The following definitions shall be applicable
in this chapter:
ALLEY
A public right-of-way which normally affords a secondary
means of vehicular access to abutting property.
ARTERIAL STREET
A street which provides for the movement of relatively heavy
traffic to, from or within the Village. It has a secondary function
of providing access to abutting land.
BLOCK
An area of land within a subdivision that is entirely bounded
by a combination or combinations of streets, exterior boundary lines
of the subdivision and streams or water bodies.
BUILDING LINE
A line parallel to a lot line and at a distance from the lot line to comply with the yard requirement of Chapter
350, Zoning.
COLLECTOR STREET
A street which collects and distributes internal traffic
within an urban area, such as a residential neighborhood, between
arterial and local streets. It provides access to abutting property.
COMMISSION
The Plan Commission created by the Village Board pursuant
to § 62.23, Wis. Stats., if one is created.
COMPREHENSIVE PLAN
A Comprehensive Plan prepared by the Village indicating the
general locations recommended for the various functional classes of
land use, places and structures and for the general physical development
of the Village and includes any unit or part of such plan separately
adopted and any amendment to such plan or parts thereof.
CUL-DE-SAC
A short street having but one end open to traffic and the
other end being permanently terminated in a vehicular turnaround.
DIVISION OF LAND
Where the title or any part thereof is transferred by the
execution of a land contract, an option to purchase, an offer to purchase
and acceptance, a deed, or a certified survey, and a division occurs
where any of the above transactions changes the title from a joint
tenancy to a tenancy in common or from a tenancy in common to a joint
tenancy.
EASEMENT
The area of land set aside or over or through which a liberty,
privilege or advantage in land, distinct from ownership of the land,
is granted to the public or some particular person or part of the
public.
FINAL PLAT
The final map on which the subdivider's plan of subdivision
is presented for approval and which, if approved, will be submitted
to the County Register of Deeds. Said plat must conform to all state
laws.
FLOODLANDS
Those lands, including the floodplains, floodways, and channels,
subject to inundation by the one-hundred-year recurrence interval
flood or, where such data is not available, the maximum flood of record.
FRONTAGE STREET
A minor street auxiliary to and located on the side of an
arterial street for control of access and for service to the abutting
development.
HIGH-WATER ELEVATION
The average annual high-water level of a pond, stream, river,
lake, flowage, or wetland referred to an established datum plane or,
where such elevation is not available, the elevation of the line up
to which the presence of the water is so frequent as to leave a distinct
mark by erosion, change in or destruction of vegetation or other easily
recognized topographic, geological or vegetative characteristic.
IMPROVEMENT, PUBLIC
Any sanitary sewer, storm sewer, open channel, water main,
roadway, park, parkway, public access, sidewalk, pedestrianway, planting
strip or other facility for which the Village may ultimately assume
the responsibility for maintenance and operation.
LOCAL STREET
A street of little or no continuity designed to provide access
to abutting property and leading into collector streets.
LOT
A parcel of land having frontage on a public street or other
officially approved means of access, occupied or intended to be occupied
by a principal structure or use, and sufficient in size to meet the
lot width, lot frontage, lot area, yard, parking area and other open
space provisions of this chapter and any applicable zoning ordinance.
LOT AREA
The area contained within the exterior boundaries of a lot,
excluding streets, easements and land under navigable bodies of water.
LOT, CORNER
A lot abutting intersecting streets at their intersection.
LOT, DOUBLE FRONTAGE
A lot which has a pair of opposite lot lines along two substantially
parallel streets and which is not a corner lot. On a double frontage
lot, both street lines shall be deemed front lot lines.
LOT LINES
The peripheral boundaries of a lot as defined herein.
LOT WIDTH
The width of a parcel of land measured along the front building
line.
MAJOR THOROUGHFARE
A street used or intended to be used primarily for fast or
heavy through traffic. Major thoroughfares shall include freeways,
expressways and other highways and parkways, as well as arterial streets.
MARGINAL ACCESS STREET
A street which is parallel to and adjacent to major thoroughfares
and which provides access to abutting properties and protection from
traffic on the major street.
MINOR STREET
A street used, or intended to be used, primarily for access
to abutting properties.
MINOR SUBDIVISION
The division of land by the owner or subdivider resulting
in the creation of not more than four parcels or building sites.
OWNER
Includes the plural as well as the singular and may mean
either a natural person, firm, association, partnership, private corporation,
public or quasi-public corporation, or combination of these.
PEDESTRIAN PATHWAY
A public way, usually running at right angles to streets,
which is intended for the convenience of pedestrians only; it may
also provide public right-of-way for utilities.
PLAT
The map on which the subdivider's plat of subdivision is
presented to the Village for approval.
PRELIMINARY PLAT
The preliminary plat map indicating the proposed layout of
the subdivision to be submitted to the Village Board for its consideration
as to compliance with the Comprehensive Plan and these regulations
along with required supporting data.
PROTECTIVE COVENANTS
Contracts entered into between private parties which constitute
a restriction on the use of all private property within a subdivision
for the benefit of the property owners and to provide mutual protection
against undesirable aspects of development which would tend to impair
stability of values.
REPLAT
The process of changing, or a map or plat which changes,
the boundaries of a recorded subdivision plat or part thereof. The
legal dividing of a large block, lot or outlot within a recorded subdivision
plat without changing exterior boundaries of said block, lot or outlot
is not a replat.
SHORELANDS
Those lands within the following distances: 1,000 feet from
the high-water elevation of navigable lakes, ponds and flowages or
300 feet from the high-water elevation of navigable streams or to
the landward side of the floodplain, whichever is greater.
SUBDIVIDER
Any person, firm or corporation, or any agent thereof, dividing
or proposing to divide land resulting in a subdivision, minor subdivision
or replat.
SUBDIVISION
The division of a lot, outlot, parcel, or tract of land by
the owner thereof or his agent for the purpose of transfer of ownership
or building development where the act of division creates five or
more parcels or building sites of 1 1/2 acres or less in area,
or where the act of division creates five or more parcels or building
sites by successive divisions within a period of five years, whether
done by the original owner or a successor owner.
WETLANDS
Those lands which are partially or wholly covered by marshland
flora and generally covered with shallow standing water or lands which
are wet and spongy due to high water table.
WISCONSIN ADMINISTRATIVE CODE
The rules of administrative agencies having rule-making authority
in Wisconsin, published in a loose-leaf, continual revision system,
as directed by § 35.93 and Ch. 227, Wis. Stats., including
subsequent amendments to those rules.
The subdivider shall grade each land division
in order to establish street, block and lot grades in proper relation
to each other and to topography as follows:
A. Master site grading plan.
(1) A master site grading plan shall be prepared by the
subdivider for all new subdivisions. This plan shall be prepared in
accordance with the requirements and standards of the Village.
(2) The master site grading plan shall show existing and
proposed elevations of all lot corners, control points and building
locations. The plan shall also indicate all overland storm drainage
in and adjacent to the subdivision. The cost of the preparation of
such a plan shall be paid for by the subdivider.
(3) After approval or modification of these plans by the
Village Engineer, the full width of the right-of-way of the proposed
streets within the subdivision and the entire subdivision lot area
shall be graded in accordance with the master site grading plan. The
owners of the subdivision lots shall adhere to those plans.
(4) Upon completion of all street and subdivision grading,
the grades shall be checked and certified by the Village Engineer
to determine that the completed grading work is in accordance with
the master site grading plan.
(5) The cost of all required grading work, supervision,
certification, inspection and engineering fees shall be paid for by
the subdivider.
B. Right-of-way grading. The subdivider shall grade the
full width of the right-of-way of all proposed streets in accordance
with the approved plans, including the grading of sight triangles
at each intersection.
C. Block grading. Block grading shall be completed by
one or more of the following methods:
(1) Regrading along the side or rear lot lines which provides
for drainage to the public drainage facilities, provided that any
ditches or swales are in public drainage easements and provided that
a deed restriction is adopted which prohibits alteration of the grades
within five feet of any property line from the grades shown on the
master site grading plan.
(2) Parts of all lots may be graded to provide for drainage
to a ditch or to a swale.
D. Miscellaneous grading requirements.
(1) Lot grading shall be completed so that water drains
away from each building site toward public drainage facilities at
a grade approved by the Village Engineer and provisions shall be made
to prevent drainage onto properties adjacent to the land division
unless to a public drainage facility.
(2) Grading activities shall not result in slopes greater
than 3:1 on public lands or lands subject to public access.
(3) The topsoil stripped for grading shall not be removed
from the site unless identified in the erosion control plan approved
by the Village Engineer as not being necessary for erosion control
or site landscaping purposes. Topsoil shall be uniformly returned
to the lots when rough grading is finished. Topsoil piles shall be
leveled and seeded for erosion control prior to the Village releasing
the one-year guarantee provision on public improvements in the streets
adjacent to the lots on which the topsoil is stockpiled.
(4) Such grading shall not result in detriment to any
existing developed lands, either within or outside of the corporate
limits.
E. Drainage flows. The subdivider shall cause to be set
upon the master grading plan arrows indicating the directions of drainage
flows for each property line not fronting on a street on all parcels
and along each street as will result from the grading of the site
and the construction of the required public improvements or which
are existing drainage flows and will remain. The arrows shall be accompanied
on the master grading plan with the following note: "Arrows indicate
the direction of drainage flows in various components resulting from
site grading and the construction of required public improvements.
The drainage flow components located in easements shall be maintained
and preserved by the property owner unless approved by the Village
Engineer."