In all zones, the retail sale of agricultural
products is permitted on the property where they were produced, provided
that the sale of such products is clearly accessory to the principal
use of that property.
Except as provided in §
198-55, the keeping of livestock shall be permitted as use by right in the Industrial Zone subject to the following requirements:
A. All areas used for pasturing, grazing or exercise
shall be securely fenced to prevent the escape of livestock. Such
fencing may be located up to, but not on, the property line.
B. All livestock, except while pasturing, grazing or
exercising, shall be housed in a building erected or maintained for
the purpose.
C. The building required by Subsection
B hereof shall not be erected or maintained within 100 feet of any land zoned or used for residential purposes.
D. The accumulation and storage of manure or other odor
producing substances shall not be permitted within 100 feet of any
lot line. Such substances shall be stored, and disposed of within
two weeks, so as not to create a health hazard or nuisance.
Garage, yard, attic, barn, patio or similar
types of residential sales shall be permitted in all zones subject
to the following conditions:
A. The period of the sale shall not exceed four days
during two consecutive weeks.
B. The time of the sale shall begin not earlier than
9:00 a.m. and shall extend not later than 9:00 p.m., prevailing time,
on each day thereof.
C. Only goods and property of the applicant shall be
sold and such goods and property shall not have been purchased or
otherwise acquired by the applicant for the purpose of resale.
D. Goods and property shall be displayed only on the
day of the sale.
E. No household shall receive a permit for more than
one sale per calendar year.
The height regulations do not apply to the following
projections, provided that the height of any such projection above
its base shall not be greater than the shortest distance measured
along a horizontal plane from such base to any lot line:
A. Structures such as chimneys, standpipes, flagpoles,
television antennas (excluding residential satellite dish antennas)
or radio towers.
B. Structures on buildings such as clock towers, cupolas,
water tanks, and other mechanical appurtenances, if such structures,
at any level, do not cover more than 25% of the roof on which they
are located.
C. Parapet walls or cornices used solely for ornamental
purposes if not in excess of five feet in height above the roof line.
All dwelling units must conform to the minimum
habitable floor area as follows:
A. Single-family and two-family dwellings: 800 square
feet per dwelling unit.
B. Multifamily dwellings and two-family conversions:
600 square feet per dwelling unit.
C. Accessory dwelling unit: 400 square feet per dwelling
unit.
Where an industrial or commercial use is proposed
in the Village Center or Industrial Zone and it abuts a residential
zone or use, except for street or alley frontage:
A. A fence or screen planting acceptable to the Borough
is required to be erected to screen from view the industrial or commercial
use.
B. The space along the side lot line in the Village Center
or Industrial Zone abutting a residential zone for 20 feet in depth
may not be used for commercial or industrial operations. This area
must be suitably landscaped and maintained; however, parking is permitted
within the interior 10 feet of the twenty-foot buffer strip.
No principal building or structure shall be
erected, structurally altered or relocated on land which is not adequately
drained at all times in accordance with the following:
A. Lot drainage. Lots shall be laid out and graded to
provide positive drainage away from new and existing buildings and
on-site sewage disposal facilities and to prevent the collection of
stormwater in pools.
B. Nearby existing facilities. Where adequate existing
storm sewers are readily accessible, the developer must extend the
existing facilities and connect his stormwater facilities to these
existing storm sewers.
C. Open drainageways. Open drainageways shall not be
accepted for the conveyance of concentrated stormwater flow, unless
recommended by the Borough Engineer. The Borough Engineer shall review
the design of such open drainageways in relation to the following:
(1) Safety. Steep banks and deep pools shall be avoided.
(2) Erosion. Adequate measures shall be taken, such as
seeding, sodding, paving, or other measures as necessary to prevent
the erosion of banks and the scouring of the channel.
(3) Stagnation. Design of open drainageways shall not
create stagnant pools or swampy areas.
D. Drainage upon adjacent properties:
(1) In the design of storm drainage facilities, special
consideration must be given to preventing excess runoff onto adjacent
properties. When a storm drainage outlet will discharge upon another
property, the developer must secure the approval in writing of the
adjoining affected owners. In no case may a change be made in the
existing topography which would:
(a)
Within a distance of 20 feet from a property
line to the beginning of the slope result in increasing any portion
of the slope to more than 4:1 (horizontal:vertical).
(b)
Result in a slope which exceeds the normal angle
of slippage of the material involved.
(2) All slopes must be protected against erosion.
E. Drainage onto streets:
(1) In order to minimize surface water drainage onto streets,
a building or structure on a lot and its driveways must be at a grade
in satisfactory relationship with the established street grade, or
with the existing street grade where none is established. All grading
must be designed to accomplish the following:
(a)
Gutters adjacent to shoulders. When gutters
are provided in cut areas, the water shall not encroach upon the shoulder
during a ten-year frequency storm of five minute duration. Frequent
and/or sustained flooding of the subbase shall be avoided.
(b)
Curbed sections. The maximum encroachment of
water on the roadway pavement shall not exceed half of a through traffic
lane or one inch less than the depth of curb during a ten-year frequency
storm of five minute duration.
(2) Inlets shall be provided to control the encroachment
of water on the pavement.
F. Obstruction to drainage prohibited. The damming, filling
or otherwise interfering with the natural flow of a surface watercourse
is not permitted without approval of the Borough Council and the Pennsylvania
Department of Environmental Protection.
Where a use involves exterior lighting, the
lighting must be so located and shielded that no objectionable illumination
or glare is cast upon adjoining properties or so it does not obstruct
the vision of motorists.
Demolition of any structure must be completed
within nine months of the issuance of a permit. Completion consists
of tearing the structure down to grade, filling any resulting cavity
to grade and removing all resulting materials from the lot. A structure
may be partly demolished only if a building remains and the demolition
of the part is completed within nine months of the issuance of a permit.
All evidence of the structure which was demolished must be removed
from the exterior surfaces of the remaining building.
A building, the foundation of which was completed
before an amendment, may be constructed without being bound by the
requirements of the amendment if the construction is completed within
one year after the amendment.
No lot may be formed from part of a lot occupied
by a building unless each newly created lot will meet all the applicable
provisions of this chapter.
On a lot held in single and separate ownership
on February 8, 1978 (the effective date of the Borough's original
Zoning Ordinance), or any amendment thereto creating a lot, which
does not fulfill the regulations for the minimum lot area and/or lot
width for the zone in which it is located, a building may be erected,
altered and used and the lot may be used for a conforming (permitted)
use, provided the setbacks are not less than the minimum specified
in the chapter for the zone in which the lot is located.