Pursuant to § 280-a, Subdivision 4,
of the Town Law, the Town Board of the Town of Philipstown, New York,
has by resolution dated May 27, 1958, declared "...that the whole
of the Town of Philipstown lying outside the Villages of Cold Spring
and Nelsonville and lying outside of existing subdivisions (as defined
in § 1115 of the Public Health Law) shall be and the same
hereby is made an open development area wherein permits may be issued
for the erection of structures to which access is given by private
right-of-way or easement upon such conditions and subject to such
limitations as may be prescribed by general or special rule of the
Planning Board."
The following regulations apply to the open
development area of the Town of Philipstown and shall govern the issuance
of permits in said area for the erection of structures to which access
is given by private right-of-way or easement.
Except as hereinafter otherwise provided, the private right-of-way or easement shall be improved with a travelway meeting the minimum standards for private ways as specified in the Land Subdivision Regulations. (See Summary of standards in §
112-64.) The travelway shall have suitable grades and alignment to provide safe and convenient access to cars, fire apparatus and service vehicles. In no case shall the requirement for grading, drainage and alignment be construed to exceed the requirements therefor contained in the Town Road Specifications in effect at the time the application is made.
The following shall be submitted with and form
part of all applications for permits for the erection of structures
to which access is given by private right-of-way or easement:
A. Proof of access: proof, in writing, of the permanent
creation of the right-of-way or easement.
B. Maps: the two copies of the layout or plot plan required under §
175-8 of the Zoning Law of the Town of Philipstown, drawn to a scale of not less than one inch equals 100 feet and showing the right-of-way or easement and the dimensions thereof; copies of a subdivision plat map approved by the Philipstown Planning Board showing the right-of-way and lot may constitute such map.
C. Statement: a verified statement on forms prescribed by the Planning Board setting forth that the right-of-way or easement has been or, prior to the issuance of a certificate of occupancy, will be improved with a travelway conforming with the requirements of §
112-54 hereof; or, if full conformity is not shown or proposed, a statement of the respects in which the travelway, as existing or proposed, does not conform with said requirements and of the reason or reasons therefor.
Upon receipt of the application referred by
the Building Inspector, the Planning Board shall promptly call the
applicant into consultation and after such consultation or, if the
applicant shall not appear, after the time fixed therefor shall proceed
as follows:
A. Approval. If the Planning Board is satisfied, in its discretion, that the access to the parcel for which the permit is sought will provide safe and convenient access to such traffic, including but not limited to cars, fire apparatus and service vehicles, as may be necessary to serve not only the parcel for which the permit is sought, but other lands which then or in the future may share the use of such access, it shall approve the application. Such approval may include approval of access to more than the four building lots specified in §
112-56A(5) when the Planning Board finds that the lot for which the permit is sought has usable practical access on a state highway or county road but that approval of the application will assist traffic safety by avoiding construction of additional driveways onto such highway or road.
B. Modification and approval. If it shall appear that such access does not meet the standard therefor set forth in Subsection
A hereof but that it is capable of meeting the same if modified or altered, the Planning Board may, with the consent of the applicant, modify or alter the application in the respects necessary to meet such standard and, as so modified or altered, shall approve the same.
C. Disapproval reference to other regulations. If the Planning Board is satisfied, in its discretion, that the access does not and cannot, under any modification or alteration thereof that may be made under these regulations, meet the standard therefor set forth in Subsection
A hereof, the Planning Board shall disapprove the application and, in an appropriate case, shall require that before a building permit may be issued, the applicant comply with the Land Subdivision Regulations of the Town of Philipstown and the Town Road Specifications.
Unless its time to do so shall have been extended
by mutual consent of the applicant and the Planning Board, such Board
shall, within 45 days after the receipt by it of any application referred
to it hereunder, file with the Building Inspector a written return
of its action thereon. The return shall state whether the application
is approved or denied and, if denied, shall state the reasons therefor;
if the application is modified or altered and, as modified or altered,
approved, the return shall specify the modifications or alterations
made.
Upon receipt of the return, the Building Inspector
shall proceed as follows:
A. If the application has been approved as filed, or
as modified or altered, he shall forthwith issue a building permit
on the application as filed, or as filed and modified or altered,
provided that the requirements of all other applicable laws, ordinances,
rules and regulations are met.
B. If the application has been denied, he shall forthwith
notify the applicant of such denial and the reason or reasons therefor.
For the purpose of these regulations, an existing
right-of-way or easement is a private right-of-way or easement improved
with a travelway and providing access to one or more existing lots
containing a dwelling or other principal structure as of July 3, 1980
(the effective date of these regulations, as amended).
A. Action by Building Inspector.
(1) If the access to the parcel for which the permit is sought is an existing right-of-way or easement, the Building Inspector may issue a permit, notwithstanding that the right-of-way or easement is less than 50 feet in width and notwithstanding that the travelway does not meet the standards of construction therefor set forth in §
112-54 hereof, provided that:
(a)
The authority of the Building Inspector to issue
permits for parcels deriving access from any such right-of-way or
easement shall be limited to such number, which, when added to the
number of principal structures existing on or along said right-of-way
or easement or any tributaries thereof and deriving access therefrom,
shall not exceed eight on a right-of-way or easement existing before
August 5, 1960 (the date of Town Board approval of the initial Open
Development Area General Regulations), or four on a right-of-way or
easement existing before July 3, 1980 (the effective date of these
regulations, as amended).
(b)
The travelway, as constructed or proposed to be improved, provides a reasonable and practical equivalent of the access required in §
112-54 hereof, not only for the parcel for which the permit is sought but for all other parcels that may exist or legally be created on or along the right-of-way or easement.
(c)
The right-of-way or easement is of sufficient
width to allow, in addition to the travelway, an easement at least
10 feet in width for the introduction of utilities and utility lines
and pipes to structures existing or that may be constructed on or
along said right-of-way.
(d)
The requirements of all other applicable laws,
ordinances, rules and regulations are met.
(2) In the event the provisions of Subsection
A(1)(a) through
(d) hereof are not complied with, the Building Inspector shall refer the application to the Planning Board for its action thereon.
B. Action by Planning Board: Upon receipt of an application referred to it under Subsection
A, the Planning Board shall proceed in the manner provided by §
112-57 hereof and, in passing upon the application, may make any reasonable exception to any part of these regulations and may approve the application subject to conditions that will preserve the overall purpose and intent of the regulations.
No certificate of occupancy shall be issued
for any structure erected under a building permit issued pursuant
to any part of these regulations unless the travelway has first been
fully completed and complies in all respects with the specifications
therefor upon which the building permit was issued.
If the applicant is aggrieved by the action
of the Planning Board, he may, within 30 days after the return of
the Planning Board is filed with the Building Inspector, appeal such
action to the Zoning Board of Appeals, and the same provisions are
hereby applied to such appeals as are provided in cases of appeals
on zoning regulations. Where there are practical difficulties or unnecessary
hardships in the way of carrying out the strict letter of these regulations
or where the circumstances of the case do not require the structure
to be related to existing or proposed streets or highways, the Board
of Appeals may make any reasonable exception and may reverse or affirm,
wholly or partly, or may modify the action appealed from, subject
to conditions that will preserve the spirit of these regulations,
secure the public safety and welfare and work substantial justice.
The action by the Board of Appeals shall be filed forthwith with the
Building Inspector, who shall proceed thenceforth as though the action
of the Board of Appeals was the original action of the Planning Board.
The Building Inspector shall maintain a file
and map record of all applications under these regulations.
The following is a summary of the standards
for new open development area private rights-of-way and easements
layouts:
A. Right-of-way width: 50 feet. The right-of-way is to
consist of an easement superimposed upon the abutting lots; fee to
land under the easement owned by the abutting lots to the center line
of the right-of-way.
B. Travelway: fourteen-foot width constructed with a suitable compacted gravel or crushed stone base, eight inches in depth, meeting the specifications for a foundation course as set forth in the Town Road Specifications [§§
112-34J and
112-35A of the Subdivision Regulations; §§
150-20B(2) and
150-21B of the Town Road Specifications].
C. Drainage: The travelway is to be provided with sufficient drainage to protect the stability of the travelway and to prevent water from crossing the travelway surface (§
112-35B of the Subdivision Regulations).
D. Maximum grade: 14% (§
112-34J of the Subdivision Regulations).
E. Turnaround: 75 feet diameter of right-of-way, or a hammerhead- or branch-type capable of accommodating the turning and backing movements of a vehicle 40 feet in length [§
112-34G(2) of the Subdivision Regulations].
F. Alignment: 75 feet minimum radius of curvature (§
112-34L of the Subdivision Regulations).
G. Street connection: shall connect to:
(1) An existing state highway or county road;
(2) An existing Town of Philipstown street or highway;
(3) A proposed Town street or highway shown on a plat
approved by the Philipstown Planning Board and filed in the Putnam
County Clerk's office; or
(4) A private right-of-way or easement meeting the requirements of the Open Development Area General Regulations of the Town of Philipstown and giving sole access to no more existing or potential lots, including the lots proposed under the application, than permitted by such general regulations [§
112-34B(3) of the Subdivision Regulations].
H. Lots: maximum of four lots; minimum area of 120,000 square feet and shall be of such shape that a square 250 feet on each side will fit on the lot. [See §
112-33B(2) and
(3) of the Subdivision Regulations.]
I. Requirement precedent to issuance of permit: The right-of-way shall connect to existing state, county or Town highway or an improved open development area right-of-way (excluding proposed Town highways); travelway and drainage complete or guaranteed; proof of access; etc. (See §§
112-55 and
112-56 of these regulations.)
J. Requirement of recorded right-of-way maintenance agreement.
[Added 9-25-2013 by L.L. No. 4-2013]
(1) Prior to granting final approval of a new open development area subdivision pursuant to these regulations, the Planning Board shall require the applicant to submit a right-of-way maintenance agreement that complies with the criteria in Subsection
J(4) below.
(2) Final approval of the subdivision shall be conditioned upon recording
the approved maintenance agreement in the County Clerk's office, and
the Planning Board Chair shall not sign the plat until the applicant
has shown proof of such recording and provided a suitable notation
of such recording on the plat.
(3) An applicant may substitute a recorded property owners' association agreement for a recorded right-of-way maintenance agreement, provided that the Town Attorney finds that the property owners' association documents provide assurances of maintenance of the right-of-way that meet the requirements in Subsection
J(4). The property owners' association agreement shall be recorded in the County Clerk's office prior to or simultaneously with final approval of the plat.
(4) The right-of-way maintenance agreement or property owners' association
(POA) agreement shall meet the following minimum requirements:
(a)
The signatories to the maintenance agreement or the POA agreement
shall have adequate powers to charge the subdivision lot owners for
their proportionate share of the maintenance costs of the private
road.
(b)
The maintenance agreement or the POA agreement shall ensure
that the road will be maintained and kept open to permit emergency
vehicle access.
(c)
The maintenance agreement or POA agreement shall bind all lot
owners in the subdivision and their successors in title.
K. Note: See the Land Subdivision Regulations and Town
Board Specifications for details and other requirements.