The purpose of this article is to implement the historic preservation
element of the Master Plan, to provide guidance to property owners
in achieving preservation of historic resources and to advance the
following public purposes:
A. To preserve and protect historic, architectural, cultural, archaeological,
and aesthetic resources for the general welfare of the public;
B. To identify, designate, and regulate historic districts and historic
sites to preserve their historic, architectural, cultural, archaeological,
and aesthetic significance;
C. To preserve and enhance the environmental quality of neighborhoods;
D. To strengthen the City's economic base by the stimulation of the
tourist industry;
E. To foster economic development and manage growth;
F. To foster civic pride in the beauty and accomplishments of the City's
past.
As used in this article, the following terms shall have the
meanings indicated:
ADDITION
An extension or increase in building size, floor area or
height.
ALTERATION
As applied to a building or structure, a change or rearrangement
in the structural parts or in the means of egress, or an enlargement,
whether by extending on a side or by increasing in height or the moving
from one location or position, to another, or the change in appearance
of the exterior surface of any improvement.
CERTIFICATE OF APPROPRIATENESS
A document issued by the Historic Preservation Commission
demonstrating its review of any alteration, addition to or demolition
of a designated historic site, or to a property within a historic
district. Such review is based upon the application and representations
of the applicant and the approved plans presented for the preservation,
restoration, rehabilitation or alteration of an existing property,
or the demolition, addition, removal, repair or remodeling of any
feature on an existing building within the historic district, or for
any new construction within the historic district.
DEMOLITION
The partial or total razing, dismantling or destruction of
any historic site or any improvement within a historic district.
EVALUATION
The process of determining whether identified properties
meet defined criteria of historical, architectural, archaeological
or cultural significance.
HISTORIC DISTRICT
One or more historic sites and certain intervening or surrounding
property significantly affecting or affected by the quality and character
of historic site or sites, as specifically designated herein.
HISTORIC RESOURCE
Any prehistoric or historic district, site, building, structure,
or object included in, or eligible for inclusion in, the National
Register (of Historic Places); such term includes artifacts, records,
and remains which are related to such a district, site, building,
structure, or object.
HISTORIC SITE
Any real property, man-made structure, natural object or
configuration or any portion or group of the foregoing which has been
designated in the Master Plan as being of historic, archaeological,
cultural, scenic or architectural significance at the national, state
or local level, as specifically designated herein or any property
which is located in a historic district. The designation of a historic
site or landmark shall be deemed to include the Tax Map lot on which
it is located as well as the right-of-way contiguous thereto.
HISTORIC STRUCTURE
Any structure situated on property included in the Historic
Designation List of the City of Cape May, as adopted by Ordinance
192-7-98, as it may be amended.
IMPROVEMENT
Any structure or any part thereof installed upon real property
by human endeavor and intended to be kept at the location of such
construction or installation.
INTEGRITY
The ability of a property or element to convey its historic
significance; the retention of those essential characteristics and
features that enable a property to effectively convey its significance.
INVENTORY
A list of historic properties determined to meet criteria
of significance specified herein.
MINOR APPLICATION
Any application for a certificate of appropriateness which:
A.
Does not involve demolition, relocation or removal of a historic
site;
B.
Does not involve an addition to a property in a historic district
or new construction in a historic district;
C.
Is a request for approval of fences, signs, lighting, doors,
windows, roofs, paving, exterior sheathing or streetscape work which
will comply with the adopted design guidelines for the improvement
proposed where a specific guideline applies and which will not substantially
affect the characteristics of the historic site or the historic district.
If the design guidelines contain a discretionary standard, the Chairperson
shall refer the request for approval to the complete Planning Board.
D.
Is a request for a field change for a certificate of appropriateness which has already been issued and which meets the criteria of Subsection
C of this definition, above.
NATIONAL REGISTER CRITERIA
The established criteria for evaluating the eligibility of
properties for inclusion in the National Register of Historic Places.
NONCONTRIBUTING BUILDINGS
Building, site, structure or object that does not add to
the historic architectural qualities, historic associations or archaeological
values for which a property is significant because it was not present
during the period of significance; due to alterations, disturbances,
additions or other changes it no longer possesses historic integrity
reflecting its character at that time or is incapable of yielding
important information about the period; or it does not independently
meet the National Register criteria.
ORDINARY MAINTENANCE AND REPAIR
Repair of any deterioration, wear or damage to a structure
or any part thereof in order to return the same as nearly as practicable
to its condition prior to the occurrence of such deterioration, wear,
or damage with in-kind material and quality workmanship. Ordinary
maintenance shall further include in-kind replacement of exterior
elements or accessory hardware, including signs, using the same materials
and workmanship and having the same appearance.
PERMIT
Any required approval for exterior work to any improvement
or property in a historic district or on a historic site. Permit shall
include, but is not limited to, a building permit, a City window replacement
permit, a demolition permit, a permit to move, convert, relocate or
remodel or to change the use or type of occupancy of any improvement
or property in a historic district which involves exterior changes
to the structure or the property on which it is located.
PRESERVATION
The act or process of applying measures to sustain the existing
form, integrity and material of a building or structure, and the existing
form and vegetative cover of a site. It may include initial stabilization
work, where necessary, as well as ongoing maintenance of the historic
building materials.
PROTECTION
The act or process of applying measures designed to affect
the physical condition of a property by defending or guarding it from
deterioration, loss or attack, or to cover or shield the property
from danger or injury.
RECONSTRUCTION
The act or process of reproducing by new construction the
exact form and detail of a vanished or nonsurviving building, structure
or object, or any part thereof, as it appeared at a specific period
of time when documentary and physical evidence is available to permit
accurate reconstruction.
REHABILITATION
The act or process of returning a property to a state of
utility through repair or alteration which makes possible an efficient
contemporary use while preserving those portions or features of the
property which are significant to its historical, architectural and
cultural values.
REPAIR
Any work done on an improvement that is not an addition and
does not change the exterior appearance of any improvement; provided,
however, that any such repairs must be done with materials and workmanship
of the same quality.
RESTORATION
The act or process of accurately recovering the form and
details of a property and its setting as it appeared at a particular
period of time by means of the removal of later work or by the replacement
of missing earlier work.
STREETSCAPE
The visual character of the street, including, but not limited
to, the architecture, building setbacks and height, fences, storefronts,
signs, lighting, parking areas, materials, color, sidewalks, curbing
and landscaping.
STRUCTURE
A combination of materials to form a construction for occupancy,
use or ornamentation whether installed on, above, or below the surface
of a parcel of land.
SURVEY
A process of identifying and gathering data on a community's
historic resources. It includes a field survey which is the physical
search for and recording of historic resources on the ground, preliminary
planning and background research before the field survey begins, organization
and presentation of survey data as the survey proceeds, and the development
of inventories.
SURVEY DATA
The raw data produced by the survey; that is, all the information
gathered on each property and area investigated.
VICTORIAN HOTELS
Hotels with at least 100 rooms, the main portion of which
were constructed during or within 15 years after the reign of Victoria
Alexandrina, Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
(1837-1901).
[Added 12-19-2017 by Ord.
No. 335-2017]
A. The purpose of this section is to provide uniform standards, design
guidelines and criteria for the regulation of historic sites and districts
for use by the Historic Preservation Commission. All projects requiring
a certificate of appropriateness and all applications for development
in historic districts or on historic sites shall be governed by the
principles of the Secretary of the Interior's Standards for Rehabilitation,
the Secretary of the Interior's Standards for the Treatment of Historic
Properties with Guidelines for Preserving, Rehabilitating, Restoring
& Reconstructing Historic Buildings, and the Cape May Design Guidelines
for the historic district which are adopted as an appendix to this
section and which are incorporated herein by reference.
B. Criteria for finding appropriateness. The Historic Preservation Commission
may consider the siting, design, arrangement, texture, details, scale,
shape, materials, finish, color, and relationship to streetscape of
the proposed work and the relationship of those characteristics to
the historic, architectural, cultural, archaeological, and aesthetic
significance of the historic site or district.
C. In considering permit applications, the Historic Preservation Commission
shall not consider use, zoning requirements for setbacks, density,
height limitations or lot coverage in finding appropriateness, as
these fall within the purview of the Planning Board and the Zoning
Board of Adjustment.
D. In considering development applications referred to it by a Board,
the Historic Preservation Commission may consider use, zoning requirements
for setbacks, density, height limitations, and lot coverage, in rendering
its advice to the Planning Board and the Zoning Board of Adjustment
on the application of the zoning ordinance provisions concerning historic
preservation. The Commission should emphasize the streetscape when
reviewing applications for development. The Commission shall not hear
applications for development unless referred to it by either the Planning
Board or the Zoning Board of Adjustment.
E. Criteria for plan review. All reviews of plans within Historic Preservation
Districts shall give consideration to:
(1) The cultural, historic or architectural values of a structure and
its relationship to the surrounding area.
(2) The general compatibility of the proposed use to the cultural and
historical values of the surrounding area.
(3) The general compatibility of exterior design, arrangement, texture
and materials proposes to be used. In carrying out the review under
the guidelines, the following criteria shall be utilized:
(a)
All exterior elevations, including the roof, must be maintained
and new construction must be compatible with existing districts and
surrounding areas.
(b)
In-kind or compatible exterior colors must be utilized.
(c)
In-kind or similarly compatible building materials must be utilized.
(d)
Uses shall be environmentally compatible with the uses adjacent to the property and throughout the surrounding areas. Uses shall not adversely affect the uses in the adjacent or surrounding areas and shall conform to the performance criteria outlined in §
525-58 herein.
F. Standards. Standards as are adopted by the Historic Preservation
Commission pursuant to resolution of the Historic Preservation Commission
are hereby adopted and made part of this chapter. The standards consist
of window standards, exterior sheathing standards, fence standards,
streetscape standards, roof standards, door standards, porch standards,
solar panel standards, windmill/wind turbine standards, broadband
television antenna standards, and design standards for all new construction
and rehabilitation projects in the historic district and for all rehabilitation
projects that affect historic sites outside of the historic district.
A copy of the standards shall be available in the offices of
the Construction Official and the City Clerk and the official website
of the City of Cape May at www.capemaycity.com. The standards may
be amended by the Historic preservation Commission, but shall not
take effect until proved approved by ordinance of City Council.
[Amended 7-18-2023 by Ord. No. 508-2023]
H. De minimis exception. The standards provided for in §
525-39F may be waived by the Historic Preservation Commission based upon a finding that the impact from said waiver is de minimis, and thus will not have a material or substantial impact on the historic district or a historic site.
It shall be the duty of all municipal officials reviewing all
permit applications involving real property or improvements thereon
to determine whether such application involves any activity which
should also be the subject of an application for a certificate of
appropriateness. If it should, the official shall inform both the
administrative officer and the applicant, as well as the Historic
Preservation Commission.
The requirements of this article shall be considered to be in
addition to and in no case shall they be interpreted as a substitute
for any other approval, permit or other action as otherwise provided
for.