This chapter shall be known as the "Site Plan
Approval Law of the Town of Mamaroneck."
In order to ensure that proposed development
and use of land within the unincorporated area of the Town of Mamaroneck
will have a harmonious relationship with the existing or permitted
use of contiguous land and of adjacent neighborhoods and so to ensure
that the health, safety, welfare, comfort and convenience of the public
is fully considered, this chapter is hereby enacted.
As used in this chapter, the following terms
shall have the meanings indicated:
SITE PLAN
A plan which shows the proposed development and use of land
within the unincorporated portion of the Town of Mamaroneck. Such
plan shall consist of a map affirmatively demonstrating compliance
with and adequate provision for all of the criteria, matters and items
listed in this chapter.
The approving agencies for site plans and all
amendments to and modifications thereof shall be as follows: Pursuant
to § 274-a of the Town Law, the Town Board hereby delegates
to the Planning Board the approval authority for all site plan applications.
In acting on any site plan application, the
Planning Board, in addition to all other applicable laws, is hereby
granted the powers set forth in § 274-a, Subdivision 1a,
of the Town Law of the State of New York and shall consider the standards
set forth therein in granting site plan approval. The approving agency
shall also take into consideration the following standards:
A. Traffic access and roads. All proposed traffic access
points and roads shall be adequate but not excessive in number, adequate
in width, paving, grade, alignment and visibility and not located
too near street corners or other places of public assembly. Necessary
traffic signalization, signs, dividers and other safety controls,
devices and facilities shall be given proper consideration and duly
provided wherever appropriate or warranted.
B. Pedestrian safety and access. Safe, adequate and convenient
pedestrian access and circulation shall be provided both within the
site and to adjacent streets, with particular attention to all intersections
with vehicular traffic.
C. Circulation and parking. Off-street parking and loading
spaces shall be arranged with consideration given to their location,
sufficiency and appearance and to prevent parking in public streets
of vehicles of persons connected with or visiting the use. The interior
circulation system shall be adequate to provide safe accessibility
to, from and within all required off-street parking areas.
D. Screening and landscaping. All structures, recreational,
parking, loading, public and other service areas shall be reasonably
landscaped and/or screened so as to provide adequate visual and noise
buffers in all seasons from neighboring lands and streets. The scale
and quality of the landscaping and screening on site shall be harmonious
with the character of and serve to enhance the neighborhood.
E. Environmental quality. All bodies of water, wetlands,
steep slopes, hilltops, ridge lines, major stands of trees, outstanding
natural topography, significant geological features and other areas
of scenic, ecological and historic value shall be preserved insofar
as possible; soil erosion shall be prevented insofar as possible;
flood hazard shall be minimized; air quality shall be well within
legal limits; and all potentially ecological disruptive elements of
site preparation, such as blasting, diversion of watercourses and
the like, shall be conducted according to the highest standards of
professional care.
F. Fire protection. All proposed structures, service
areas, fire lanes, hydrants, equipment and material shall be adequate
and readily accessible for the protection of the proposed uses from
fire.
G. Drainage.
[Amended 6-30-1986 by L.L. No. 6-1986]
(1) A storm drainage system which demonstrates affirmative
compliance with the form, scope and substance of all applicable design
criteria shall be provided to accommodate expected loads from the
tributary watershed when developed to the maximum density permitted
under the existing zoning standards. Drainage shall be conducted to
a point of adequate and suitable disposal.
(2) On sites of 10,000 square feet or more and in other
instances determined by the Planning Board to be appropriate after
consultation with the Town Engineer, development shall be so designed
and executed as to limit overflow from the site to zero increase in
the rate of runoff and to create zero decrease in the rate of upstream
runoff into the site, as related to existing conditions, except that
the Planning Board, after consultation with the Town Engineer, may
substitute a different requirement for a particular site if it determines
that the substituted requirement will be more effective in controlling
flooding and erosion at the site and at other locations.
(3) On parcels of five acres or more, the Planning Board
may require that development be so designed and executed as to reduce
the rate of runoff by a stipulated percentage, not to exceed 20%,
as compared with existing conditions, through drainage systems, water
retention and/or the maintenance of open spaces, both those required
under ordinary circumstances and such additional open spaces as may
be required for this purpose, but without reducing the rate of runoff
into the site from upstream. Such a requirement shall not be applied
unless the Planning Board determines that it is an appropriate and
important means of preventing an increase in erosion and flooding
at the site and/or at other locations. In making such determination,
the Planning Board shall consult with the Town Engineer and with the
Westchester County Soil and Water Conservation District, who shall
respond within the time limits set by this chapter. Failure to respond
within such time limits shall be deemed approval by such agencies.
H. Refuse and sewage disposal. The public and/or private
disposal systems shall be sufficient to safely and adequately handle
the type and volume of refuse and sewage which can reasonably be anticipated
to be generated by the land uses on site.
I. Water supply. The public and/or private delivery systems
for bringing potable water to each of the uses on site shall be shown
to be sufficient.
J. Location and dimension of buildings. The location,
arrangement, size and design of the buildings, lighting and signs
shall be comparable to each other and with the site as a whole. At
a minimum, a distance equal to the average height of the principal
buildings on the site at the point where said buildings are most closely
proximate to each other shall be provided between all buildings on
the site unless, in the opinion of the approving agency, compelling
considerations of topography or design dictate otherwise.
K. Impact of the proposed use on adjacent land uses.
Adjacent and neighboring properties shall be protected against noise,
glare, unsightliness or other objectionable features. Where a proposed
use is a nonresidential use which would adjoin residential areas,
special consideration shall be given by the approving agency to minimizing
the impact of the proposed use on the residential properties.
L. Design requirements and guidelines.
[Added 5-18-2004 by L.L. No. 8-2004]
(1) For properties located in the B-Business District, the approving agency shall apply the design requirements and guidelines contained in §
240-45H of the Code.
(2) For properties located in the SB - Service Business District, the approving agency shall apply the design requirements and guidelines contained in §
240-46H of the Code.
(3) For properties located in the B - MUB - Business-Mixed
Use Business District, the approving agency shall apply design requirements
and guidelines contained in § 240-47H of the Code.
(4) For properties located in the UR - Urban Renewal District, the approving agency shall apply the design requirements and guidelines contained in §
240-48.1D of the Code.
(5) If there is a conflict between any of the provisions of §
177-5A through and including K of the Code and any of the provisions of the applicable design requirements and guidelines, the provisions of §§
240-45H,
240-46H,
240-47E or
240-48.1D of the Code, as the case may be, shall be applied.
The provisions of this chapter shall not apply
in any of the following instances:
A. A single one-family dwelling which is not part of
a staged development.
B. A single two-family dwelling which is not part of
a staged development.
C. All alterations to existing buildings or structures,
whether or not there shall be a change of use which is permitted within
the zoning district, provided that the Building Inspector or the Director
of Building Code Enforcement and Land Use Administration and the Town
Engineer make a written finding that the alteration will not substantially
intensify the use or substantially modify the site with respect to
generation of traffic, pedestrian movement, parking needs, noise,
glare, exposure to hazard from fire or flood, utilization of water
supply, sanitary sewer, drainage or other utility system and will
not, in any other way, have a substantial impact upon the character
or environment of the surrounding area, and provided further that,
if such written finding is not made, the application shall be referred
to the approving agency for site plan review.
[Amended 10-16-2002 by L.L. No. 10-2002; 1-20-2016 by L.L. No. 1-2016]
The application procedure for site plan approval
shall involve a three-stage process: a presubmission conference, site
plan application and public hearing by the Planning Board. The Planning
Board may adopt such rules and regulations as may be required to implement
the application procedure.
[Amended 7-17-1996 by L.L. No. 14-1996; 10-16-2002 by L.L. No. 10-2002; 1-20-2016 by L.L. No. 1-2016]
The Planning Board shall forward one copy of
the site plan application to the Town Engineer, the Building Inspector
or the Director of Building Code Enforcement and Land Use Administration,
the Fire Department, the County Planning Department, the Traffic Committee
and the State Department of Transportation, if the site plan shows
frontage along a state highway, and other local, state, county, regional
and federal agencies having jurisdiction, as well as to any technical
consultants that the Planning Board, in its discretion, deems necessary
or appropriate for a thorough review of the application.
Whenever the circumstances of the proposed development require compliance with this Chapter
177 and with any other local law, ordinance or requirement of the Town, the approving agency shall, in all cases where it is practicable, attempt to integrate, as appropriate, the site plan review as required by this chapter with the procedural submission requirements of such other local laws, ordinances and requirements; provided, however, that such attempt to integrate such procedures shall not in any way interfere with any of the requirements of this chapter or any other applicable local law, ordinance or requirement.
[Amended 10-16-2002 by L.L. No. 10-2002; 1-20-2016 by L.L. No. 1-2016]
The approved site plan shall be revised by the
applicant to include all conditions imposed by the approving agency.
It may then be signed and dated by the Secretary to the Planning Board.
The approving agency shall submit a signed copy of the approved site
plan, revised as set forth above, to the Building Inspector or the
Director of Building Code Enforcement and Land Use Administration.
[Amended 7-17-1996 by L.L. No. 14-1996; 8-17-2011 by L.L. No. 8-2011]
Every application for site plan approval shall be accompanied by the fee set forth in §
A250-1. Should an agency of the Town having jurisdiction over an application deem it necessary to hire consultants for technical review and/or on-site inspection, the applicant shall be required to pay the actual cost to the Town for such services.
The approving agency may require that public improvements and landscaping be secured by a performance guaranty in the same manner prescribed for such improvements in Chapter
190, Subdivision of Land, of the Code of the Town of Mamaroneck and/or through the use of letters of credit approved as to form by the Counsel to the Town and as to substance by the approving agency.
Upon a finding by the approving agency that,
due to the particular character or limited nature of a development
or change in use or to special conditions peculiar to a site, the
submission of a preliminary and/or final site plan or of certain portions
of the information normally required as part of the site development
plan is inappropriate or unnecessary or that strict compliance with
said requirements will cause extraordinary and unnecessary hardship,
the approving agency may vary or waive such submission or requirements
wherever, in the opinion of the approving agency, such variance and
waiver will be consistent with the goal of promoting the public health,
safety, comfort, convenience and general welfare of the community.
The findings for granting such waiver shall become a part of the public
record.
Any violation of this chapter shall constitute
a violation and be punishable by a fine of up to $250 for each such
violation, except that the placing of any structure on a property
which requires site plan approval or amendment to a site plan approval
without first obtaining said site plan approval shall be a misdemeanor
punishable by a fine not to exceed $1,000 or imprisonment for a period
not to exceed six months.