The provisions and performance standards set
forth in this article shall apply to all development within the City
as provided in the Schedules of District Regulations and this chapter.
The following provisions and standards shall
be addressed and satisfied in connection with development review and
approval.
No use governed by state and federal air quality
regulations shall emit heat, odor, vibrations, noise or any other
pollutant into the air which exceeds the most stringent requirements
of the applicable state or federal requirements.
A. The length, width and acreage of street blocks shall
be sufficient to accommodate the size lot required in the zone district
in which it is to be located and to provide for convenient access,
circulation control, and traffic study.
B. Blocks over 1,000 feet in length within residential
areas shall be discouraged, but where they are used, pedestrian crosswalks
or bikeways between lots may be required in locations deemed necessary
by the Planning Beard. No block within a residential area shall exceed
1,500 feet in length.
C. Within commercial and industrial areas, block lengths
shall be sufficient to meet area and yard requirements for such uses
and to provide proper street access and circulation.
Whenever buffers or screening are required as
provided by this chapter or as a condition imposed by the Planning
Board or Zoning Board of Adjustment, it shall be installed in accordance
with the following standards and requirements:
A. Buffer areas shall require site plan review and are
required along all lot lines and street lines which separate a nonresidential
use from either an existing residential use or residential zoning
district. Buffer areas shall be developed in an aesthetic manner for
the primary purpose of screening views and reducing noise perception
beyond the lot. No structure, use, activity, storage of materials,
stormwater management facility or parking of vehicles shall be permitted
within a buffer area, except as may be permitted within an individual
zoning district. This provision shall not be construed to prevent
driveways and walkways between the street and the use within the site
or utilities providing service to such use.
[Amended 1-16-2007 by Ord. No. 1-2007]
B. The standards for the location and design of buffer
areas are intended to provide flexibility in order to provide effective
buffers. The location and design of buffers shall consider the use
of the portion of the property being screened, the distance between
the use and the adjoining property line, differences in elevations,
the type of buffer such as dense planting, existing woods, a wall
or fence, buffer height, buffer width, and other combinations of man-made
and natural features. The buffer shall be designed, planted, graded,
landscaped and developed with the general guideline that the closer
a use or activity is to a property line, or the more intense the activity
is to a property line, or the more intense the use, then the more
effective the buffer area must be in obscuring light and vision and
reducing noise beyond the edges of the lot.
[Amended 1-16-2007 by Ord. No. 1-2007]
C. All buffer areas shall be planted and maintained with
either grass or ground cover together with a screen of live shrubs
or scattered plantings of live trees, shrubs, or other plant material
meeting the following standards:
(1) The preservation of all natural wooded tracts shall be an integral part of all site plans and may be calculated as part of the buffer area, provided that the growth is of a density and the area has sufficient width to serve the purpose of a buffer. Where additional plantings are necessary to establish an appropriate tone for an effective buffer, the plantings shall conform to the Subsection
A herein;
(2) Plant material used in screen planting shall be at
least three feet in height when planted and be of such density as
will obscure, throughout the full course of the year, the glare of
vehicle headlights emitted from the premises;
(3) The screen planting shall be so placed that at maturity
it will not be closer than three feet from any street or property
line;
(4) Trees shall be at least eight feet in height and 14
inches in caliper when planted, free of disease and insect pests,
and approved stock as required by the City Shade Tree Commission;
(5) Any plant material which does not live shall be replaced
within one year or one growing season; and
(6) Screen plantings and landscaping shall be broken at
points of vehicle and pedestrian ingress and egress to assure a clear
sight triangle at all street and driveway intersections.
D. Constructed screening shall consist of a masonry wall
or barrier or a uniformly painted fence of one material highly resistant
to weather conditions or decay and at least six feet in height, no
more than eight feet above finished grade at the point of construction.
Such wall, barrier or fence may be opaque or perforated, provided
that not more than 50% of its area is open.
E. Required minimum buffer widths. The minimum buffer
widths shall be determined through the application of the existing
and proposed land uses as indicated in the Required Minimum Buffer
Widths Table. Buffers shall not be required for uses in the B-3 District; however, walls or fences may be required in accordance with Subsection
D at the discretion of the Board of Jurisdiction to meet the purposes of this section.
[Added 1-16-2007 by Ord. No. 1-2007]
F. Relationship of buffers to pervious coverage and open
space. Buffers shall be considered pervious coverage in the determination
of lot coverage. Buffers shall count towards any required open space
percentage, provided they otherwise meet the dimensional standards
for such open space.
[Added 1-16-2007 by Ord. No. 1-2007]
G. Reverse frontage buffer for residential uses. Reverse
frontage screening shall be required where residential units or lots
back onto any arterial or major collector street, as indicated on
the Circulation Plan of the City. The following landscape treatments
shall be provided in order to screen private residential spaces from
the roadway.
[Added 1-16-2007 by Ord. No. 1-2007]
(1) A landscape buffer of 25 feet in width shall be provided.
Such landscaped buffer width shall be in addition to the required
rear yard depth.
(2) The preservation of existing trees in excess of eight
inches is encouraged. Where existing understory screening does not
block at least 60% of the view from the street, supplemental shade-tolerant
plantings of shrubs, evergreen and ornamental trees shall be installed
to complete screening of residences. Sidewalks shall be designed to
avoid mature plantings even if a public access easement outside of
the right-of-way is necessary.
A. Concrete structures shall conform to the American
Society for Testing Materials, cement designations C-150, Type 1 for
standard portland cement; C-150, Type 3 for high early strength portland
cement; and C-175, Type 1-A for air-entraining portland cement. Vinsol
resin or Darex A.E.A. shall be used as the air-entraining agent, and
both fine and coarse aggregate shall conform to the requirements therefor
of the New Jersey Department of Transportation Standard Specifications,
as amended and supplemented.
B. The following standards shall be met unless modified
by the City Engineer:
(1) Unless otherwise specified, all concrete shall be
air entrained, having 4% to 7% entrained air.
(2) Concrete shall be Class A, B, C or D (see Chart 1).
(3) Required reinforcing steel shall be intermediate grade
deformed bars conforming to American Society for Testing Materials,
designation A-15 and A-305, as amended and supplemented.
(4) Required joint filler shall be a cellular compression
material conforming to the requirements therefor of the New Jersey
Department of Transportation Standard Specifications, as amended and
supplemented.
(5) In the construction of required concrete structures,
the City Engineer will determine the slump range within which the
contractor may work. Transit mix concrete may be used if obtained
from sources approved by the City Engineer. On-site mixing and proportioning
equipment will also be subject to the approval of the City Engineer.
(6) Forms shall conform to lines, dimensions and grades
shown on plans and may only be omitted when soil conditions and workmanship
permit accurate excavation to specifications. Forms shall be firmly
braced, tight and capable of resisting movement, bulging or mortar
leakage. Forms shall be smooth and clear and shall be completely removed.
(7) Soil base for concrete work shall be properly finished
to prescribed lines, grades and dimensions and shall be approved by
the City Engineer or his representative before concrete is placed.
All areas to receive concrete shall be free of frost, foreign matter
and excessive water, except that soil surface and forms shall be uniformly
damp when concrete is placed. All concrete shall be handled and placed
so as to avoid segregation. Concrete that has begun to set or has
been contaminated with foreign materials or that has too much water
shall not be used. Pouring shall be done in a continuous process until
an individual section is completed. All concrete shall be thoroughly
compacted with vibrator or suitable equipment. Finished concrete shall
have a wood-float finish unless specified by the City Engineer and
shall be kept continuously moist for a period of three days. Curing
shall be accomplished at the discretion of the City Engineer. Expansion
joints shall be provided as prescribed and shall extend the full thickness
of the concrete. Concrete shall not be poured when the temperature
is below 40º F. or during periods of precipitation unless precautions
acceptable to the City Engineer have been taken to prevent damage
to the work. Precautions to avoid freezing of the concrete shall be
in accordance with the current recommendations of the American Concrete
Institute.
A. The standard monolithic concrete curb and gutter will
be required along the pavement edge of streets in conformance with
the improvement standards as defined and shown in Diagrams 1 through
3, Typical Roadway Sections and Details, and Diagram 4, Standard Details — Curb
and Gutter, which are hereby made a part of this chapter. At the discretion
of the Planning Board upon advice of the City Engineer, roll-type
curb may be permitted along local street in conformance with the improvement
standards defined and shown in the aforementioned Diagrams 1 through
3, Typical Roadway Sections and Details, and Diagram 4, Standard Detail — Curb
and Gutter, which are a part of this chapter. Concrete shall be Class
B.
|
CHART 1
|
---|
|
Class
|
Cement
|
Sand
|
Concrete Standards Coarse Aggregate
|
Void Contract
|
---|
|
A
|
1
|
1.50
|
3.0
|
1.35
|
|
B
|
1
|
1.75
|
3.5
|
1.55
|
|
C
|
1
|
2.00
|
4.0
|
1.80
|
|
D
|
1
|
2.25
|
4.5
|
2.00
|
B. Expansion joints shall be provided at intervals of
20 feet or when new construction abuts existing construction. The
expansion joints shall be filled with one-half-inch thick cellular
material conforming to the requirements therefor contained in the
Standard Specifications of the New Jersey Department of Transportation,
as amended to date, to within 1/2 inch of the top and face of the
curb and to within 1/4 inch of the top of the gutter. All joints shall
extend the full depth of the structure.
C. Finished curbs and gutters shall be true to applicable
grades, lines, dimensions, and curvatures. Exposed edges shall be
neatly rounded to a one-half-inch radius. Completed work shall be
protected from traffic and the elements and shall be kept moist for
at least three days. Damaged, broken or cracked work shall be renewed
by the contractor at his expense.
Any site plan that provides temporary stopping
space for vehicles of customers or patrons seeking service at a roadside
business establishment, such as a roadway grocery or farm market produce
stand, gasoline service station, drive-in bank, fast food take-out
window, or similar uses, shall ensure that the stopping or maneuvering
space is at least 10 feet removed from the right-of-way line of the
road.
The proposed name of any development shall not
duplicate, or too closely approximate, the name of any other development
or locality in or in close proximity to the City. The Planning Board
shall have final authority to designate the name of the development
which shall be determined at the preliminary stage of development
review.
A. Whenever and wherever feasible, buildings shall be sited so as to make maximum use of sunlight or winds in connection with energy generation and/or conservation. All buildings and structures hereinafter erected or constructed, altered or added onto shall use renewable energy sources, with the limits of practicability and feasibility dependent on the proposed use of the structure and its location. Where an applicant can demonstrate that literal enforcement of the provisions of this chapter will prevent or substantially impair or reduce energy conservation methods or technologies, the approval authority may waive or adjust the standards, including, through variance procedures as set forth in §
30-94, maximum and minimum yard dimensions as shown on the Schedules of District Regulations. In so doing, the approval authority shall determine that the intent and purpose of this chapter and the adopted Master Plan are met, and that adjoining properties and/or their environment will not be adversely affected by the waiver, adjustment or variance.
B. In the case of new developments, the majority of all
structures in the development shall have their long axis located within
30º of true South.
C. Wherever plantings are proposed or required as provided
under the provisions of this chapter, no plantings of trees, shrubs
or any object shall be permitted which will result in shading or interfering
with solar access to the south wall of any proposed or existing building.
When reviewing proposed landscaping for any proposed development,
the approving authority shall not require or permit, where reasonably
able to do so, any planting or the placement of an object or structure
which will substantially interfere with solar access to adjacent buildings
or existing solar devices or structures.
In order to provide fire protection to new developments
the following standards shall apply:
A. All dead-end roads will terminate in an area adequate
to provide ingress and egress for fire-fighting equipment.
B. The rights-of-way of all roads will be maintained
so that they provide an effective fire break.
C. All proposed developments of 25 units or more will
have two accessways to public rights-of-way and the accessways shall
be of such width and surface composition sufficient to accommodate
and support fire-fighting equipment.
D. Wherever a central water supply system will serve
a development, provision shall be made for fire hydrants along the
streets, driveways and/or on the walls of nonresidential structures
as approved by the City Fire Department or other appropriate fire
official, the City Engineer and in accordance with fire insurance
rating organization standards.
A. Every principal building shall be built upon a lot
having frontage on a public street, either improved to City specifications
and standards, or for which the improvements have been ensured by
the posting of a performance guaranty as provided in this chapter.
B. Where a building or lot has frontage upon a street
which is shown on an adopted Master Plan or Official Map of the City
and which street is proposed for right-of-way widening, the required
front yard area shall be measured from such proposed right-of-way
line(s).
All uses and/or structures intended for use
by the public or to which public access will be permitted shall comply
with all state and federal regulations concerning access by and provisions
for facilities for the handicapped including provisions of sufficient
handicapped parking areas in close proximity to the use(s) they are
intended to serve.
A homeowners' association may, or in some cases,
be required to be established for the purpose of owning and assuming
maintenance responsibilities for the common open space and common
lands or property designed within a development, provided that the
Planning Board is satisfied that the organization will have a sufficient
number of members to reasonably expect a perpetuation of the organization
in a manner enabling it to meet its obligations and responsibilities
in owning and maintaining any property for the benefit of owners or
residents of the development. If established, the organization shall
incorporate the following provisions:
A. Membership by all property owners, condominium owners,
stockholders under a cooperative development and other owners of property
or interests in the project shall be mandatory. Required membership
and the responsibilities upon the members shall be in writing between
the organization and each member in the form of a convenant with each
agreeing to liability for his/her pro rata share of the organization's
costs.
B. The organization shall be responsible for liability
insurance, taxes, maintenance and any other obligations assumed by
the organization, and shall hold the municipality harmless from any
liability. The organization shall not be dissolved and shall not dispose
of any open space or property by sale or otherwise, except to an organization
conceived and established to own and maintain the open space or property
for the benefit of such development, and thereafter such organization
shall not be dissolved or dispose of any of its open space or property
without first offering to dedicate the same to the municipality or
municipalities wherein the land is located.
C. The assessment levied by the organization upon each
member may become a lien on each member's property. The organization
shall be allowed to adjust the assessment to meet changing needs.
D. The organization shall clearly describe in its bylaws
all the rights and obligations of each tenant and owner, including
a copy of the covenant, model deeds and Articles of Incorporation
of the organization and the fact that every tenant and property owner
shall have the right to use all common properties. These shall be
set forth as a condition of approval and shall be submitted prior
to the granting of final approval by the Planning Board.
E. The Articles of Incorporation, covenants, bylaws,
model deeds, and other legal instruments shall ensure that control
of the organization shall be transferred to the members based on a
percentage of the dwelling units sold and/or occupied and shall clearly
indicate that in the event such organization shall fail to maintain
the common open space or common property or lands in reasonable order
and condition, the City may serve written notice upon such organization
or upon the owners of the development setting forth the manner in
which the organization has failed to maintain the common open space
or common property or lands in reasonable condition, and the notice
shall include a demand that such deficiencies of maintenance be cured
within 15 days thereof, and shall state the date and place of a hearing
thereon which shall be held within 15 days of the notice. At such
hearing, the designated municipal body or officer, as the case may
be, may modify the terms of the original notice as to deficiencies
and may give a reasonable extension of time, not to exceed 65 days
within which they shall be cured.
F. If the deficiencies set forth in the original notice
or in the modification thereof shall not be cured within 15 days,
or any permitted extension thereof, the City, in order to preserve
the common open space and common property or land and maintain the
same for a period of one year, may enter upon and maintain such land.
The entry and maintenance shall not vest in the public any rights
to use the common open space and common property and land, except
when the same is voluntarily dedicated to the public by the owners.
Before the expiration of the year, the City shall, upon its initiative
or upon the request of the organization theretofore responsible for
the maintenance of the common open space and common property of land,
call a public hearing upon 15 days written notice to such organization
and to the owners of the development, to be held by the City at which
hearing such organization and the owners of the development shall
show cause why such maintenance by the municipality shall not, at
the election of the City, continue for a succeeding year.
G. If the municipality shall determine that such organization
is ready and able to maintain the open space and property or land
in reasonable condition, the municipality shall cease to maintain
the open space and property or lands at the end of the year. If the
City shall determine such organization is not ready and able to maintain
the open space and property or land in reasonable condition, the City
may, in its discretion, continue to maintain the open space and property
or land during the next succeeding year, subject to a similar hearing
and determination in each year thereafter. The decision of the City
in any such case shall constitute a final administrative decision
subject to judicial review.
H. The cost of such maintenance by the City shall be
assessed pro rata against the properties within the development that
have a right of enjoyment of the common open space and property of
land in accordance with assessed values at the time of imposition
of the lien, and shall be a lien and tax on the properties and be
added to and be part of the taxes to be levied and assessed thereon,
and enforced and collected with interest by the same officers and
in the same manner as other taxes.
A. All shade trees shall have a minimum diameter of 2 1/2
inches measured three feet above the ground and shall be of a species
approved by the approval authority or City Shade Tree Commission.
Trees shall be planted 40 feet to 60 feet apart and parallel to but
not more than 20 feet from the curbline and shall be balled and burlapped,
nursery grown, free from insects and disease and true to species and
variety. Stripping trees from a lot or filling around trees on a lot
shall not be permitted unless it can be shown that grading requirements
necessitate removal of trees, in which case those lots shall be replanted
with trees to reestablish the tone of the area to conform with adjacent
lots. Dead or dying trees shall be replaced by the developer during
the next recommended planting season.
B. Off-street parking areas located in commercial or
industrial zones which comprise parking for 25 or more vehicles shall
be provided with living shade trees of a type or types as approved
by the City Shade Tree Commission or Planning Board. The shade trees
shall be located in a carefully planned manner within the parking
lot area and in quantity equal to not less than one shade tree for
every eight parking spaces, and they shall be so spaced and planted
as to ensure their proper maintenance and full protection for health
and continued growth.
C. At least 20% of the land area within the perimeter
of the parking surface in commercial or industrial zones where 100
or more parking spaces are provided shall be developed as a landscaped
divider strip. All such areas shall be planted with grass, shrubs,
bushes and shade trees in order to alleviate an otherwise barren expanse
of open area and unsightly appearance and as an aid to stormwater
disposal. Adequate provisions shall be made to ensure that such landscaping
shall be maintained in good condition.
D. Where parking islands or dividers are to be planted,
they shall be a minimum of 7 1/2 feet wide when planted between rows
of parking spaces. Where parking islands at the ends of parking bays
are to be planted and landscaped, said islands shall be a minimum
of 15 feet wide, and such planting shall be maintained at all times
so that proper sight distances are maintained for the safe movement
of traffic. All such parking islands shall be protected from intrusion
and injury which could result from the movement of vehicles by the
use of curbs or other equally effective means as approved by the City
Engineer.
E. Planting strips shall be provided between adjoining
parking lots in commercial zones to achieve safety and better control
of vehicular movement from one parking lot to another. In such instances,
no parking shall be allowed within five feet of the property line,
on either side, thereby providing a total strip or island 10 feet
wide sufficient for landscaping and/or screening, consistent with
all applicable safety standards as approved by the City Engineer as
set forth in this chapter.
F. Open space adjacent to buildings not surfaced, such
as walkways, driveways, parking areas, utility areas or other required
improvements in any apartment or multifamily dwelling project, shall
be graded and seeded to provide a thick strand of grass or other ground
cover material. Two suitable specimen trees and four evergreen shrubs,
exclusive of those used in connection with parking or other open areas,
shall be provided and properly planted for each building. All such
landscaping shall be subject to the approval of any City Shade Tree
Commission or, in the absence of a Commission, the Planning Board.
G. In connection with the demolition or removal of a
structure from a site, any hole or excavation remaining or resulting
from such demolition or removal shall be filled only with clean fill
dirt. The dumping of masonry, concrete, wood, debris or rock shall
be prohibited. The site of such demolition or removal shall have a
layer of topsoil provided for the entire site in sufficient depth
and quality to permit the planting, healthy growth and maintenance
of a thick strand of grass which shall be planted by the person or
firm responsible for the said demolition or removal. The City Engineer
shall determine the suitability of the topsoil and seeding to be provided.
H. Where deemed appropriate and necessary to maintain
the character of the street or neighborhood, the planting of shade
trees shall be required. Such trees shall be approved by the City
Shade Tree Commission or the Planning Board.
In accordance with good design practice, extreme
deviations from rectangular lots shapes and straight lot lines shall
not be allowed unless made necessary by special topographical conditions
or other special conditions acceptable to the approving authority.
All lots shall conform to the following requirements:
A. Lot dimensions and area shall not be less than the
requirements of the minimum and maximum standards set forth on the
Schedules of District Regulations which are a part of this chapter.
B. Insofar as is practical, side lot lines shall be either
at right angles or radial to street lines.
C. Each lot must front upon an approved, paved street.
D. Through lots with frontage on two streets will be
permitted only under the following conditions:
(1) Where the length of the lots between both streets
is such that future division of the lot into two lots is improbable;
and
(2) Access shall be to the street with the lower traffic
function, and the portion of the lot abutting the other street shall
be clearly labeled on the plat, and in any deed, that street access
is prohibited.
E. Where extra width has either been dedicated or anticipated
for widening of existing streets, zoning consideration shall begin
at such new street line, and all setbacks shall be measured from such
line.
F. Whenever land has been dedicated or conveyed to the
City by the owner of a lot in order to meet the minimum street width
requirement or to implement the Official Map or Master Plan, which
lot existed at the effective date of this chapter, the Construction
Official shall not withhold a building and/or occupancy permit when
the lot depth and/or area was rendered substandard due to such dedication
and where the owner has no adjacent lands to meet the minimum requirements.
Whenever manholes, inlets or catch basins are
proposed and/or required to be constructed, all materials used in
said construction shall meet the latest testing standards for the
materials involved and shall be subject to the approval of the City
Engineer. All such structures shall be designed and constructed in
accordance with the approval of the City Engineer.
Monuments shall be the size and shape required
by N.J.S.A. 46:23-9.12 of the Map Filing Law, as amended, and shall
be placed in accordance with said statute and indicated on the final
plat. All lot corners shall be marked with a metal alloy pin of permanent
character.
In connection with the clearing of any site
for a proposed development or in the construction of any proposed
development, natural features of the site, such as trees (particularly
those trees with a diameter of eight inches at breast height), brooks,
streams, wetlands, hilltops and scenic vista or views, shall be preserved
whenever possible. On individual lots, care shall be taken to preserve
individual trees, to enhance soil stability and landscape treatment
of the area.
As a condition of preliminary approval and prior
to any construction or the filing of an application for final approval
of a subdivision or a site plan, the applicant shall have made case
payments, or, with the consent of the City, installed, in the manner
provided below with respect to the immediate and ultimate installation
of any required off-site and/or off-tract improvements.
A. Allocations of costs, criteria in determining allocation.
The allocation of costs for off-site and/or off-tract improvements
as between the applicant, other property owners and the City, or any
one or more of the foregoing, shall be determined by the Planning
Board, with the assistance of the appropriate City agencies, on the
basis of the total cost of the off-site or off-tract improvements,
the increase in market value of the property affected and any other
benefits conferred. The needs created by the application, population
and land use projections for the general area of the applicant's property
and other areas to be served by the off-site or off-tract improvement,
the estimated time of construction of the off-site or off-tract improvements
and the condition and periods of usefulness, which periods may be
based upon the criteria of N.J.S.A. 40A:2-22. Requirements for off-site
or off-tract improvements shall be consistent with Section 30 of P.L.
1975, Chapter 291. In addition, the following criteria may also be
considered, as well as any other reasonable criteria the Planning
Board feels is necessary to protect the health, safety and general
welfare of the City.
(1) Street, curb, sidewalk, shade trees, streetlights,
street signs and traffic light improvements may also be based upon
the anticipated increase of traffic generated by the application.
In determining such traffic increase, the Planning Board may consider
traffic counts, existing and projected traffic patterns, quality of
roads and sidewalks in the area and other factors related to the need
created by the application and the anticipated benefit thereto.
(2) Drainage facilities may also be based upon or be determined
by the drainage created by or affected by a particular land use, considering:
(a)
The percentage relationship between the acreage
of the application and the acreage of the total drainage basin;
(b)
The use of a particular site and the amount
of area to be covered by impervious surfaces on the site itself;
(c)
The use, condition or status of the remaining
area in the drainage basin.
(3) Water supply and distribution facilities may be also
based upon the added facilities required by the total anticipated
water use requirements of the property of the applicant and other
properties in the general area benefiting therefrom.
(4) Sewerage facilities may be based upon the proportion
that the total anticipated volume of sewage effluent of the applicant's
property and other properties connected to the new facility bears
to the existing capacity of existing sewerage facilities, including
but not limited to, lines and other appurtenances leading to and servicing
the applicant's property. Consideration may also be given to the types
of effluent and particular problems requiring special equipment or
added costs for treatment. In the event the applicant's property shall
be permitted to be connected to existing sewer facilities, the applicant
shall pay a charge or be assessed in accordance with the law.
B. Determination of cost of improvements. The cost of
installation of the required off-site and/or off-tract improvements
shall be determined by the Planning Board with the advice of the Planning
Board and/or City Engineer and appropriate City agencies.
C. Manner of construction. When those estimates are received,
the City Commission shall then decide whether the off-tract improvement(s)
is to be constructed:
(1) By the City as a general improvement, or
(2) By the City as a local improvement, or
(3) By the applicant under a formula providing for partial
reimbursements by the City for benefits to properties other than the
subdivision or site plan subject property.
D. Amount of contribution. When the manner of construction
has been determined, the applicant may be required to provide a cash
deposit to the City of one of the following amounts:
(1) If the improvement is to be constructed by the City
as a general improvement, an amount equal to the difference between
the estimated cost of the improvement and the estimated total amount,
if less, by which all properties to be serviced thereby, including
the subject property, will be specifically benefited by the off-tract
improvement;
(2) If the improvement is to be constructed by the City as a local improvement, then in addition to the amount referred to in Subsection
D(1) above, the estimated amount by which the subject property will be specifically benefited by the off-tract improvement; or
(3) If the improvement is to be constructed by the applicant,
an amount equal to the estimated cost of the off-tract improvement,
less an offset for benefits to properties other than the subject property.
E. Payment of allocated cost.
(1) The estimated costs of the off-tract improvement allocated
to the applicant if deposited in case shall be paid by the applicant
to the City Treasurer, who shall provide a suitable depository therefor,
and such funds shall be used only for the off-tract improvements for
which they are deposited or improvements serving the same purpose,
unless such improvements are not initiated by the City within a period
of 10 years from the date of payment, after which time the funds so
deposited shall be returned together with accumulated interest or
other income thereof, if any.
(2) In the event the payment by the applicant to the City
Treasurer provided for herein is less than its share of the actual
cost of the off-tract improvements then it shall be required to pay
its appropriate share of the cost thereof.
(3) In the event the payment by the applicant to the City
Treasurer provided for above is more than its appropriate share of
the actual cost of installation of the off-tract improvements, it
or its successors or assigns shall be repaid an amount equal to the
difference between the deposit and its share of the actual cost.
(4) If the applicant shall deem that any of the amounts
so estimated by the Planning Board are unreasonable, it may challenge
them and seek to have them revised in appropriate proceedings brought
to compel subdivision or site plan approval.
(5) If the applicant and the Planning Board cannot agree
with respect to the applicant's appropriate share of the actual cost
of the off-site improvement, or the determination made by the officer
or Board charged with the duty of making assessments as to specific
benefits, if the off-tract improvement is to be constructed as a local
improvement, no approval shall be granted; provided, however, that
the applicant may challenge such determination and seek to have it
revised in appropriate judicial proceedings in order to compel subdivision
or site plan approval.
F. Assessment of properties. Upon receipt from the applicant
of its allocated share of the costs of the off-tract improvements,
the City may adopt a local improvements assessment ordinance for the
purpose of construction and installation of the off-tract improvements
based upon the actual cost thereof. Any portion of the cost of the
improvements not defrayed by a deposit by the applicant may be assessed
against benefiting property owners by the City. Any assessment for
benefits conferred made against the applicant or his successors in
interest shall be first offset by a pro rata share credit of the allocated
costs previously deposited with the City Treasurer pertaining thereto.
The applicant or his successors in interest shall not be liable for
any part of an assessment for such improvements unless the assessment
exceeds the pro rata share credit for the deposit, and then only to
the extent of the deficiency.
G. Credit for work performed. In the event the applicant,
with the City's consent, decides to install and construct the off-tract
improvement, or any portion thereof, the certified cost shall be treated
as a credit against any future assessment for that particular off-tract
improvement, or portion thereof, constructed by the City in the same
manner as if the developer had deposited its apportioned cost with
the City Treasurer, as provided herein.
H. Installation of improvement by applicant.
(1) At the discretion and option of the City and with
the consent of the applicant, the City may enter into a contract with
the applicant, providing for the installation and construction of
off-tract improvements by the applicant upon contribution by the City
of the remaining unallocated portion of the cost of the off-tract
improvement.
(2) In the event the City so elects to contribute to the
cost and expense of installation of the off-site improvements by the
applicant, the portion contributed by the City shall be subject to
the possible certification and assessment as a local improvement against
benefiting property owners in the manner provided by law, if applicable.
I. Compliance to design criteria. Should the applicant
and the City enter into a contract for the construction and erection
of the off-tract improvements to be done by the applicant, it shall
observe all requirements and principals or policies of this chapter
in the design of such improvements.
The following standards shall apply to all off-street loading and parking facilities required as per §§
30-136 and
30-137 of this chapter:
A. There shall be appropriate means of access to a street
or alley, as well as sufficient area to permit on-site maneuvering
and docking.
B. The minimum dimensions of stalls and aisles in parking
facilities shall be as follows:
(1) Parking space width shall be at least nine feet.
(2) Parking space depth shall be at least 18 feet, with
the dimensions measured on the angle for all angle parking.
(3) Minimum width of aisles providing access to parking
spaces for one-way traffic only, varying with the angle of the parking,
shall be:
|
Angle of Parking
(degrees)
|
Minimum Aisle
Width (feet)
|
---|
|
Parallel
|
12
|
|
30
|
12
|
|
45
|
14
|
|
60
|
18
|
|
90
|
24
|
(4) Minimum width of aisles providing access to stalls
for two-way traffic shall be 25 feet.
(5) Up
to 25% of the required parking spaces may be designated for use by
compact vehicles with minimum dimensions of eight feet in width and
16 feet in length. Compact parking spaces must be identified with
proper signage.
[Added 8-3-2010 by Ord. No. 14-2010]
C. Parking areas shall be designed to permit each motor
vehicle to proceed to and from the parking space provided for it without
requiring the moving of any other vehicle.
D. The width of entrance and exit drives shall be:
(1) A minimum of 12 feet for one-way use only.
(2) A minimum of 20 feet for two-way use.
(3) A maximum of 35 feet at the street line and 54 feet
at the curbline.
E. The maximum width of driveways and sidewalk openings
measured at the street lot line shall be 35 feet, and the minimum
width shall be 20 feet for loading facilities.
F. Parking and loading areas shall be paved with asphalt,
bituminous or concrete material to minimize nuisance from dust. Pervious
pavement also shall be permitted as long as it complies with the following:
[Amended 8-3-2010 by Ord. No. 14-2010]
(1) Pervious
pavement shall be located only on soils having a rapid permeability.
(2) Pervious
pavement shall not be located in soils with a high water table or
depth to bedrock of less than 10 feet.
(3) Pervious
pavement shall not be located on any slope exceeding 10% over 20 feet.
G. For the purpose of servicing any property held under
single and separate ownership, entrance and exit drives crossing the
street line shall be limited to two along the frontage of any single
street, and their center lines shall be spaced at least 80 feet apart
in the case of loading facilities and 30 feet apart for parking areas.
On all corner properties, there shall be spaced a minimum of 60 feet,
measured at the curbline, between the center line of any entrance
or exit drive and the street line of the street parallel to said access
drive.
H. All loading spaces and access drives shall be at least
five feet from any side or rear lot line.
I. All artificial lighting used to illuminate any loading
space or spaces shall be so arranged that no direct rays from such
lighting shall fall upon any neighboring property.
J. The arrangement of the off-street loading spaces shall
be such that no vehicle would have occasion to back out onto the street.
K. Off-street loading spaces shall be designed and used
in a manner as to at no time constitute a nuisance or a hazard or
unreasonable impediment to traffic.
L. The screening requirements of §
30-155 shall be applicable to all loading areas, including access and maneuvering areas, abutting residential or commercial districts, and in the case of off-street parking areas of greater than 10 spaces, from all lots in an abutting R Residential District, including side lots situated across a street.
M. Parking
and loading areas shall be properly graded and drained in order to
dispose of all surface water and shall be maintained free of weeds,
dust, trash and debris.
[Added 8-3-2010 by Ord. No. 14-2010]
N. Wheel
guards, bumper guards or continuous curbing shall be utilized so that
no part of parked vehicles will extend beyond the property line of
the parking area. One wheel stop shall be placed at the end of each
parking space.
[Added 8-3-2010 by Ord. No. 14-2010]
A. In reviewing site plans for freestanding buildings
and structures and depending on individual site characteristics, consideration
shall be given by the approving authority in its review thereof, to
positioning that provides a desirable visual composition, avoids blocking
natural scenic vistas or views, provides a desirable space enclosure,
does not unnecessarily alter existing topography and natural features
and otherwise respects established natural conditions and the character
of surrounding buildings and structures, in particular those structures
of historic significance as determined by a local, county, state or
federal listing of such significance.
B. The approving authority shall also give consideration
to the positioning of buildings and structures on the site with respect
to energy conservation and the avoidance of prevailing winter winds
and the maximizing of solar access and gain, both for the proposed
structure(s) and any existing ones on adjoining properties.
All on-site streets shall be paved in conformance
with the improvement standards as defined in Diagrams 1 through 3,
Typical Roadway Sections and Details, which are a part of this chapter, and the standards set
forth herein:
A. Gravel base course shall be constructed in accordance
with the provisions of Article 3.1 of the Standard Specifications
for Road and Bridge Construction of the New Jersey Department of Transportation
as currently amended. Gravel base course materials shall be soil aggregate,
Type 2, Class B.
B. Bituminous-stabilized base course materials shall
conform to requirements specified in Article 3.2A of the Standard
Specifications for Road and Bridge Construction of the New Jersey
Department of Transportation, as currently amended, for bituminous-stabilized
base course stone mix. Before construction of the bituminous-stabilized
base course, the gravel base course shall be in a properly finished
condition conforming to the proper line and grade and free of soft
spots or other deficiencies. Within 24 hours prior to the commencement
of paving, the gravel base course shall be tested by running a roller
of a weight as great or greater than that to be used in the paving
operation over the entire pavement area. When, in the opinion of the
City Engineer or his representative, such testing results in excess
deformation, the developer will be required to stabilize the gravel
base course in a manner satisfactory to the City Engineer.
C. The method of construction of the bituminous-stabilized
base course shall conform to the same State of New Jersey specifications
referred to above for base course material. Upon completion, uniformly
selected core samples intact for full thickness of base course shall
be provided, at the rate of one sample for every 1,000 square yards
of base course, at the expense of the developer.
D. Where deficiencies in required thickness are noted,
at least two additional cores will be required to determine the extent
of the deficiency.
E. The average thickness of the bituminous-stabilized
base course as determined from the core samples shall be not less
than the thickness specified in Diagrams 1 through 3, Typical Roadway
Sections and Details, which are a part of this chapter. When the thickness
of the pavement as indicated by any core sample shall show a deficiency
of 1/4 inch or more from the required thickness, the City Engineer,
at his option, may direct the developer to:
(1) Remove and replace the bituminous-stabilized base
course to the correct thickness; or
(2) Construct an overlay of bituminous concrete suitable
to the Engineer to correct the thickness deficiencies.
F. Materials for the surface course, as shown on Diagrams
1 through 3, Typical Roadway Sections and Details, which are part
of this chapter, shall be FABC-1, No. 5, as specified in Article 3.10
of the aforementioned New Jersey Department of Transportation Standard
Specifications, which shall be placed over a properly installed and,
where needed, repaired base course, a track coat as specified in Section
3.10 of the aforementioned New Jersey Department of Transportation's
Standard Specifications shall be applied.
In reviewing site plans, consideration shall
be given to building materials, use of color and/or texture, massing,
fenestration and advertising features as they relate to site conditions
and harmonize with similar elements in surrounding buildings and structures.
A. Sanitary sewer facilities shall be provided and installed
in accordance with the specifications as set forth in this section
and as required by the City Engineer. Sanitary sewer facilities shall
be designed and installed for either immediate or future connection
with a public or on-site community sanitary sewer system approved
by the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection and the City
Commission of the City of Millville. In areas where a public sanitary
sewer system does not exist or is not expected to be provided within
a reasonable period of time in the opinion of the Planning Board,
the Board may waive the requirement that sanitary sewer facilities
be installed and connected to public sewer systems.
B. In those cases where a public sanitary sewer system
is not presently available and the site of the proposed development
is unsuitable for individual on-site septic systems as determined
by the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection or other
county or local agency, an on-site community sanitary sewer system
approved by the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection
and the City Commission shall be installed. On-site septic systems
shall be provided in addition to the required installation of sanitary
sewer systems (collection lines and other related facilities) for
those areas expected to be provided with public sanitary sewers within
a reasonable period of time. All individual on-site septic systems
shall be installed within the front yard of the lots or in any area
approved by the Construction Official in order to facilitate the eventual
connection of the system to public facilities.
C. The approval authority may also as a condition of preliminary approval require the installation of sanitary sewer facilities necessary to permit connection to a public sanitary sewer system as provided for in connection with §
30-170.
D. All sanitary sewer systems shall comply with the rules
and regulations established by the Department of Health, State of
New Jersey, as amended. Sanitary sewer pipe shall be sized for full
flow from the tract. The City may require larger pipe sizes to accommodate
future extensions. Minimum grades for sanitary sewer lines shall be
4/10 of 1% for asbestos-cement pipe and 5/10 of 1% for vitrified clay
pipe.
E. Cast-iron pipe, when used for sanitary sewers, shall
be centrifugally cast and shall be provided with mechanical joints,
with both pipe and joints conforming to applicable American Standards
Association specifications. Cast-iron pipe shall be thickness Class
22 for pipe diameters of 12 inches or less and thickness Class 21
for pipe diameters of 14 inches or more. All cast-iron fittings, including
Y-branches, shall conform to the requirements of the current American
Waterworks Association's specifications therefor and shall be provided
with joints suitable for use with adjoining pipe. Cast-iron fittings
shall be Class D for fitting diameters of 12 inches or less and Class
B for diameters of 14 inches or more. Cast-iron saddles shall be subject
to the approval of the City Engineer.
F. Asbestos-cement pipe and fittings shall conform to
applicable requirements of the American Society for Testing Materials
specifications, as amended. Except where required for special conditions,
asbestos-cement type pipe fittings shall be nonpressure Class 1500
for pipe diameters of 12 inches or less and Class 2400 for pipe diameters
of 14 inches or more. All asbestos-cement pipe and fittings shall
be furnished with sleeve-and-gasket-type couplings designed for use
with the size and class of pipe specified.
G. Vitrified clay pipe and fittings shall conform to
the applicable requirements of the American Society for Testing and
Materials specifications, as amended. Except where required for special
conditions, such as excessive depth, vitrified clay pipe fittings
shall be standard strength. All vitrified clay pipe and fittings shall
have factory-fabricated gasket-type couplings which conform to the
American Society for Testing and Materials specifications therefor.
H. Excavation and backfill shall conform to the requirements set forth for subsurface structure excavations. Applicable requirements for protecting excavations from cave-ins and water accumulations set forth under §
30-179, Stormwater management, shall apply. Pipes shall be laid in straight lines between manholes except where otherwise specifically provided by the City Engineer. When deviation from a straight line is permitted, the deflection of each joint shall not exceed the manufacturer's recommended maximum for the type, joint and size of pipe being installed. All pipes shall be laid to uniform grades between manholes. Each section of pipe shall be solidly bedded in the trench bottom and shall be supported for its full length except where excavation has been made for joints. Before making each joint, the ends of the pipes and all joint members shall be thoroughly cleaned. All jointing shall be done in strict accordance with the manufacturer's recommendations and the directions of the City Engineer. All visible leakage of any description and no matter where located shall be corrected by the contractor in a manner satisfactory to the City Engineer, whether or not the total leakage into the sewer is within the allowable maximum as determined by infiltration tests. Such infiltration tests shall be made when and as directed by the City Engineer, and no connections to flowing lines shall be made until the testing is complete and satisfactory results have been obtained. The contractor shall furnish all labor, material and equipment necessary for the infiltration tests. No section of sanitary sewer between adjacent manholes will be considered satisfactory or acceptable when the rate of infiltration exceeds 1/2 of the above-specified rate. Leakage in excess of the above shall be located and corrected by the contractor. Y-branch and service laterals which are not to be immediately connected to flowing lines shall be securely plugged so as to provide a permanently watertight seal, and the contractor shall accurately record the station and direction of each such stub. These shall also be located on the contractor's copy of the plans and permanently marked with a crosscut on the curb or a hub stake driven at the curbline.
In each land development requiring project approval,
the area between the edge of the existing pavement and the proposed
or existing curbing along the entire property frontage of the road
shall be paved in accordance with the standards and specifications
set forth in this chapter and by the City Engineer.
All multifamily, commercial, industrial, recreational
and public uses shall provide for centralized collection of solid
wastes. Such solid waste disposal areas and facilities shall be sufficient
in size to handle anticipated waste generation of the site and use,
and be at convenient locations, screened from view. All such areas
and facilities, including provisions for source separation and resource
recovery, shall conform to any adopted solid waste disposal plan or
ordinance applicable to the area involved.
Streetlighting standards and fixtures of a type
and number approved by the Planning Board and City Engineer shall
be installed at street intersections and elsewhere as deemed necessary
by the approving authority to provide light for public safety and
welfare along public streets. The developer shall provide for the
installation of connection of streetlighting standards and fixtures
wherever underground utility service is provided.
A. Surface drainage systems adequately designed to accommodate
all surface runoff coming to or accumulating on the tract shall be
constructed. The determination of pipe sizes and box culverts shall
be based on hydraulic computations using the rational method in which
the actual watershed area tributary to the structure is measured and
a minimum runoff coefficient is used which is based on Table 1 shown
below. In cases where dense residential and business development is
anticipated by the Planning Board, this coefficient should be increased
as conditions require, to be determined by the City Engineer.
|
TABLE 1
Runoff Coefficients for Drainage Design
|
---|
|
Classification
|
Runoff Factor C
|
---|
|
Parklands, golf courses, etc.
|
0.15 to 0.30
|
|
Open residential
|
0.30 to 0.50
|
|
Dense residential and business
|
0.50 to 0.70
|
|
Commercial and industrial
|
0.70 to 0.90
|
B. In general, it will be the objective of these standards
to encourage the retention and disposal of all surface runoff on-site
to the greatest extent practical given existing site conditions and
the ability of downstream facilities to handle additional runoff to
be generated by the site.
C. In general, where pipe sizes would be four feet in
diameter or larger, open channels will be permitted. Such channels
shall be properly cleared and graded, with side slopes not to exceed
three feet horizontally to one foot vertically. Maximum design velocities
for channels in feet per second shall not exceed three for fine sand
to firm loam, five for stiff clay to hardpan and 15 for concrete-lined
ditch. Velocity shall be controlled by the use of check dams or ditch
banks, which shall be protected by the use of sod, riprap or paving,
as design velocity dictates.
D. No storm drainage pipes of less than 12 inches in
diameter or, if the run exceeds 50 feet, of less than 15 inches in
diameter, shall be installed. Inlets shall be spaced so that the run
of water in gutters does not exceed 1,000 feet or one block, whichever
is less. Manholes or inlets shall be located where a change in grade
or alignment or a storm drain occurs, but in any case not more than
500 feet apart. Where pipe sizes are increased, the invert of the
larger pipe shall be dropped so the tops of the pipes will be at the
same elevation. Outlet pipes shall extend to the edge of existing
streams and must be provided with concrete headwalls or suitable end
sections. Underdrains with minimum pipe size of six inches must be
constructed where groundwater interferes with the stability of the
road base or with development construction.
E. Where pipe drains a low point from which there can
be no surface runoff without flooding curbs and sidewalk areas, the
design shall be based on the municipal standard rainfall curves shown
in Figure 1 and shall be based on a ten-year storm. In other cases,
the pipe size may be based on a two-year storm. Box culverts shall
be designed on the basis of a fifteen-year storm. Pipe grades shall
be so designed that a minimum velocity of 2 1/2 feet per second
will be obtained when the pipe is flowing 1/4 full. All drainage calculations
must be preliminary reviewed and approved by the City Engineer.
F. Subsurface structure excavations shall be carried
out by the contractor and, only where considered necessary by the
City Engineer, shall be carried below the required facility installation
level to remove and replace unstable soils with thoroughly tamped
gravel, crushed stone or crushed slag. Adequate bracing, shoring and
sheeting shall be installed to protect workmen, members of the public,
public and private property and the work underway. Where deemed necessary
by the City Engineer, the contractor shall provide, install and operate
an adequate well-point system for dewatering to stabilize excavation
bottoms and banks.
G. Unless otherwise specified in specific situations
by the City Engineer, reinforced concrete pipe, when used, shall be
Class III, Wall B. All reinforced concrete pipe shall have flexible
rubber-type gasket joints, with both pipe and gasket conforming to
the American Society for Testing and Materials specifications therefor,
as amended and revised to date. When used, corrugated metal pipe and
pipe arch shall conform to the requirements of the American Association
of State Highway Officials (AASHO) specifications therefor, as amended
and revised to date. All corrugated metal pipe and pipe arch shall
be fully bituminous coated in accordance with current New Jersey Department
of Transportation specifications therefor.
H. When used, corrugated aluminum pipe and pipe arch
shall conform to the requirements of AASHO designation M-196-62 or
AASHO designation M-211-65. The aluminum alloy sheets shall conform
to the requirements of ASTM B209 Alloy Alclad 3004-H34.
I. Where used, cast-iron pipe, together with mechanical
joints, shall conform to the American Standards Association specifications
therefor, and unless otherwise specified by the City Engineer, cast-iron
pipe shall be Class 22 for pipe diameter of 12 inches or less and
thickness Class 21 for a pipe diameter of 14 inches or more.
J. All drainage pipe shall be laid in straight lines
between drainage structures except when otherwise specifically provided.
When deviation from a straight line is permitted, the deflection of
each joint shall not exceed the manufacturer's recommended maximum
for the pipe, joint and size of pipe being installed. All pipe shall
conform to specified lines, grades and dimensions.
K. No deflective or leaking pipes, joints, connections,
manholes, inlets or other parts of the work will be acceptable. All
visible leakage of any description, no matter where located, shall
be corrected by the contractor in a manner satisfactory to the City
Engineer.
L. All developments may incorporate on-site stormwater
detention or impoundment facilities as indicated earlier, in the following
manner:
(1) Swales may be constructed in which there need be no
outlet facilities and which will impound water draining only from
other landscaped areas. The water impounded in these areas will be
left to evaporate and percolate, the swales shall otherwise be seeded
and maintained in lawn area.
(2) Impoundment/detention basins along any stream that
maintains a steady flow of water throughout the year may be constructed,
provided that any improvements designed to provide such impoundment/detention
facilities shall meet the standards of, and if required have the approval
of, the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, and shall
have the proper amount of sustained water flow downstream, proper
depth of water to control vegetation, and proper design to prevent
water stagnation in any part of the pond.
(3) Detention of stormwater on roof surfaces may be designed
by means of essentially flat but slightly pitched roofs to the edges.
Facilities for control of the water runoff from the roof shall be
provided in the form of vertical leaders with detention rings around
the intake to provide the control of water flow. The spacing and capacity
of the vertical leaders and the detention rings shall be approved
by the City Engineer and Construction Official, depending on the areas
to be drained, the pitch of the roof, the capacity of the impoundment/detention
facilities to which the water will eventually drain and the structural
strength of the roof. It is recommended that the intakes be protected
by a device that will accept the full amount of water passed on to
it from the detention rings, but which will act as a strainer for
any foreign matter such as leaves, twigs and seedlings. The leader
from a roof with water detention design shall direct the stormwater
into a detention basin constructed in a manner as outlined above.
M. If the
drainage characteristics of the soils permit, vegetation can be used
as an effective way to reduce stormwater runoff. Bioretention of stormwater
integrated into landscaped infiltration areas, swales, or rain gardens
can provide temporary storage of runoff as well as on-site infiltration.
Such design will be permitted if soil tests indicate a capacity for
this design and if drainage calculations demonstrate the capacity
of such facilities to accommodate the anticipated stormwater runoff.
Indigenous species must be utilized for bioretention strategies. A
maintenance plan must also be provided to ensure irrigation and weeding
of site.
[Added 8-3-2010 by Ord. No. 14-2010]
Topsoil moved during the course of construction
shall be redistributed so as to provide at least three inches of cover
to all areas of the development not covered and shall be stabilized
by seeding, planting or sodding. In the event that the site does not
contain sufficient amounts of topsoil to provide three inches of topsoil
to all uncovered areas of the development, the developer shall supply
sufficient amounts to meet this requirement. Unless specifically permitted
by the Planning Board, no topsoil shall be removed from the site.
The following standards shall apply in connection
with all developments in connection with the design and construction
of driveways, bikeways, sidewalks or pedestrianways, streets and similar
items concerned with traffic and circulation:
A. Access.
(1) Where a driveway serves right-turning traffic from
a parking area providing 200 or more parking spaces and/or the abutting
road has a peak-hour traffic volume exceeding 1,000 vehicles per hour,
an acceleration lane shall be provided in accordance with "A Policy
of Geometric Design of Urban Highways," published by the American
Association of State Highway Officials.
(2) Where a driveway serves as an entrance to a development
providing 50 or more parking spaces, a deceleration lane shall be
provided for traffic turning right into the driveway from any collector
or arterial road. The deceleration lane is to be at least 200 feet
long and at least 13 feet wide, measured from the abutting road curbline.
A minimum forty-foot curb return radius will be used from the deceleration
lane into the driveway.
B. Driveways. Any driveway providing access from a public
street or way to any permitted use or structure shall comply with
the following regulations:
(1) Driveways shall enter the street or road right-of-way
at an angle between 75º and 105º.
(2) The portion of the roadway lying between the right-of-way
of the street and the driveway shall be surfaced as a driveway extension.
(3) Any curb opening shall be properly reconstructed to
the satisfaction of the City Engineer. Where curbing does not exist
and conditions warrant, an adequate drain pipe shall be installed
as determined by the City Engineer.
(4) Driveway grades shall not exceed 8% by a distance
of 40 feet from any street or road right-of-way line, unless otherwise
approved by the City Engineer.
(5) Driveway widths at the street right-of-way lines shall
be a minimum of 10 feet and a maximum of 20 feet in connection with
single-family residential uses. All other uses shall conform to the
driveway regulations contained herein or as required by the City Engineer.
(6) The number of driveways provided from a site directly
to any road shall be as follows:
|
Use
|
Length of Site Frontage
(feet)
|
Number of Driveways
|
---|
|
Residential
|
200 or less
|
1
|
|
Commercial
|
200 or less
|
1
|
|
Commercial or arterial or collector road
|
200 to 500
|
2
|
|
All other uses
|
Over 800
|
To be determined by the Planning Board upon
receipt of advice from the City Engineer.
|
(7) All entrance and exit driveways to a road shall be
located to afford maximum safety to traffic on the road.
(8) Any exit driveway or driveway lane shall be so designed
in profile and grading and shall be so located as to permit the following
maximum sight distance measured in each direction along any abutting
road; the measurement shall be from the driver's seat of a vehicle
standing on the portion of the exit driveway that is immediately outside
the edge of the road traveled or shoulder:
|
Allowable Speed on Road
(mph)
|
Required Sight Distance
(feet)
|
---|
|
25
|
150
|
|
30
|
200
|
|
35
|
250
|
|
40
|
300
|
|
45
|
350
|
|
50
|
400
|
(9) Where a site occupies a corner of two intersecting
roads, no driveway entrance or exit may be located within a minimum
of 30 feet of tangent of the existing or proposed curb radius of that
site.
(10)
No entrance or exit driveway shall be located
on the following portions of any collector or arterial road: on a
traffic circle, on a ramp of an interchange, within 30 feet of the
beginning of any ramp or other portion of an interchange, nor on any
portion of such road where the grade has been changed to incorporate
an interchange.
(11)
Where two or more driveways connect a single
site to any one road, a minimum clear distance of 100 feet measured
along the right-of-way line shall separate the closest edges of any
two such driveways.
(12)
Driveways used for two-way operation shall intersect
any collector or arterial road at an angle as near 90º as site
conditions will permit and in no case less than 60º.
(13)
Driveways used by vehicles in one direction
of travel (right turn only) shall not form an angle smaller than 60º
with a collector or arterial road unless acceleration and deceleration
lanes are provided.
(14)
The dimensions of driveways shall be designed
to adequately accommodate the volume and character of vehicles anticipated
to be attracted daily onto the land development for which the site
plan is prepared. The required maximum and minimum dimensions for
driveways are indicated on the accompanying table. Driveways serving
large volumes of daily traffic or traffic over 25% of which is truck
traffic shall be permitted to use low-to-minimum dimensions. (See
Table 2.)
(15)
The surface of any driveway subject to City
site plan approval shall be constructed with a permanent pavement
of a type specified by standards set by the City Engineer. Such pavement
shall extend to the paved traveled way or pave shoulder of the road;
required driveway dimensions specified in Table 2.
|
TABLE 2
Type of Development
|
---|
|
Type of Development
|
One-Way Curbline Opening
(feet)
|
Operation Driveway Width
(feet)
|
Two-Way Curbline Opening
(feet)
|
Operation Driveway Width
(feet)
|
---|
|
5 to 10 family resident
|
12-15
|
10-13
|
12-30
|
10-26
|
|
10 family or more
|
12-30
|
10-26
|
24-36
|
20-30
|
|
Commercial or industry
|
24-50
|
24-34
|
24-50
|
24-46
|
|
Service station
|
15-36
|
12-34
|
24-36
|
20-34
|
(16)
Any vertical curve on a driveway shall be flat
enough to prevent the dragging of any vehicle undercarriage. Any driveway
profiles and grades shall be submitted to and approved by the City
Engineer. Should a sidewalk be so located with respect to the curb
at a depressed-curb driveway that is likely to cause undercarriage
drag, the sidewalk should be appropriately lowered to provide a suitable
ramp gradient.
C. Bikeways.
(1) Bikeways shall be required when in the Planning Board's
opinion, depending on the probable volume of bicycle traffic, the
development's location in relation to other populated areas, or its
location with respect to any overall bikeway route or trail adopted
by the Planning Board or other applicable agency, provision of the
bikeway(s) would be needed and used. Bicycle traffic shall be separated
from motor vehicle and pedestrian traffic as much as possible.
(2) Bikeways shall generally not exceed a grade of 3%,
except for short distances, and they should be a minimum of five feet
wide for one-way and eight feet wide for two-way travel. Bikeways
shall be designed and constructed in accordance with the specifications
and standards of the City Engineer.
D. Sidewalks.
(1) Sidewalks shall be required along all streets. In
reviewing a request for a waiver of this requirement, the Planning
Board shall be guided by the probable volume of pedestrian traffic,
the street classification in instances where streets are involved,
school bus stops, the development's location in relation to other
populated areas or pedestrian traffic generators, and the general
type of improvement intended. The Planning Board shall further only
grant waivers which are in accordance with the provisions of the Master
Plan.
(2) When required and unless reduced or altered by the
Planning Board, all sidewalks shall conform to the following standards:
(a)
Sidewalks shall be at least four feet wide and
located as approved by the Planning Board. Sidewalks shall be at least
four inches thick, except at the point of vehicular crossing where
they shall be at least six inches thick, of Class C concrete, having
a twenty-eight-day compression strength of 4,000 psi, and shall be
air-entrained.
(b)
Finished sidewalks shall be true to specified
lines, grades, and curvatures. Completed work shall be adequately
protected from traffic and the elements.
E. Sight triangles.
(1) Sight triangles shall be required at each quadrant
of an intersection of streets, and streets and driveways. The area
within sight triangles shall be either dedicated as part of the street
right-of-way or maintained as part of the lot adjoining the street
and set aside on any subdivision or site plan as a sight triangle
easement. Within a sight triangle, no grading, planting or structure
shall be erected or maintained more than 30 inches above the street
center line or lower then eight feet above the street center line
except for street name signs and official traffic regulation signs.
Where any street or driveway intersection involves earth banks or
vegetation, including trees, the developer shall trim such vegetation
and trees as well as establish proper excavation and grading to provide
the sight triangle.
(2) The sight triangle is that area bounded by the intersection
of street lines and a straight line which connects "sight" points
located on each of two intersecting street lines the following distances
away from the intersection of street lines: arterial streets at 130
feet; collector streets at 60 feet; and local streets at 35 feet.
Where the intersecting streets are both arterial, both collectors,
or one arterial and one collector, two overlapping sight triangles
shall be required formed by connecting the sight points noted above
with a sight point 35 feet on the intersecting street. Any proposed
development requiring site plan approval shall provide sight triangle
easements at each driveway with the driveway classified as a local
street for purposes of establishing distances. The classification
of existing and proposed streets shall be those as defined in the
adopted Master Plan or as designated by the Planning Board at the
time of the application for approval of the new street, not included
in the Master Plan. Portions of a lot set aside for the sight triangle
may be calculated in determining the lot area and may be included
in establishing the minimum setback required by the zoning provisions.
F. Streets.
(1) All development shall be served by improved streets
with an all-weather base and pavement with an adequate crown. The
arrangement of streets now shown on the Master Plan or Official Map
shall be such as to provide for the appropriate extension of existing
streets, conform with the topography as far as practical, and allow
for continued extension into adjoining undeveloped tracts.
(2) When a development adjoins land capable of being developed
or subdivided further, suitable provision shall be made for optimum
access from the adjoining tract to existing or proposed streets.
(3) Local streets shall be designed to discourage through
traffic.
(4) To conserve energy and permit the greatest potential
for buildings to have a southern exposure, all new streets shall have
an east/west orientation whenever possible considering topographic
features and existing land use patterns.
(5) Development bounded by arterial or collector streets.
(a)
In all residential districts, development bounded
by an arterial or collector street shall control access to streets
by having all driveways intersect minor streets. Where the size, shape,
location, or some other unique circumstance may dictate no other alternative
than to have a driveway enter an arterial or collector street, the
lot shall provide on-site turnaround facilities so it is not necessary
to back any vehicle onto an arterial or collector road and abutting
lots may be required to use abutting driveways with one curb cut.
All lots requiring reverse frontage shall have an additional 25 feet
of depth to allow for the establishment of the buffers outlined below
unless such buffers are established in a reserve strip controlled
by the City or county.
(b)
That portion of the development abutting an
arterial or collector street right-of-way shall either be planted
with nursery grown trees to a depth of not more than 25 feet as a
buffer strip along the right-of-way line and for the full length of
the development so that in a reasonable period of time a buffer area
will exist between the development and the highway, or, where topography
permits, earthen berms may be created at a sufficient height to establish
a buffer between the development and the highway. Berms shall not
be less than five feet in height; they shall be planted with evergreens
and deciduous trees according to a landscaping plan so as to be designed
to have no adverse effect on nearby properties. All trees shall be
of nursery stock having a caliper of not less than 2 1/2 inches
measured three feet above ground level and be of an approved species
as determined by the City Shade Tree Commission or Planning Board.
They shall be of symmetrical growth, free of insect pests and disease,
suitable for street use, and durable under the maintenance contemplated.
(6) In all developments the minimum street right-of-way
shall be measured from lot line to lot line and shall be in accordance
with Diagrams 1 through 3, Typical Roadway Sections and Details, which
is part of this chapter; but in no case shall a new street that is
a continuation of an existing street be continued at a width less
than the existing street although a greater width may be required
in accordance with the diagram details above referenced. Where an
arterial or collector street intersects another arterial or collector
street, the right-of-way and cartway requirements shall be increased
by 10 feet on the right side of the street(s) approaching intersection
of the center lines.
(7) No development showing reserve strips controlling
access to streets or another area, either developed or undeveloped,
shall be approved except where the control and disposal of land comprising
such strips has been given to the City Commission under conditions
imposed by the Planning Board.
(8) In the event that a development adjoins or includes
existing City streets that do not conform to widths as shown on the
City Master Plan or Official Map or the street width requirements
of this chapter, additional land along both sides of the street sufficient
to conform to the right-of-way requirements shall be anticipated in
the subdivision design of creating over-sized lots to accommodate
the widening at some future date. The additional widening may be offered
to the City for the location, installation, repair and maintenance
of streets, drainage facilities, utilities and other facilities customarily
located on street right-of-way and shall be expressed on the plat
or plan as follows: "Street right-of-way easement granted to the City
of Millville permitting the City to enter upon these lands for the
purposes provided for and expressed in the Development Regulations
Chapter of the City of Millville." This statement on an approved plat
or plan shall in no way reduce the developer's responsibility to provide,
install, repair or maintain any facilities installed in this area
dedicated by ordinance or as shown on the plat or plan, or as provided
for by any maintenance or performance guaranty. If a development is
along one side only, 1/2 of the required extra width shall be anticipated.
(9) The actual design and construction of all streets
or roads within the City shall be subject to review and approval by
the City Engineer in accordance with the provisions of this chapter,
any adopted Master Plan or Official Map and any other applicable ordinances
of the City of Millville or acceptable engineering standards.
(10)
Where dead-end (cul-de-sac) streets are utilized,
they shall conform to the following standards:
(a)
Dead-end streets of a permanent nature (where
provisions for future extension of the street to the boundary of the
adjoining property is impractical or impossible) or of a temporary
nature (where provision is made for the future extension of the street
to the boundary line of adjoining property) shall provide a turnaround
at the end with a right-of-way radius sufficient to permit the maneuvering
and turning of emergency vehicles including fire trucks.
(b)
If a dead-end street is of temporary nature,
provisions shall be made for removal of the turnaround and reversion
of excess right-of-way to the adjoining properties as off-tract responsibility
of the developer creating the street extension when the street is
extended.
(c)
A dead-end street shall serve no more than 14
lots.
(11)
No street shall have a name which will duplicate
or so nearly duplicate in spelling or phonetic sound the names of
existing streets so as to be confusing therewith. The continuation
of an existing street shall have the same name. The names of new streets
must be approved by the Planning Board. This subsection shall apply
to any street within the City of Millville or surrounding municipalities.
(12)
Streets shall be constructed in accordance with
the standards as shown on Diagrams 1 through 3, Typical Roadway Sections
and Details, which are a part of this chapter and the standards contained
in this section.
(13)
Longitudinal grades on all local streets shall
not exceed 10%, nor 4% on arterial or collector streets. No street
shall have a longitudinal grade of less than 1/2 of 1%. Maximum grades
within intersections shall be 4% percent. The cross section of the
cartway from the center line to the curbline or edge of the paving
shall be parabolic and shall not exceed a slope of 2%. Where the cartway
on a collector or arterial street is banked to facilitate a curve
in the street alignment, the slope toward the curbline or shoulder
shall conform to accepted engineering practice.
(14)
Local streets should not be part of a four-way
intersection. Intersecting street center lines shall be as nearly
at right angles as possible, and in no case shall they be less than
75º at the point of the intersection. The curblines shall be
parallel to the center line. Approaches to all intersections shall
follow a straight line for at least 100 feet measured from the curbline
of the intersecting street to the beginning of the curve. No more
than two street center lines shall meet or intersect another point.
Collector and arterial streets intersecting another street from opposite
sides shall not be offset unless, measuring from the point of intersection
of the street center line, the two intersections shall be spaced a
sufficient distance to permit a minimum two lot depths between two
street rights-of-way, but not less than 250 feet between rights-of-way.
Any development abutting an existing street which is classified as
an arterial or collector street shall be permitted not more than one
new street every 800 feet on the same side of the street within the
boundaries of the tract being subdivided. In the spacing of streets,
consideration will be given to the location of existing intersections
on both sides of the development. Intersections shall be rounded on
the curbline, with the street having the highest radius requirement
as outlined below determining the minimum standard for all street
lines:
(a)
Arterial street at 40 feet.
(b)
Collector street at 30 feet.
(15)
The right-of-way for internal roads and alleys
in commercial and industrial development shall be determined on an
individual basis by the Planning Board and shall in all cases be sufficient
in width and design to safely accommodate parking and loading needs
of adjoining uses.
(16)
A tangent at least 200 feet long shall be introduced
between reverse curves on arterial and collector streets. When connecting
street lines deflect in any direction they shall be connected by a
curve with a radius conforming to standard engineering practice so
that the minimum sight distance within the curbline shall be 160 feet
for a local street, 300 feet for a collector street, and 500 feet
for an arterial street.
(17)
All changes in grade where the difference in
grade is 1% or greater shall be connected by a vertical curve having
a length of at least 50 feet for each 2% difference in grade, or portion
thereof, and providing minimum sight distances of 160 feet for a local
street, 300 feet for a collector street and 500 feet for an arterial
street. Intersections shall be designed with as flat a grade as practical
with the advice of the City Engineer.
(18)
In the case of local streets within a development where the City Commission determines that the length of the street and the nature of adjacent uses warrant such reduction in the width of the paved surface, the width required in Subsection
F(6) of this section may be reduced, but in no case shall the paved width of a local street be less than 26 feet.
(19)
Street signs shall be installed by the developer
in a manner and of a material and design to be approved by the Planning
Board as recommended by the City Engineer. All such signs shall be
installed so as not to create any visual obstruction and to be free
of visual obstruction.
(20)
The developer of any subdivision or development
shall provide for the installation of the underground service for
all poles and fixtures for streetlighting. Streetlighting standards
of a type and number approved by the Planning Board and the City Engineer
shall be installed by all street intersections and elsewhere as deemed
necessary by the Planning Board.
(21)
Whenever a development abuts or crosses municipal
boundaries, access to those lots within the City shall be from within
the City as the general rule. Wherever access to a development is
required across land in an adjoining municipality as the exception,
the Planning Board may require documentation that such access is legally
established, and that the access road is adequately improved.
Each development requiring off-street loading
or parking areas, or where roadways are not dedicated and accepted
by the City, shall install and maintain all appropriate traffic and
directional signs, markers or pavement markings as approved by the
appropriate approval authority. In the case of parking and loading
facilities, parking stalls and loading areas, traffic flow directions
and areas where is for limited period of time or prohibited shall
be clearly marked. In the case of developments where access is provided
by driveways or streets not dedicated and accepted by the City, county
or state, all traffic signs, directional signs and similar markings
shall be installed and maintained in accordance with the requirements
of the appropriate approval authority.
New utility distribution lines and telephone
or other communication facility lines to locations not presently served
by such utilities shall be placed underground, except in those cases
where the Planning Board finds that such placement underground would
be detrimental to existing land uses such as, but not limited to,
active agricultural operations.
No development, site clearing or demolition activity shall be carried out unless it is designed to avoid irreversible adverse impacts on the survival of existing vegetation. The removal of vegetation shall be permitted when such removal is necessary to accommodate the development or maintenance of a permitted structure or to otherwise conduct a permitted use of the property; to eliminate a pedestrian or vehicular safety hazard to a structure; specimen trees will not be cleared or removed; and the area cleared shall be landscaped in accordance with §
30-165 of this article.
In any district, nothing shall be erected, placed,
or allowed to grow in such a manner as to materially impede vision
between a height of 2 1/2 feet and 10 feet above the center line
grade of an abutting street or streets within 30 feet of an intersection
of street lines involving a state or county road, within 20 feet of
an intersection of street lines involving two municipal streets or
within 15 feet of an intersection involving boundary lines of a driveway
and a street.
A. Where water is accessible from a servicing utility,
the developer shall arrange for the construction of water mains in
such a manner as to make adequate water service available to each
lot, dwelling unit or use within the development. The entire system
shall be designed in accordance with the requirements and standards
of the City, county and/or state agency having approval authority
and shall be subject to its approval. The system shall also be designed
with adequate capacity and sustained pressure for present and probable
future development. Minimum City specifications shall be as follows:
(1) Water supply facilities and systems shall be provided
and installed in accordance with the specifications of this section
and as required by the City Engineer. Water supply facilities and
systems shall be designed and installed for either immediate or future
connection with a public or on-site community water supply facility
or system approved by the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection
and the City Commission of the City of Millville. In areas where public
water supply does not exist or is not expected to be provided within
a reasonable period of time in the opinion of the Planning Board,
the Board may waive the requirement that water supply facilities be
installed to connect with public water supply facilities or systems.
(2) In those cases where the public water supply facility
or system is not presently available and the site of the proposed
development is unsuitable and unsafe in terms of public health for
individual on-site water supply facilities as determined by the New
Jersey Department of Environmental Protection or Health, or other
appropriate local agency, an on-site community water supply system
approved by the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection
and the City Commission of the City of Millville shall be installed.
On-site water supply system shall be provided in addition to the required
installation of water supply facilities for those areas expected to
be provided with public water supply facilities or systems within
a reasonable period of time.
(3) All water supply and treatment facilities shall comply
with the rules and regulations established by the New Jersey Department
of Health, as amended and supplemented. Water mains shall be sized
for adequate delivery of pressure and volume. In general, the size
of water mains shall conform to the following: Lines whose primary
function is and will be to serve adjacent property shall be six inches,
and lines that serve as feeder lines to several other streets in addition
to the one in which they are located shall be eight inches and shall
be laid out to provide loops with other lines eight inches or larger
which enclose areas of not more than 1/4 square mile. Lines that provide
the main feed from present or larger lines shall be laid out so as
to form loops with other similar lines which enclose not more than
one square mile. The system shall be designed so that not more than
one hydrant is affected by shutting off any one section, so that hydrants
are located within 600 feet along street lines of any property development,
so that not more than four valves are necessary to shut off any one
section and so that the number of dwelling units affected by shutting
off any one section shall be limited to approximately 25.
(4) Cast-iron pipe and fittings shall conform to applicable
requirements of the American Standards Association's specifications,
as amended. Cast-iron pipe shall be thickness Class 22, and flanges
shall be Class 125. Mechanical joints conforming to the American Standards
Association (ASA) Specifications A-21.11, as amended, or gasket-type
joints of Tyton or approved equal, shall be used. Other fittings shall
conform to the requirements of the American Standards Association
Specifications A-21.10, as amended, and all cast-iron pipe or fittings
shall be cement-lined in accordance with ASA A-21.4, as amended. Valves
shall conform to the current American Waterworks Association standard
for iron-body-disk gate valves with parallel seats. Unless otherwise
specified by the City Engineer, valves shall be operated by a two-inch-square
operating nut of cast-iron and shall open in a counterclockwise direction.
The direction of opening shall be marked by an arrow and the word,
"open." All cast-iron surfaces of valves and valve boxes shall be
complete with covers, and both valve box and cover shall be of ample
strength and dimension to fully sustain the shocks of vehicular traffic
and to maintain the upper section and cover to proper grade under
heavy traffic conditions. Fire hydrants shall be as required by City
specifications. Operating cap nuts shall be one-and-one-half-inch
pentagons. They shall be equipped with two hose nozzles and one steamer
nozzle, size and treads to be in accordance with local fire company
requirements. They shall have a provision for a six-inch connection
to the main. Valve opening for the hydrant shall be four inches. Valves
shall be installed between all fire hydrants and the supply main.
(5) Excavations and backfill shall conform to the requirements for subsurface structure excavations. Requirements relating to protection of the work from cave-ins and accumulation of water shall be as specified under §
30-179, Stormwater management.
(6) Water mains shall be laid in straight lines except
when otherwise specifically directed by the City Engineer. When deviation
from a straight line is permitted, the deflection of each joint shall
not exceed the manufacturer's recommended maximum for the type of
joint and size of pipe being installed. Water pipes shall be laid
with at least 3 1/2 feet of cover over the top of the pipe to
the existing or proposed finished grade or to the future finished
grade when such is lower. Special care shall be exercised to removal
all earth, stones and other materials from each pipe as it is laid
and to prevent any such materials from entering the pipelines. The
contractor is responsible for the lines being maintained in an absolutely
clean condition on the inside and for seeing that all valves and hydrants
are clean and in good working order when installed. Open pipe ends
shall at all times be adequately protected and shall be securely sealed
with dirt-proof plugs whenever work is stopped for any reason. After
removing a plug, the interior of the pipeline shall be inspected before
resuming pipe laying operations.
(7) All fittings and valves shall be set accurately, true
to and square with pipelines. Valve stems shall be accurately plumbed.
Fittings and valves shall be supported by approved blocking so as
to ensure their remaining accurately in position during jointly and
in such a manner that their weight will not place undue strain on
connection pipe or joints. Pipelines shall be thrust-blocked at all
bends greater than 10º and at all T's, plugs, valves and hydrants
so as to prevent movement of the lines under pressure.
(8) Before new waterlines are put into service, the contractor
shall provide necessary equipment for and shall perform a two-hour
pressure test, during which time pressure will be maintained at 125
pounds per square inch, and the amount of water that must be added
to maintain this pressure will be measured. The maximum leakage which
will be permitted for sections of the system up to and including 500
linear feet will be 0.01 gallon per inch of diameter per 24 hours
per foot of pipe. Where the length of pipe to be tested exceeds 500
lineal feet, the total amount of leakage allowed for any such section
of pipe shall be the amount which would be allowed for 500 feet. In
general, every section of pipe which can be isolated by existing or
proposed valves shall be individually pressure-tested except where
such sections are less than 200 feet in length, in which case they
may be tested as part of another section.
(9) Before a new waterline is put into service or when
any section of a pipeline is drained or emptied of water at any time,
it shall be completely sterilized with chlorine according to the directions
of the City Engineer.
B. Where public water is not available, potable water
supply shall be provided to each lot on an individual well basis.
Such wells shall be designed in accordance with the requirements and
standards of the City and/or state agency having jurisdiction thereof.
A. Where, due to natural features or special conditions,
a literal enforcement or the provisions of this article will result
in unnecessary hardship or be detrimental to the stated goals and
objectives of the City's development policy as expressed in the adopted
City Master Plan, the Planning Board may, by resolution, grant such
waiver from or adjustment to the requirements thereof as will not
be contrary to the public interest and will not subvert the objectives
of the City Master Plan and this chapter. Financial hardship or disadvantage
shall not be sufficient cause or proof of hardship.
B. All requests for waivers or adjustments to the design
standards contained herein shall be submitted in writing to the approval
authority and shall clearly set forth the reason why literal enforcement
would cause hardship or be contrary to stated planning objectives
or goals.
C. In reviewing such requests, the approving authority
shall give consideration to the development size, anticipated or recognizable
adverse impacts to be created or increased by it, natural and existing
conditions at the development or adjacent thereto, the purpose or
reason of the development, and reasonable feasibility of design standards
to the development proposed.
All improvements to be installed as set forth
in this article, when required of a developer, shall be subject to
inspection by the approval authority engineer or the City Engineer,
who shall be notified by the developer at least seven days prior to
the start of construction. No underground installation shall be covered
until inspected and approved by the appropriate engineer.