A. 
Unless a contrary intention clearly appears, the following words and phrases shall have for the purpose of this chapter the meanings in the following clauses.
B. 
For the purpose of this chapter, words and terms used herein shall be interpreted as follows:
(1) 
Words used in the present tense include the future.
(2) 
The singular includes the plural.
(3) 
The word "person" includes a corporation, partnership and association as well as the individual.
(4) 
The word "lot" includes the word "plot" or "parcel."
(5) 
The word "Township" shall always mean Lower Makefield Township.
(6) 
The word "may" is permissive; the words "shall" and "will" are mandatory.
(7) 
The words "building," "structure" and "street" are used generally and shall be construed as if followed by the phrase "or part thereof."
C. 
Any word or term not defined herein shall be used with a meaning of standard usage.
The following specific definitions apply in this chapter.
ABUTTING
Areas that are contiguous; join at a border or boundary; or lots that share a common boundary, as where no other land, road, or street intervenes.
[Added 10-3-2018 by Ord. No. 413]
ADJOINING
Touching or contiguous; to be in contact with; to abut upon.
[Added 10-3-2018 by Ord. No. 413]
AGENT
Any person, other than the developer, who, acting for the developer, submits to the Township subdivision plans for the purpose of obtaining approval thereof.
APPLICANT
Any developer who submits to the Township subdivision or land development plans for the purpose of obtaining approval thereof, including his heirs, successors and assigns.
BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICE (BMP)
Activities, facilities, designs, measures or procedures used to manage stormwater impacts from land development activities, to meet state water quality requirements, to promote groundwater recharge and to otherwise meet the purposes of this chapter. Best management practices include but are not limited to infiltration, filter strips, low-impact design, bioretention, wet ponds, permeable paving, grassed swales, forested buffers, sand filters and detention basins. Structural BMPs are permanent appurtenances to the project site.
[Added 12-20-2006 by Ord. No. 363]
BICYCLE PATHS
Off-street bikeways laid out on private property, public rights-of-way, open land or recreational areas.
BICYCLE LANES
Lanes located on the paved surface of a roadway, street or highway or on the shoulder of a roadway, street or highway.
BICYCLE ROUTE
The area of a public roadway, street or highway which is specifically designated and marked as a "bicycle route."
BLOCK
An area bounded by streets.
BOARD OF SUPERVISORS
The word "Supervisors" or the words "Board of Supervisors" shall always mean the Lower Makefield Township Board of Supervisors.
BUILDING
Any structure having a roof and used or intended to be used for the shelter or enclosure of persons, animals or property.
BUILDING LINE
A. 
FRONTA line parallel to the right-of-way line at a distance therefrom equal to the depth of the minimum front yard required.
B. 
SIDEA line parallel to the side lot line at a distance therefrom equal to the depth of the minimum side yard required.
C. 
REARA line parallel to the rear lot line at a distance from the rear lot line equal to the depth of the minimum rear yard required.
CARTWAY
The portion of a street intended for vehicular use.
CENTER LINE OF STREET OR ROAD
A line which is typically midway between and parallel to the right-of-way lines.
CLEAR SIGHT TRIANGLE
An area of unobstructed vision at street intersections as defined and regulated by § 200-7 of the Township Zoning Ordinance.
COUNTY
Shall always mean Bucks County, Pennsylvania.
CROSSWALK OR INTERIOR WALK
A right-of-way or easement for pedestrian travel across or within a block.
CUL-DE-SAC STREET
A street intersecting another street at one end and terminating at the other in a vehicular turnaround.
DETENTION BASIN
An area designed to hold stormwater or surface runoff and discharge the impounded water at a controlled rate. This area may drain dry or may be normally a wet area with the capacity to act as a detention basin.
DEVELOPER
Any landowner, agent of such landowner or tenant with the permission of such landowner who makes or causes to be made a subdivision of land or a land development.
DEVELOPMENT
Any man-made change or improvement, including but not limited to buildings or other structures, the placement of mobile homes, streets and other paving, utilities, filling, grading and clearing of vegetation, excavation, mining, dredging or drilling operations or demolition.
DEVELOPMENT PLAN
The provisions for land development, a plat of subdivision, all covenants relating to use, location and bulk of buildings and other structures, intensity of use or density of development, streets, ways and parking facilities, common open lands and public facilities. The phrase "provisions of the development plan" shall mean the written and graphic materials referred to in this definition.
DRAINAGE FACILITY
Any ditch, gutter, pipe, culvert, storm sewer, detention or retention basin or other structure designed, intended or constructed for the purpose of diverting surface waters from or carrying surface waters off streets, rights-of-way, parks, recreational areas, paved areas or any part of any subdivision.
DRAINAGE PLAN
A plan showing all present and existing surface and subsurface drainage conditions as described by grades, contours and topography with proposed methods and facilities to collect and convey said drainage.
DRIVEWAY
A vehicular accessway connecting a street and a parking area or garage within a lot or property.
DWELLING
A building containing one or more dwelling units designed or used exclusively as living quarters.
A. 
SINGLE-FAMILY DETACHED DWELLINGA dwelling on a lot designed and occupied exclusively as a residence for one family, having independent outside access and having yards on all sides, including a manufactured home or mobile home.
B. 
SINGLE-FAMILY ATTACHED DWELLINGA dwelling designed and occupied exclusively as a residence for one family, having independent outside access attached to but separated from adjoining dwellings by not more than two party walls, and not a two-family dwelling.
C. 
TWO-FAMILY DWELLING (TWIN OR DUPLEX DWELLING)A structure containing two dwelling units, each of which is totally separated from the other by a solid wall extending from ground to roof or a solid ceiling and floor extending from exterior wall to exterior wall, except for a common stairwell.
D. 
MULTIPLE-FAMILY DWELLINGA dwelling designed and occupied exclusively as a residence for three or more families.
DWELLING UNIT
Any room or group of rooms located within a residential building and forming a single habitable unit with facilities which are used or intended to be used for living, sleeping, cooking and eating by one family.
ENGINEER
The Township Engineer or other licensed engineer designated by the Supervisors to perform the duties of engineer as herein specified. Such engineer shall be registered in accordance with the Pennsylvania Engineer, Land Surveyor and Geologist Registration Law.[1]
EASEMENT
A grant of one or more of the property rights by the property owner to and/or for the use by the public, a corporation, the Township or other governmental authority or another person or entity.
EROSION
The removal of surface materials by the action of natural elements.
FLAG LOT or LANE LOT
A lot which does not have the minimum lot width required at the minimum required front building line but which attains the minimum lot width required at a distance from the right-of-way line greater than the minimum front yard setback. The lot includes a strip of land owned in fee simple, which is the lane or flagpole portion of the lot, connecting the street with the flag portion of the lot.
GRADE, ESTABLISHED
The elevation of the center line of the streets as officially established by the Township Engineer.
GRADE, FINISHED
The completed surfaces of lawns, walks and roads brought to grade as shown on official plans or designs relating thereto.
GRADE LEVEL
The mean elevation of the ground surrounding a building, calculated as an average of the highest and lowest elevations.
IMERVIOUS SURFACE
Surfaces which do not absorb water, including all buildings and paved or hard surfaces. In addition, other areas determined by the Township Engineer to be impervious within the meaning of this definition shall also be classified as impervious. For purposes of this definition, that area of a swimming pool located inside the coping shall not be classified as impervious.
IMPROVEMENTS
Those physical additions, installations and changes required, such as streets, curbs, sidewalks, water mains, sewers, drainage facilities, public utilities, driveways, parking areas and any other items required to render land suitable for the use proposed.
INVASIVE PLANT
An invasive plant is one which grows aggressively, spreads, displaces other plants and has generally been introduced from other continents. Lacking natural predators, disease, or other natural controls, these plants can dominate large areas, diminish and/or limit biodiversity, are expensive to control and are directly responsible for the extinction and loss of natural plants that have evolved in communities with other plants, wildlife, insects and micro organisms. The Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources maintains a periodically updated list of invasive plants that is available to the general public.
[Added 4-4-2007 by Ord. No. 368]
LAND DEVELOPMENT
The improvement of one lot or two or more contiguous lots, tracts or parcels of land for any purpose involving a group of two or more residential or nonresidential buildings, whether proposed initially or cumulatively, or a single nonresidential building on a lot or lots regardless of the number of occupants or tenure or the division or allocation of land or space, whether initially or cumulatively, between or among two or more existing or prospective occupants by means of or for the purpose of streets, common areas, leaseholds, condominiums, building groups or other features; a subdivision of land. The addition of an accessory farm building, subordinate to an existing farm building, on a lot or lots shall not be considered a land development.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT
A licensed landscape architect registered in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
LAND SURVEYOR
A licensed surveyor registered in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
LOT
A parcel of land, set aside from other parcels in one ownership and not divided by a street and having access to a public street.
LOT AREA, GROSS
The area contained within the property lines of the lot but excluding any part of a public or private street ultimate right-of-way.
LOT AREA, NET
The gross lot area, excluding any area required as resource protection land or as recreation land under this chapter, and excluding the area of easements for pipelines or drainage facilities.
LOT, CORNER
A lot which has an interior angle of less than 135° at the intersection of two street lines. A lot abutting a curved street shall be considered a corner lot if the tangents to the curve at the points of intersection of the side lot lines intersect at an interior angle of less than 135°.
LOT, INTERIOR
A lot other than a corner lot.
LOT, THROUGH
An interior lot having frontage on two parallel or approximately parallel streets.
LOT DEPTH
The mean distance from the street line of the lot to its opposite rear line measured in the general direction of the side lines of the lot.
LOT OF RECORD
A lot which has been recorded in the office of the Recorder of Deeds of Bucks County, Pennsylvania.
LOT LINE CHANGE
Any division of land for the adjustment or relocation of one existing boundary line between two adjacent lots or the shifting of boundary lines to increase the area of an existing lot; provided, however, that the lot line change results in the same number or fewer lots as existed prior to the lot line change.
LOT LINES
The lines bounding a lot.
A. 
LOT LINE, FRONTA line abutting the street at the ultimate right-of-way line.
B. 
LOT LINE, SIDEAny lot boundary line which is not a front lot line or a rear lot line.
C. 
LOT LINE, REARA lot line which is opposite and most distant from the front lot line . If the rear lot line is less than 20 feet in length, or if the lot forms a point at the rear, the rear lot line shall be deemed to be a line 20 feet in length within the lot, between the side lot lines, parallel to and at the maximum distance from the front lot line. For a corner lot, of the two lot lines opposite the front lot lines, that which is most distant will be the rear lot line.
LOT WIDTH
The horizontal distance between the side lines of the lot measured at the front building line.
LOW-IMPACT DEVELOPMENT (LID)
A land use development strategy that emphasizes protection and use of on-site natural features integrated with engineered, small-scale hydrologic controls at the parcel and subdivision scale to manage stormwater and more closely mimic predevelopment watershed hydrologic functions. Low-impact development techniques may be considered an alternative to traditional, structural stormwater management solutions.
[Added 12-20-2006 by Ord. No. 363]
MUNICIPALITY or MUNICIPAL
Shall always mean Lower Makefield Township.
NATIVE PLANT
A native plant is one that occurs naturally in an area without human intervention and that was growing in the area prior to the time of European settlement. Such plants are adapted to the local climate and tend to be more drought-, disease- and insect-resistant than introduced varieties and they help preserve the balance and beauty of natural ecosystems. For purposes of this chapter, the range of native plants shall be the Lower Delaware Valley, Piedmont-Coastal Plain areas; provided, however, that native plants from outside but close to that general area will satisfy the requirements of this chapter with the approval of the Township’s Plant Expert.
[Added 4-4-2007 by Ord. No. 368]
NOXIOUS WEED
A generally invasive plant that once declared noxious becomes illegal to sell, transport, plant or otherwise propagate within the Commonwealth. Lists of noxious weeds are periodically updated and are available from the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources.
[Added 4-4-2007 by Ord. No. 368]
OFFICIAL MAP
A map adopted by ordinance pursuant to Article IV of the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code, Act 247, as amended.[2]
OPEN LANDS
Resource-protected lands, including farmland which is part of a farmland preservation conditional use development.
[Amended 11-15-2023 by Ord. No. 442]
OPEN SPACE
An area of land or of water, or a combination of land and water, within a development site designed and intended for the use or enjoyment of residents, not including streets, parking areas, or areas set aside for facilities (such as detention and retention basins). Open space can include resource-protected land. Open space shall not include land occupied by commercial, industrial, residential, or other nonrecreational uses, land reserved for future parking areas for nonrecreational uses, stormwater management facilities, wastewater management facilities, and/or the yards or lots of dwelling units. Open space shall not include leftover areas, remnants of land remaining after lotting out, or other unusable areas (such as environmentally damaged land that has not been remediated or has not been reclaimed, or landfills).
[Amended 11-15-2023 by Ord. No. 442]
OWNER
The owner of record of a parcel of land.
PARKING SPACE
An off-street area on a lot with an all-weather surface available for the storage of one motor vehicle and having dimensions as required by this chapter, exclusive of passageways and driveways appurtenant thereto, and having individual direct access to a street without moving another vehicle.
PENNSYLVANIA CERTIFIED HORTICULTURIST (PCH)
A horticulturist registered under the laws of Pennsylvania and skilled in the use of native vegetation.
[Added 4-4-2007 by Ord. No. 368]
PLAN, AS-BUILT
Drawings of all improvements constructed within any subdivision or land development, showing the precise locations and details of all such improvements required by this chapter or as required by the Board of Supervisors prior to dedication of improvements.
PLAN, FINAL
A subdivision or land development plan showing all those items required by this chapter and prepared for formal approval by the Board of Supervisors.
PLAN, PRELIMINARY
A subdivision or land development plan showing all those items required by this chapter and prepared for preliminary consideration prior to the preparation of a final plan.
PLAN, RECORD
An exact copy of the approved final plan on opaque linen, or other material acceptable to the Bucks County Recorder of Deeds, of standard size prepared for necessary signatures and recording with the Bucks County Recorder of Deeds, including a note referencing that all sheets are part of final plan approval.
PLAN, SKETCH
An informal plan, to scale, indicating salient existing features of a tract and its surroundings and the general layout of the proposed subdivision or land development for discussion purposes only and not to be presented for approval.
PLANNING COMMISSION or COMMISSION
Shall always mean the Lower Makefield Township Planning Commission.
PLANT EXPERT
A registered landscape architect (RLA) or Pennsylvania-certified horticulturist (PCH) registered under the laws of Pennsylvania.
[Added 4-4-2007 by Ord. No. 368]
PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice published once each week for two consecutive weeks in a newspaper of general circulation in the Township. Such notice shall state the time and place of hearing and the particular nature of the matter to be considered at the hearing. The first publication shall not be more than 30 days and the second publication shall not be less than seven days from the date of the hearing.
PUBLIC HEARING
A formal meeting held pursuant to public notice by the Board of Supervisors or the Planning Commission, intended to inform and obtain public comment, prior to taking action in accordance with this chapter.
PUBLIC MEETING
A forum held pursuant to notice under the act of July 3, 1986 (P.L. 388, No. 84), known as the "Sunshine Act."[3]
RECREATION
A. 
RECREATIONA healthful and enjoyable activity, whether indoor or outdoors, in which individuals or groups engage in during their leisure time.
(1) 
ACTIVE RECREATIONRecreation activities of a more competitive or athletic nature or that involve significant physical exertion by the participant, such as team sports, individual sports, use of playground equipment or swimming.
(2) 
PASSIVE RECREATIONActivities that do not commonly involve competition or athletic participation by the participant, including arts and crafts, spectating, picnicking, nature study, music, walking and cultural activities.
B. 
ACTIVE RECREATION AREAAn area developed to be conductive to active recreation, such as athletic fields, hard-surfaced courts, pools and children's play equipment.
C. 
PASSIVE RECREATION AREAAn area maintained to be conducive for passive recreation, such as nature trails, creeks, picnic areas, craft rooms or woods.
D. 
CORE RECREATION LANDAn area primarily intended for active recreation, such as team and individual sports and children's play equipment. This also includes certain passive lands that are integrated within the active lands; or include over 5 acres that are immediately adjacent to active areas, that relate directly to the active areas and that at a minimum serve as an important buffer between recreational facilities and homes.
E. 
REGIONAL RECREATION LANDAn area intended primarily for passive recreation such as hiking, picnicking and nature study.
REGISTERED LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT (RLA)
A landscape architect registered under the laws of Pennsylvania and skilled in the use of native vegetation.
[Added 4-4-2007 by Ord. No. 368]
RETENTION BASINS
A lake or pond which receives surface runoff and which has the capacity to detain a quantity of stormwater and discharge it at a controlled rate.
REVERSE FRONTAGE LOT
A lot extending between and having frontage on a collector or arterial street and a local or minor street with vehicular access solely from such local or minor street.
RIGHT-OF-WAY
Land set aside for use as a street or other means of travel or for use by a utility.
A. 
RIGHT-OF-WAY LINEThe dividing line between a lot and the ultimate right-of-way of street or road or utility line.
B. 
RIGHT-OF-WAY, FUTURE OR ULTIMATEThe right-of-way width deemed necessary to provide adequate width for future improvements, as designated by Township ordinances.
RUNOFF
The surface water discharge or rate of discharge of a given watershed after a fall of rain or snow that does not enter the soil but runs off the surface of the land.
SEDIMENTATION
The process by which mineral or organic matter is accumulated or deposited by moving wind, water or gravity. Once this matter is deposited (or remains suspended in water), it is referred to as "sediment."
SEWAGE FACILITY
Any sanitary sewer, sewage system, sewage treatment works or parts thereof designed, intended or constructed for the collection, treatment and satisfactory disposal of sanitary waste and industrial sewage.
SINGLE AND SEPARATE OWNERSHIP
The ownership of a lot by one or more persons, partnerships or corporations, which ownership is separate and distinct from that of any adjoining lot.
SITE OR TRACT
An area having specific boundaries and encompassing an existing or proposed land development, subdivision or residence.
SITE AREA, BASE
See the Township Zoning Ordinance for definition and method of calculation.[4]
SITE AREA, GROSS
All land area within the site as determined from an actual survey.
SITE AREA, NET BUILDABLE
That part of the base site area remaining for development after the required resource-protected land has been subtracted and, if applicable, required common open space, as defined and calculated in § 200-52 of the Township Zoning Ordinance.
SLOPE
The face of an embankment or cut section; any ground whose surface makes an angle with the plane of the horizon. Slopes are usually expressed in a percentage of horizontal distance as compared to vertical distance.
STREET
A public street, road or highway which is legally open or officially platted by the Township or a private street, road or way over which the owners or tenants have the right-of-way.
STREET, HALF OR PARTIAL
A street parallel and adjacent to a property line having a lesser right-of-way width than required for satisfactory improvement and use of the street.
STREET HIERARCHY
Streets are classified according to their functions. Streets are ordered from high order streets (starting with arterials) to lower order streets (ending with local streets).
A. 
ARTERIALSProvide minimal land access with high degree of travel mobility; serve major centers of urban activity and travel generation; generally serve the highest traffic volume corridors and the longest trip lengths, thus carrying a significant proportion of the total urban area travel; principal arterial routes should be continuous, both internally and between major rural connections.
B. 
COLLECTORSLower travel speeds than on arterial roads; penetrate neighborhoods to distribute or collect trips; serve minor travel generators such as local elementary schools, small individual industrial plants, office, commercial and warehouse locations not served by arterials.
C. 
LOCALComprises all remaining roads and streets; primary purpose is to provide direct access to abutting land and access to the higher order systems; through traffic movement is deliberately discouraged; offers the lowest level of mobility. Local streets shall be the same as minor streets identified in other Township documents.
STREET LINE
The dividing line between a lot and the ultimate right-of-way line of a street.
STREET, PUBLIC
A vehicular way which is owned by a federal, state, county or local government or governmental agency.
STRUCTURE
Any man-made object having an ascertainable stationary location on or in land or water, whether or not affixed to the land.
SUBDIVIDER
See "developer."
SUBDIVISION
The division or redivision of a lot, tract or parcel of land by any means into two or more lots, tracts, parcels or other division of land, including changes in existing lot lines for the purpose, whether immediate or future, of lease, partition by the court for distribution to heirs or devisees, transfer of ownership or building or lot development; provided, however, that the subdivision by lease of land for agricultural purposes into parcels of more than ten acres not involving any new street or easement of access or any residential dwelling shall be exempted.
A. 
MAJOR SUBDIVISIONThe division of land into more than two lots, tracts or parcels of land.
B. 
MINOR SUBDIVISIONThe division of land into no more than two lots, tracts or parcels of land, provided that there is not created by the subdivision any new street or streets, the need for required improvements, easement of access or the need therefor or a lot line change. Only one application for a minor subdivision may be made for any parcel held in single ownership.
TOWNSHIP FIRE MARSHAL
The Fire Marshal of Lower Makefield Township as appointed by the Board of Supervisors for the review of subdivision and land development plans in Lower Makefield Township in regard to their adequacy in respect to fire protection, general advice to the Board of Supervisors in all matters regarding fire protection and liaison between the Township and all fire companies having jurisdiction in Lower Makefield Township.
TOWNSHIP MANAGER
The Manager of the Township of Lower Makefield.
TOWNSHIP SOLICITOR
The Solicitor to the Lower Makefield Township Board of Supervisors.
TREE PROTECTION AREA
See § 178-85C.
UNDEVELOPED LAND
Land in parcels sufficiently large for future subdivision or development which is presently in agriculture, woodland or lying fallow.
WATERCOURSE
A permanent stream, intermittent stream, river, brook, creek or a channel or ditch or drain for water, whether natural or manmade.
WATER FACILITY
Any water works, water supply works, water distribution system or part thereof designed, intended or constructed to provide or distribute potable water.
WETLANDS
Those areas that are inundated or saturated by surface water or groundwater at a frequency and duration sufficient to support, and under normal circumstances do support, a prevalence of vegetation typically adapted for life in saturated soil conditions. Those areas or lands defined as wetlands in either the United States Army Corps of Engineers Technical Report, Corps of Engineers Wetlands Delineation Manual, as most recently updated or modified; or the United States Environmental Protection Agency Wetlands Identification Delineation Manual, Volume I, Rational, Wetland Parameters and Overview of Jurisdictional Approach, Volume II, Field Methodology, as most recently updated or modified; or the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection Wetlands Identification and Delineation, Chapter 105, Dam Safety and Waterways Management Rules and Regulations, as most recently updated or modified. Where a difference between the foregoing criteria exist, the most restrictive criteria will be used in any particular case. For the purposes of this definition and for its application to this chapter, "most restrictive criteria" shall mean the criteria which causes the preservation of the most extensive area of wetlands.
WOODLANDS
Stands of trees averaging greater than 6 inches in caliper measured four feet above the ground covering an area greater than one quarter of an acre.
YARD
A space open to the sky on the same lot with a building or structure which is unoccupied except for accessory structures to the extent specifically permitted by this chapter or the Township Zoning Ordinance.[5]
A. 
YARD, FRONTThe space between the front building line and the right-of-way line for the full width of the lot.
B. 
YARD, SIDEThe space between the side building line and the side lot line.
C. 
YARD, REARThe space between the rear building line and the rear lot line for the full width of the lot.
ZONING ORDINANCE
The officially enacted Zoning Ordinance of the Township of Lower Makefield with any and all amendments thereto.[6]
[1]
Editor's Note: See 63 P.S. § 148 et seq.
[2]
Editor's Note: See 53 P.S. § 10101 et seq.
[3]
Editor's Note: See 65 P.S. § 271 et seq.
[4]
Editor's Note: See Ch. 200, Zoning.
[5]
Editor's Note: See Ch. 200, Zoning.
[6]
Editor's Note: See Ch. 200, Zoning.