[Amended 11-1-2006 by L.L. No. 10-2006]
A. Intent. The intent of this district is to promote
and preserve, in appropriate areas, conditions favorable to larger-lot
family life. The Rural Residential District will support limited agricultural
activities, including the keeping of horses and raising of crops.
This district is intended to be primarily residential in nature and
protected from encroachment by commercial and industrial activities.
B. Permitted structures and uses.
(1) Principal structures and uses.
(b)
Private stable and horse farm.
(c)
A church, synagogue or any other place of public
worship.
(d)
Wildlife reservation or conservation project,
including related structures.
(e)
Cemetery, including mausoleums, provided that
mausoleums shall be a distance of at least 200 feet from any adjoining
residence district; and provided, further, that any new cemetery shall
contain a single contiguous area of 20 acres or more.
(f)
Bed-and-breakfast establishment, tourist home and boardinghouse. (Special use permit required; see §§
200-16.1 and
200-45 of this chapter.)
(g)
College, university, technical school, theological
school, including buildings, offices, classrooms, laboratories, chapels,
auditoriums, lecture halls, libraries, student and faculty centers,
athletic facilities, dormitories, fraternities/sororities, and housing
for students or staff members.
(h)
Commercial recreation use, including golf courses, country clubs, riding arena or facilities for tennis, handball, racquetball, baseball, football, basketball, hockey/skating, swimming or similar facilities on any lot measuring no less than five acres. (Special use permit required; see §
200-45 of this chapter.)
(2) Accessory structures and uses.
(a)
Structure and uses customarily incidental, subordinate
and related to the above.
(b)
Home occupations. (Special use permit required; see §
200-45 of this chapter.)
(c)
The office of a resident professional, as permitted
and regulated by this chapter.
(d)
Detached private garages and parking areas.
(e)
Agricultural buildings and barns.
(f)
Private riding arenas or rings.
(h) The keeping of a maximum of six chickens on a lot consisting of a
minimum of one acre.
[Added 2-3-2016 by L.L.
No. 1-2016]
(i)
Beekeeping, provided that hives are situated
no less than 50 feet from any property line.
(j)
Swimming pools, as permitted and regulated by §
200-17C of this chapter.
(k)
Other private recreational uses and structures.
(l)
Signs, as permitted and regulated by §
200-29 of this chapter.
(m)
Private and parochial schools and day-care centers,
when accessory to a church, synagogue or other place of public worship.
(n) Private kennels, on a lot consisting of a minimum of three acres.
[Added 12-14-2011 by L.L. No. 11-2011]
C. Design regulations.
(1) Principal structures and uses.
(a)
Minimum lot area per dwelling unit: one acre.
(b)
Minimum width of lot abutting a dedicated street:
200 feet.
(d)
Maximum lot coverage by structures: 15%.
(e)
Maximum structure height: 30 feet.
(f)
Minimum livable floor area, excluding attics,
basements, cellars or attached garages.
[1]
Under two stories: 1,200 square feet.
[2]
Two stories: 1,600 square feet.
(2) Keeping of horses for noncommercial use.
(a)
Two horses per minimum two acres; one acre for
each additional horse.
(3) Accessory structures and uses.
[Amended 5-26-2010 by L.L. No. 1-2010]
(a)
Agricultural buildings' and structures' location:
[1]
From another structure: 20 feet.
[2]
From any lot line: 20 feet.
[Amended 12-14-2011 by L.L. No. 11-2011; 7-16-2014 by L.L. No.
3-2014]
[3]
Size: 1,500 square feet maximum.
[4]
All agricultural buildings, structures, and
facilities associated with the keeping of horses shall be a minimum
of 75 feet from the property line.
(b) All other structures:
[Amended 5-15-2013 by L.L. No. 4-2013; 7-16-2014 by L.L. No.
3-2014; 8-17-2016 by L.L. No. 5-2016]
[1] From another structure: 10 feet.
[2] From any lot line: five feet.
[3] Size: 1,200 square feet maximum.
(4) All properties shall be maintained in accordance with Chapter
149 of the Town Code.
(5) Animal waste/manure storage.
(a)
Temporary or permanent waste storage facilities
shall not be located less than 100 feet from any perennial or intermittent
stream, spring, pond, ditch, gully or creek.
(b)
Temporary or permanent waste storage facilities
or other odor-, dust-, nuisance-producing substances shall be kept
at least 75 feet from any property line and 100 feet from any nearby
residential structure.
(c)
Temporary or permanent waste storage facilities
shall be prohibited in front yard areas and shall be situated a minimum
of 100 feet from any existing drinking water supply well.
(d)
The location of an animal waste storage facility
in a floodplain shall require a floodplain development permit.
(e)
Animal waste or manure, and water contaminated
with waste nutrients, shall not be discharged to surface waters or
groundwater.
(f)
Water runoff shall not flow uncontrolled into
or across storage areas or facilities, or areas with a large concentration
of animals.
(g)
Animal waste storage facilities must be properly
sized for the projected accumulation based on expected application
periods.
(h)
Animal waste storage facilities must comply
with all provisions of the New York State Agriculture and Markets
Law and other applicable state and county regulations.
(i)
The land application of animal waste is not
permitted.
(6) Fencing.
(a)
Fencing shall not be placed closer than 15 feet
to the property line in any front yard.
(b)
Stockade and other solid fencing, with the exception
of stone farm walls, shall not be placed along the side lot line closer
than 60 feet from the front property line.
(c)
Fencing shall not exceed five feet in height
up to 60 feet from the front property line; thereafter, fencing for
the keeping of horses may be increased to a height not to exceed eight
feet.
(d)
Fencing in side or rear yards may be located
along the property line (requires a building permit from the Code
Enforcement Office).
(e)
Side yard fencing shall only follow the property
line from a point located 60 feet back from the front property line.
(f)
All other fencing shall be consistent with §
200-34 of this chapter.
D. Definitions. As used in this section, the following terms shall have
the meanings indicated:
AGRICULTURAL BUILDINGS AND STRUCTURES
Shall include, but not be limited to, barns, sheds, shops,
machine or equipment storage buildings, greenhouses, stables, riding
rings, exercise tracks, runs, dry lots, stalls, paddocks, corrals
or fences, manure storage facilities, or other storage buildings,
outbuildings or enclosures.
BARN
A building used for the housing and care of horses and for
the storage of feed, hay, other crops and equine equipment and permitted
uses accessory to those listed herein.
CORRAL
A fenced enclosure used for the regular confinement of horses.
PADDOCK
A fenced area for turn out and/or exercising of horses.
PASTURE
An area used seasonally for grazing horses.
PRIVATE STABLE
A structure designed for the feeding, housing and exercising
of horses belonging to the owner of the premises.
RIDING ARENA
An enclosed area or structure for equestrian training, showing
or entertainment.
STALL
An enclosure provided and designed for the feeding and housing
of one horse.
[Amended 5-17-2000 by L.L. No. 5-2000; 5-15-2013 by L.L. No.
4-2013]
The following provisions apply to auxiliary housing units:
A. A special
use permit shall be required. The permit shall be issued by the Board
of Appeals only after a public hearing advertised in the manner required
by § 267 of the Town Law.
B. An auxiliary
housing unit may be included within a single-family detached dwelling
to accommodate not more than two members of the family otherwise occupying
the dwelling. At least one member of the persons housed in the auxiliary
housing unit must be at least 60 years of age or handicapped or otherwise
incapacitated to the extent that independent housing is not practical.
C. The auxiliary
housing shall not exceed 500 square feet of the space within the principal
dwelling unit feet.
D. The permit
for an auxiliary housing unit shall be valid for a period not exceeding
two years. Thereafter, it can be renewed, from time to time, for additional
two-year periods upon proof satisfactory to the Board of Appeals that
the circumstances warranting the original permit continue to exist.
[Added 5-17-2000 by L.L. No. 5-2000]
The following provisions shall apply to bed-and-breakfast
establishments and tourist homes referred to in this chapter:
A. A special use permit shall be required for the operation
of any bed-and-breakfast establishments and tourist homes.
B. No special use permit for a bed-and-breakfast establishment or tourist home shall be authorized unless the applicant's project meets the requirements of §
200-45, Subsection
C, of the Town Code and also the following:
(1)
The applicant shall be the owner and full-time
resident of the premises, and the bed-and-breakfast or tourist home
use shall be subordinate and incidental to the residential use of
the structure.
(2)
No external modifications of the structure shall be allowed in conjunction with the creation of a bed-and-breakfast or tourist home use, and no visible evidence of the conduct of the establishment, other than the posting of one sign, in accordance with §
200-29 of this chapter, shall be present.
(3)
All guestrooms shall be contained within the
principal structure and limited to the first and second stories of
said structure.
(4)
The length of stay at a bed-and-breakfast or
tourist home establishment shall not exceed five days per stay.
(5)
Guestroom living quarters shall not constitute
a separate dwelling unit and shall not be leased or rented as such.
(6)
The number of guestrooms for transient lodgers
shall not exceed five, nor be less than three, to accommodate not
more than 10 lodgers at any one time.
(7)
The number of occupants per room shall be determined by the provisions of §
158-10, Subsection
A, of the Town Code.
(8)
The architectural integrity and arrangement
of interior spaces must be maintained and the number of guestrooms
shall not be increased, except as required to meet health, safety
and sanitation requirements.
(9)
Sanitary facilities shall be provided on each
floor that contains sleeping accommodations and shall be accessible
from any sleeping room without requiring passage through any other
sleeping room.
(10)
The serving of meals on the premises shall be
limited to breakfast for lodgers only; no cooking or cooking facilities,
and no consumption of meals, shall be permitted in individual guestrooms.
(11)
Communal space utilized for dining purposes
must contain a minimum of 100 square feet of floor area.
(12)
Hard-wired smoke detectors, carbon monoxide
detectors and heat detecting systems shall be installed in each guestroom
and in adjacent hallways and corridors on each floor. Under certain
circumstances, residential sprinkler systems or exterior stairways
may be required in conformance with the New York State Uniform Fire
Prevention and Building Code. All emergency exits shall be obvious
and clearly identified, and a firesafety notice indicating emergency
procedures shall be affixed to the occupied side of the entrance door
to each guestroom.
(13)
Outside activities shall not be permitted by
guests where they will create a nuisance or in any way alter the character
of the neighborhood.
(14)
All off-street parking shall be regulated in accordance with §
200-27 of this chapter. Parking areas for four or more vehicles may require adequate screening from adjacent residential uses, if deemed necessary by the Planning Board.
(15)
A certificate of compliance shall be issued
by the Building Inspector only after it has been determined that the
structure meets all of the requirements of the New York State Uniform
Fire Prevention and Building Code and after the special permit has
been issued by the Town Board.
The following provisions apply to all residential
districts, unless otherwise indicated:
A. Supplemental yard regulations.
(1) Front yards of partially built-up blocks. Where 50%
or more of the aggregate street frontage on one side of a street between
two successive intersecting streets is occupied by buildings, the
minimum front yard of a lot to be developed shall be the average setback
distance of existing residence buildings located on either side.
(2) Building on existing lots of record. Where a building already exists
in the R-1, R1-L and R-2 districts, the required front yard setback
shall be at the existing building line and no building shall be closer
to the front lot line.
[Added 7-16-2014 by L.L. No. 3-2014]
(3) Side yards on corner lots. The shorter line abutting
a street on a corner lot is the front lot line. The width of the side
yard on the street shall be not less than the front yard, and the
interior side yard shall comply with the minimum regulations for the
district.
(4) Yards for accessory structures and uses in the R-1,
R-1-L and R-2 Districts. No accessory building shall project into
a required front yard. An accessory building may project into a side
yard to the extent permitted in the district. No single accessory
structure shall exceed 900 square feet.
[Amended 10-2-1996 by L.L. No. 10-1996; 11-1-2006 by L.L. No. 10-2006; 5-26-2010 by L.L. No. 1-2010]
(5) Exterior heating or air-conditioning structures. In
AOS, R-A, R-R, R-1, R-1-L and R-2 Districts, nonportable exterior
heating or air-conditioning structures shall not be located within
five feet of any lot line.
[Amended 11-1-2006 by L.L. No. 10-2006; 5-26-2010 by L.L. No. 1-2010]
B. Principal structure permitted on lots in AOS, R-A, R-R, R-1, R-1-L and R-2 Districts. There shall be no more than one principal structure permitted on a lot in the AOS, R-A, R-R, R-1, R-1-L and R-2 Districts, unless approved under Chapter
178, Subdivision of Land, or as provided in §
200-8.1B(1)(l).
[Amended 11-1-2006 by L.L. No. 10-2006; 5-26-2010 by L.L. No. 1-2010]
C. Swimming pools.
(1) Limits on maximum lot coverage shall apply to aboveground
private swimming pools only if the land area covered exceeds 80 square
feet. In no event shall any private pool occupy more than 10% of the
lot.
(2) No swimming pool, described as any pool capable of
having a water depth exceeding 24 inches, shall be installed unless
there shall be erected and maintained a fence of such construction
that there shall be no access except through the gate having a minimum
height of four feet and a maximum height of six feet and so constructed
as to not shut off light or air to any buildings, and such fence shall
completely surround the area of the swimming pool but shall be not
less than four feet from any edge of the swimming pool or placed on
the lot line, and any gate shall be self-closing and locked while
the premises are not under the direct supervision of an adult. All
latching and locking devices shall be a minimum of four feet above
the base of the fence. The wall of a dwelling and/or its accessory
buildings may act as an integral part of the fence, except that any
openings or doors, etc., shall be kept locked also while the premises
are unsupervised by an adult.
(3) No swimming pool, as described in Subsection
C(2), all of which is above ground, shall be installed or maintained unless either:
(a)
The ladder, stair or other access to the pool
is capable of being removed by the owner thereof. The word "removed,"
as used here, in addition to its usual and customary meaning, shall
mean raising and locking the ladder, stair or other access in a position
where the bottom thereof is at least as high as the top of the pool;
or
(b)
The ladder, stair or other access is completely
enclosed by a fence, the minimum height of which shall be equal to
the height of the pool, except that in no event shall the fence be
higher than six feet. Any gate in the fence shall be closed and locked
when the pool is not being supervised by the owner thereof.
(4) No person shall discharge or cause to be discharged
any water from a garden hose, swimming pool, sump pump, or roof gutter
over a public sidewalk or a public street or onto any private property
in violation of Health Department Rules.
[Amended 7-7-1999 by L.L. No. 4-1999; 5-26-2010 by L.L. No.
1-2010]
D. Commercial and/or unlicensed vehicles in residential districts. No parking, principal garaging or open storage of any commercial vehicle, as defined in Subsection
D(1), shall be permitted in residential districts, except that one commercial vehicle, the rated capacity of which shall not exceed 3/4 ton, shall be permitted only if housed within a completely enclosed building.
[Amended 11-1-2006 by L.L. No. 10-2006]
(1) Definitions. As used in this subsection, the following
terms shall have the meanings indicated:
BOAT
Any vessel capable of transport by water.
CAMPER
A compact, temporary living unit which sets in the bed of
a pickup truck.
CAMPER TRAILER
Any structure which is mounted or designed for mounting on
wheels and which includes accommodations designed for sleeping or
living purposes for one or more persons and is designed to be towed
behind a motor vehicle.
COMMERCIAL VEHICLE
A pickup truck, van or other vehicle with a license plate
and/or registration which designates that vehicle as being commercially
licensed.
RECREATIONAL VEHICLE
Any motorized vehicle which may include accommodations designed
for sleeping or living purposes for one or more persons.
TRAILER
Any structure or vehicle which is mounted or designed for
mounting on wheels and designed to be towed behind a motor vehicle.
(2) One structure or vehicle as defined in Subsection
D(1) may be parked on a driveway in the required front yard of any residence district, provided that:
(a)
It shall not obstruct clear vision under §
200-35 of this chapter.
(b)
It shall not be parked or stored within 10 feet
of the front lot line.
(c)
It shall not be parked or stored within five
feet of any side lot line.
(d)
If the stored or parked height exceeds eight
feet, the vehicle or structure shall be parked or stored in the rear
yard or housed within a completely enclosed building.
E. Design regulations: churches, synagogues and other
places of public worship and related activities.
(1) Minimum lot area: one acre.
(2) Minimum lot width: 200 feet.
(3) Minimum yards for structures and parking, loading
and stacking areas:
|
Yard
|
Structures
(feet)
|
Parking, Loading and Stacking Area
(feet)
|
---|
|
Front, from right-of-way of a dedicated street
|
50
|
15*
|
|
Side, abutting a residential district
|
25
|
25*
|
|
Rear, abutting a residential district
|
50
|
25*
|
|
Side and rear, abutting a nonresidential district
|
15
|
15*
|
|
*NOTE: Entire area must be landscaped.
|
(4) Maximum lot coverage by structure: 25%.
(5) Maximum structure height (excluding bell spire): 35
feet.
(6) Boundary treatment. Fences, walls or plantings or
other screening materials shall be required to provide visual screening
between adjacent structures and uses and parking or other areas or
uses on the parcel.
F. Home occupation. A special use permit shall be required.
The permit shall be issued by the Town Board only after a public hearing,
advertised in the manner required by Town Law, and upon the following
findings and conditions with respect to the health, safety and welfare
of the surrounding community:
(1) Only persons residing on the premises shall be engaged
in such an occupation.
(2) The home occupation shall be clearly incidental and
subordinate to the use of the premises for residential purposes. The
area devoted to the home occupation shall not exceed 25% of the ground-floor
area of the principal structure. It may be within the principal or
accessory structure.
(3) There shall be no change in the outside appearance
of the building or premises or other visible evidence of the conduct
of such home occupation.
(4) No equipment or process shall be used which creates
any noise, vibration, glare, fumes, odors or electrical interference
perceptible to the normal senses off the lot.
G. Office of resident professional. A special use permit
shall be required. The permit shall be issued by the Town Board only
after a public hearing, advertised in the manner required by § 274-b
of the Town Law, and upon the following findings and conditions:
(1) The resident professional office shall be clearly
incidental and subordinate to the use of the premises for residential
purposes.
(2) The area devoted to the resident professional office
shall not exceed 25% of the ground-floor area of the principal structure.
(3) The resident professional may have only one employee,
assistant or associate.
(4) Off-street or other available legal parking spaces shall be provided in addition to driveways and any private garage or parking area according to the profession involved and the requirements of §
200-27 of this chapter. The location thereof shall be determined by the Town Board. The location thereof shall be that which has the least negative impact on adjacent properties. Screening of the parking by fences, vegetation or other appropriate material shall be provided so as to assure privacy for adjacent land uses, with visual, noise and air quality factors considered.
(5) One unlighted sign of not more than two square feet
in size identifying the resident and the profession shall be permitted.
(6) The Town Board may establish additional conditions
and restrictions as it deems necessary to protect the general health,
welfare and safety, including, without limitation, those regulating
the days and hours when the profession may be conducted.
H. Interpretation of attached dwelling unit lot requirements
in the MFR-3 and MFR-4 Districts. In the MFR-3 and MFR-4 Districts,
each attached dwelling unit within a structure which meets the requirements
for the district shall also be deemed to meet the requirements if
it is located upon a lot meeting the applicable density or dwelling
unit minimum land area requirement. The dwelling unit may include
an interest in common lands.
I. Permitted locations for parcels abutting navigable
waterways. Parcels abutting a navigable waterway which is coincident
with the rear lot line may build the principal or auxiliary structure
to within 10 feet of the rear line regardless of the district requirements.
This provision shall be permitted only if the parcels on either side
of the subject parcel are vacant or the parcels are of such size or
configuration that the placement of a new structure will not unduly
obstruct the view toward the navigable waterway from the adjacent
principal structures. Fences which obstruct the view from the principal
structure shall not be permitted on a line with the rear building
lines of adjacent principal structures.
J. Boat ramps and boathouses. Boat ramps and boathouses
shall be permitted along the shoreline of navigable waterways after
obtaining the necessary New York State Department of Environmental
Conservation and Town building permits.
K. Lighting. Lighting facilities shall be arranged so
that adjoining properties and streets are protected from glare and
hazardous interference of any kind. In no instance shall lighting
standards exceed 10 feet in height.
[Added 7-7-1999 by L.L. No. 4-1999]