Placement of accessory buildings and uses, including
garages and off-street parking and truck loading spaces, shall be
as follows in the districts as indicated:
A. In all districts.
(1) Accessory buildings, including garages:
[Amended 11-17-2003 by L.L. No. 11-2003]
(a)
If detached from a main building or if connected
only by an open breezeway-type structure, an accessory building shall
be not less than 10 feet from the main building unless the accessory
building has a floor area that is 32 square feet or less.
(b)
An accessory building not for use as habitable
space with a floor area of 32 square feet or less and not more than
eight feet in height does not require a permit.
(c)
An accessory building not for use as habitable
space having a floor area greater than 32 square feet and less than
144 square feet and not more than 12 feet in height requires a permit
application showing all materials, dimensions and location but may
be exempted from other documentary and construction requirements of
the New York State Building Code in the reasonable discretion of the
Code Enforcement Officer.
(d)
An accessory building with a floor area of 144
square feet or more, or a height of more than 12 feet, shall be subject
to all the requirements of the New York State Building Code.
(2) A private garage may be constructed as a structural
part of a main building, provided that when so constructed, the garage
walls shall be regarded as the walls of the main building in applying
the front, rear and side yard regulations of this chapter.
(3) Accessory buildings, including private garages, shall
not be placed within a required front yard nor within a required side
yard.
(4) An access driveway may be located within a required
yard.
(5) Required accessory off-street parking area or truck
loading space shall not be encroached upon by buildings, open storage
or any other use.
(6) The storage of manure or of odor- or dust-producing
substances as an accessory use shall not be permitted within 100 feet
of any lot line.
(7) The storage, sale or abandonment of wastepaper, rags,
scrap metal or discarded materials or the collecting, dismantling,
storage, salvaging or abandonment of machinery or vehicles not in
operating condition shall constitute a junkyard, which is a prohibited
use and a violation of this chapter; provided, however, that the storage
of agricultural equipment, machinery and vehicles which are used on
the premises or are intended for use on the premises shall not, for
the purposes of this chapter, constitute a junkyard.
(8) A building basement or a garage or other nonresidential accessory space shall not be used for dwelling purposes unless approved by the Erie County Board of Health; provided, however, that no such approved use shall exceed one year in duration and then only when it is related to the construction of a main dwelling on the site. The Board of Appeals may grant not more than a one-year extension of such temporary dwelling use in accordance with Article
XI.
(9) Abandoned vehicles.
[Amended 1-2-1990 by L.L. No. 3-1990; 12-1-1997 by L.L. No.
6-1997]
(a)
Purpose. The seriousness of the matter of the
outdoor storage of abandoned, junked, discarded and unlicensed, unregistered
and/or uninspected motor vehicles upon privately owned property within
the Village of Springville increases with the passage of time. It
is a source of vexation and annoyance, not only to the members of
the traveling public, but to the owners and occupants of adjoining
and nearby lands. The outdoor storage of such vehicles is unsightly.
It constitutes an attractive nuisance to children and a peril to their
safety, in case of fire and explosion, whenever gasoline and other
flammables are left in these vehicles. These vehicles depreciate the
value of neighboring properties. The preservation of peace and good
order, the benefit of trade, the preservation of public health, the
protection of property and property values and the prevention and
extinguishment of fires and explosions compel the Board of Trustees
of the Village of Springville to legislate upon this subject matter.
It is hereby declared that the adoption of this section has for its
purpose the effective termination of such obnoxious procedure.
(b)
Prohibitions. No motor vehicle or combination
of motor vehicles, including motorcycles, motor scooters, snowmobiles,
cars, trucks, buses or any other type of motor vehicle, or part or
parts thereof, requiring a New York State license, registration and
inspection for the lawful operation on a public highway, without such
a correct and current license registration and inspection shall be
parked or stored in the open on any lot or lots in the Village of
Springville in excess of 20 days, either consecutively or in combination
thereof, in any three-hundred-sixty-five-day period; provided, however,
that any improperly licensed, uninspected and/or unregistered motor
vehicle parked and/or stored on any lot in the Village of Springville
for less than 20 days in any three-hundred-sixty-five-day period shall
not be permitted closer to the street than the front of any permanent
dwelling or other structure on said lot; and provided, further, that
this prohibition shall not apply to a motor vehicle that is part of
the normal inventory of any business lawfully conducted on a lot which
is currently zoned for such use.
B. In residence districts.
(1) Accessory buildings or structures located within a
front or side yard shall meet the minimum front and side yard requirements
set forth in the Table of Dimensional Regulations.
(2) Accessory buildings or structures may be located in
the minimum required rear yard, provided that such building or structure
shall not exceed 20 feet in height and, further, that it be set back
from any side or rear lot line the following minimum distances:
[Amended 4-28-2003 by L.L. No. 3-2003]
(a)
In an R-8.5 District, five feet.
(b)
In an R-6 District, three feet.
(c)
In an RM District, five feet.
(3) Accessory off-street parking areas shall be paved
in accordance with municipal specifications.
(4) Accessory storage of Classes I and II flammable liquids
shall be limited to underground storage of a capacity not exceeding
300 gallons, except that as an accessory use on a farm with an area
of more than 50 acres, such storage may be above ground and have a
capacity not exceeding 2,000 gallons.
(5) No part of any area in a residential zoning district
or a residence in a nonresidential zoning district shall be used for
parking and located closer to a street than the minimum front yard
setback unless:
[Added 5-4-1987 by L.L. No. 3-1987;
amended 12-1-1997 by L.L. No. 6-1997]
(a)
A nonfee permit is issued; and
(b)
Said parking area is enclosed with landscape
timbers or other durable stationary material; and
(c)
Anti-erosion base material is applied in sufficient
quantity and of sufficient quality to prevent bleeding through of
earth.
(6) The total area of all detached accessory structures
on any single parcel of land in a residential district shall not exceed
300 square feet in area. The area of detached private garages shall
not, however, be included in determining the total square footage
of detached accessory structures.
[Added 12-1-1997 by L.L. No. 6-1997]
C. In nonresidence districts.
(1) Accessory off-street parking areas may be located within required front, side or rear yards except where a transitional yard is required in conformance with §
200-14.
(2) Accessory storage of Classes I and II flammable liquids
in districts where such storage is not a special exception use shall
be limited to an underground tank with a capacity not exceeding 12,000
gallons.
In all districts except a B-1 or VI District,
the lot frontage at the street line shall be not less than 40 feet.
In order to assure an orderly and compatible
relationship between residence districts and nonresidence districts
along their common boundary lines, the following requirements shall
be met along such boundaries:
A. Minimum required transitional side and rear yards
within nonresidence districts adjoining residence districts shall
be 30 feet.
B. In a B-1 or VI District, the minimum required screening
within required transitional side and rear yards shall be a six-foot-high
stockade-type fence or equal, to be erected and maintained by the
nonresidential property owner along the side and rear property lines.
C. In a CIP District, the minimum required screening
within a required transitional side or rear yard shall be an eight-foot-high,
six-foot-wide protective planting strip in accordance with specifications
established by the municipality and guaranteed by a maintenance bond.
[Amended 5-4-1987 by L.L. No. 3-1987]
D. Buffer, screening and landscaping requirements in
HC-O, O-O Districts and R-O Districts.
[Added 5-4-1987 by L.L. No. 3-1987;
amended 7-20-2009 by L.L. No. 1-2009]
(1) Appropriate buffer areas and screening shall be provided
to improve the appearance of certain setback and yard areas, including
off-street parking and loading areas, and to protect and preserve
the appearance, character and value of surrounding neighborhoods.
(2) Buffers and screens shall consist of suitable landscaping
materials, such as but not limited to grass, ground covers, shrubs,
vines, hedges and trees; nonliving durable material commonly used
in landscaping, such as but not limited to rocks, pebbles, walls or
fences, but excluding paving; and earth berms with appropriate ground
cover.
(3) No less than 20% of the lot area for any new residential
structure shall be devoted to landscaping and shall be used for no
other purpose. Lots with structures proposed for conversion to nonresidential
use shall set aside as much lot area as possible for landscaping purposes.
(4) Landscaping requirements for certain yard areas, off-street
parking areas of five or more spaces and off-street loading areas.
(a)
Required landscaping adjacent to public rights-of-way.
On the site of a building or open lot use providing an off-street
parking area for five or more vehicles or an off-street loading area,
where such area will not be entirely screened visually by an intervening
building or structure from any abutting right-of-way, there shall
be provided landscaping between such area and such right-of-way as
follows:
[1]
A strip of land at least five feet in depth
located between the abutting right-of-way and the off-street parking
or loading area which is exposed to an abutting right-of-way shall
be landscaped, such landscaping to include one tree for each 50 linear
feet or fraction thereof. Such trees shall be located between the
abutting right-of-way and off-street parking or loading area and shall
be planted in a planting area of at least 25 square feet, with a minimum
dimension of at least five feet.
[2]
In addition, a hedge, wall, berm or other durable
landscape barrier of not less than three feet nor more than four feet
in height shall be placed along the perimeter of such landscaped strip.
If such durable barrier is of nonliving materials, not less than one
shrub or vine shall be planted for each 10 feet of abutting barrier.
Such shrubs or vines shall be planted along the street side of such
barrier unless they are of sufficient height at the time of planting
to be readily visible over the top of such barrier.
[3]
The required remainder of the landscaped areas
shall be landscaped with grass, ground cover or other landscape treatment,
excluding paving.
[4]
All property, other than the required landscaped
strip lying between the right-of-way and off-street parking or loading
area, shall be landscaped with grass or other suitable ground cover.
(b)
Perimeter landscaping relating to abutting properties.
[1]
That portion of such area not screened shall
be provided with a wall or hedge or other durable landscape barrier
not greater than eight feet in height nor less than four feet in height
to form a continuous year-round screen between the off-street parking
or loading area and such abutting property. Such landscaped area shall
be located between the common lot line and the off-street parking
or loading area exposed to the abutting property, provided that the
purpose of screening off-street parking and loading areas is accomplished.
If such barrier consists all or in part of plant materials, such plant
materials shall be planted in a planting strip of not less than three
feet in width.
[2]
In addition, one tree shall be planted for each
75 linear feet of such landscape barrier or fractional part thereof.
Such trees shall be located between the common lot line and the off-street
parking or loading area. Each tree shall be planted in at least 25
square feet of planting area, with a minimum dimension of at least
five feet. Each such planting area shall be landscaped with grass,
ground cover or other landscaped material, excluding paving, in addition
to the required tree.
[3]
The provisions of this subsection shall not
be applicable in the following situations:
[a] Where a proposed parking or loading
area abuts an existing hedge, wall or other durable landscape barrier
on an abutting property, said existing barrier may be used to satisfy
the landscape barrier requirements of this subsection, provided that
said existing barrier meets all applicable standards of this chapter
and protection against vehicular encroachment is provided for hedges.
[b] Where the abutting property is
used for nonresidential purposes, only the tree provision, with its
planting area as prescribed in this subsection, shall be required;
however, the number of trees may be reduced to one tree for every
125 linear feet or fraction thereof, but all perimeter requirements
shall apply within the front setback area.
On a corner lot in any district except the B-1
and VI Districts, within the triangular area determined as provided
in this section, no wall or fence or other structure shall be erected
to a height in excess of two feet, and no vehicle or object or any
other obstruction of a height in excess of two feet shall be parked
or placed, and no hedge or shrub or other growth shall be maintained
at a height in excess of two feet, except that trees whose branches
are trimmed away to a height of at least 10 feet above the curb level
or pavement level where there is no curb shall be permitted. Such
triangular area shall be determined by two points, one on each intersecting
street line, each of which points is 50 feet from the intersection
of such street lines.
[Added 4-28-2003 by L.L. No. 4-2003]
A. Private swimming pools shall be approved specifically with respect to the availability of water supply and the adequacy of wastewater disposal as they affect both the subject lot and the surrounding land use. Public swimming pools shall be subject to the provisions of §
200-70 of Article
X of this chapter, entitled Special Exception Uses.
B. Private swimming pools, their water and electric supply
systems and their enclosures shall be constructed, installed and maintained
according to the Uniform Fire Prevention and Building Code of New
York State.
C. Private swimming pools shall comply with all setback
restrictions and shall be installed in the rear yard of the premises
no closer than 10 feet to a dwelling. A private swimming pool shall
not be less than 10 feet from the side and/or rear lot line; and on
lots less than 50 feet in width at the pool location, the pool shall
be located midway between the side lot lines.
[Added 10-19-2009 by L.L. No. 3-2009]
Driveways and roadway and access connections shall be subject to and comply with Chapter
150 of the Village Code.