Under normal circumstances, the minimum area
required to qualify for a Planned Residential Development District
shall be 25 contiguous acres of land.
The tract of land for a project may be owned,
leased or controlled either by a single person or corporation or by
a group of individuals or corporations. An application must be filed
by the owner or jointly by owners of all property included in a project.
In the case of multiple ownership, the approved plan shall be binding
on all owners. Leaseholds shall be for a period of at least 50 years.
All approved plans shall be binding on all successors of the applicants.
The Planned Residential Development District
shall be applicable to any area of the Town where the applicant can
demonstrate that the characteristics of his holdings will meet the
objectives of this article.
Common open space shall comprise a minimum of
10% of the gross area of the planned residential development to be
used for recreational, park or environmental amenity for collective
enjoyment by occupants of the development but shall not include public
or private streets, driveways or utility easements. No more than 50%
of the common open space of a proposed planned residential development
shall be comprised of floodplains or slopes over 35%.
Permitted uses within a PRD District shall be
as follows:
A. Residential uses: detached, semidetached or attached
one-family dwellings, garden apartments and townhouses.
B. Nonresidential uses: active and passive park and recreation
areas, open space and facilities, including swimming pools, tennis
courts, ball fields, playgrounds, walkways, bikeways, nature trails
and similar structures and facilities.
C. Accessory uses: those accessory uses and structures
permitted in the R-3 District.
A planned residential development plan that is in conformance with the criteria established in §§
270-92 through
270-97 hereof conserves natural amenities and is consistent with the following standards shall be deemed to have qualified for tentative approval:
A. General planning considerations.
(1) The plan may provide for a mixture of those uses set forth in §
270-96 above; provided, however, that not more than 25% of the total number of proposed dwellings shall be townhouses.
(2) No building or structure shall be more than 40 feet in height as defined in §
270-5 of this chapter.
(3) The intent of this article is to encourage excellent
quality development and to take into consideration the appearance
of all elevations and the arrangement of the buildings and external
spaces and materials used therein.
(4) Nonresidential uses shall be designed and intended
primarily for the use of the residents of the planned residential
development and the immediate neighborhood, and the burden of proof
shall be upon the applicant to prove that such is the case. No building
designed or intended to be used in part or in whole for institutional
purposes shall be constructed prior to the construction and completion
of not less than 20% of the dwelling units proposed in the plan. Recreational
and open space uses shall be incorporated into each phase or stage
of development in the manner prescribed by the plan. Applicable recreational
facilities shall be completed before construction of the next phase.
(5) Maximum residential density. In consideration of the
intent of the provisions of this article, the Town Board may permit
a greater number of dwelling units per acre than is permitted by this
chapter otherwise applicable to the site. Applicants requesting such
density increase shall be required to submit the following:
(a)
A preliminary sketch plan which conforms to
all standards and criteria of the effective zoning to establish the
maximum permitted density.
(b)
A preliminary sketch plan which conforms to
all requirements of this article illustrating the planned residential
development based upon the requested density increase.
B. Consideration for density increase shall be governed
by the criteria listed below, which are to be treated as additive,
not compounded.
(1) Open space (as defined in §
270-96) reservation shall be considered as a basis for density increases according to the following provisions:
(a)
If 5% of the gross area of the planned residential development is reserved for common usable open space in addition to the minimum required open space set forth in §
270-96, the applicant shall receive a ten-percent density increase if such open space area is improved and a five-percent density increase if unimproved.
(b)
If 10% of the gross area of the planned residential development is reserved for common usable open space in addition to the minimum required open space set forth in §
270-96, the applicant shall receive a fifteen-percent density increase if such open space area is improved and a seven-and one-half-percent increase if unimproved.
(c)
If 20% of the gross area of the planned residential development is reserved for common usable open space in addition to the minimum required open space set forth in §
270-96, the applicant shall receive a fifteen-percent density increase if such open space area is improved and a ten-percent density increase if unimproved.
(2) Character, identity and architectural and siting variation
incorporated in a development shall be considered cause for density
increases not to exceed 10%, provided that these factors make a substantial
contribution to the objectives of a planned residential development.
The degree of distinctiveness and the desirable variation achieved
shall govern the amount of density increase which the Town Board may
approve. Such variations may include, but are not limited to, the
following:
(a)
Landscaping (a maximum increase of 5%), streetscaping,
open spaces and plazas, use of existing landscape, pedestrian way
treatment and recreational areas.
(b)
Siting (a maximum increase of 2.5%), visual
focal points, use of existing physical features such as topography,
view, sun and wind orientation, circulation pattern, physical and
environment, in building setbacks and building groups (such as clustering).
(c)
Design features (a maximum of 2.5%), street
sections, architectural styles, harmonious use of materials, parking
areas broken by landscape features and varied use of house types.
All streets and sidewalks must conform to the
town's design standards with respect to rights-of-way, width, paving
specifications, cartway design, horizontal and vertical alignment,
site distances and drainage provisions, except when modified or waived
by the Board. Pedestrian circulation systems must be provided as convenient,
safe and attractive links between residential groupings, open space
areas, recreation areas and schools.
Whenever any planned residential development
is proposed, before any permit for the erection of a permanent building
in such planned residential development shall be granted and before
any subdivision plot of any part thereof may be filed in the office
of the Schenectady County Clerk, the developer, or his authorized
agent, shall apply for and secure approval of such planned residential
development in accordance with the following procedures:
A. Application for sketch plan approval.
(1) In order to allow the Town authorities and the developer
to reach an understanding on basic design requirements prior to detailed
design investment, the development shall submit a sketch plan of his
proposal to the Planning Board. The sketch plan shall be approximately
to scale, though it need not be to the precision of a finished engineering
drawing, and it shall clearly show the following information:
(a)
The location of the various uses and their areas.
(b)
The general outlines of the interior roadway
system and all existing rights-of-way and easements, whether public
or private.
(c)
Delineation of the various residential areas, indicating for each such area its general extent, size and composition in terms of total number of dwelling units, approximate percentage allocation by dwelling-unit type (i.e., single-family detached, duplex, townhouse, garden apartments) and general description of the intended market structure (i.e., luxury, middle-income, moderate-income, elderly units, family units, etc.), plus a calculation of the residential density in dwelling units per gross acre (total area, including interior roadways) for such area based upon the method set forth in §
270-98A(5) above.
(d)
The common open space system.
(e)
The overall drainage system.
(f)
If grades exceed 3% or portions of the site
have a moderate-to-high susceptibility to erosion or a moderate-to-high
susceptibility to flooding and ponding, a topographic map showing
contour intervals of not more than five feet of elevation, along with
an overlay outlining the above susceptible soil areas, if any.
(g)
Principal ties to the community at large with
respect to transportation, water supply and sewage disposal.
(h)
General description of the provisions of other
community facilities, such as schools, fire-protection services and
cultural facilities, if any, and some indication of how these needs
are proposed to be accommodated.
(i)
A location map showing uses and ownership of
abutting lands.
(2) In addition, the following documentation shall accompany
the sketch plan:
(a)
Evidence of how the developer's particular mix
of land uses meets existing community demands.
(b)
Evidence that the proposal is compatible with
the goals of the Official Comprehensive Plan.
(c)
If the development is to be staged, a general
indication of how the staging is to proceed. Whether or not the development
is to be staged, the sketch plan of this section shall show the intended
total project.
(d)
Evidence of any sort in the applicant's own
behalf to demonstrate his physical and financial competence to carry
out the plan and his awareness of the scope of such a project.
(e)
A long-form environmental assessment shall be
submitted together with a list of other permits required and involved
agencies. If determined necessary, an environmental impact statement
will be prepared in accordance with the requirements of the New York
State Environmental Quality Review Act.
B. Planning Board review. The Planning Board shall review
the sketch plan and other documents submitted by the applicant and
shall render either a favorable or an unfavorable report to the Town
Board.
(1) A favorable report shall include a recommendation
to the Town Board that a public hearing be held for the purpose of
considering planned unit development districting. It shall be based
on the following findings, which shall be included as part of the
report:
(a)
The proposal conforms to the Town Comprehensive
Plan.
(b)
The proposal meets the intent and objectives
of planned unit development, as expressed herein.
(c)
The proposal meets all the general requirements
of this article.
(d)
The proposal is conceptually sound in that it
meets a community need and it conforms to accepted design principles
in the proposed functional roadway system, land-use configuration,
open-space system, drainage system and scale of the elements, both
absolutely and to one another.
(e)
There are adequate services and utilities available
or proposed to be made available in the construction of the development.
(2) An unfavorable report shall state clearly the reasons
therefor and, if appropriate, point out to the applicant what might
be necessary in order to receive a favorable report. The applicant
may, within 10 days after receiving an unfavorable report, file an
application for planned unit development districting with the Town
Board. The Town Board may then determine, on its own initiative, whether
or not it wishes to call a public hearing.
C. Completed application. The Chairman of the Planning
Board shall certify when all of the necessary application material
has been presented, and the Planning Board shall submit its report
within 60 days of such certification. If no report has been rendered
after 60 days, the applicant may proceed as if an unfavorable report
were given to him.