[HISTORY: Adopted by the Board of Supervisors of Warren County as
indicated in article histories. Amendments noted where applicable.]
GENERAL REFERENCES
Subdivision of land — See Ch. 155.
[Adopted 10-16-1989]
This article provides road-naming rules that enable dispatchers and
drivers of ambulances and fire trucks to accurately and quickly find residences;
the Post Office to sort and deliver mail more efficiently; businesses to locate
addresses; and addresses to fit standard computerized address spacing.
These rules apply to roads in Warren County outside the boundaries of
the Town of Front Royal, except that those road names previously assigned
to state roads are exempt. House numbering for mailing addresses is currently
developed and maintained by the United States Postal Service.
A.
Road names are limited to three words, plus a type-of-road
suffix. The total number of characters and spaces, including the suffix abbreviation,
shall not exceed 20 characters.
B.
The road name shall not include numbers, dashes, apostrophes
or other nonalphabetical characters. Commemorative names such as Thomas Jefferson
and James Madison are reserved for use on primary state highways.
C.
Continuous roads or roads in alignment with existing
roads shall retain the same name. A road that intersects with another road
shall normally require a new name if the road makes more than a sixty-degree
angle at the intersection. Disconnections more than 60 feet offset will require
a new name on the disconnected section.
E.
Road names must not be identical or similar to other
road names in the county, including the Town of Front Royal. When there are
two or more duplicate or similar road names, only the one with the greatest
number of residences will remain, and the others are to be changed. Different
suffixes, such as Avenue, Circle, Court, Drive, etc., do not make two otherwise
similar road names different. Only the suffix "Court" is permitted for two
road names otherwise similar if the Court is a dead-end appendage of the other
road. Road names must also be relatively easy to pronounce, spell and locate
in a road name index by dispatchers.
F.
Definitions of required suffixes with their road sign
abbreviations:
Avenue (AV)
|
Any road not defined by another suffix
| |
Boulevard (BLVD)
|
Any road divided by an island
| |
Circle (CR)
|
A road that circles back upon itself
| |
Court (CT)
|
Any single cul-de-sac or dead-end road
| |
Drive (DR)
|
Any road not defined by another suffix
| |
Highway (HVW)
|
Primary state road
| |
Lane (LN)
|
Any road not defined by another suffix
| |
Loop (LOOP)
|
A road that loops back upon itself
| |
Pike (PIKE)
|
Primary state road
| |
Place (PL)
|
A cul-de-sac from which another road originates
| |
Plaza (PLAZA)
|
A commercial multiple-building parking lot access
| |
Road (RD)
|
Any right-of-way serving 3 or more residences
| |
Square (SO)
|
Townhouse or apartment parking lot access road
| |
Street (ST)
|
Any road not defined by another suffix
| |
Turnpike (TPK)
|
Primary state road
| |
Way (WAY)
|
Any road that connects 2 separate roads
|
Developers of new roads shall submit their request for road names in
accordance with the Warren County Subdivision Ordinance.[1]
Road names submitted to the County Administrator or Board of Supervisors
for approval prior to September 18, 1989, that comply with the rules of this
chapter will be approved by the Board of Supervisors concurrent with adoption
of this chapter. Any rejected road names will be referred back to the requester
for compliance with the rules. If a written resubmittal with an acceptable
road name is not received within 60 days. the County Administrator will select
a name for submission to the Board of Supervisors for approval.
Platted private road names or other right-of-way access roads serving
three or more residences will be reviewed by the County Administrator's
office on a systematic geographic basis for compliance with this chapter.
Those road names in noncompliance with the road-naming rules will be referred
for 60 days to any applicable subdivision association for substitute name
nomination to the County Administrator. Complying road names are submitted
by the County Administrator to the Board of Supervisors for approval. A public
hearing is not required but may be scheduled by the Board at its option. A
list of roads approved and/or in use within the county and town is available
for review or purchase by the public at the County Administrator's office.
The County Administrator will send notices of approved road names to
emergency dispatchers, the Town of Front Royal Planning Office, any applicable
subdivision association and the Postmaster for implementation of the name
for mail addressing where applicable. The changes will also be made periodically
to any future county-prepared road map.
Signs for new roads completed after the adoption of this chapter are
to be purchased and installed by the developer with signs meeting the specifications
of the county. A road sign must be installed before issuance of any occupancy
permit for any structure on the road.
Signs for road names requested for approval prior to September 18, 1989,
and approved by the Board in accordance with road-naming rules of this chapter
will be purchased and installed by the county as workload and the county budget
permits.
A.
A road sign shall consist of two or more crossed signs
identifying each of the intersecting roads.
B.
The plates shall be aluminum, 0.08 to 0.10 inch thick
and six inches high by 24 or 30 or 36 inches long as necessary, with three-fourths-inch
radius corners. Reflective white letters will be mounted on a green background.
The name shall be on both sides of the sign in four-inch block uppercase letters
and the suffix abbreviations in two-inch block uppercase letters. The pole
caps and crossover brackets are to be of cast aluminum with zinc-plated set
screws adjustable by an allen wrench. The ten-foot post shall be galvanized
steel pipe of three-inch outside diameter, buried two feet deep. The post
may be installed by a post driver and/or supported by soil cement or concrete.