[Added 5-2-2011 ATM, Art. 30; 10-29-2912 FYTM,
Art. 12; 11-13-2017 FYTM, Art.
12]
The purpose of this article is the protection of public health, safety and welfare through the preservation of the Town's historic and cultural character for the residents and visitors of the Town of Brewster. The site plan review process assures that the development site functions in a logical fashion with minimal impacts. The adoption of these standards (§
179-64) ensures that future development will not degrade the existing character of the Town and surroundings and will maintain or enhance transportation flow and help preserve the Town’s character and cultural assets for the residents and visitors of the Town of Brewster.
In addition to any other permits required, the following development
activities shall require a Site Plan Review from the Planning Board:
A. Any development required to undertake staff review pursuant to §
83-3A of the General Bylaws.
B. The establishment of any new commercial, industrial, mixed-use or
multifamily use.
C. For existing commercial, industrial, or multifamily uses, any increase
of floor area by more than 500 square feet through either a new principal
building, a new accessory building, or an addition to a preexisting
building.
D. A change of use of an existing structure or lot from its current use to any other commercial, industrial, or multifamily use specified in the Table of Uses, §
179-11.
E. An increase in lot coverage by 10% or more associated with any existing
commercial, industrial, or multifamily use.
A. If the site plan meets the requirements of this article, the Planning Board shall approve it. Such approval may include reasonable conditions to ensure the site plan standards (§
179-66) are satisfied. The Planning Board cannot deny approval of a site plan for a use which is allowed by right (not by special permit) in the district but may impose reasonable conditions on the proposed use. The Planning Board may not impose conditions, the implementation of which would be contrary to any requirement of this bylaw or require a variance from it or any other applicable bylaw.
B. If the project proponent needs a special permit from the Board of Appeals acting under Article
VIII, Nonconforming Uses, Structures and Lots, §
179-28, Change of nonconforming uses, Subsection
A, the proponent may file a single, combined special permit application with the Planning Board, and in those instances, the Planning Board is authorized to grant all special permit relief in one proceeding. The proponent shall comply with all pertinent requirements, and the Planning Board shall apply the appropriate criteria to the different components of such an application.
The purpose of these standards is to improve roadway safety
and internal site circulation, aesthetics and retention of historic
character. All uses requiring a Site Plan Review under this article
shall meet the following standards:
A. Transportation standards.
(1) Proposed uses shall not degrade the existing levels of service of
surrounding roads and intersections below level of service (LOS) C,
defined by the Transportation Research Board’s Highway Capacity
Manual, based on summer peak-hour traffic volumes. The proponent shall
demonstrate that the proposed use shall maintain level of service
(LOS) c. If the existing level of service is presently below LOS C,
or if the LOS with the new use would fall below LOS C, the Planning
Board may require a traffic study that would identify ways to improve
LOS or mitigate impacts to the satisfaction of the Board.
(2) Driveways shall be designed to provide exiting motorists with safe sight distance. Sight distance at all driveways shall meet American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials standards as well as those set forth in Brewster's Sight Line Bylaw (Chapter
157, Article
VI, of the Town Code).
(3) All new commercial development where the project is expected to increase traffic by 20 or more daily trips, (see §
179-11, Table 1, Use Regulations) shall prepare a trip reduction plan. The trip reduction
plan shall describe traffic impact mitigation strategies designed
to reduce traffic generation and may include strategies such as company-sponsored
carpooling/vanpooling, bicycle and pedestrian incentive measures,
and/or variable work hour or flextime programs.
B. Access standards.
(1) The number of curb cuts on Route 6A, Route 124, Route 137, Underpass
Road and Tubman Road shall be minimized. To the extent feasible, access
to businesses shall be provided through one of the following means:
(a)
Access through a common driveway serving adjacent lots or premises;
(b)
Access through an existing side or rear street; or
(c)
Access through a cul-de-sac or loop road shared by adjacent
lots or premises.
(2) The Planning Board may allow reduced setback requirements to accommodate
joint driveways in cases where it is deemed advantageous to the Town.
(3) Existing businesses are encouraged to consolidate existing access
points, especially in cases where separate parcels are assembled under
one purpose, plan, entity or usage.
(4) Businesses shall be permitted one access driveway by right. Two driveways
shall be permitted only when deemed necessary by the Planning Board
and shall be clearly marked "entrance" and "exit."
(5) Internal circulation shall be provided, to the greatest extent possible,
among adjoining premises to encourage internal property-to-property
pedestrian, bicycle and vehicular movements. Site circulation shall
have clarity from the driver's perspective, aided by simple patterns
and use of planting islands or other devices in larger circulation
areas.
(6) All necessary curb cut permits shall be obtained prior to issuance
of a Certificate of Occupancy by the Building Department.
(7) Pedestrian and bicycle circulation shall be provided for between
the principal building and the street and, where appropriate, adjacent
development.
(8) Driveway locations shall provide the maximum practicable separation
between access locations, using shared access where feasible.
(9) All access drives shall be separated by at least 120 feet in the
C-H District and V-B District, as measured between the center line
of each access drive at the street line. This standard may only be
modified in cases where the Planning Board believes it is in the best
interest of the Town to do so.
D. Parking design standards.
(1) The Town of Brewster recognizes that reliance on rigid parking and
loading lot standards precludes the development of parking lots that
are sensitive to the Town's historic and rural character. Yet, it
also recognizes that some standards for parking and loading lot design
are required, provided that they can be administered with flexibility
given the individual requirements of development proposals and the
parcels on which they are proposed.
(2) Through provisions of its special permit, the Planning Board is authorized to relax any and all of numerical standards established by §
179-22, Parking and loading requirement tables, and by §
179-23, Parking and loading lot standards, if the Planning Board finds that:
(a)
Such relaxation will not conflict with the minimum standards
established by this article or the purpose of this article; and
(b)
It will result in a development that is at least as beneficial
to the Town of Brewster as the development without a relaxation of
the numerical standards.
(3) The following guidelines are set forth to assist the applicant and
the Planning Board:
(a)
Loading and unloading areas shall be provided of a sufficient
size to accommodate the numbers and types of vehicles likely to use
the premises, given the nature of the development proposed. Loading
and unloading areas shall be located and designed to allow vehicles
to safely maneuver to and from a public right-of-way and to prevent
obstruction or interference with a public right-of-way, parking space
or parking aisle.
(b)
Loading areas shall be provided to the rear of the lot, wherever
possible.
(c)
Parking areas shall be located to the side or rear of the structure.
No parking is permitted in the required front yard setback for the
structure.
(d)
To the extent possible, parking areas shall be shared with adjacent
businesses and should be situated to the side and rear of the lot
(frontage on Route 6A shall be considered the "front" of the lot).
(e)
In cases where shared parking is provided, the Planning Board
may permit a reduction in necessary spaces since complementary uses
may require less total parking area than each use individually.
(f)
Bicycle users shall be accommodated by provision of on-site
bicycle parking storage and bicycle and walking paths.
(g)
Drainage facilities shall be designed and constructed for parking areas in such a way as to contain and treat stormwater runoff on the premises, as well as comply with design standards referred to in §
179-57 of the Zoning Bylaw.
E. Landscaping, design and appearance standards.
(1) A year-round landscaped buffer strip shall be provided adjacent to any public road to visually screen parking and other uses from the road, where feasible, and without interfering with vehicular or pedestrian safety. The screened buffer shall be appropriate to the site and planted with a combination of grass, medium-height shrubs, evergreen varieties preferred, and shade trees along the road frontage. Applicants are expected to review Brewster's Sight Line Bylaw, Chapter
157, Article
VI, of the Town Code, prior to designing parking lot landscaping plans.
(2) At least 25% of the required front yard area shall be vegetated.
(3) A landscaped buffer strip of approximately ten-foot depth shall be
provided adjacent to adjoining uses, excluding areas providing shared
access and parking. The buffer strip shall be planted with a combination
of grass, medium-height shrubs (evergreen varieties preferred) and
shade trees.
(4) Exposed storage areas, machinery, service areas, truck loading areas,
utility buildings and structures and other unsightly uses shall be
screened from view from neighboring properties and streets using plantings,
a wall or tight fence complemented with plantings or through some
other means deemed acceptable to the permit granting authority.
(5) Shrubs and trees which die shall be replaced within one growing season.
All landscaped areas shall be maintained, as approved.
(6) Buildings and architectural design shall be compatible with the character
and scale of the adjacent roadway and surrounding neighborhood.
(7) Structures shall be sited so as to allow separations between buildings,
particularly to encourage open space in the site and reduce building
massing.
(8) The use of bituminous paving shall be minimized.
(9) Old, well-established trees shall be protected by siting buildings
and parking around or within the existing landscape.
(10)
Building design shall adhere to the guidelines of the Brewster
Historic District Committee in locations subject to review by the
Committee.
F. Environmental protection requirements.
(1) Stormwater management. All development shall be designed so that
resulting stormwater patterns resemble, as nearly as possible, preexisting
conditions of volume, velocity, quality and location of runoff. Any
increase over predevelopment runoff peak rate shall be authorized
only if staff review determines that any potential problems with capacity,
downstream erosion or siltation will be prevented through on- or off-site
improvements or compensatory actions and that the public interest
is better served by allowing the increase than by denying it.
(2) No land altering activity, including clearing, grading, excavating
or construction is permitted until all the required permits have been
obtained.
(3) Erosion control.
(a)
Any area of bare earth exposed through building or site development
or demolition must be permanently stabilized through replanting, paving
or other means of eliminating wind or water erosion. Such stabilization
must be completed prior to building occupancy or, where no building
is committed, within 60 days of exposure, or a performance bond must
be posted in an amount sufficient to assure completion of such work.
(b)
Existing grade shall be changed minimally, typically departing
from existing grade by no more than six feet and resulting in a balance
on site between cut and fill, except for basement and cellar excavations.
(c)
All construction must comply with the following. An erosion
control plan shall be submitted for every development which will expose
more than 60,000 square feet of bare earth during development through
either removal or filling on the same parcel or on contiguous parcels
in the same ownership and for developments exposing 20,000 to 60,000
square feet of bare earth where staff review deems such plan to be
necessitated by slopes in excess of ten-percent highly erodible soils
or other unusual conditions. Such plan shall have sufficient information
on existing and proposed topography, vegetation and control measures
to allow determination of compliance.
[1]
Stripping of vegetation, regrading or other development shall
be done in a way which will minimize soil erosion.
[2]
Whenever practical, trees and other natural vegetation shall
be retained, protected and supplemented.
[3]
The disturbed area shall be kept to a minimum.
[4]
Where necessary, temporary vegetation and/or mulching shall
be used to protect areas exposed during development.
[5]
Sediment basins (debris basins, desilting basins or silt traps)
shall be installed and maintained where necessary to remove from runoff
waters any sediment from land undergoing development.
[6]
The angle of graded slopes and fills shall be no greater than
two horizontal to one vertical. Slopes left exposed must immediately
be planted or otherwise provided with permanent ground cover or other
means sufficient to restrain erosion.
[7]
A ground cover sufficient to restrain erosion must be planted
or otherwise provided within 30 working days, season permitting, on
any portion of the tract upon which further active construction is
not being undertaken.
[8]
The development plan shall be fitted to the topography and soils
so as to minimize erosion potential.
G. Plants and animals.
(1) New development and redevelopment proposals located in a mapped Natural
Heritage and Endangered Species Program (NHESP) area are required
to file with the Natural Heritage Program and provide the written
determination from the NHESP prior to receiving Site Plan approval.
(2) Specimen plants and trees, especially trees exceeding 12 inches in
diameter, shall be preserved or relocated when possible. Applicants
shall be required to submit signed documentation from the Conservation
Commission or its agent that the project has been reviewed by the
Conservation Commission with respect to these considerations. The
Conservation Commission or its agent may determine that the proposed
site either contains no such habitats or species or that all feasible
efforts to avoid, minimize or compensate for damage have been reflected
in the proposal.
H. Lighting.
(1) Lighting
shall be downward casting and full shielded so as to not illuminate
areas off the property. A photometric lighting plan shall be required
for all new development. The Planning Board may determine whether
a photometric plan is required for redevelopment. Light poles shall
be no higher than necessary to provide safe levels of nighttime illumination.
(2) No flickering or flashing lights shall be permitted. Processes, such
as arc welding, which create light flashes shall be confined within
buildings or shielded to prevent either direct glare or flashing reflected
from the sky.
I. Noise. Where exterior noise levels after construction are expected
to exceed 100 decibels at the source for more than 15 minutes at a
time, continually on a regular or sporadic basis, the applicant shall
be required to show the Planning Board the means by which this impact
shall be mitigated. The Board shall have the authority to require
greater degrees of mitigation if the Board is not satisfied that the
resultant noise level will have a minimal effect on surrounding neighborhoods
or wildlife habitats.
A. Waivers. When in the opinion of the Planning Board the requirements of §
179-66, Site Plan Review standards, do not substantially change the relationship of the structure to the site and to abutting properties and structures, the Planning Board may determine, without a public hearing, that Site Plan Review for special permit approval is not required. Upon receipt of written request, such a determination may be made by an affirmative vote of a majority of the Planning Board present, and in no event fewer than four members.
B. Severability. The provisions of this article are severable from each
other, and the invalidity of any provisions or sections shall not
invalidate any other provision or section thereof.