The Conservation Design Overlay District encompasses all properties
within all residential zoning districts (A, AR, R-1, R-2 and CC) in Antrim
Township. These properties shall be required to comply with the regulations
in this article and all other sections of the Code. To the extent that other
sections of the Code are inconsistent with this article, this article shall
control. Existing properties less than eight acres in size as of the effective
date of adoption of this amendment to the Zoning chapter and proposing less
than a total of 24 residential dwelling or commercial units may be subdivided
and developed as a permitted use in accordance with conventional design criteria.
The minimum area requirements and all other requirements of the conventional
design criteria must be complied with.
A. Exceptions. There are two exceptions where a property
of eight acres or larger and/or proposing more than a total of 24 residential
dwelling or commercial units may be developed in accordance with conventional
design criteria. The two exceptions are as follows:
(1) In any instance where a property is limited due to the
siting of individual on-lot sewage disposal systems within an area prone to
documented high levels of nitrate/nitrogen in the groundwater, such properties
may be required by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection
to maintain a minimum lot size higher than the prescribed standards for the
Conservation Design Overlay District. In such instances where groundwater
conditions are documented via a hydrogeological study to be nonconducive to
the higher densities prescribed in this overlay district, the property may
be developed in accordance with conventional design criteria as a permitted
use.
(2) For properties located in the A, A-R and/or R-1 Zoning
Districts, and where the developer proposes no more than five additional lots
and/or dwelling units, the property may be developed in accordance with conventional
design criteria as a permitted use. Each property will be considered by the
Board as it existed on the date of adoption of this amendment to the Township
Zoning chapter and assessed cumulatively with regard to subsequent proposals.
B. The design of all subdivisions in the Conservation Design
Overlay District shall be governed by the following minimum standards:
(1) Ownership. The tract of land may be held in single and
separate ownership or in multiple ownership. However, when a tract is held
in multiple ownership, it shall be planned as a single entity with common
authority and common responsibility.
(2) Combining the design options. The various layout and
density options described in this article may be combined, based upon demonstration
by the applicant that such a combination would better fulfill the intent of
this chapter, in particular the stated purposes of this article, as compared
with applying a single option to the property.
(3) Intersections and access. New intersections with existing
public roads shall be minimized. Although two accessways into and out of subdivisions
containing more than 50 dwellings are required for safety, proposals for more
than two entrances onto public roads shall be discouraged if they would unnecessarily
disrupt traffic flow.
(4) Sensitive area disturbance. The proposed design shall
strictly minimize disturbance of environmentally sensitive areas (primary
and secondary conservation areas), as shown on the existing resources and
site analysis plan. Lands within the floodplain, wetlands and slopes in excess
of 25% constitute examples of such environmentally sensitive areas, where
disturbance shall be strictly minimized. Demonstration by the applicant that
primary and secondary conservation areas will be protected by the proposed
application shall be a prerequisite to approval of both the conceptual preliminary
plan and the detailed final plan.
Land in the Conservation Design Overlay District may be used for the
following purposes:
A. Single-family detached dwellings. Single-family detached
dwellings in Options 1, 2, 3 and 4 subdivisions pursuant to the following:
(1) Single-family detached dwellings are permitted under
the standards found in §§
150-86 and
150-87 herein.
(2) On tracts of less than eight acres, existing on the effective
date of adoption of this amendment to the Township Zoning chapter, and proposing
less than a total 24 residential dwelling or commercial units, single-family
detached dwellings are permitted under the standards for Option 1 found in
§§
150-86 and
150-87, and conventional lots of an area equal
to the minimum required for the underlying zoning district with no required
greenway land, in accordance with conventional design criteria.
B. Single-family semidetached dwellings (duplex units).
(1) Single-family, semidetached dwellings are permitted in
Option 1 and 4 subdivisions, according to the standards in §§
150-86
and
150-87 and the other requirements of this chapter, including but not limited
to, whether single-family semidetached dwellings are permitted in the underlying
zoning district.
(2) On tracts of less than eight acres, existing on the effective
date of adoption of this amendment to the Township Zoning chapter, and proposing
less than a total 24 residential dwelling or commercial units, single-family
semidetached dwellings are permitted under the standards for Option 1 found
in this chapter, including but not limited to §§
150-86 and
150-87, and conventional lots of an area equal to the minimum required for
the underlying zoning district with no required greenway land, in accordance
with conventional design criteria.
C. Multiple household residential buildings. Residential
buildings for three and four households in Option 4 subdivisions, according
to the standards in §§
150-86 and
150-87.
D. Greenway land. Greenway land (also referred to as "open
space") comprising a portion of residential development, and according to
requirements of this article, including but not limited to §§
150-86,
150-87 and
150-88.
E. Nonresidential uses. The following nonresidential uses
in accordance with the standards of this article, including not limited to
§
150-88, Chapter
125 and the Code.
(1) Agricultural uses, including horticultural, wholesale
nurseries and the raising of crops, and buildings related to the same.
(2) Woodlots, arboreta and other similar silvicultural uses.
(3) Woodland preserve, game preserve, wildlife sanctuary
or other similar conservation use.
(4) Municipal or public uses; public park or recreation area
owned and operated by a public or private nonprofit agency; governmental or
public utility building or use; not to include business facilities, storage
of materials, trucking or repair facilities, the housing of repair crews,
private or municipal sanitary landfills.
F. Accessory uses. Accessory uses shall be permitted on
the same lot with and customarily incidental to any permitted use and not
conducted as an independent principal use according to the following:
(1) Accessory dwelling units (including elder cottages and
tenant houses) proposed in Option 3 subdivisions (country properties) are
subject to the following provisions:
(a) Accessory dwelling units in principal residences or in
new outbuildings (such as barns, stables, carriage houses, and spring houses)
shall be designed to harmonize with vernacular rural buildings in the Township's
historic landscape.
(b) There shall be a maximum of one accessory dwelling unit
(ADU) on any legal building lot in an Option 2 subdivision, and a maximum
of two accessory dwelling units (ADUs) on any legal building lot containing
10 or more acres in an Option 3 subdivision, provided all performance standards
of this article are met.
(c) The gross floor area in the first ADU shall not exceed
900 square feet. In the second ADU, where permitted, the maximum area shall
be 750 square feet. However, on lots exceeding 15 acres, the second ADU may
take the form of a tenant house containing up to 2,000 square feet of floor
space. Under this section, existing historic accessory buildings more than
75 years old that exceed these floor space limits are permitted as ADUs without
having to meet the dimensional setback requirements of this article.
(d) Building permits for ADUs shall not be issued until the
applicant places a restrictive easement on the subject property prohibiting
future enlargement of the ADUs or the creation of additional ADUs beyond the
limits described above. Issuance of permits for ADUs shall be contingent upon
Township Sewage Enforcement Officer and Pennsylvania DEP approval for any
on-site septic sewage disposal systems needed.
G. Conditional uses. Hamlets and villages are allowed as
conditional uses pursuant to the following and the conditional use permitting
process as set forth in the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code:
(1) General.
(a) Residential diversity. A primary objective of the hamlet
and village options is to provide for a diversity of household types, age
groups and income levels, in a manner consistent with the variety of existing
homes in the Township and with traditional village building and site development
patterns. Within the overall residential density figures for villages and
hamlets, new construction is to be predominantly single-family detached residential
on a variety of compact village-scale lot sizes, which shall range in area
from 6,000 square feet to 12,000 square feet with an average lot size of at
least 10,000 square feet. This component shall comprise at least 60% of the
residential development allowed in villages and hamlets. However, in both
villages and hamlets, the concept of large "country properties" of 10 acres
or more shall be encouraged, in which part of the required greenway may be
incorporated within lot boundaries as "mini-farms," consistent with regulations
pertaining to active and passive agriculture in other parts of this article,
if any.
(b) Housing types. Within villages, 15% of all new units
may be designed as semidetached dwellings, and a further 10% may be designed
as three-or four-family attached dwellings. When different housing types are
proposed in either villages or hamlets, they shall be integrated architecturally
and in scale so that they can be physically incorporated within the same streetscape
as single-family dwellings and nonresidential buildings and not isolated from
each other in separate areas.
(c) Locational considerations for hamlet and village uses.
Residential lots in villages and hamlets shall generally not be located within
500 feet of Interstate 81, nor within 150 feet of any existing two-lane state-numbered
highway, unless effectively screened from the public view by virtue of topography,
dense vegetation, or other physical or visual barriers. Commercial/mixed-use
areas in villages shall be located within 1,500 feet from as much of the residential
areas as possible. Nonresidential uses that are intended to serve an area
beyond the village itself shall be located to permit vehicular access from
outside the village without passing through residential streets.
(d) Hamlet uses. Hamlets shall consist of residential uses
only with a greater housing variety permitted.
(e) Village uses. Villages are intended to provide for a
range of complementary uses and may consist of two areas: residential and
mixed-use/commercial. These areas are intended to provide for the diversity
necessary for traditional village life while maximizing the interactions among
related uses and minimizing the adverse impacts of different uses upon each
other. The village residential area is intended to contain a variety of housing
options and related uses. The village mixed-use/commercial area is intended
primarily to provide uses that meet the retail and service needs of a traditional
village center and its vicinity within one- and two-story buildings and may
contain other compatible uses such as civic and institutional uses of community-wide
importance, specifically including second-floor residential uses. The village
mixed-use/commercial area may be located either at the approximate center
of the village or at the edge near an existing major or minor collector road.
If the village mixed-use/commercial area is located along such a thoroughfare,
parking areas shall be screened from view, preferably in locating them behind
those commercial buildings, as seen from the collector.
(2) Hamlet and village uses. The following uses are intended
in the hamlet option and in the village residential area of the village option.
(a) Hamlets and the village residential area:
[1] Single-family detached dwellings;
[2] Two-family and three-family dwellings sited so they front
directly onto streets (rather than parking areas);
[3] Accessory dwelling units (as allowed in Option 3 subdivisions);
[4] Uses accessory to residential uses (including home occupations);
(b) Additional standards for hamlets and villages are provided
in §
125-75 et seq. of the Subdivision and Land Development Chapter.
(3) Additional uses in village option subdivisions.
(a) The following additional uses are intended in the village
option, according to area.
[1] Village residential area:
[a] Elderly congregate housing; and
[b] Neighborhood retail uses occupying not more than 1,000
square feet of floor space.
[2] Village mixed-use/commercial area:
[a] Retail uses, professional offices, and personal or professional
services in buildings of 2,000 square feet or less (but up to 3,500 square
feet if in buildings of two or more stories facing the street);
[b] Bed-and-breakfast establishments;
[c] Schools, day-care centers, libraries, churches and other
houses of worship;
[d] Single-family detached dwellings, two-, three-, and four-family
dwellings sited so they front directly onto streets (rather than parking areas);
[e] Second-story residential uses are encouraged, and shared
parking arrangements shall be allowed;
[f] Artisan living/working uses, public utilities facilities,
including substations, pumping stations and waste treatment facilities, and
gasoline stations (outside the core area), and uses accessory to the above;
and
[g] Sites for active recreation, such as organized games.
(b) Specifically excluded from the category of retail uses
and service businesses allowed in this subdistrict are flea markets, indoor/outdoor
amusement businesses, automotive sales, car washes, gasoline stations, betting
parlors, building supply stores, adult bookstores, massage parlors, and mini
storage facilities.
Protected greenway land in all subdivisions shall meet the following
standards:
A. Uses permitted on greenway lands. The following uses
are permitted in greenway land areas:
(1) Conservation of open land in its natural state (for example,
woodland, fallow field, or managed meadow);
(2) Agricultural and horticultural uses, including raising
crops or livestock, wholesale nurseries, associated buildings, excluding residences
that are specifically needed to support an active, viable agricultural or
horticultural operation. Specifically excluded are commercial livestock operations
involving swine, poultry, mink and other animals likely to produce highly
offensive odors. See also §
150-85E(1).
(3) Pastureland for horses used solely for recreational purposes
or associated accessory facilities. Equestrian facilities shall be permitted
but may not consume more than half of the minimum required greenway land.
(4) Forestry, in keeping with established best management
practices for selective harvesting and sustained-yield forestry.
(5) Neighborhood open space uses such as village greens,
commons, picnic areas, community gardens, trails, and similar low-impact passive
recreational uses specifically excluding motorized off-road vehicles, rifle
ranges, and other uses similar in character and potential impact.
(6) Active noncommercial recreation areas, such as playing
fields, playgrounds, courts and bikeways, provided such areas do not consume
more than half of the minimum required greenway land or five acres, whichever
is less. Playing fields, playgrounds, and courts shall not be located within
100 feet of abutting properties. Parking facilities for the same shall also
be permitted, and they shall generally be gravel-surfaced, unlighted, properly
drained, provide safe ingress and egress, and contain no more than 10 parking
spaces.
(7) Golf courses, including their parking areas and support
facilities, may comprise 100% of the minimum required greenway land, provided
the land has restrictions and/or other legally binding constraints ensuring
that the land shall be perpetually used exclusively as a golf course. Driving
ranges and/or miniature golf are not considered a golf course.
(8) Water supply and sewage disposal systems and stormwater
detention areas.
(9) Easements for drainage, access, sewer or water lines,
or other public purposes;
(10) Underground utility rights-of-way. Aboveground utility
and street rights-of-way may traverse conservation areas but shall not count
toward the minimum required greenway land.
B. Greenway design standards.
(1) Greenway lands shall be laid out in general accordance
with the Township's Map of Potential Conservation Lands and/or layout of adjacent
properties to ensure that an interconnected network of open space will be
provided. (See Plates 1 through 3 attached to the Open Space Plan of the Township
of Antrim Comprehensive Plan.) The required greenway land consists of a mixture
of primary conservation areas (PCAs), all of which must be included, and secondary
conservation areas (SCAs). PCAs comprise floodplains, wetlands and slopes
over 25%. SCAs should include special features of the property that would
ordinarily be overlooked or ignored during the design process. Examples of
such features are listed, prioritized and described in §
125-72
in the Subdivision and Land Development chapter.
(2) In Option 1 subdivisions, the greenway land comprises
a minimum percentage of the property respectively, based on the underlying
zoning district. This land shall generally remain undivided and may be owned
and maintained by a homeowners' association, land trust, another conservation
organization recognized by the Township, or by a private individual. In all
cases the land shall be subject to a conservation easement. However, in no
case shall less than 30% of the land be available for the common use and passive
enjoyment of the subdivision residents. These ownership options may be combined
so that different parts of the greenway land may be owned by different entities.
(3) In Option 2 subdivisions, the required greenway land
may lie within the estate lots. The greenway land must be subject to conservation
easements.
(4) Greenway lands in Option 3 developments shall be contained
within the country property lots. The greenway land must be subject to conservation
easements.
(5) Up to 5% of the total tract acreage in any of the options
shall be set aside to provide potential connections with the Township's long-range
trail network, if within or planned to be within the Township's long-range
trail-network.
(6) Buffers for adjacent public parkland. Where the proposed
development adjoins public parkland, a natural greenway buffer at least 50
feet deep shall be provided within the development along its common boundary
with the parkland, within which no new structures shall be constructed, nor
shall any clearing of trees or understory growth be permitted (except as may
be necessary for street or trail construction). Where this buffer is unwooded,
vegetative screening shall be planted, or the buffer shall be managed to encourage
natural forest succession through "no-mow" policies and the periodic removal
of invasive alien plant and tree species.
C. Other requirements.
(1) No portion of any building lot may be used for meeting
the minimum required greenway land, except as permitted within country properties
(or within conservancy lots of at least 10 acres, designed as an integral
part of Option 4 hamlets and villages). However, active agricultural land
with farm buildings, excluding areas used for residences, may be used to meet
the minimum required greenway land.
(2) Pedestrian and maintenance access, excluding those lands
used for agricultural or horticultural purposes in accordance with §§
150-85
and
150-88 herein, shall be provided to greenway land in accordance with the
following requirements:
(a) Each neighborhood shall provide one centrally located
access point per 25 lots, a minimum of 35 feet in width.
(b) Access to greenway land used for agriculture may be appropriately
restricted for public safety and to prevent interference with agricultural
operations.
(3) All greenway land areas that are not wooded or farmed
shall be landscaped in accordance with the landscaping requirements of the
Subdivision and Land Development chapter.
Additional density may be allowed by the Board when one of the following
public benefits is proposed:
A. Provision of affordable housing. A density increase is
permitted where the subdivision proposal provides on-site or off-site housing
opportunities for low- or moderate-income families. When off-site housing
provision is proposed, the Board shall require evidence that these units will
in fact be constructed by a certain date. The amount of density increase shall
be based on the following standard: For each affordable housing unit provided
under this section, one additional building lot or dwelling unit shall be
permitted, up to a maximum 15% increase in dwelling units. Affordable housing
is herein defined as units sold or rented to families earning up to 120% of
the area median income, adjusted for family size, as determined by the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development.
B. Provision of age-restricted housing. A density increase
is permitted where the subdivision proposal provides age-restricted, on-site
housing opportunities for individuals age 55 years or older. The amount of
density increase shall be based on the following standard: For each housing
unit provided under this section, one additional building lot or dwelling
unit shall be permitted, up to a maximum 15% increase in dwelling units. Age-restricted
housing is herein defined as housing intended and operated for occupancy by
persons 55 years of age or older and at least 80% of the occupied units are
occupied by at least one person who is 55 years of age or older. This definition
includes all other supplementary language in Section 807(b) of the United
States Fair Housing Act, as amended.
C. Implementation. For each of the above categories of public
purposes, density bonuses may be implemented by reducing the amount of required
greenway land by up to 10%, reducing the minimum lot area requirements by
up to 10%, or by a combination of these approaches, at the discretion of the
Board. The cumulative reductions may total up to 20%, if the Board is satisfied
that the public purposes are being served.