The purpose of the following article is to ensure that the highest standards of site, building and landscape design are conscientiously met through the use of qualified technical and aesthetic judgment, compatible with the Master Plan of the municipality. In acting upon plats, the Planning Board shall require, among other conditions, in the public interest, that the tract shall be adequately drained, and the streets shall be of sufficient width and suitable grade and suitably located to accommodate the prospective traffic and to provide access for fire-fighting equipment to buildings. The Planning Board shall further require that all lots shown on the plats shall be adaptable for the intended purposes without danger to health or peril from flood, fire, erosion or other menace. Required improvements shall be designed and constructed to conform to the specifications as established by the municipality. In considering applications for subdivision of land, the Planning Board shall be guided by the standards set forth hereinafter. Said standards shall be considered to be minimum requirements and shall be waived by the Board only under circumstances set forth in Article
VIII herein.
[Added 10-6-2005 by L.L. No. 2-2005]
All lots must have soil percolation and deep
pit tests which will verify that sufficient and appropriate lands
are available for a conventional, subsurface, sanitary disposal system
designed and constructed to serve a single-family residence and an
additional area of not less than 50% of the area of the proposed conventional,
subsurface sanitary disposal system referred to above, if any, as
shown by said tests which additional area may be reserved for the
construction of additions to the system. The area proposed for the
subsurface, sanitary disposal system, including the reserve area,
shall not exceed 10% in grade. Both the area for the conventional,
subsurface sanitary disposal system and the additional reserved area
shall be clearly delineated on any map or plot submitted to and approved
by the Planning Board.
It is the policy of the municipality that all
central sewer and water systems be owned and operated by the municipality.
It is required as a condition to final approval of the plat that where
central sewer and/or water systems are to be installed, that an improvement
district be legally formed or extended. Such systems with appurtenances
shall be offered for dedication to the Town, without cost to the Town.
A. Water and sewage facilities.
(1) Endorsement. The proposed subdivision plat shall be
properly endorsed and approved by the Orange County Department of
Health. Such endorsement and approval shall be secured by the subdivider
after approval of the preliminary plat by the Planning Board.
(2) Local requirements. Approval from the Orange County
Department of Health shall constitute only the minimum requirement
necessary and, where considered essential by the Board, a public sanitary
and/or water system may be required for any subdivision.
(3) The requirements contained in the "Greenville Sewage
Disposal Ordinance" approved by the Municipal Legislature of the Town
of Greenville, and as hereafter may be amended, shall apply, and all
sewage disposal systems shall be constructed in conformance thereto;
said Sewage Disposal Ordinance being attached hereto and made a part
hereof.
(4) Dedication. Water and sewer mains and systems are
to be offered for dedication to the municipality and, upon acceptance
of the completed facility, shall be maintained by the municipality
and shall be located in the street rights-of-way or in perpetually
unobstructed sites or easements of a width adequate for servicing.
(5) Connections. The developer shall be responsible, not
only for the laterals within the development, but also for any lines
or connections that may be necessary to bring the service to the development.
(6) The Planning Board may require that prior to final
approval, the Municipal Engineer shall determine the capacity of a
well to adequately supply a development with water. In order to assure
adequate water supply for the safety, health and comfort of the residents,
a seventy-two-hour test shall be taken during which time an amount
equal to at least 600 gallons per dwelling unit shall be obtained
on a sustained basis.
B. Standards for water systems.
(1) All water mains over six inches in diameter shall
be Transite Ring Tite Pressure Pipe or equal.
(2) All water mains under six inches in diameter shall
be cast iron to meet AWWA requirements.
(3) Mains having a total length from source of supply
of over 2,000 lineal feet shall be six inches in diameter unless otherwise
approved by the Municipal Engineer.
(4) Hydrants shall be installed on the end of system,
at the end of all branches and at eight-hundred-foot intervals throughout
the subdivision.
(5) Hydrants shall be four-inch inlet as manufactured
by Eddy Valve Company, or equal, with two-and-a-half-inch nozzle connections
and one pumper connection.
(6) Threads on nozzle connections of hydrants shall be
National Standard.
(7) All water mains shall be valved in such manner that
repairs may be made without shutting down the entire system.
(8) Corporation cocks shall be installed at a 45°
angle to the water main and not from the top of the main.
(9) A curb box and cock shall be installed on each lot,
the same to be 18 inches inside the curbline and brought to finished
grade.
(10)
All valve boxes in street shall be brought to
finished grade line of said street.
(11)
All water mains shall be laid with a minimum
of four feet of cover.
(12)
All service lines to buildings shall be three-fourths-inch
type K copper tubing as manufactured by Chase Brass or equal.
(13)
All water mains shall be inspected by the Municipal
Sanitary Inspector or Municipal Engineer before any backfilling is
started.
(14)
A water meter shall be installed in each building,
the same to be as manufactured by Rockwell Meter Company or equal.
(15)
Before any water district is accepted by the
municipality, it shall meet with the approval of the Municipal Engineer
as to capacity, quality and output of water from wells.
(16)
In all instances, adequate chlorine equipment
shall be installed in the proper manner to safeguard water supply.
(17)
All water mains shall be tested to withstand
normal pressures plus 50%.
C. Standards for sewage systems.
(1) Minimum size of sanitary sewers shall be eight inches.
(2) Sewers shall be of cement asbestos or vitrified clay
American Society of Testing and Materials (ASTM) Specifications (C-13).
(3) Manholes shall be constructed at all changes in direction,
street intersections and otherwise at three-hundred-foot intervals.
(4) All sanitary sewers shall be installed in accordance
with requirements and approval of the New York State Department of
Health.
(5) Manholes shall be precast reinforced concrete or constructed
of eight-inch brick walls or eight-inch sewer blocks. If constructed
of blocks, the exterior of the manhole shall be plastered with three-fourths-inch
of cement plaster.
(6) Iron steps shall be installed in the masonry and shall
not exceed 15 inches on center.
(7) Twenty-four-inch heavy (highway-type) cast-iron tops
shall be installed over the masonry hole.
(8) Sewer lines shall be inspected by the Municipal Sanitary
Inspector or Municipal Engineer before any backfilling is started.
(9) All house sewer lines shall run from house to sewer
through cast-iron pipe or approved equal.
(10)
All sewage treatment plants shall be inspected
during construction and shall be subject to approval by the Municipal
Engineer before final acceptance.
(11)
Chlorine treatment for sewage plant shall be
gas-type as manufactured by Wallace and Tiernan or equal.