Any change of lot line, whether in conjunction with the creation of a street or a new lot, or a simple exchange of land, shall be considered to be a subdivision and shall be subject to Planning Board review and approval per Chapter
A361. A plat indicating such change shall be filed with the Office of the Westchester County Clerk prior to such change taking effect. A copy of the filed plat shall also be submitted to the City Assessor. No building permit shall be issued for the use or development of any lot which has not been so created subsequent to the effective date of this chapter.
A. Lot for every building. Every building hereafter erected
shall be located on a lot and there shall be no more than one principal
building and its accessory buildings on one lot except for multifamily
and nonresidential buildings in districts where such uses are permitted.
B. Subdivision of a lot. Where a lot is formed hereafter from part of a lot already occupied by a building, such separation shall be effected in a manner which will not impair conformity with any of the requirements of this chapter with respect to the existing building and all yards and other required spaces in connection therewith. No permit shall be issued for the erection of a building on the new lot thus created unless it complies with all the provisions of this chapter. All subdivisions and/or apportionments shall be submitted to the Planning Board per Chapter
A361 of the City Code.
C. New building on lots smaller than required. A building
permit may be issued for the erection of a one-family residential
building on a lot in a one-family residential district which was located
in the R1-7.5 or the R1-10 District prior to May 19, 2005, notwithstanding
that the lot frontage or lot area of such lot is less than that required
for the district in which such lot is located at the time of issuance
of the building permit, provided that 1) such lot met the lot frontage
and lot area requirements in effect for such lot in the R1-7.5 or
R1-10 District, as the case may be, prior to May 19, 2005, and 2)
such lot was in different ownership than any other lot or lots contiguous
thereto on May 19, 2005, and still is in different ownership as of
the date of issuance of the building permit. In addition, a permit
may be issued for the erection of a building for a permitted use on
a lot for which a valid conveyance has been recorded prior to April
18, 1955, notwithstanding that the area or dimensions of such lot
are less than that required for the district in which such lot is
located, provided that:
[Amended 5-19-2005 by Ord. No. 120-2005]
(1) The lot met the zoning requirements at the time the
deed to the lot was created.
(2) All yard setbacks and other building related requirements
which are in effect at the time of the obtaining of the building permit
are complied with; provided, however, that in a one- or two-family
residence district, the permitted floor area ratio may be increased
to allow the construction of a dwelling which meets the minimum floor
area requirement of the district in which it is located or so much
thereof as may be possible within the limits of the required yard
setbacks.
(3) The ownership of such lot was not the same as any
other lot or lots contiguous thereto on April 18, 1955, and still
is not the same as of the date of issuance of the building permit.
If that is not the case, such other lot or lots, or so much thereof
as may be necessary, shall be combined with the first-named lot to
make one or more conforming lots, whereupon a permit may be issued,
but only for such combined lots. Where the required area or dimensions
of lots are changed by an amendment to this chapter, any lot legally
in existence on that date and made nonconforming by such amendment
may be built upon as provided in this section.
(4) The lot is shown on a subdivision plat filed in the
Westchester County Clerk's Office.
[Added 5-13-2008 by Ord. No. 108-2008; amended 10-16-2012 by Ord. No. 171-2012]
D. Minimum distance between buildings on the same lot.
(1) In all residence districts the minimum distance between
principal buildings shall equal at least the average height of such
buildings at the points where such buildings are closest to one another.
(2) The minimum distance between any principal building and any accessory building shall in no case be less than the height of the accessory building but in no case less than 10 feet. See §
331-45A(1)(c).
E. Major development subdivision of certain building
lots in the DMU, DMUR, MUFE, and DB Districts. Notwithstanding other
provisions in this chapter, a building lot located in the DMU Downtown
Mixed-Use District, DMUR Downtown Mixed-Use Urban Renewal District,
MUFE Mixed-Use Family Entertainment District, or the DB Downtown Business
District, which contains at least 75,000 square feet of horizontal
lot area (the development site) and on which at least 300,000 square
feet of building gross floor area is constructed or approved to be
constructed, may be horizontally and/or vertically subdivided into
Building Lots which do not comply with the bulk and dimensional requirements
of this chapter (major development lots), provided that:
[Amended 9-20-2005 by Ord. No. 225-2005]
(1) Each such major development lot shall contain at least
1,000,000 cubic feet of area;
(2) All major development lots which together constitute
the development site shall be subject to one combined and integrated
approval under the State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA)
and, as may be applicable, one combined and integrated site plan,
subdivision, special permit and/or variance approval;
(3) Each of such major development lots shall be serviced
by separate water, sanitary sewer and storm sewer utility lines;
(4) All of the major development lots which together constitute
a development site shall be subject to a declaration of covenants
and easements, recorded against all such major development lots, in
form and substance acceptable to the Corporation Counsel of the City,
and to which all mortgages and liens (except for the lien of real
property taxes) on such lots shall be subordinated, containing the
following at a minimum:
(a)
Cross-easements for structural support, utilities,
pedestrian, vehicular, and emergency services access, and off-street
parking between or among such major development lots;
(b)
A requirement that the owner of each major development
lot maintain a policy of commercial general liability insurance providing
liability insurance against claims for bodily injury, death and property
damage occurring in, on or about such owner's major development lot,
including property damage as a result of fire or other casualty, and
that such policy shall name all of the owners of the other major development
lots as additional insureds;
(c)
Covenants that require the owner of each major
development lot to maintain the building(s) and/or structure(s) located
on such owner's major development lot in accordance with commercially
accepted first class standards, and, if applicable, as is necessary
to ensure the continued structural and functional integrity of all
of the buildings and structures constructed on the development site,
and that give each owner a right of self-help upon the failure of
any owner to perform its maintenance obligations;
(d)
A requirement that the major development lot
which has the most at-grade frontage along the public sidewalks which
adjoin the development site shall be solely and entirely responsible
for maintenance, repair and replacement of and shall assume all liability
for all of the sidewalks and curbs which adjoin the development site;
and
(e)
In the event the City cannot after due diligence
determine which between or among such major development lots is responsible
for a violation of City state, and/or federal codes and/or regulations
regarding maintenance of the properties and/or buildings on such major
development lots, the City may serve the owners of all such major
development lots with such violations and all such owners shall consent
to the jurisdiction of the court hearing such violations.
(5) Dimensional. parking, and sign requirements, as set
forth this chapter and the Sign Ordinance, shall be applied as though the entire development site
were one building lot;
(6) A subdivision of a development site shall be considered a major development subdivision subject to this Subsection
E even if there are fewer than three major development lots; and
(7) The plat for the subdivision shall be in a format
acceptable for filing in the Westchester County Clerk's Office.
See also §
331-29, Schedule of Dimensional Regulations.
A. Use of yards.
(1) Buildings and structures. No principal building shall
be constructed on any portion of a lot which is less in width than
the minimum required for the district in which it is located. No building
or structure shall be permitted within any minimum required yard except:
[Amended 7-16-2002 by Ord. No. 139-2002]
(a)
Decks or terraces less than 18 inches above
the level of the ground beneath them and not extending closer than
six feet to any side lot line or 10 feet to a rear lot line.
(d)
Sports courts but not closer than 10 feet from
any property line.
[Added 9-21-2004 by Ord. No. 198-2004]
(e)
Other minor accessory structures in a side or
rear yard but no closer than three feet from any property line.
(f)
Ground-mounted solar energy collectors not extending closer
than six feet to any side lot line or 10 feet to a rear lot line.
[Added 11-15-2016 by Ord.
No. 233-2016]
(2) Parking. No parking shall be permitted within any yard except as provided in Article
XIV.
(3) Structural projections.
(a)
Open one-story porches, roof overhangs, canopies,
and other similar architectural features may extend to within a minimum
distance of the front lot line as follows:
[1]
R1-20, R1-15, R1-10, and R1-WF-10 Districts:
25 feet.
[Amended 5-19-2005 by Ord. No. 120-2005]
[2]
R1-10A and R1-7.5 Districts: 20 feet.
[Amended 5-19-2005 by Ord. No. 120-2005]
[3]
R2-7.0, RMF-0.4, RMF-0.5, RMF-0.7, and RMF-1.3
Districts: 15 feet.
(b)
The ordinary projections of window sills, belt courses, chimneys, cornices, eaves, sun-shading devices and other similar architectural features shall not project more than 30 inches into any side or rear yard. Any commercial installation of an awning proposed as a sun-shading device shall be subject to §
270-4F and all applicable subsections.
[Amended 2-19-2013 by Ord. No. 39-2013]
B. Front and side yards on corner lots. The owner of
a corner lot in a residence or nonresidence district may elect either
yard fronting on a street as the required front yard, with any other
yard fronting a street being equal to at least the following:
(1) R1-20, R1-15, R1-10, R1-WF-10: 25 feet.
[Amended 5-19-2005 by Ord. No. 120-2005]
(2) R1-10A, R1-7.5, RMF-0.5, RMF-0.7, RMF-1.3: 20 feet.
[Amended 5-19-2005 by Ord. No. 120-2005]
(3) R2-7.0, RMF-0.4: 15 feet.
C. Obstruction to visibility at intersections. The following requirements with respect to obstruction to visibility at intersections shall apply to one- and two-family properties in residence districts only. Standards with regards to visibility affecting other properties shall be as determined adequate by the Planning Board as set forth in Article
XIII of this chapter.
(1) Driveway intersections. Obstructions to visibility
which exceed 2 1/2 feet in height shall be prohibited in the
triangles formed by the edge of the paved street, the edge of the
driveway, and a line joining points located along the street pavement
edge 30 feet therefrom and the driveway edge 15 feet therefrom.
(2) Street intersections. Obstructions to visibility which
exceed 2 1/2 feet in height shall be prohibited in the triangle
formed by intersecting street pavement edges, and a line joining points
located along said street pavement edges, which are 40 feet from the
theoretical point of intersection of such lines, as extended.
(3) Right-of-way
intersections. No person in possession of property as either owner
or tenant thereof shall erect, construct, install, plant, grow or
maintain on any property located at the intersection of the rights-of-way
of avenues, streets or alleys any fence, sign, post, hedge, shrubbery
or tree that exceeds three feet in height above the nearest ledge
of such intersecting corner of said rights-of-way of said avenues,
streets or alleys, or any tree of which any branch shall be lower
at any point than seven feet above said level of such corner of said
rights-of-way of said avenues, streets or alleys, to the end that
persons driving vehicles upon either of such intersecting corner of
said rights-of-way of said avenues, streets or alleys shall have an
unobstructed view across the corner part of said premises to the other
corners of said avenues, streets or alleys for a distance of at least
20 feet measured from the intersecting corner of said rights-of-way
of said avenues, streets or alleys in either direction.
[Added 6-15-2010 by Ord. No. 103-2010]
[Amended 6-15-2004 by Ord. No. 137-2004; 9-21-2004 by Ord. No. 198-2004]
A. Spires, cupolas, belfries, flagpoles, masts and other
similar roof structures covering a total of not more than 10% of the
horizontal area of the roof on which they are located shall be permitted
to exceed the highest point in the roof by not more than five feet.
[Amended 6-17-2008 by Ord. No. 133-2008]
|
In all residence districts, except on streets,
light stanchions or similar freestanding structures for illumination
affixed to the ground shall not exceed 10 feet in height.
|
B. No building shall contain more than the number of
stories specified in the Schedule of Dimensional Regulations nor exceed
the maximum height set forth in such regulations for the district
in which such building is located.
C. In the Central Parking Area, rooftop structures which
are used solely for the purpose of housing building mechanicals shall
not be included in computing Height for purposes of this Zoning Code,
provided their vertical elevation does not exceed 15% of the Height
of a building, and provided that such rooftop structures are subject
to a detailed architectural review and analysis facilitated by a Licensed
Architect to ensure architectural excellence.
[Added 7-18-2006 by Ord. No. 193-2006]
[Amended 4-20-2004 by Ord. No. 90-2004]
Fences and walls, not exceeding four feet in
height, are permitted within required front yards and not exceeding
six feet in height are permitted in side or rear yards, except that:
A. In a residence district, the height of any fence or
wall shall not exceed four feet in height along the side lot line
from the front property line up to the building line.
B. Any fence or wall separating a residence district
from a nonresidence district may have a maximum height of seven feet.
C. Any retaining wall constructed in a required yard
over four feet in height shall not be permitted.
D. Any fence or wall surrounding a public utility use
or a use of a governmental agency may have a maximum height of six
feet if of solid construction or eight feet if of at least 3/4
open construction.
E. A fence of at least 3/4 open construction and
a maximum of 10 feet in height shall be permitted to enclose tennis
courts, but not in required yards.
F. If any such fence or wall located within a required
yard has a finished or more attractive side, such side shall face
the neighboring property or street.
G. All fences and walls must be inside all property lot
lines.
H. Electrically charged fences, barbed-wire fences and
other fences constructed of sharp materials are not permitted in any
residentially zoned district and in any district, other than residential,
where installation of the barbed wire would be visible from the street
or from any residential zone.
I. In the R1-HIST Residence District, no fence or wall
shall be constructed without prior approval of the Historic and Landmarks
Review Board.
J. On a corner lot, the fence along the side yard facing a street (not the front yard) shall not exceed four feet in height, except at street intersections at which §
331-14C(1) shall control.
[Added 12-11-2007 by Ord. No. 294-2007]
[Amended 7-16-2002 by Ord. No. 139-2002; 12-11-2007 by Ord. No.
294-2007; 6-15-2010 by Ord. No. 104-2010; 6-19-2018 by Ord. No. 2018-123]
All permanent, portable or movable swimming pools shall not be located, installed, constructed or maintained on any lot except when in compliance with the following requirements (See §
331-109 for regulations pertaining to outdoor swimming pools as an accessory structure to a multifamily residence, community-purpose building, or annual membership club.):
A. Swimming pools installed above the ground shall have a height no
greater than 48 inches as measured from the mean ground level at the
base of the pool to the rim of the pool. The exposed sides of such
swimming pool shall be screened by evergreen landscaping whose height
at the time of installation shall be at least equal to the height
of the exposed portion of the swimming pool, exclusive of deck rails.
The pool enclosure for an aboveground pool shall be in compliance
with Appendix G of the Residential Code of the State of New York and
all other applicable laws and regulations. Aboveground pool installations
shall be screened with an evergreen screen which shall have a minimum
height of 48 inches around the swimming pool and shall be adequate
to screen the view of the pool area from adjacent properties and from
the street.
B. Swimming pools installed in the ground, where the rim of the pool
is flush with the ground or with an on-ground deck, shall be required
to be surrounded with four-foot-high fencing which shall be in compliance
with all other applicable laws and regulations. A dwelling or accessory
structure may be used to form any part of such enclosure provided
that compliance is met with Appendix G of the Residential Code of
the State of New York. In addition, an evergreen screen which shall
have a minimum height of 48 inches shall be provided around the swimming
pool, outside of the fence, and shall be adequate to screen the view
of the pool area from adjacent properties and from the street. Such
evergreen screen is not required where there exists a perimeter fence
that is adequate to screen the view of the pool area from adjacent
properties and from the street.
C. Any lights illuminating swimming pools shall be so directed as to
eliminate direct rays and minimize reflected rays of light on neighboring
streets and properties.
D. All swimming pools shall be located no less than 20 feet from all
lot lines.
E. All swimming pools shall be limited to the exclusive use of the occupants
of the premises and their nonpaying guests.
F. The applicant shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of the Building
Official that the proposed swimming pool will comply with all other
applicable codes and regulations.
G. The emptying of swimming pools shall comply with all other applicable
codes and regulations.
H. The filter pump and electrical switch shall be secured and screened
and at a location where noise will not emanate beyond the perimeter
of the property and shall not be located in any required yard.
I. Where the construction of a lake or pond, which otherwise meets the
definition of a swimming pool, is reviewed as part of a site plan
or special permit application, that review shall suffice and a separate
permit under this section need not be obtained.
[Amended 6-15-2004 by Ord. No. 137-2004; 6-17-2008 by Ord. No. 133-2008; 10-20-2009 by Ord. No.
199-2009]
A. No building
or structure or parking lot or parking space shall be constructed
within 75 feet of the boundary of any tidal or freshwater wetland,
other than boardwalks, shoreline promenades, bulkheads, piers, docks,
marinas, boat ramps and boat-launching facilities, boat storage, repair
or service facilities, wharves, breakwaters or other similar water-dependent
structures, where the setback shall be zero feet, and where any necessary
tidal wetland permit and/or Planning Board approval is obtained for
construction of such boardwalks, shoreline promenades, bulkheads,
piers, docks, marinas, boat ramps and boat-launching facilities, boat
storage, repair or service facilities, wharves, breakwaters or other
similar water-dependent structures and a SEQRA findings statement
has been issued by the appropriate approving agency. Notwithstanding
the foregoing, this section shall not apply to properties that have
an existing seawall or other continuous barrier along the boundary
of any such tidal or freshwater wetland.
[Amended 2-15-2011 by Ord. No. 45-2011; 10-16-2012 by Ord. No.
171-2012]
B. Portions
of a building may project into a wetland setback, provided that the
building and site conform to the following criteria:
(1) The
site does not abut a residential district;
(2) The
projections are more than 20 feet above ground;
(3) The
projections are not enclosed; and
(4) The
projections do not extend more than 10 feet into the setback.
C. Within
any freshwater wetland setback, the following additional conditions
shall apply:
(1) A
minimum thirty-five-foot "non-disturbance buffer" shall be created
immediately adjacent to the wetland, in which the following are prohibited:
the clearing, trimming, pruning of vegetation, the grading, dredging,
filling, and stockpiling of soil, the construction or installation
of buildings or structures below ground, the construction of storm
drains, sewers, or other underground utilities, the installation of
leaching pools or other discharges, the storage, dumping or disposal
of materials, the planting of non-wetland vegetation, and the application
of fertilizers or pesticides, except that if such non-disturbance
buffer contains any invasive plants that are not native to the wetland
ecology, such vegetation may be removed and substituted with appropriate
wetland vegetation, if approved by the Planning Board.
(2) A
maximum fifteen-foot "limited-disturbance buffer" shall be created
between the thirty-five-foot non-disturbance buffer and the fifty-foot
building/structure/parking lot setback line.
(a) Prohibited within the limited-disturbance buffer are the following:
building or structures above or below the ground, parking of vehicles,
the storage, dumping or disposal of materials, the construction of
storm drains, sewers, underground utilities, roof drains or leaching
pools or other discharges, the filling or stockpiling of soil, the
application of fertilizers or pesticides, bare ground or gravel, the
construction of decks or in-ground or aboveground swimming pools,
the discharge of chlorinated swimming pool backflush water, brick
or stone barbeque pits, sheds, porches or other accessory structures.
(b) Clearing and fine grading within the fifteen-foot limited-disturbance
buffer and the building/structure/parking lot setback line are allowed,
but only after installation of required erosion and sedimentation
controls (i.e., silt fencing and staked hay bales). Soils shall be
fine graded and reseeded with a native seed mix suitable for the site-specific
conditions and stabilized immediately after clearing and fine graded.
Trimming, pruning, and planting of vegetation shall be permitted within
the fifteen-foot limited-disturbance buffer. Also permitted within
the fifteen-foot limited-disturbance buffer are pervious pavers for
outdoor recreation (but not for overflow or permanent vehicle parking),
unfertilized grass and landscaping, movable lawn furniture, barbeques,
small plastic or inflatable pools for infants, and similar temporary
features.
No structure shall be erected in a designated
floodplain without compliance with flood hazard protection requirements.
[Added 5-19-2005 by Ord. No. 120-2005]
No land along the Long Island Sound located
below the high-water line, or land elsewhere which is under water,
at the time an application for a building permit is filed, may be
claimed as available for compliance with any requirement contained
in this chapter, unless plans for filling such land in a manner satisfactory
to the Building Official are made a part of the building operation
for which such permit is requested.
[Amended 6-17-2008 by Ord. No. 131-2008]
A. Security Grilles shall not be permitted except in
the following Districts: LI and I.
B. Security Grilles in existence as of June 17, 2008
may be repaired, if damaged, but shall not be replaced.
C. Security Grilles in existence as of June 17, 2008
shall be removed at the time of any change of use of the building
to which they are attached.
[Amended 3-15-2016 by Ord. No. 73-2016]
A. Applicability.
(1) All exterior fixtures installed, replaced, or repaired after the
effective date of this chapter shall conform to the standards established
by this chapter.
(2) Existing lighting in conflict with this chapter shall be classified
as "nonconforming," except for the following:
(a)
Residential floodlights as regulated herein.
(b)
Temporary lighting installed and lit between November 15 and
January 15 of the following year.
(c)
Residential sensor-activated fixtures as regulated herein.
(3) Nonconforming lighting located on nonresidential properties shall
be replaced with compliant lighting within six months after adoption
of this subsection.
[Added 3-28-2017 by Ord.
No. 61-2017]
B. Outdoor lighting standards.
(1) General standards for nonresidential.
(a)
Canopy lights, such as service station lighting, shall be fully
recessed or fully shielded to prevent glare and excessive lighting.
(b)
All area lights shall be full cutoff fixtures.
(c)
Unshielded wall packs and floodlights are not permitted.
(2) Type of fixtures for all exterior lighting. All exterior lighting
shall use full cutoff fixtures with the light source directed downward
and with the fixture level with the horizontal plane, with the following
exceptions:
(a)
Unshielded residential fixtures equal to one sixty-watt incandescent
light per fixture, regardless of number of lamps, are allowed, provided
that the illumination standards are met.
(b)
Residential floodlights of less than 1,800 lumens (one-hundred-watt
incandescent) are permitted if angled downward such that the center
beam is not directed above a forty-five-degree angle measured from
the vertical line from the center of the light to the ground, and
only if the fixture does not cause glare or excessive lighting and
beam spread beyond the intended target or across property lines. Photocells
with operable timers that allow a light to go on at dusk and off by
11:00 p.m., as well as motion-sensor-activated lights, are encouraged.
(c)
Temporary lighting installed and lit between November 15 and
January 15 of the following year.
(d)
Residential sensor-activated fixtures, provided that:
[1]
The fixture is operational and located in such a manner or shielded
to prevent glare and excessive lighting;
[2]
The fixture is set to only go on when activated and to go off
within five minutes after activation has ceased; and
[3]
The sensor shall not be triggered by activity off the property.
(e)
Lighting of radio, communication and navigation towers is allowed,
provided that the owner or occupant demonstrates that the Federal
Aviation Administration (FAA) regulations can only be met through
the use of lighting that does not comply with this chapter and that
the provisions of this chapter are otherwise met. Tower lighting shall
not be permitted unless required by the FAA; in which case, required
lighting shall be of the lowest allowed intensity and red, unless
specifically forbidden under FAA requirements.
(f)
In situations of lighted flags which are not illuminated with
downward lighting, upward lighting may be used in the form of a narrow
cone spotlight which confines the illumination to the flag. Municipal
flags are exempt from this requirement.
(3) No fixtures shall be taller than 20 feet from the ground to their
tallest point.
(4) Privately owned or leased light fixtures located on public utility
poles or located in the public right-of-way are prohibited.
(5) For all nonresidential lighting, the maximum illuminance at or beyond
the property line that adjoins a residential parcel or public right-of-way
may not exceed 0.05 footcandle horizontal on the ground or 0.05 footcandle
vertical measured at a five-foot height above the ground, unless another
applicable law supersedes. Maximum horizontal or vertical illuminance
allowed between adjacent commercial properties is 0.1 footcandle.
(6) Illumination of all off-street parking and loading facilities, other
than those accessory to one- and two-family dwellings, shall be provided
such that the lighting level shall not exceed an intensity of five
footcandles, nor shall it be less than 1.5 footcandles at pavement
level.
(7) The average illuminance levels listed in the Illumination Levels
for Various Common Tasks, as provided in the IESNA Recommended Practices
Guidelines, shall not be exceeded for nonresidential lighting unless
otherwise specified or approved by the Building Official.
C. Procedures for nonresidential lighting.
(1) Any change or alteration of nonresidential exterior lighting must
be approved by the Building Official and verified, post installation,
by the Code Enforcement Officer to insure compliance with all the
provisions of this chapter. Where new installations have been designed
by an illuminating engineer/professional, he or she shall also conduct
a post-installation inspection to verify and certify that the installed
system operates as designed.
(2) All applications for site plan review, special permits, or building
permits shall include lighting plans, fixture and controls specifications
and additional documentation, if any lighting is to be used, regardless
of whether the lighting is preexisting or proposed, showing the following,
if requested by the Building Official, in order to verify that lighting
conforms to the provisions of this chapter:
(a)
Location of each current and proposed outdoor lighting fixture
indicated on a site plan.
(b)
Type of fixture equipment, including cutoff characteristics,
indicating manufacturer and model number.
(c)
Lamp source type, lumen output, and wattage.
(d)
Mounting height indicated, with distance noted to nearest property
line, for each fixture.
(e)
Shielding and all mounting details, including pole foundation
description.
(f)
Initial illuminance levels as expressed in footcandle measurements
on a grid of the site showing footcandle readings in every five-foot
square. The grid shall include light contributions from all sources.
(g)
Statement of the proposed hours when each fixture will be operated.
(h)
Total exterior lighting lamp lumens for proposed property.
(i)
Lighting manufacturer specifications (cut sheets), with photographs
of the fixtures, indicating the cutoff characteristics of the fixture.
(j)
Detailed photometric layout.
(k)
Types of timing devices used to control on/off.
Loudspeakers and voice amplification systems
are prohibited in all districts unless specifically permitted by this
chapter.
A satellite earth station or dish antenna may
be located, installed, constructed or maintained on any lot, building
or structure only when in compliance with all of the following requirements:
A. Satellite earth stations or dish antennas mounted
on a building or roof shall not exceed 12 feet in height. The height
of the satellite earth station or dish antenna shall be measured from
the bottom of its base or pad to the highest point of the earth station
or antenna when in its most vertical position.
B. All satellite earth stations or dish antennas, as regulated by §
331-98, shall be reasonably located and screened to minimize visibility from streets and the surrounding properties by using fencing, earth berms, landscaping and architectural features.
C. All satellite earth stations or dish antennas shall
be designed, constructed and installed in conformance with all building,
electrical, fire prevention, noise and other applicable codes and
regulations, as well as any other construction or performance standards,
rules and regulations of any governmental entity having jurisdiction
over such devices, including, without limitation, the Federal Communications
Commission (FCC).
[Added 11-15-2016 by Ord.
No. 233-2016]
A. Definitions.
WIND TURBINE or WIND ENERGY TURBINE
A wind turbine or wind energy turbine converts kinetic wind
energy into rotational energy that drives an electrical generator.
A wind turbine typically consists of a mast or mounting frame and
structural supports, electrical generator, transformer, energy storage
equipment, and a rotor with one or more blades. Some turbines use
a vertical axis/helix instead of rotor blades.
(1)
SMALL WIND TURBINES or SMALL WIND ENERGY TURBINESTurbines with an American Wind Energy Association (AWEA) rated power output of 10 kW or less. They are also certified by the Small Wind Certification Council to meet AWEA Small Wind Turbine Performance and Safety Standards. These turbines may or may not be connected to the power grid.
B. Installation of wind turbines in multifamily residential, mixed-use, and commercial and industrial districts shall be subject to approval by the Planning Board, in accordance with the provisions and procedures of Article
XIII, Site Plan Approval, which shall take into account the needs of energy conservation. Wind energy facilities shall not be permitted in single-family residential districts.
C. Wind turbines shall be allowed as a permitted accessory use in all
multifamily residential, mixed-use, and commercial and industrial
districts, subject to the following requirements:
(1)
Building permits shall be required for installation of building-mounted
wind turbines.
(2)
Pole-mounted or ground-mounted turbines shall not be permitted.
D. Rotor-swept area. The rotor-swept area is the projected area as defined
by the AWEA. The maximum rotor-swept area is 150 square feet.
E. Setbacks and Height.
(1)
Setbacks. Building-mounted turbines are subject to the minimum
setbacks of the building they are mounted on.
(2)
Height. A turbine may be up to 50% above the base zone height
limit, or 45 feet above the height of the building it is mounted on,
whichever is less.
[Added 11-15-2022 by Ord. No. 2022-171]
Development built in accordance with Article
XXII, Downtown Overlay Zones, the R1-WF-10 One-Family Waterfront Residence District, and on the seaward side of Pelham Road from Water Street to the boundary with the Village of Pelham Manor shall provide waterfront public access or scenic view public access as set forth in their respective sections of the Code and/or comply with the fee requirements set forth in their respective sections of the Code and/or in Chapter
133, Fees.