The use and building regulations contained in this Article
XV are supplemental and additional to the district regulations for each district contained in Articles
IV through
XIV, inclusive.
[Amended 5-6-2003 by L.L. No. 3-2003]
The height of a structure shall not exceed standards
applicable for each district, except that:
A. Any elevator or stair bulkhead shall not exceed 20
feet above the maximum height otherwise permitted and shall not occupy
more than 10% of the total roof area.
B. If the Board of Trustees finds that one or more of
the following items would enhance the aesthetics and architecture
of the building and is compatible with the architecture of adjacent
or nearby structures, it may permit a spire, belfry, dome, flagpole,
chimney, tower, turret, steeple, weather vane, or lightning rod (and
not including television, radio, or wireless communication antennas)
or other similar structure to be erected to a height in excess of
the restrictions on building height, provided that no such structure
or combination of structures shall:
(1) Have a lot coverage in excess of 10% of the lot area;
(2) Have any sign bearing lettering or commercial advertisement
of any kind.
(3) Except for a spire, steeple or similar structure on
a place of worship, exceed the height limit by more than 25%; or
(4) Have a width that is more than 30% of the width of
the facade of the building to which it is connected.
C. If the Board of Trustees finds that a parapet wall,
pitched roof, cornice, or similar architectural feature would enhance
the aesthetics and architecture of the building, it may permit the
feature to be erected to a height of not more than six feet above
the maximum height.
Notwithstanding the lot area and lot width requirements of Articles
IV through
XIV, inclusive, a single-family dwelling may be erected on any lot separately owned and not adjacent to any lot in the same ownership on August 6, 1957.
A swimming pool or wading pool, accessory to the residence on the same lot, either permanent or above ground temporary, may be installed or constructed in any residence district subject to a special permit by the Board of Appeals in accordance with the provisions of §
98-133C and the requirements set forth hereinafter:
A. The Board of Appeals shall not authorize the issuance
of any permit under the provisions of this section unless it finds
in each individual case that the proposed use of the property or structure:
(1) Will not tend to depreciate the value of the property
in the Village;
(2) Will not create a hazard to health, safety, morals
or the general welfare;
(3) Will not be detrimental to the neighborhood or to
the residents thereof;
(4) Will not alter the essential character of the neighborhood;
and
(5) Will not otherwise be detrimental to the public convenience
and welfare.
B. No swimming or wading pool shall be installed or constructed
or maintained except under the following conditions:
(1) It shall be for the exclusive private use of the occupant
of the dwelling on the same lot, his family and nonpaying guests.
At least one-third (1/3) of the people using the pool must be residents
of the building to which it is accessory, and the maximum number of
bathers in a given pool shall be restricted to one bather for each
25 square feet of surface water.
(2) Its use shall be consistent with the health, safety,
morals and public welfare of the community, and it shall not unduly
interfere with the peace, comfort and repose of occupants of the adjoining
properties. No pool shall be used between the hours of 10:00 p.m.
and 8:00 a.m.
(3) The edges of related pools, aprons or other related
construction shall not be installed within the required front yard
or within five feet of the side or rear lot lines if the lot width
is less than 75 feet nor, except as specified hereinafter, within
10 feet of the side or rear lot lines if the lot width is 75 feet
or more. On lots with a width of 75 feet or more, the ten-foot minimum
dimension to the edge of a pool or related construction may be reduced
to five feet if written consent is obtained from all known property
owners within 200 feet from the lot lines of the property on which
the pool is located and if such written consents are properly filed
with the Village Building Committee as a permanent record.
(4) A nonclimbing fence with an effective height of not
less than four feet shall be erected and maintained not more than
20 feet distant at any one point from the outside edge of the swimming
pool. The fence shall have a self-closing gate which shall be locked
with a tumbler type lock when the pool is not in use.
(5) No light shall be located more than seven feet above
ground level. All lights shall be shielded and directed toward the
ground in order to eliminate glare and reflection. No light of any
kind shall be used between the hours of 10:00 p.m. and 8:00 a.m.
(6) Operation, maintenance and construction of the pool
shall conform in all respects to state, county and local building,
plumbing, electrical and sanitation codes and regulations enforced
in the Village of Pelham and specifically Sections P316-2, P316-3,
P316-4 and P316-5 of the New York State Building Construction Code
applicable to swimming pools.
(7) The discharge of wastewater and pool drainage shall
be through appropriate piping to the sanitary sewer or the storm sewer.
Fresh water shall be added to the pool in such a manner as to prevent
the entrance of pool water into the potable water system, either public
or private.
C. The provisions of this §
98-106 shall not be deemed to prohibit or regulate the use of small portable pools of a size not exceeding 30 square feet in area or one foot in depth, which pools are emptied and refilled with each use and at least once a day.
D. Application requirements.
(1) Any application for a permit under this section shall
include a hold-harmless agreement in writing wherein the applicants
agree to indemnify and hold harmless the Village of Pelham for any
damages or personal injuries sustained by any person or persons as
a result of the use of a swimming pool or wading pool and shall further
contain an agreement in writing by the applicants that in the event
said swimming pool and the use thereof is abandoned by the owner of
the property, that said owner shall remove said swimming pool and
restore the topography of the land to its original condition.
(2) Applicants shall further evidence a service contract
annually of their choice in writing which shall require periodic testing
of the pool water for bacteria count by a duly authorized private
or public concern or agency approved by the State Commission of Health.
E. The provisions herein as to the side and rear and front line restrictions shall apply solely to the construction and maintenance of swimming pools and shall not otherwise change or modify the provisions of lot coverage set forth in §§
98-15,
98-22,
98-29,
98-36 and
98-43 of this chapter.
[Added 11-20-84 by L.L. No. 9-1984]
A. A satellite earth station, accessory to the principal building or structure on the same lot, may be installed or constructed in any residential, office or business district subject to a special permit by the Board of Appeals in accordance with the provisions of §
98-133C and the requirements set forth hereinafter.
[Amended 6-21-1988 by L.L. No. 2-1988; 10-17-1989 by L.L. No. 5-1989]
B. No satellite earth station shall be installed or constructed
or maintained except under the following conditions:
(1)
It shall be for the exclusive private use of
the occupant or occupants of the building or structure on the same
lot, and no separate fee shall be charged for viewing any broadcast
received by such station.
[Amended 10-17-1989 by L.L. No. 5-1989]
(2)
A freestanding satellite earth station shall
be located only to the rear of the principal building or structure
on the lot and, notwithstanding other provisions in this chapter to
the contrary, shall not be located any nearer any property line than
permitted for a principal building in the district in which it is
located.
(3)
No part of a freestanding satellite earth station
shall exceed a height of six feet. Dish antennas located on a building
shall not exceed more than six feet in height above the highest point
of the roof.
[Amended 6-21-1988 by L.L. No. 2-1988]
(4)
The location and design of the satellite earth
station shall reduce to a minimum the visual impact, the nuisance
and distractive influence on surrounding properties or streets through
the use of structures, architectural features, earth berms, screening
and/or landscaping that harmonize with the elements and characteristics
of the property. The material used in the construction of the antenna
shall not be unnecessarily bright, shiny, garish or reflective.
[Added 5-18-1993 by L.L. No. 1-1993; amended 10-19-1993 by L.L. No. 2-1993]
A. A building or structure may be used as a veterinary hospital subject to a special permit of the Board of Appeals issued in accordance with the provisions of §
98-133C and the requirements set forth hereinafter.
B. The Board of Appeals shall not authorize the issuance
of any permit under the provisions of this section unless it finds
in each individual case that the proposed use of the property or structure
shall:
(1)
Not create a hazard to health, safety, morals
or general welfare and shall conform to all applicable federal, state,
county and local health and safety codes.
(2)
Not keep animals overnight(s) unless necessary
to facilitate diagnoses, treatment or recuperation, and all areas
for holding animals shall be within the confines of the building.
(3)
Be constructed with sufficient internal sound-absorbing
materials so as to minimize noise emanating from the premises.
(4)
Provide for dispersing odors which are emitted
from the building in a manner which will minimize their impact.
(5)
Provide space for waiting room, doctors' offices,
operating room, holding of animals, storage and administrative functions.
(6)
Provide parking for all employees in municipal
parking facilities.
(7)
Provide sufficient off-street parking for patrons
either on site or elsewhere.
[Added 4-18-2017 by L.L.
No. 2-2017; amended 8-2-2022 by L.L. No. 6-2022]
A. Legislative
findings and purpose.
(1) The Board of Trustees finds that encouraging property owners to develop
mixed-use commercial, office, retail and housing projects within the
Village's downtown core, particularly those involving dedicated senior
housing, will activate Village street life, enhance walkability, promote
the Village's culture, enhance the real property tax base, and better
utilize existing public services; that there are opportunities within
the Village's downtown core to use vacant and underutilized property
more efficiently to reinvigorate the Village's downtown area; that
creating incentives for higher density development within the Village's
downtown core will be more cost-effective because it will use infrastructure
that already exists and thereby avoid the need to create additional
costly infrastructure; and that those incentives will allow for development
within the Village's downtown core that will preserve, complement
and be compatible with the character, massing, and scale of adjacent
residential land uses.
(2) There is hereby created, therefore, a Business District Floating
Zone (BDFZ), the purposes of which are to create a stronger and more
competitive downtown and encourage redevelopment in the Village's
central core and main commercial corridors by facilitating appropriately
scaled higher density mixed-use development in the Village's downtown
core which will allow a mix of residential and street-level commercial
uses that are complementary to the existing community scale and fabric
in areas of the Village with access to public transit, existing infrastructure,
and community services.
B. Authority
of the Board of Trustees. In addition to development permitted under
the other provisions of this chapter, the Board of Trustees may permit
and grant site plan approval, in accordance with the provisions of
this section, for development on any property in the Business-1, Business-2
or Business-3 District. In addition, property zoned Residence M or
Residence M-1 zoning districts that adjoins and is in the same ownership
as property in the Business-1 or Business-2 zoning district may be
developed jointly with the property in the Business-1 or Business-2
zoning district under this section, as long as the development on
the adjoining property is secondary to the development on the primary
lot. In no event may the Board of Trustees permit development under
this section on any adjoining property which involves the aggregation
of lots which are under separate ownership on the date on which this
law becomes effective.
C. Approval process. An application for development permitted under this section must be commenced by submitting to the Building Inspector a declaration of intent to develop form accompanied by the information required by §
79-8, submitting the application to the Planning Board and Architectural Review Board for a recommendation consideration in accordance with §
79-6A for a recommendation to the Board of Trustees, and paying the fee required by the schedule of fees of the Village of Pelham. The Planning Board and Architectural Review Board will hold presubmission conferences as provided in §
79-6A(2) within 45 days of the submission to the Building Inspector. The Building Inspector will forward the application to the Board of Trustees, along with any comments from the Planning Board and the Architectural Review Board, within five working days after the presubmission conferences are completed. The Board of Trustees must hold a public hearing on the application within 60 days of the date on which it determines that the application is substantially complete. The applicant must provide notice of the public hearing as required by §
79-6F. The Board of Trustees will consider applications for site plan approval under this section in accordance with the standards established by §
79-5. If the Board of Trustees approves the application, the applicant must comply with §
79-6J.
D. Eligibility.
In order to be eligible for approval under this section, the lot area
of the proposed development must be not less than 4,000 square feet
and the lot width must be not less than 40 feet.
E. Development
regulations. Development will be governed by the lot and bulk regulations
established for the zoning district in which the property is located,
except that regardless of those regulations:
(1) Permitted uses.
(a) In the Business-1 and Business-2 Districts, any use permitted as
of right and not requiring a special permit in the Business-1 District.
(b) In the Business-3 District, townhouses.
(2) Lot coverage. Lot coverage on the ground floor may be as much as,
but may not exceed, 80% of the lot area. Notwithstanding the foregoing,
the Village Board may, in its discretion, increase the allowable lot
coverage on a building site up to 100%, if the Village Board determines
that the development includes public parking that will improve access
to, enhance the convenience of and/or increase the safety of the downtown
area.
(3) Yards. No side or rear yard is required, unless the Board of Trustees finds that a rear yard or side yard is necessary to ensure compatibility with abutting land uses. If the Board of Trustees requires a rear yard or side yard, the side yard or rear yard must be in the dimension required for the zoning district in which the property is located. The requirements of §
98-64 will not apply, but the Board of Trustees must ensure adequate access to a proposed building for fire/rescue and public safety purposes and may require suitable pedestrian access across any lot contiguous to a lot proposed to be developed.
(4) Height. The height of any single-family dwelling or two-family dwelling may not exceed 35 feet or 2 1/2 stories; the height of any multifamily, commercial, office, or mixed-use building may not exceed 60 feet or five stories; and the height of any townhouse may not exceed 40 feet or three stories. To ensure compatible development, the Village Board may further limit the height of townhouses to the height of any residential structures in the neighboring residential zoning districts. §§
98-6,
98-102B and
98-106.3E(4) of this Code notwithstanding, the Village Board may allow an antenna array, attachment structure, attached wireless telecommunications facility and/or equipment facility as defined in §
87-3 of this Code on the roof of the building if the antenna array and/or attachment structure, attached wireless telecommunications facility or equipment facility is the subject of a lease with the Village in effect as of January 1, 2022 or a lease with another party in substitution for a lease with the Village in effect as of January 1, 2022.
(5) Notwithstanding the height limitations established by §
98-106.3E(4), the Board of Trustees may allow a maximum building height of six stories or 65 feet for a multifamily building if the proposed building is fenestrated with transparent windows and doorways which allow visibility to the inside of the building for no less than 60% of the street frontage at the ground level and includes a nonresidential use, such as a retail, restaurant, commercial, office or civic uses, or an ancillary, nonresidential use, such as a meeting room or common amenity room, at the street level in an otherwise residential building that qualifies as age-restricted housing. A building qualifies as age-restricted housing if at least 80% of the occupied units are occupied by at least one person 55 years of age or older; the owner or management of the building publishes and adheres to policies and procedures that demonstrate an intent to provide housing for persons 55 years or older; and the building complies with rules issued by the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development for verification of occupancy through reliable surveys and affidavits.
(6) Minimum lot area per dwelling unit. The minimum lot area per dwelling
unit will be 500 square feet. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Village
Board may, in its discretion, decrease the minimum lot area per dwelling
to 400 square feet, if the Village Board determines that the development
includes public parking that will improve access to, enhance the convenience
of and/or increase the safety of the downtown area.
(7) Usable open space. The proposed development must provide, on site
and in the aggregate for the building, a minimum of 25 square feet
per dwelling unit of usable open space, such as terraces, patios,
rooftop decks and other similar facilities.
(8) Parking. The proposed development must provide one parking space per dwelling unit for residential uses and parking as required by §
98-113 for nonresidential uses, except that the Board of Trustees may waive the parking requirement, in whole or in part, if the proposed development creates additional new on-street parking, such as by eliminating existing curb cuts or adding diagonal parking; the Board of Trustees has adopted a comprehensive plan for adding more parking and has established a separate parking fund for creating new parking and the developer contributes to the parking fund an amount deemed sufficient by the Board of Trustees to create parking that will be reasonably available to serve the proposed development; or the Board of Trustees determines that the anticipated number of persons frequenting or using the proposed development will be substantially below that typically associated with the proposed use. Parking for nonresidential uses must not be visible from the street unless no alterative design is reasonably possible.
(9) Design guidelines. The Board of Trustees must consider following
design guidelines in the review of a proposed development:
(a) Design features should be included that enhance the visual aesthetic
and pedestrian experience, such as streetscape improvements, attractive
lighting, benches, variation of façade and building materials,
landscaping, and suitable building and parking orientation;
(b) Massing, height, scale and architectural character should be compatible
with, and not negatively alter the character of, abutting uses, particularly
existing development located on or near the perimeter of the property;
(c) All proposed structures allowed under §
98-106.3 must be well integrated with adjacent lower scaled residential neighborhoods with respect to massing, setbacks, building orientation, and encourage shared or private landscaped side and rear yards, especially when adjacent to lower density residential uses;
(d) Nonmotorized transportation facilities, such as on-site bicycle racks
and storage space, should be provided;
(e) New public open space or connections to existing open spaces, as
applicable, should be included;
(f) Appropriately scaled green infrastructure to improve stormwater management,
such as rain gardens, green roofs, and cisterns, should be provided;
and
(g) The application should include a plan for maintaining the design
features after construction is complete.
F. Other
conditions. The Board of Trustees may impose such other conditions
as it deems appropriate.
G. The provisions of this section are hereby readopted. The Village Board will review amendments to §
98-106.3 of the Code of the Village of Pelham effected by this section no later than March 31, 2027. The amendments will expire unless they are readopted by a majority vote of the members of the Village Board prior to March 31, 2028. The Village Clerk is directed to revise the Code accordingly if the amendments expire as provided in this section.
[Added 4-18-2017 by L.L.
No. 3-2017]
A. Authority
to modify zoning requirements. In order to enable and encourage flexibility
of design and development of land in such a manner as to preserve
its natural and scenic qualities, protect areas of meaningful ecological
value, reduce flood hazards, facilitate the adequate and economical
provision of streets and utilities, minimize negative environmental
impacts, improve the aesthetic quality of new residential developments,
encourage the conservation of energy, increase recreational opportunities
and otherwise promote the planned and environmentally desirable use
of land, the Board of Trustees may, simultaneously with the approval
of a subdivision plat of not more than 10 lots, modify the otherwise
applicable provisions of this chapter with respect to minimum lot
size, lot width, lot coverage, yard requirements, and frontage requirement
in connection with the subdivision and redevelopment of any property
if it finds that development of the property without such restrictions
benefits the Village by protecting natural features and open space
resources or otherwise.
B. Development
standards. Except as modified by the Board of Trustees, all regulations
normally applicable to residential uses in the zoning district in
which the property is located will continue to apply, along with the
following requirements, which are hereby established specifically
for developments proposed under this section:
(1) Permitted uses. The permitted uses and accessory uses permitted within
the development must be the same as those permitted in the zoning
district in which the property is located, except that two-family,
multifamily and townhouse dwelling units are permitted in any zoning
district in which any residential use is permitted.
(2) Number of permissible units. The number of dwelling units or building
lots (in a development of detached one-family dwellings) may not exceed
the number which could be permitted, in the judgment of the Board
of Trustees, if the land were subdivided into lots conforming to all
normally applicable requirements of this chapter, as determined on
the basis of a sketch layout of a conventional subdivision, prepared
and submitted by the applicant, which includes topographic information
and such other data as may be reasonably required.
(3) Common lands and facilities. If the subdivision results in any common
lands or facilities, the Board of Trustees will impose such conditions
as it deems appropriate with respect to those areas.