributary watershed when developed to the maximum density permitted
under the existing zoning standards.
E. The underground installation of all utilities and
services, including lines and equipment, for providing power and/or
communication, in order to achieve greater safety and improved appearance.
F. Conformance of the final site development with the
Town Development Plan.
G. Consideration of the project's impact on the natural
and man-made environment, with emphasis on minimizing the adverse
effects thereon.
H. A plan which takes advantage of solar access. Wherever
reasonably feasible, all future buildings shall be sited so that they
may take advantage of solar access. Factors to be considered in this
regard shall include the orientation of the proposed building with
respect to sun angles, the shading and windscreen potential of existing
and proposed vegetation, both on and off the site, and the impact
on solar access of existing and potential buildings off the site.
I. The site
plan shall be designed so that the created landscape is harmonious
with the natural features of the site.
[Added 7-14-2009 by L.L. No. 5-2009]
J. The relationships
of improved areas and open spaces are designed to be harmonious with
existing structures, terrain and landscape.
[Added 7-14-2009 by L.L. No. 5-2009]
K. Reasonable
provisions are made for sight and sound buffers, the preservation
of views, light and air, and those aspects of structure, improvement
and land design not otherwise regulated that may have substantial
effects on neighboring land uses.
[Added 7-14-2009 by L.L. No. 5-2009; amended 5-17-2011 by L.L. No.
4-2011]
L. New designs
of structures, improvements and land are consistent and harmonious
in relationship to existing streetscapes and the predominant architecture
of the area.
[Added 7-14-2009 by L.L. No. 5-2009]
M. All outdoor lighting meets the standards of Chapter
125, §
125-41, in addition to the following standards:
[Added 5-17-2011 by L.L. No. 4-2011]
(1) All
exterior lighting fixtures shall protect adjacent properties from
glare and light trespass.
(2) Photometric
studies for parking lots, sidewalks and other walkways shall include
light contributions from nearby side-mounted building lights, freestanding
sidewalk lights and streetlights.
(3) All
exterior luminaires, including luminaires installed under canopies,
shall be full cutoff fixtures, as defined by the IESNA.
(4) Exterior
lighting fixtures shall be equipped with a lamp or lamps of a total
not to exceed 1,800 lumens per fixture and, to the extent possible,
be full cutoff lighting.
(5) Automatic
teller machine (ATM) and other bank lighting shall be full cutoff
and shall not cause glare or light trespass. Light levels shall not
exceed the minimum standards under the New York State ATM Lighting
Law, as may be amended from time to time.
(6) Illumination
levels shall not exceed the recommendations of the IESNA RP-33-99
Lighting for Exterior Environments by more than 10%.
(7) The
Planning Board may require operable photocells, motion sensors, or
timers that allow a light to go on at dusk and off by an appropriate
evening hour, as well as shields to alleviate nuisance and disability
glare.
(8) The
Planning Board may require reflector markers, lines, signs or other
passive means for illumination be used in order to avoid excessive
or unnecessary light.
(9) The
Planning Board may require parking area lights to be greater in number,
lower in pole height and lower in light level, as opposed to fewer
in number, higher in pole height and higher in light level in order
to avoid excessive or unnecessary light.
(10) The Planning Board may require the use of bollard lighting rather
than pole lighting.
Where required by the New York State Environmental
Quality Review Law (SEQR), additional information concerning the environmental
impact of the proposed development may be required as a part of the
preliminary and/or final site plan application.
Where, due to special conditions peculiar to
a site or to the size, nature or complexity of the proposed use or
development of land or buildings, the Planning Board finds that additional
data is necessary for the proper review of the site plan, the Board
may require any or all of such data to be included in the required
submission of said plan.
[Amended 10-5-1992]
Upon a finding by the Planning Board that, because
of the particular character or limited nature of a new development
or change in use or special conditions peculiar to a site, the submission
of a preliminary and/or final site plan or of certain portions of
the information normally required as part of the site plan is inappropriate
or unnecessary or that strict compliance with said informational requirements
will cause extraordinary and unnecessary hardship, the Planning Board
may vary or waive such submission wherever, in the opinion of the
Board, such waiver will not be detrimental to the public health, safety
or general welfare. No such waiver shall be granted unless and until
all amounts due to the Town as real estate taxes and special assessments
on the subject property, together with all penalties and interest
thereon, shall have been paid.
[Added 6-14-1983]
The Town Engineer shall supervise site plan
compliance and shall receive a site plan inspection fee. The Town
Engineer may, on approval of the Town Board, hire additional staff
to assist in the supervision of site plans.
[Amended 6-14-1983]
Approval of any final site plan shall expire
unless a building permit or certificate of occupancy or certificate
of compliance is applied for within a period of 18 months from the
date of the signing of the final site plan by the Planning Board,
except where the staging of development over a longer period has been
specifically provided for at the time of site plan approval. The Planning
Board may extend the site plan approval for not more than two six-month
periods.
[Amended 6-14-1983]
Fees for preliminary and final site plan approval
and for site plan inspection are listed in the fee schedule as adopted
by the Town Board.