Unless otherwise expressly stated, the following words
shall, for the purposes of this chapter, have the meanings herein
indicated:
ACCESSORY BUILDING
A subordinate building, the use of which is incidental to
that of the principal building.
ACCESSORY STRUCTURE
Any structure no greater than 15 feet in height, which does
not exceed 10% of lot coverage, which is considered incidental to
the primary use of the property, included in the calculation of overall
lot coverage, encroaching no closer than five feet to the property
boundary lines when attached to the primary structure, excluding stoops,
stairs, chimneys, vents and on-grade HVAC units, and other electrical
or plumbing appurtenances; and when said structure is detached requires
a setback of at least three feet from the property boundary lines,
not included beyond the front line of the primary structure, and constructed
on buildable lots and parcels contiguous to those of the primary structures.
[Added 4-18-2000 by L.L. No. 4-2000;
amended 12-4-2007 by L.L. No. 15-2007]
ACCESSORY USE
A use customarily incidental and subordinate to the principal
use of a building and located on the same lot with such principal
use or building.
ADULT ENTERTAINMENT CABARET
A public or private establishment which presents topless
dancers, strippers, male or female impersonators or exotic dancers
or other similar entertainment and which establishment is customarily
not open to the public generally but excludes any minor by reason
of age.
[Added 10-21-2008 by L.L. No. 12-2008]
ALTERATION
As applied to a building or structure, a change, modification
or rearrangement in any part, or the moving from one location or position
to another. Ordinary repairs shall not be considered "alterations."
AREA, BUILDING
The aggregate of the horizontal cross-section area of the
building on a lot, excluding one-story accessory buildings, whether
attached or unattached, and excluding cornices, eaves, gutters and
chimneys projecting not more than 24 inches, steps, one-story open
porches, bay windows not extending through more than one story and
not projecting more than three feet, balconies and terraces.
AREA, HABITABLE FLOOR
Interior space in a dwelling with a height from floor to
ceiling of not less than seven feet six inches, which is usable for
ordinary residential purposes. This does not include utility rooms
or storage space other than clothes closets.
BAR
Any place of public assembly in which the business of directly
or indirectly selling or serving drink to the public is conducted
and which does not provide any form of entertainment, including music,
whether live or mechanical, singing, dancing or any type of game of
amusement.
[Added 10-21-2008 by L.L. No. 12-2008]
BASEMENT
That space of a building that is partly below grade which
has more than 1/2 of its height, measured from floor to ceiling, above
the average established curb level or finished grade of the ground
adjoining the building.
BOARDINGHOUSE
Any dwelling or part thereof which contains one or more rooming
units, in which space is let by the occupant or owner to three or
more persons for hire or otherwise.
[Added 1-21-2020 by L.L. No. 1-2020]
BUILDING
Any structure having a roof for the shelter, housing or enclosure
of persons, animals, chattels or property of any kind.
BUILDING AREA
Includes all accessory structures and is included in the
calculation of the overall lot coverage.
[Added 4-18-2000 by L.L. No. 4-2000]
BUILDING HEIGHT
Height shall be calculated from the mean grade of the property
to the highest roof peak of the structure on the site.
[Amended 3-4-2008 by L.L. 3-2008]
BUILDABLE LOTS OR PARCELS
Areas of contiguous land used for the purpose of erecting
a structure or creating a definable use as cited in the Zoning Ordinance.
[Added 4-18-2000 by L.L. No. 4-2000]
CABARET
Any room, place or space in which any professional entertainment
or floor show of any kind whatsoever or similar entertainment, including
dancing by the patrons, is permitted or provided in connection with
the business of directly or indirectly selling or serving food or
drink to the public is conducted, and provides any form of entertainment,
including music, whether live or mechanical, singing, dancing or any
type of game of amusement. The term "cabaret" shall include establishments
customarily called "discotheques."
[Added 10-21-2008 by L.L. No. 12-2008]
CARPORT
A structure not more than one story in height, without walls,
doors or other enclosures on at least two sides, the floor of which
rests upon the ground, used exclusively for the storage or parking
of not more than two motor vehicles and which is accessory to a private
dwelling.
[Added 12-4-1990 by L.L. No. 17-1990]
CATERING AND EVENTS FACILITY
A facility, not open to the general public, used for the
hosting of corporate, social, private events for a third party on
a fee basis. Any entertainment to be provided shall be incidental
thereto.
[Added 10-21-2008 by L.L. No. 12-2008]
CELLAR
That space of a building that is partly or entirely below
grade, which has more than 1/2 of its height, measured from floor
to ceiling, below the average established curb level or finished grade
of the ground adjoining the building.
CLASS A MULTIPLE DWELLING
A multiple dwelling which is occupied, as a rule, for permanent
residence purposes. This class shall include tenements, flat houses,
maisonette apartments, apartment houses, apartment hotels, bachelor
apartments, studio apartments, duplex apartments, kitchenette apartments,
garden-type maisonette dwelling projects and all other dwellings except
Class B multiple dwellings.
[Added 4-18-2000 by L.L. No. 4-2000]
CLASS B MULTIPLE DWELLING
A multiple dwelling which is occupied, as a rule, transiently,
as a more or less temporary abode of individuals or families who are
lodged with or without meals. This class shall include hotels, lodging
houses, rooming houses, boardinghouses, boarding schools, furnished
room house, lodgings, clubhouses, college and school dormitories and
dwellings designed as private dwellings but occupied by one or two
families with five or more transient boarders, roomers or lodgers
in one household.
[Added 4-18-2000 by L.L. No. 4-2000]
COMMUNITY RESIDENCE
A facility for mentally disabled persons as defined by the
Mental Hygiene Law and the rules and regulations issued thereunder.
CONVERTED DWELLING
A dwelling erected before April 18, 1929, to be occupied
by one or two families living independently of each other and subsequently
occupied as a multiple dwelling; or a dwelling three stories or less
in height to be occupied by one or two families living independently
of each other and subsequently occupied by not more than three families
in all, with a maximum occupancy of two families on each floor in
a two-story building and one-family on each floor in a three-story
building. A converted dwelling occupied as a Class A multiple dwelling
is a Class A converted dwelling; every other converted dwelling is
a Class B converted dwelling.
[Added 4-18-2000 by L.L. No. 4-2000]
COURT
An open, unoccupied space bounded on three or more sides
by the exterior walls of a building or buildings, or exterior walls
and interior lot lines on which walls are allowable.
CURB LEVEL
For the purpose of measuring the height of any portion of
a building, the level of the curb at the center of the front of the
building, except that where a building faces on more than one street,
the "curb level" is the average of the levels of the curbs at the
center of each front.
DANCE HALL
Any place of public assembly in which dancing is carried
on and to which the public may gain admittance either with or without
the payment of a fee.
[Added 10-21-2008 by L.L. No. 12-2008]
DECK
An accessory structure with a platform height of 18 inches
or higher above street elevation, with permanent footings with an
area coverage greater than 100 square feet, attached and encroaching
no closer than five feet to the property boundary lines when attached
to the primary structure and when said structure is detached requires
a setback from the property boundary lines of a minimum of three feet
from the primary structure and/or accessory structure. All decks shall
be considered an accessory structure.
[Added 4-18-2000 by L.L. No. 4-2000; 12-4-2007 by L.L. No.
15-2007]
DRIVE-IN RESTAURANT
A building or facility with accessory facilities devoted
to the preparation and/or sales and service of food, refreshments,
edibles or nonalcoholic drink to patrons for consumption on the premises
which permits or encourages consumption of such food, refreshments,
edibles or drink on the premises in parked or standing vehicles or
informally outdoors. A drive-in restaurant shall be construed to include
any form of drive-in, open-front or curb-service eating establishment;
however, it shall not be construed to include any form of cabaret
or similar entertainment establishment.
[Added 10-21-2008 by L.L. No. 12-2008]
DRIVEWAY
A private road that enables vehicles to travel from a public
road on an approved surface to the rear line of a structure or garage.
Every driveway shall have an unobstructed minimum width of 10 feet.
[Added 12-4-2007 by L.L. No. 15-2007]
DWELLING
A building designed or used exclusively as the living quarters
for one or more persons.
DWELLING, MULTIPLE
One of the following:
(1)
A building containing three or more dwelling
units.
(2)
A building containing living, sanitary and sleeping
facilities, occupied by one or two families and more than two lodgers
residing with either one of such families.
(3)
A building with one or more sleeping rooms other
than a one- or two-family dwelling used or occupied by permanent or
transient paying guests or tenants.
(4)
A building with sleeping accommodations for
more than five persons used or occupied as a club, dormitory, fraternity
or sorority house or for similar uses.
(5)
A building used or occupied as a convalescent,
old age or nursing home, but not including private or public hospitals
or public institutions.
(7)
A building for senior citizens, intended primarily
for persons 62 years old or more, who are in good physical condition
and who do not require physical assistance.
DWELLING, TWO-FAMILY
A building designed for or occupied by two families living
independently of each other, with separate cooking and sanitation
facilities. This may be either a semidetached house the two parts
of which share a party wall, each side housing not more than one family,
or a dwelling containing separate quarters for one family over the
quarters of the other family.
DWELLING UNIT
A dwelling or portion thereof providing complete living facilities
for one family.
FAMILY
Either a person occupying a dwelling and maintaining a household,
with not more than two boarders, roomers or lodgers, or two or more
persons occupying a dwelling, living together and maintaining a common
household, with not more than four boarders, roomers or lodgers. A
"boarder," "roomer" or "lodger" residing with a family shall mean
a person within the household who pays a consideration for such residence
and does not occupy such space within the household as an incident
of employment therein.
[Amended 4-18-2000 by L.L. No. 4-2000]
FAST-FOOD RESTAURANT
An eating establishment, excluding bakeries and delicatessens,
where the majority of service is available from a counter-type installation
and from which quickly prepared or pre-prepared foods are taken away
by the customer, whether or not interior seating facilities are provided.
[Added 10-21-2008 by L.L. No. 12-2008]
FLOOR AREA RATIO (FAR)
The measurement of a building's floor area in relation to
the size of the lot/parcel upon which the building is located.
[Added 6-20-2023 by L.L. No. 2-2023]
GARAGE, PRIVATE
A building used only for the storage of motor vehicles commonly
used for pleasure only, except as otherwise specifically provided
in any zone.
GARAGE, PUBLIC
A building used commercially for the storage, repair (excluding
body work and painting), rental, greasing, washing, servicing, adjusting
or equipping of motor vehicles.
GARDEN-TYPE MAISONETTE DWELLING PROJECT
A series of attached, detached or semidetached dwelling units
which are provided as a group collectively with all essential services,
such as but not limited to water supply and house sewers, and which
units are located on a site or plot not less than 20,000 square feet
in area under common ownership and erected under plans filed with
the Department on or before April 18, 1954, and which units together
and in their aggregate are arranged or designed to provide three or
more apartments.
[Added 4-18-2000 by L.L. No. 4-2000]
GASOLINE SERVICE STATION
Any area of land, including structures thereon, that is used
or designed to be used for supplying gasoline, oil or other fuel for
the propulsion of motor vehicles and which may include facilities
used or designed to be used for polishing, greasing, washing, cleaning
or servicing such motor vehicles.
GRADE
The natural surface of the ground, or surface ground, after
completion of any change in contour, including the completed surfaces
of lawns, walks and roads brought to grades as shown on official plans
or designs relative thereto.
HABITABLE ROOM
A room or enclosed floor space used or intended to be used
for living, sleeping, cooking, recreation or eating purposes, excluding
stairways, bathrooms, water closet compartments, laundries, pantries,
foyers, communicating corridors, closets or storage spaces.
HEALTH CLUB
A club which may be utilized by members and/or the general
public upon payment of a fee and which contains some or all of the
following types of athletic facilities: swimming pool, racquetball
courts, squash courts, exercise rooms, gymnasium or similar facilities.
[Added 10-21-2008 by L.L. No. 12-2008]
HOME OCCUPATION
Any customary handicraft for gain conducted only by members
of a family residing on the premises, and conducted entirely within
the dwelling, provided that no article is sold or offered for sale
except such as may be produced by members of the immediate family
residing on the premises.
JUNKYARD
Any land or structure or part thereof exceeding 300 square
feet in area used for the collection, storage or sale of wastepaper,
rags, scrap metal or other scrap or discarded material or for the
collecting, dismantling, storage or salvage of machinery or vehicles
not in running condition or for the sale of the parts thereof.
[Added 10-21-2008 by L.L. No. 12-2008]
KITCHENETTE
Space, less than 60 square feet in floor area, used for cooking
or preparation of food and not deemed habitable space.
LODGING HOUSE
A multiple dwelling, other than a hotel, a rooming house
or a furnished room house, in which persons are housed for hire for
a single night, or less than a week at one time, or any part of which
is let for any person to sleep in for any term less than a week.
[Added 4-18-2000 by L.L. No. 4-2000]
LOT
Any single parcel of land.
LOT, CORNER
A parcel of land at the junction of and fronting on two or
more intersecting streets.
LOT, DEPTH OF
The mean distance from the street line of the lot to its
opposite line, measured in the general direction of the side lines
of the lot. In a corner lot the depth is the longer dimension thus
measured.
LOT, WIDTH OF
The mean dimension of the lot measured at right angles to
its depth.
MEANS OF EGRESS
A continuous unobstructed way of exit from any point in a
building or structure to a public way. A means of egress comprises
the vertical and horizontal ways of travel and includes intervening
room spaces, doorways, hallways, corridors, passageways, balconies,
ramps, stairs, enclosures, lobbies, escalators, horizontal exits,
courts and yards.
[Added 4-18-2000 by L.L. No. 4-2000]
MEZZANINE
An intermediate floor, between the floor and ceiling of any
space, which extends over only a part of the floor area next below.
MOTOR VEHICLE
Any and all devices, in, upon or by which any person or property
is or may be transported, operated upon a public highway or public
street, propelled by any power other than muscular power, including
but limited to trucks, tractors, trailers, semitrailers, taxis, mobile
homes, motor homes, boats and landscaping equipment.
[Added 4-18-2000 by L.L. No. 4-2000]
NONCONFORMING USE
A use of land or building which lawfully existed prior to
the enactment of any regulation which prohibited such use and which
is maintained after the date of the adoption of such regulation. For
the purposes of this definition, the earliest regulation referred
to herein shall be the Village of Hempstead Building Zone Ordinance
of 1930.
PARKING FIELD, BUSINESS
An area, together with means of ingress and egress, owned,
leased and operated by private enterprise and used for the parking
of vehicles as a commercial enterprise where a fee is charged for
parking.
PARKING FIELD, MUNICIPAL
An area, together with means of ingress and egress, owned
or leased and operated by the Village and used for the parking of
vehicles.
PARKING FIELD, PRIVATE
An area, together with means of ingress and egress, owned,
leased and operated by private enterprise and used for the parking
of motor vehicles as an accessory to a commercial use and for which
no fee for parking is charged, or used for the parking of motor vehicles
by the occupants of a multiple residence as an accessory thereto,
whether or not a fee is charged, provided further that said parking
area shall be graded so that the drainage water will be deposited
in the approximate center of the field and shall drain into adequate
dry wells.
PLACE OF ASSEMBLY
A room or space where 49 persons or less gather for amusement,
athletic, civic, dining, educational, entertainment, patriotic, political,
recreational, religious, social or similar purposes.
PLACE OF PUBLIC ASSEMBLY
A room or space where 50 or more persons gather for amusement,
athletic, civic, dining, educational, entertainment, patriotic, political,
recreational, religious, social or similar purposes.
RESTAURANT
Restaurant means an establishment engages in the service
of food and/or beverages to patrons seated inside a building. To qualify
as a restaurant, an establishment shall have the following:
[Added 10-21-2008 by L.L. No. 12-2008]
(1)
A food preparation area that is at least 10%
of the gross building square footage of the principal building. The
square footage of a food preparation area located in an on-site accessory
restaurant use building may be applied when calculating this minimum
ten-percent requirement; and
(2)
At least 75% of all customer seats designated
for full-service, full-menu dining; and
(3)
No more than 25% of the building floor area
may be devoted to accessory entertainment uses, including but not
limited to lounges, bars, live performances, and disc jockey areas.
An establishment with more than 25% of the building floor area devoted
to entertainment shall not qualify as a restaurant (full-service)
and shall not be eligible for a restaurant accessory entertainment
license.
RESTAURANT, CARRY-OUT
A nonrestaurant food and beverage service business designed
primarily as a carry-out food establishment such as but not limited
to bakeries, delicatessens, coffee shops, and pizzerias, and maybe
accessory to grocery stores, food markets, health food stores, and
supermarkets, and may provide limited table service to customers.
A carry-out food establishment shall not include a fast-food establishment
or restaurant as defined in this chapter, nor shall it include any
businesses with drive-up window service.
[Added 10-21-2008 by L.L. No. 12-2008]
ROOMING HOUSE
Any dwelling or part thereof which contains one or more rooming
units, in which space is let by the occupant or owner to three or
more persons for hire or otherwise.
[Added 10-21-2008 by L.L. No. 12-2008]
SENIOR CITIZEN
A person 62 years old or more who is in good physical condition
and does not require physical assistance.
SETBACK LINE
The nearest point to the street line at which a building
may be erected in conformity with this chapter. The setback of a building
shall be measured from the street line to the nearest part of the
building which is covered by a roof.
SPLIT-LEVEL DWELLING
A dwelling of at least two stories, and containing at least
1,500 square feet of habitable floor area, and so arranged that no
substantial part of the next higher story of the building is directly
over the story immediately lower. Each successive story shall be four
or more feet higher than the next lower story. If the garage level
contains any space used for habitation, other than storage, recreation
room or a home workshop, it shall be counted as a story.
STORY
That portion of a building which is between one floor level
and the next higher floor level or the roof. The ground or first story
of a building is the lowest story thereof which has its floor level
entirely above the level of the ground, except when the ground story
has a ceiling seven feet six inches or more above the curb level,
it shall be considered as a "story" in determining the height of a
building.
SHEDS
An accessory structure greater than 15 feet in height which
does not exceed more than 10% of lot coverage, which is considered
incidental to the primary use of the property, included in the calculation
of overall lot coverage, encroaching not closer than five feet to
the property boundary lines when attached to the primary structure,
with permanent footings, an area coverage greater than 100 square
feet when attached or detached from the primary structure and/or accessory
structure.
[Added 4-18-2000 by L.L. No. 4-2000]
STORY, HALF
A story, under a roof other than a flat roof, the rafter
plates of which on at least two opposite walls are less than three
feet above the floor thereof.
STREET LINE
The dividing line between a public or private street and
a lot.
SWIMMING POOL
All swimming pools shall be considered an accessory structure.
[Added 4-18-2000 by L.L. No. 4-2000]
TENEMENT
Any building or structure or any portion thereof which is
occupied, wholly or in part, as the residence of three families or
more living independently of each other and doing their cooking upon
the premises, and includes apartment houses, flat houses and all other
houses so erected and occupied, except that a tenement shall not be
deemed to include any converted dwelling. An "old-law tenement" is
a tenement existing and recorded as such in this Department, except
that it shall not be deemed to include any converted dwelling.
[Added 4-18-2000 by L.L. No. 4-2000]
TRANSIENT OCCUPANCY
The occupancy of a room for sleeping purposes by the same
person or persons for a period of 30 days or less.
[Added 4-18-2000 by L.L. No. 4-2000]
TWO-STORY BUILDING
A building having not more than two floors and having habitable
floor area on the second floor accessible by a permanent stairway.
YARD, FRONT
The open, unoccupied space, within and extending the full
width of the lot, between the street line and any part of the building
nearest to such line.
YARD, REAR
The open space, unoccupied except for permitted accessory
buildings, running the full width of the lot, between the nearest
part of the rear wall of the building throughout its height and the
rear line of the lot. In the case of a lot on the corner of two or
more streets, either lot line not bordering on a street may be selected
by the owner to be the rear line, provided that the owner notes the
same on the plans officially filed with the Superintendent of the
Building Department. In case of a gore lot between two streets meeting
at an angle of 90° or less, the lot line which is not also a street
line shall be considered a side lot line and not a rear lot line.
YARD, SIDE
The open, unoccupied space within the lot between a side
lot line or its vertical projection and the parts of the building
nearest to such side line. Such a side yard shall extend through from
the street line or the front yard, if such is required, to the rear
yard, if such is required, or to the rear lot lines.
YARD, SIDE, WIDTH OF
The least distance between the side lot line or its vertical
projection and the wall nearest to the side lot line.