[Amended 7-18-2005 by Ord. No. 05-14]
A.
Permitted uses. In any R-150 District, only the following uses shall be permitted, except as provided in Subsection B:
(1)
Dwellings, one-family detached.
(2)
(3)
Farms and accessory agricultural uses and activities, but not
including farm produce stands.
(4)
Municipal uses (recreational).
B.
Conditional uses. In any R-150 District, the following conditional uses may be permitted, pursuant to the provisions of Article XXVIII:
(1)
Farm produce stands.
(2)
Home occupations and professional offices in the home as accessory
uses.
(3)
Churches and related uses.
(4)
Developed nonpublic recreational uses, such as golf courses,
tennis clubs and swim clubs.
(5)
Horticultural nurseries, but greenhouses or structures for the
indoor cultivation of plants shall only be of permanent-type construction
or permanent foundations and shall be set back a minimum of 100 feet
from the street line.
(6)
Private clubs, service organizations.
(7)
Public and nonpublic schools.
(8)
Public utility installations.
C.
Area, yard and building dimensions. In any R-150 District, the following
dimensional requirements shall apply:
[Amended 7-18-2005 by Ord. No. 05-14]
C.
Area, yard and building dimensions. In any R-100 District, the following
dimensional requirements shall apply:
[Amended 7-18-2005 by Ord. No. 05-14]
C.
Area, yard and building dimensions. In any R-75 District, the following
dimensional requirements shall apply:
[Amended 7-18-2005 by Ord. No. 05-14]
C.
Area, yard and building dimensions. In any R-60 District, the following
dimensional requirements shall apply:
A.
Permitted uses. In any R-A District, only the following uses shall be permitted, except as provided in Subsection B:
(1)
Dwellings, multiple-group (garden apartment) project.
(2)
(3)
Churches and other places of worship and parish homes.
(4)
Nonpublic educational institutions.
(5)
Public buildings and uses.
(6)
One-family detached dwellings, provided that the area, yard
and building dimensions of the adjacent most restrictive one-family
detached residential district shall apply.
B.
Conditional uses. In the R-A District, the following conditional uses may be permitted, pursuant to the provisions of Article XXVIII:
C.
Area, yard and building dimensions. In any R-A District, the following
dimensional requirements shall apply, except that all uses, other
than a multiple-group-dwelling project, shall conform to the area,
yard and building dimensions of the most restrictive adjacent one-family
detached residential district:
(3)
Maximum dwelling unit density. No multiple-group-dwelling project
shall have a density exceeding 16 dwelling units per acre.
(4)
Minimum setback requirements.
(a)
Front. No multifamily dwelling constituting a part of a multiple-group-dwelling
project shall be placed any nearer to a front lot line than 45 feet;
provided, however, where such front lot line abuts a street designated
on the major street portion of the Comprehensive Master Plan as a
major arterial street of a secondary arterial street, the setback
distance shall be increased to 75 feet. The same provisions shall
apply to all accessory buildings.[2]
(b)
Rear. No such dwelling shall be placed any nearer to a rear
lot line than 40 feet. Accessory buildings shall be placed no nearer
than 20 feet to such line.
(c)
Side. No such dwelling shall be placed any nearer to a side
lot line than 30 feet; provided, however, that where such line is
a side street line, the distance shall be increased to 40 feet. In
any event, no such dwelling shall be less than 50 feet from any other
dwelling or place of business on any abutting property. Accessory
buildings shall be located at least 20 feet from a side lot line and
at least 40 feet from a side street line.
(5)
Building requirements.
(b)
Maximum height. The maximum height of any principal building shall not exceed 2 1/2 stories or 35 feet, except that an additional full story may be permitted, not to exceed three full stories, where the topography permits, pursuant to the provisions of § 195-117C. For accessory buildings, the maximum height shall be two stories or 20 feet.
(c)
Minimum floor area. The living area of a one-bedroom dwelling
unit shall be not less than 800 square feet, and the living area of
a two-bedroom dwelling unit shall not be less than 950 square feet.
(6)
Off-street parking.
(a)
Minimum space allocation. Each dwelling unit shall be allocated
two spaces for off-street parking purposes.
(b)
Garages. Thirty percent of the required off-street parking spaces
may be enclosed in attached or detached private garages. No such garages
shall be located in any front yard, and no garages shall face a public
street.
(c)
Screening required. All off-street parking areas shall be subject to the provisions of § 195-145 with respect to screening when such areas adjoin other residential properties. In any event, parking areas shall be attractively landscaped.
(d)
Paving. All off-street parking areas shall be surfaced in accordance
with Township standards.
(e)
Location upon lot. No off-street parking area shall be located
in any front yard unless the Planning Board adjudges that such area
is adequately landscaped and screened. In no event shall such parking
area to be closer than 10 feet to any rear lot line, 15 feet to a
front lot line or side street line, or five feet to a side lot line.
D.
Other general design and site requirements.
(1)
Roads and access.
(a)
Roads. All interior private roads shall have a minimum width
of 22 feet for two-way traffic or 12 feet for one-way traffic. Paving
shall be in accordance with Township standards.
(b)
Access. Points of ingress and egress shall be located not less
than 150 feet apart or shall be combined at one point if located on
the same public street frontage. Wherever possible, access to the
multiple-group-dwelling project should not be gained directly from
a major arterial street or a secondary arterial street, unless such
access is controlled by a traffic signal where warranted.
(3)
Utilities and services.
(a)
Water and sewerage. Water, storm and sanitary sewerage connections
shall be provided and shall be installed in accordance with sound
engineering practice as approved by the Township Engineer and provided
that the Township Engineer shall certify that the facilities for existing
trunk drains, drainage lines and sewers will not be impaired by the
proposed plans.
(b)
Electric and telephone service. All such services shall be provided
to a multiple-group-dwelling project by means of underground facilities.
(c)
Accessory roof structure. Antennas for the purposes of television
reception shall be provided by one master tower for the project, wherever
practicable.
(d)
Refuse collection. Provisions shall be made for the collection
of refuse from refuse containers of substantial construction and satisfactory
to any appropriate Township Health Officer, board or agency.
(e)
Laundering. Sufficient enclosed area and equipment shall be
provided within each multifamily dwelling, or within each unit wherever
practicable, for washing and drying purposes. No outside area shall
be provided for such purposes, unless such area is enclosed by a solid
screen of shrubs and fencing at least six feet high.[4]
(4)
Building design.
(a)
(b)
Balconies and variations in the building line shall be used
wherever practicable.
(5)
Supervision and maintenance. No multiple-group-dwelling project shall be permitted under this article or any other article of this Part 3 unless provision shall be made for a superintendent to live upon the premises. The superintendent shall have as his/her full-time occupation the care, supervision and maintenance of the project at which he/she is employed.
A.
Purpose of district. The purpose of the R-B District is to allow
for the construction of multifamily residential buildings, including
townhouses and garden apartments, meeting the minimum density requirement
for inclusionary housing of the New Jersey Council on Affordable Housing
and providing for the required set-aside of units within such developments
affordable to low- and moderate-income families, complying with the
obligation of the Township to provide a regional fair share of low-
and moderate-income housing.[1]
B.
Permitted uses. The permitted uses are townhouses and garden apartments.
C.
D.
Development standards.
(1)
Definition of uses. Garden apartments include multiple dwellings
arranged in flats, up to 2 1/2 stories in height. Townhouses
comprise single-family dwellings attached side by side, up to 2 1/2
stories in height. A half story is one within a gable roof, in which
not over 1/2 of the floor area of the full story below has a full
ceiling height.
(2)
Density. The maximum density shall be eight units per acre of
site area.
(3)
Lower-income housing requirements. A minimum of 20% of the housing units shall be sold or rented and shall be maintained for a minimum period of 30 years so as to be affordable to families and persons of low and moderate income, under the lower-income housing requirements specified in Subsection D below.
(4)
Building requirements, garden apartments. Maximum building height
shall be 2 1/2 stories and 35 feet, and maximum building length
shall be 120 feet.
(5)
Building requirements, townhouses. Maximum building height shall
be 2 1/2 stories and 35 feet, and there shall not be more than
six housing units per structure.
(6)
Setbacks and spacing, garden apartments. The minimum setback
from street and property lines shall be 50 feet, except that accessory
garages, if provided, may be within 20 feet of side or rear lot lines.
The minimum distance between buildings shall be 35 feet between fronts
and backs, and 20 feet end to end. The minimum setback from parking
areas and driveways shall be 10 feet.
(7)
Setbacks and spacing, townhouses. The minimum setback from streets
and property lines shall be 50 feet. The minimum separation between
buildings shall be 50 feet between fronts and backs, and 25 feet end
to end. The minimum setbacks from driveways and parking areas shall
be 20 feet from building fronts and 25 feet from building rears, and
20 feet on building ends.
(8)
Landscaped areas, buffer areas, and recreation facilities. All
areas not occupied by buildings, driveways, walkways, and parking
areas shall be suitably landscaped and shall be arranged such that
appropriate active and passive recreation facilities will be provided.
Where the site adjoins other zones on the side or rear, a suitable
landscaped buffer strip of at least five feet in width shall be provided
to form a visual screen.
(9)
Parking areas and access drives. A minimum of two parking spaces
shall be provided for each dwelling unit. For townhouses, one of these
spaces shall be provided within the unit or in a garage, except that
this requirement shall not apply to lower-income units. All off-street
parking areas shall be surfaced in accordance with Township standards.
No off-street parking shall be located within front yards or within
less than 10 feet from side and rear property lines.
E.
Lower-income housing requirements.
(1)
Purpose. The purpose of this section is to establish criteria
for the development of land to comply with the provisions of the New
Jersey Supreme Court decision commonly referred to as "Mt. Laurel
II." The regulations and controls contained in this section shall
be interpreted to assure the construction of lower-income housing
which meets the standards and guidelines set forth in Mt. Laurel II.
(2)
Number and type of lower-income dwelling units required.
(a)
Garden apartment and townhouse developments shall be required
to provide 20% of all dwelling units to be affordable for lower-income
households. All units shall be affordable on senior citizen housing.
(b)
At least 1/2 of all lower-income units shall meet HUD Section
8 eligibility requirements for very low income and 1/2 shall meet
HUD eligibility requirements for lower income (Mt. Laurel II Moderate
Income). There shall be a range of affordability within the maximum
income limits as required by the regulations of the New Jersey Council
on Affordable Housing.
(c)
The developer shall agree not to impose age restrictions upon
the occupants of any low- and moderate-income unit.
(d)
Unit size distribution shall be as follows, divided evenly between
low and moderate income:
(e)
The lower-income units shall be architecturally similar to the
market rate units and shall be generally distributed among the market
rate units rather than isolated.
(3)
Pricing of low- and moderate-income units.
(a)
The average price of low- and moderate-income units within an
inclusionary development shall be, as best as practicable, affordable
to households at 57.5% of median income as contained in N.J.A.C. 5:92-12.4.
(b)
For purchased housing, as best as practicable, the following
distribution of prices shall be used for every 20 low- and moderate-income
units:
Proposed Pricing Stratification
| ||
---|---|---|
Low
|
1 at 40% through 42.5%
| |
3 at 42.6% through 47.5%
| ||
6 at 47.6% through 50%
| ||
Moderate
|
1 at 50.1% through 57.5%
| |
1 at 57.6% through 64.5%
| ||
1 at 64.6% through 68.5%
| ||
1 at 68.6% through 72.5%
| ||
2 at 72.6% through 77.5%
| ||
4 at 77.6% through 80%
|
(c)
For initial occupancy, priority shall be given to households
that fall within the median income categories delineated in the preceding
subsection.
(d)
In computing affordability and eligibility, not more than 30%
of the family income may be used for rental housing and 28% for sales
housing, as follows:
Rental units: rent, excluding utilities. Maximum rent shall
be calculated as a percentage of the uncapped Section 8 income limits.
| |||
Sales Units:
|
Principal and interest
| ||
Insurance
| |||
Taxes
| |||
Condominium or homeowners' association fees
| |||
Condominium or homeowners' association fees shall be consistent
with N.J.A.C. 5:92-12.12(a), which is as follows:
| |||
"5:92-12.12 Initial pricing
| |||
(a)
|
Municipalities shall require that the initial price of a low
and moderate income owner-occupied single family housing unit be established
so that after a downpayment of 10%, the monthly principal, interest,
taxes, insurance and condominium fees do not exceed 28% of an eligible
gross monthly income. Municipalities shall, by ordinance, require
that master deeds of inclusionary development regulate condominium
or homeowner association fees or special assessments of low and moderate
income purchasers at a specific percentage of those paid by market
purchasers. Once established within the master deed, the percentage
shall not be amended without prior approval from the Council on Affordable
Housing."
|
(e)
The following criteria shall be considered in determining rents
and sale prices:
(4)
Subsidies. Government subsidies may be used at the discretion
of the applicant to fulfill the requirements of this section. The
lack of the subsidies shall in no way alter or diminish the lower-income
requirements of this section.
(5)
Phasing of construction.
(a)
Within inclusionary developments, low- and moderate-income housing
units shall be built in accordance with the following schedule:
Minimum Percentage of Low- and Moderate-Income Units Completed
|
Percentage of Market Housing Units Completed
| |
---|---|---|
0%
|
25%
| |
10%
|
25%, plus 1 unit
| |
50%
|
50%
| |
75%
|
75%
| |
100%
|
90%
| |
100%
|
100%
|
(b)
Any development for which a subdivision or site plan has been
approved shall be considered a single development for purposes of
this section, regardless of whether parts or sections are sold or
otherwise disposed of to persons of legal entities other than the
one which received approval. All such approvals and conditions of
approvals shall run with the land. Any tracts or parcels sold shall
include documentation, satisfactory to the Township Attorney, setting
forth the requirements for low- and moderate-income housing units.
(6)
Administration of low- and moderate-income housing.
(a)
The governing body is hereby designated the Affordable Housing
Board of the Township to administer or to provide for and supervise
the administration of low- and moderate-income housing units hereunder
and to assure that such units are made available and remain affordable
to low- and moderate-income households for a period of not less than
30 years.
(b)
The Township Administrator is hereby designated to carry out
such administrative responsibilities within the Township as may be
determined by the Affordable Housing Board.
(c)
Appropriate outside agencies such as the Affordable Housing
Management Service of the New Jersey Department of Community Affairs
may be utilized for such administrative responsibilities as designated
by the Affordable Housing Board of the Township.
(d)
The cost of such administration by outside agencies shall be
met, to a reasonable extent, by the developers of the housing projects
including low- and moderate-income units.
(7)
Resale and rental of lower-income housing.
(a)
All lower-income dwelling units shall be required to have covenants
running with the land to control the resale price of for-sale units
or to employ other legal mechanisms which shall be approved by the
Township Attorney and will, in his opinion, ensure that such housing
will remain permanently affordable to persons of lower income for
a period of at least 30 years.
(b)
Selection procedures and an appropriate administration mechanism
for assuring that low- and moderate-income housing units remain affordable
to low- and moderate-income households shall be directed and administered
by the Affordable Housing Board or an agency designated by it.
(c)
The price of an owner-occupied housing unit and the rents of
affordable housing units may increase annually based on the percentage
increase in median income for each housing region as determined from
the uncapped Section 8 income limits, published by HUD, or other recognized
standard adopted by the Council on Affordable Housing.
(d)
Persons wishing to sell affordable units shall notify the Affordable
Housing Board or an agency designated by it of the intent to sell.
The seller may apply for permission to offer the unit to a non-income-eligible
household at the maximum price permitted. The seller shall document
efforts to sell the unit to an income-eligible household as part of
this application. If the request is granted, the seller may offer
low-income housing units to moderate-income households and moderate-income
housing units to households earning in excess of 80% of the median.
In no case shall the seller be permitted to receive more than the
maximum price permitted. In no case shall a sale pursuant to this
section eliminate the resale controls on the unit or permit any subsequent
seller to convey the unit except in full compliance with the terms
of N.J.A.C. 5:92-12.
(e)
Property owners of single-family, owner-occupied housing may
apply to the Affordable Housing Board or an agency designated by it
for permission to increase the maximum price for eligible capital
improvements. Eligible capital improvements shall be those that render
the unit suitable for a larger household. In no event shall the maximum
price of an improved housing unit exceed the limits of affordability
for the larger household. Property owners shall apply to the Affordable
Housing Board or an agency designated by it if an increase in the
maximum sales price is sought.
(f)
A judgment of the foreclosure or a deed in lieu of foreclosure
by a financial institution regulated by state and/or federal law shall
extinguish controls on affordable housing units, provided there is
compliance with N.J.A.C. 5:92-10. Notice of foreclosure shall allow
the Township, through the Affordable Housing Board, to purchase the
affordable housing unit at the maximum permitted sale price.
(g)
In the event of a foreclosure sale, the owner of the affordable
housing unit shall be personally obligated to pay to the Township,
through the Affordable Housing Board, any surplus funds, but only
to the extent that such surplus funds exceed the difference between
the maximum price permitted at the time of foreclosure and the amount
necessary to redeem the debt to the financial institution, including
costs of foreclosure.
(8)
Affirmative marketing.
(a)
No low- and moderate-income housing units are presently under
construction or are as yet planned by the respective property owners.
However, at such time as these units are constructed, Affirmative
Marketing will be conducted by the Township through a Housing Officer
or an appropriate agency to be appointed by the governing body. Such
marketing will include the following:
[1]
Legal advertisements and also announcements suitable for newspaper
articles will be prepared for local newspapers and those covering
Union, Essex, Morris, and Sussex Counties, prescribing the available
low- and moderate-income housing and procedures for application and
inviting such applications.
[3]
In addition, announcements of such housing will be posted in
the Municipal Building, the post office, and other appropriate public
locations. Local church groups will be contacted announcing the availability
of such units, and an announcement will be made on community-access
cable television.
[a]
Announcements will also be distributed to the County
Planning Board and Housing Authority, local service organizations,
the Welfare Director, and other appropriate local and areawide groups.
[b]
As provided in the rezoning ordinance, 50% of the
units shall be made available on a priority basis to income-eligible
households that reside in the municipality or work in the municipality
and reside elsewhere, for a period not to exceed 15 business days
from the time such units are listed for sale or resale or made available
for rent.
[c]
Screening of occupants will be the responsibility
of the Township Housing Officer or appropriate agency designated by
the governing body, who will work in conjunction with the project's
developers. Such developers will be required to pay the reasonable
costs of advertisements and will be required to cooperate with the
Township in preparing the required announcements and advertisements.
[d]
The marketing program will commence at least 90
days before the issuance of either temporary or permanent certificates
of occupancy and shall continue until all low- and moderate-income
housing units are under contract of sale and/or lease.
(b)
No more than 50% of the units shall be made available on a priority
basis to income-eligible households that reside in the municipality
or work in the municipality and reside elsewhere, for a period not
to exceed 15 business days from the time such units are listed for
sale or resale or made available for rent, subject to the regulations
of the New Jersey Council on Affordable Housing.
[Added 12-20-2004 by Ord. No. 04-20; amended 12-20-2004 by Ord. No.
04-21; 11-20-2006 by Ord. No. 06-19; 6-21-2010 by Ord. No. 10-12; 5-15-2017 by Ord. No. 17-09; 9-18-2017 by Ord. No.
17-16]
A.
Purpose of district. The purpose of the Age-Restricted/Senior Housing
District is to permit construction of an age-restricted multifamily
residential development with a twenty-percent affordable housing set-aside
in accordance with the Township's adopted Housing Element and Fair
Share Plan and the terms and conditions of the Township's Judgment
of Compliance and Repose.
B.
Permitted uses: age-restricted multifamily residential development
containing a twenty-percent set-aside for low- and moderate-income
households ages 55 years and older. The development may be constructed
as multifamily dwellings, multiple-group dwellings, or garden apartments,
townhouses or a townhouse/flat combination.
C.
Accessory
uses and structures. The following accessory uses and structures shall
be permitted in the R-SH Zone District:
[Added 2-16-2021 by Ord. No. 21-08[1]]
(3)
Other
accessory uses and structures customarily subordinate and incidental
to permitted principal uses.
[1]
Editor's Note: This ordinance also renumbered former Subsection
C as Subsection D.
D.
Development standards:
(1)
Minimum tract area: 10 acres.
(2)
Minimum frontage: a minimum of 250 feet on a paved public street.
(3)
Density. The maximum density shall be 32 units per acre for
multifamily dwellings, multiple-group dwellings, or garden apartments,
and 15 units per acre of gross site area for townhouses and townhouse/apartment/flat
combinations.
(4)
Low- and moderate-income housing requirements. A minimum of 20% of the total age-restricted dwelling units shall be affordable to low- and moderate-income households as regulated by the Township's Court-approved Affordable Housing Ordinance (Chapter 66 of the Township Code).
(5)
Building height. Maximum building height shall be 45 feet and
four stories.
(6)
Design standards. All development shall incorporate the following
design standards. Waivers from these standards may be granted by the
Board pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40:55D-51b.
(a)
Building design. The objectives of the building design standards
are to provide overall high-quality building with special emphasis
on methods that reduce the visual impact of large buildings. The exterior
appearances of buildings shall complement the character of existing
development in the surrounding area.
(b)
Specific design features that reduce the visual impact of large
buildings shall be used. These include but are not limited to:
[1]
Elements that draw focus, introduce scale and provide three-dimensional
effects.
[2]
Variations and articulation to overall building facades by changing
the facade plane.
[3]
Use of subdued wall coloration, patterning, texture and reveals.
[4]
Extensive use of landscaping to shield and break up building
planes.
(c)
Building mass. Solid and unarticulated buildings are not permitted.
The mass, scale and visual impact of buildings shall be reduced by
staggered building walls. The staggered building walls shall incorporate
a setback or bump-out that, in the opinion of the Board, provides
an equivalent reduction in the mass, scale and visual impact of the
buildings.
(d)
Architectural interest. To provide architectural interest, create
a three-dimensional effect and further reduce the visual scale and
impact of a building, the following techniques shall also be used:
[1]
Variations in building treatment shall be liberally used and
shall include painted panels, awnings or canopies, wall openings,
wall texture changes, changes in building height and variations in
rooflines.
[2]
Building entries and building corners shall be readily identifiable
through the use of canopies, marquees, architectural treatment and
the use of different materials.
[3]
Extensive use of small-scale elements, such as planter walls
and hedges, shall be provided particularly around building entrances.
[4]
Landscaping shall be employed to further reduce the visual impact
of building mass.
(e)
Materials.
[1]
The front and two side elevations of all buildings and structures
shall be constructed of brick, architectural block, architectural
precast concrete or tilt-up construction using similar materials of
equally high quality and aesthetics. Utility standard concrete panels
or masonry units may be used on rear elevations if the rear elevations
are not visible from any public right-of-way after berming, fencing
or landscaping treatment.
[2]
Rooflines and parapets shall be designed to minimize the visual
impact of rooftop-mounted equipment, such as vents and stacks, from
public rights-of-way.
(f)
Pedestrian circulation.
[1]
On-site concrete or brick sidewalks, or such other material
acceptable to the Board, shall be provided to create a continuous
pedestrian network and to connect with existing sidewalks and neighborhoods.
[2]
Vehicular and pedestrian circulation patterns shall be separated.
A landscaped buffer shall provide a separation between pedestrian
and vehicular ways.
[3]
Pedestrian crossings shall be indicated by such techniques as
changed pavement materials or texture, signals, signage, or painted
stripes, as determined by the Board.
[4]
Secure and convenient pedestrian walkway access shall be provided
between parking lots, sidewalks and primary entrances to buildings.
Sidewalks shall be barrier-free, a minimum of five feet in width and
shall be set back a minimum of five feet from all buildings.
(7)
Setbacks. The following setback standards shall apply:
(8)
Building coverage. Buildings and accessory structures shall
cover not more than 40% of the lot or parcel area. Accessory structures
devoted to parking shall count towards total lot coverage.
(9)
Total lot coverage. Not more than 70% of the lot or parcel area
shall be covered by a combination of buildings, accessory structures,
parking areas, driveways, and other impervious surfaces.
(10)
Minimum open space. Not less than 30% of the parcel area shall be open space as defined in § 195-111.
(11)
Parking. Off-street parking shall be provided in accordance
with the residential site improvement standards, but in no event shall
the parking ratio for one- and two-bedroom units be greater than 1.5
spaces per unit. No off-street parking shall be located less than
25 feet from any property line. A carport and adjacent driveway space
shall be counted as two spaces; designated stacked parking spaces
shall also be counted as two spaces. Parking spaces may be located
at grade in the building footprint (garage), without limitation.
(12)
Landscaped areas, buffer areas, and recreation facilities. All
areas not occupied by buildings, driveways, walkways, and parking
areas shall be suitably landscaped and be arranged such that appropriate
active and passive recreation opportunities will be provided on site
for the residents of the development (e.g., walking paths, benches,
gazebos, or ponds or water features); a suitable landscaped buffer
strip of at least 25 feet in width shall be provided to the property
boundaries to form a visual screen.
(13)
Parking lot setback and landscaping. Parking areas shall be
attractively landscaped in accordance with the following standards:
(a)
Parking lots shall be set back a minimum of 25 feet from the
right-of-way of a public street. The setback area shall be landscaped
with shade trees and shrubs adaptable to the location and able to
provide low-level screening of the view of the parking lot; at least
one shade tree for each 40 feet of frontage shall be provided.
(b)
In addition to landscaping required along public streets, the
interior of the parking lot shall be landscaped with at least one
tree for every 20 parking spaces, which shall be planted in suitably
prepared and protected landscaping islands.
(c)
No more than 20% of the required parking shall be provided between
the building line and the public right-of-way.
(14)
Townhouse and townhouse/apartment combination building spacing.
The minimum spacing between buildings shall be 50 feet between front
and front/back, 35 feet front/back to side and 25 feet end to end.
The minimum setbacks from driveways and parking areas shall be 15
feet from primary buildings, unless a garage is attached.
[Added 7-18-2005 by Ord. No. 05-14; amended 11-21-2016 by Ord. No. 16-10; 5-15-2017 by Ord. No. 17-09; 9-18-2017 by Ord. No. 17-16]
A.
Purpose of the district.
(1)
The downtown of any community should be a mixed-use center with many diverse retail shops and restaurants where the community can gather on nights and weekends. The Downtown Village District has been created in that area along Westfield Avenue between Washington Street and Broadway, from Denman Avenue and Benjamin Street to the Rahway border. The purpose of the DTV Downtown Village District is to permit construction of a multifamily residential development with a fifteen-percent affordable housing set-aside in accordance with the Township's adopted Housing Element and Fair Share plan and the terms and conditions of the Township's Court-approved Affordable Housing Ordinance (Chapter 66 of the Township Code). The DTV Zone District is intended to encourage retail sales and personal services oriented to pedestrian shopping on the ground floor. Second floors may be commercial or residential, and shall have only one use, commercial or residential in any one building. Only residential uses are allowed on the third and fourth floors of any building.
(2)
Authentic period (Colonial, Federal or Victorian) reproductions
are encouraged to complement the established character of more recently
constructed buildings. In any case, as a minimum, in order to assure
compatibility of new building construction or alterations of existing
buildings, the building design standards in this section shall be
adhered to, except that the Planning Board may grant waivers of specific
requirements on a showing by the developer of unavoidable hardship.
(3)
Exterior walls shall be finished with face brick, integrally
colored masonry units (not panels), or wood clapboards, cedar shingles
or vertical boards. All exterior walls of buildings shall be finished
with the same materials or combinations of materials. Exceptions require
Board of Adjustment or Planning Board approval.
(4)
Visible sections of roof areas shall be cedar shingle or textured
asphalt shingle, in dark colors. Mansard roofs, when provided, shall
be full canopies of textured asphalt shingle, or fiberglass in dark
colors.
(5)
All design features applied to building exteriors shall be functional,
rather than superimposed for decorative purposes only, unless part
of authentic period architecture. Shutters, when provided, shall be
designed to fit the windows to which they are attached.
(6)
No rooftop mechanical structures shall be permitted in the DTV
Zone without Planning Board or Board of Adjustment approval. All mechanicals
shall be adequately screened so as to conceal them.
B.
Principal uses and structures. The following principal uses and structures
shall be permitted in the DTV Zone District:
(1)
Business establishments devoted primarily to the retail sales
of goods and personal services on the premises. Retail establishments
that serve local needs may include the sale of baked goods, office
supplies, flowers and the dispensing of pharmaceutical products;
(2)
Taverns and restaurants and food establishments intended for
food consumption on the premises. Outdoor dining is permitted as an
accessory use;
[Amended 2-16-2021 by Ord. No. 21-08]
(3)
Takeout of food is permitted as an accessory use, provided that
the food is consumed off -premises;
[Amended 2-16-2021 by Ord. No. 21-08]
(4)
Personal and consumer service establishments, such as hair salons;
[Amended 2-16-2021 by Ord. No. 21-08]
(5)
Banks and other financial institutions engaged in the business
of accepting deposits from the public and/or extending credit to the
public in the form of loans. Such business must be conducted on the
premises and must be the principal activity of the use on the premises;
drive-through service is permitted as an accessory use only;
[Amended 2-16-2021 by Ord. No. 21-08]
(6)
Business, administrative and professional offices or other business
establishments providing the following services:
(7)
Museums, art galleries and indoor motion-picture theaters and
theaters for conducting live entertainment or cultural performances;
music and dance studios;
(8)
Child-care centers;
(9)
Governmental buildings and municipal parking facilities;
(10)
Public parks and playgrounds;
(11)
Residential dwelling units limited to the second, third and
fourth floors, which shall include a fifteen-percent set-aside for
very-low-, low- and moderate-income housing, if the affordable units
will be for rent, and a twenty-percent set-aside for low- and moderate-income
housing, if the affordable units will be for sale;
(12)
Commercial parking lots.
C.
Accessory uses and structures. The following accessory uses and structures
shall be permitted in the DTV Zone District:
(3)
Other accessory uses and structures customarily subordinate
and incidental to permitted principal uses and permitted conditional
uses.
D.
Conditional uses and structures. The following conditional uses and structures shall be permitted in the DTV District only if they comply with the appropriate regulations for such uses or structures in Article XXVIII:
E.
Prohibited uses and structures. Any use or structure other than those uses or structures permitted in Subsections B, C and D above are prohibited. In addition, and notwithstanding the above permitted uses, the following uses shall be specifically prohibited:
(1)
Any business conducted outside the confines of a building, except
those temporary activities permitted by special permission from the
Township Mayor and Council or allowed elsewhere in this chapter;
(2)
Gasoline filling stations, gasoline service stations, public
garages, automobile body repair or painting shops;
(3)
Lumberyards or building material yards;
(4)
Sale, rental or repair of automobiles, motorcycles, boats, trailers,
lawn mowers, small gasoline or other liquid-fuel engines;
(5)
Dry-cleaning establishments where the dry cleaning is done on
the premises;
(6)
Warehouses or businesses which do not sell directly to the general
public;
(7)
Public or private schools;
(8)
Funeral services, undertakers, crematories and morticians;
(9)
Residential use of any kind, other than those uses as permitted in Subsection B(11) above. Existing nonconforming residential buildings or structures shall not be extended or enlarged for use relating to a business, unless the first floor is used entirely for business use;
(10)
All aboveground and underground bulk storage of liquefied petroleum
gases, gasoline, diesel fuel, kerosene, No. 2 fuel, fuel oil, chemicals
or similar hazardous, flammable or combustible liquids in any amount,
except as permitted otherwise by permit. Aboveground or basement storage
of up to 530 gallons of kerosene or No. 2 heating fuel in approved
storage tanks and used exclusively for heating purposes on the premises
is exempted from the above prohibition;
(11)
Any building, structure or use which would create an undue hazard
of fire, explosion or nuisance by reason of odor, noise, dust or smoke,
or which in any way would be detrimental to the health, public morals
and public safety of the community; and
(12)
Private commercial parking lots as a principal use.
F.
Area, yard and building dimensions. In any DTV District, the following
dimensional requirements shall be applied, unless otherwise excepted:
(2)
Minimum yards.
(a)
Front yard. There shall be a minimum front yard of 15 feet,
except that when abutting a residential district, the front yard requirement
of such residential district shall apply to the abutting yard. No
parking service shall be located closer than five feet to any street
line.
(b)
There shall be no minimum single side yard requirement except
that 1) when abutting a residential district, the side yard requirement
of such residential district shall apply to the abutting property,
and 2) when developing adjacent to existing structures which are to
remain on an adjacent property, a combined minimum distance of 10
feet shall be maintained between structures.
[Amended 12-2-2019 by Ord. No. 19-23]
(c)
Rear yard: 20 feet for principal structures; five feet for accessory
structures.
(3)
Maximum building dimensions:
(a)
Height shall be a maximum of 35 feet and three stories, except
that a height of 45 feet and four stories will be permitted, provided
the building setback from the property line is a distance equal to
or exceeding the proposed height of the structure.
[Amended 12-2-2019 by Ord. No. 19-23]
(b)
Building coverage: 80%.
(c)
Impervious cover: 90%.
(d)
Floor area ratio: 3.0.
(e)
Density: 32 units per acre.
(4)
Open space. There shall be a minimum of 10% open space. When
open space is adjacent to a designated parking space, the owner shall
be prohibited from conducting snow removal or stockpiling activities
where those activities infringe upon the designated parking area.
Snow removal plans shall be provided as a part of any application
for development. Snow shall promptly be removed from any open space
area.
[Amended 12-2-2019 by Ord. No. 19-23]
G.
Streetscape standards. Private development within the DTV District
shall include street improvements to enhance the downtown streetscape.
Required streetscape improvements will include a specific architectural
and site design theme similar to the streetscape improvements undertaken
by the Township of Clark within this area during the period 2000 through
2001. Site improvements will include benches, trash receptacles, area
lighting, street trees, brick pavers and planters. These improvements
shall be consistent with plans and specifications on file with the
Township Engineer. Architectural details and standards not included
therein will be developed and adopted by the Township Engineer to
encourage a unity among the diverse uses and structures that make
up this village neighborhood. Building architectural features will
involve facade and large window treatments, cornice lines that are
visually connective with neighboring buildings, finishes and rooflines.
H.
Integrated shopping units.
(1)
Nothing in this section shall be construed to prevent the construction
or erection of a series or row of attached stores, shops or offices
on a single piece of property, or a composite of lots under one ownership,
where such a grouping forms an integrated limited shopping unit. Such
unit shall be constructed or erected in accordance with a plot plan
and shall meet any applicable dimensional requirements set forth in
this section for the DTV District. Each such integrated shopping unit
shall consist of a group of individual shops or offices and shall
have a uniform architectural design and appearance. Such design shall
be consistent with the goals and objectives of the zone.
(2)
Signs shall be in accordance with the provisions of Article XXV. In addition, such shopping unit is permitted one sign stating the name or designation of such shopping unit or listing the names or designations of stores, shops or offices therein. Such sign shall be no greater in area than 48 square feet and shall be no higher than the height of the principal building. Any illumination of such sign shall be nonflashing, uncolored and confined to the face of such sign.
I.
Screening of commercial uses. Any lot used for commercial purposes
which abuts any permitted dwellings, public buildings or institutional
premises in the DTV District or other district along any lot line,
except a front lot line or side street line, shall be screened along
such lot line. Such screen shall be a solid wall or a solid fence
not less than four feet in height, together with a three-foot planting
strip along the outside face of such wall or fence, planted in shrubs
or evergreens. In lieu of such wall, fence and planting strip, a compact
evergreen hedge of not less than three feet in height at the time
of planting may be used. Such wall, fence, planting or hedge shall
be maintained in good condition, and no advertising shall be placed
thereon. Such screening shall be indicated on the site plan.
J.
Dumpsters are required in this zone where the property contains multiple
uses or units.
[Added 12-2-2019 by Ord.
No. 19-23]
A.
Purpose of district. The Commercial Office District is designed to
define those existing areas of the Township which exhibit both residential
and commercial characteristics. In this respect, these areas contain
a mixture of dwellings, business and combined uses such as home occupations
and professional offices in the home. The district designation has
been used to prevent intensive commercial development which would
produce excessive traffic conflicts in such districts.
B.
Permitted uses. In any CO District, no other than the following uses
shall be permitted, except as provided in this section:
(1)
Customary accessory uses and buildings.
(2)
Business and professional offices; banks; business schools.
(3)
One-family dwellings on lots adjoining an R District, subject
to the dimensional requirements of such R District.
(4)
Places of worship and related uses.
(5)
Township offices and facilities, but not including outdoor storage
areas.
(6)
Home occupations and professional offices in a dwelling, but
subject to maintaining the residential appearance of the property
and not paving such a large proportion of the lot as to impair such
residential appearance or create incompatibility with adjoining residential
properties, as determined by the Township Planning Board.
(7)
Funeral homes; mortuaries.
(8)
Off-street parking in connection with commercial uses.
D.
Area, yard and building dimensions. In any CO District, the following
dimensional requirements shall apply, unless otherwise excepted:
(2)
Minimum yards:
(a)
Front: 20 feet, plus one foot for each two feet of height over
30 feet.
(b)
Side: five feet, except that when abutting an R District, the
side yard requirement of such R District shall apply to the abutting
yard.
(c)
Both sides: 25% of lot width at the front building line.
(d)
Rear: same as side yard requirements.
(3)
Maximum building dimensions:
(a)
Height: 40 feet and three stories, except for lots contiguous
to a residential district where the commercial building is within
80 feet of the contiguous lot line. In this case, the height requirements
of a residential district shall apply.
(b)
Lot coverage: 30%.
(c)
Floor area ratio (FAR): 0.4.
(4)
Open space. There shall be a minimum of 15% open space.
A.
Permitted uses. In any CN District, no other than the following uses shall be permitted, except as provided in Subsection B:
(1)
All uses permitted in the CO District, except business schools.
(2)
Private clubs and service organizations.
(3)
Retail establishments serving local needs, including, but not
limited to, the sale of groceries, baked goods, office supplies, flowers
and the dispensing of pharmaceutical products.
(4)
Personal and consumer service establishments, such as beauty
shops and barbershops.
(5)
Indoor theaters.
(7)
Restaurants designed and used primarily to serve customers consuming
food inside the restaurant building. Drive-up windows for service
in automobiles and takeout counters, as accessory uses, are permitted.
Consumption of food or beverages in automobiles on the premises is
prohibited.
[Amended 2-16-2021 by Ord. No. 21-08]
(8)
Art, music and dance studios.
(9)
Hospitals and related uses, but not including animal hospitals.
(10)
Animal clinics, provided there are no outdoor facilities.
(11)
Taverns.
B.
Conditional uses. In any CN District, the following conditional uses may be permitted, subject to the provisions of Article XXVIII:
C.
Area, yard and building dimensions. In any CN District, the following
dimensional requirements shall be applied, unless otherwise excepted:
(2)
(4)
Open space. There shall be a minimum of 10% open space.
D.
Integrated shopping units. Nothing in this section shall be construed to prevent the construction or erection of a series or row of attached stores, shops or offices on a single piece of property, or a composite of lots under one ownership, where such a grouping forms an integrated limited shopping unit. Such unit shall be constructed or erected in accordance with a plot plan and shall meet any applicable dimensional requirements set forth in this section for the CN District. Each such integrated shopping unit shall consist of a group of four or more individual shops or offices and shall have a uniform architectural design and appearance, which shall not be so markedly incongruous with the character of the neighborhood as to be seriously detrimental to the value of adjacent or nearby properties. For this purpose, such design shall be approved in the course of the plot plan review by the Planning Board, in accordance with the above standard. Signs shall be in accordance with the provisions of Article XXV. In addition, such shopping unit is permitted one sign stating the name or designation of such shopping unit or listing the names or designations of stores, shops or offices therein. Such sign shall be no greater in area than 48 square feet and shall be no higher than the height of the principal building. Any illumination of such sign shall be nonflashing, uncolored and confined to the face of such sign.
E.
Screening of commercial uses. Any lot used for commercial purposes
which abuts any permitted dwellings, public buildings or institutional
premises in the CN District or other district along any lot line,
except a front lot line or side street line, shall be screened along
such lot line. Such screen shall be a solid wall or a solid fence
not less than four feet in height, together with a three-foot planting
strip along the outside face of such wall or fence, planted in shrubs
or evergreens. In lieu of such wall, fence and planting strip, a compact
evergreen hedge of not less than three feet in height at the time
of planting may be used. Such wall, fence, planting or hedge shall
be maintained in good condition, and no advertising shall be placed
thereon. Such screening shall be indicated on the plot plan. The Planning
Board may waive the screening requirements for that portion of a side
lot line between adjoining front yards where, in its opinion, such
screening would impair vision at entrance and exit points on the properties
affected.
[Amended 5-26-2004 by Ord. No. 04-07; 3-19-2018 by Ord. No. 18-08]
A.
The purpose of the COH - Commercial Office, Multistory District is
to encourage business, administrative and professional offices, banks,
business schools, funeral homes, hotels and theaters. Well-planned,
large-scale commercial developments that are designed in a comprehensive
manner that will contribute to the economic welfare of the Township
are also encouraged. Such large-scale development shall provide an
attractive and harmonious development within Clark and integrate the
needs of pedestrians, employees and vehicles in site design.
B.
Nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit the construction
of two or more principal uses on one piece of property, or composite
of lots under single ownership, where such development would form
an integrated unit with shared access and parking.
E.
Area, yard and building dimensions. In any COH District, the following
dimensional requirements shall apply unless otherwise excepted:
(2)
Minimum yards:
(a)
Front: 25 feet, plus one foot for each foot of building height
over 35 feet.
(b)
Side: one foot for each two feet of building height or 15 feet,
whichever is greater.
[1]
Accessory building or use: five feet.
(c)
Both sides: 25% of the lot width at the front building line.
(d)
Rear: same as side yard requirement.
(4)
Open space. There shall be a minimum of 15% open space.
F.
Parking.
(1)
Notwithstanding the parking requirements set forth in § 195-142, if there is more than one principal use on a lot or lots under single ownership, a shared parking arrangement shall be permitted if the uses are complementary. A shared parking arrangement shall mean that parking spaces can serve both uses on the property provided they have opposite, or complementary, peak parking demands as determined by nationally recognized standards and/or actual parking data and experience for the proposed uses.
(2)
In the event that an applicant requests approval for parking
to be shared between two uses, the ordinance requirements for parking
may be reduced where it can be demonstrated to the satisfaction of
the Board that the reductions are supported by analyses consistent
with nationally recognized standards and/or actual parking data and
experience for the proposed uses showing that the peak parking demands
of the two or more uses do not coincide and the accumulated parking
demand at any one time of the two or more uses does not exceed the
total capacity of the facility. The applicant shall also be required
to provide a legal instrument assuring the continued existence and
availability of the shared parking spaces in connection with the uses
they serve.
(a)
Parking shall be permitted within the setbacks.
A.
Permitted uses. In any CG District, no other than the following uses shall be permitted, except as provided in Subsection B:
A.
Permitted uses. In any CP District, only the following uses shall
be permitted:
(1)
Planned commercial development consisting of commercial uses,
such as retail stores and shops, personal service establishments,
professional and business offices, banks or other uses permitted in
the zone district and which are housed in any enclosed building or
buildings utilizing common facilities such as vehicle access, customer
parking, pedestrian walkways, and loading and unloading areas.
(2)
Retail establishments, including but not limited to the sale
of groceries and food items, baked goods, office supplies, flowers,
or the dispensing of pharmaceuticals.
(3)
Personal service establishments such as beauty shops and barbershops.
(4)
Instructional schools, such as business schools or art, music,
and dance studios.
(5)
Restaurants, including drive-up service as an accessory use.
On-premises consumption of food in vehicles is prohibited.
[Amended 2-16-2021 by Ord. No. 21-08]
(6)
Private clubs and service organizations.
(7)
Motor inns and hotels.
(8)
Indoor commercial recreation, including theaters and bowling
alleys.
(9)
Customary accessory uses and structures incidental to a permitted
use and subject to the applicable provisions of this Part 3.
B.
Area, yard, setback and building dimensions. In any CP District,
the following area, yard, setback, and dimensional requirements shall
apply, unless otherwise excepted:
(4)
Minimum floor area.
(a)
Each use shall occupy a minimum floor area of 3,000 square feet.
(b)
A development that consists primarily of retail and/or personal
service establishments shall include at least one major commercial
use that occupies a minimum floor area of 25,000 square feet or 25%
of the gross building floor area, whichever is greater.
(5)
Open space. There shall be a minimum of 15% open space.
C.
Other standards and requirements.
(1)
Access and circulation. Site access and circulation shall be
designed in accordance with an overall plan for site development to
permit the convenient, safe, orderly, and efficient movement of pedestrians
and vehicles. All entrance and exit driveways to public streets shall
be located to afford maximum safety to traffic on the public streets.
Cross-connections and cross-easements among properties may be required
to reduce vehicle use of public streets in general and for interlot
trips in commercial areas.
(a)
Access drives to public streets shall provide a minimum throat
length of at least 75 feet before first intersection by an access
aisle to ensure adequate driveway storage.
(b)
Access onto Central Avenue shall be limited to one ingress and
egress location for each conforming street frontage.
(c)
Where site conditions permit, a second access location on a
different arterial or collector street frontage for ingress and egress
shall be provided to reduce traffic movements onto Central Avenue.
(d)
Off-street parking and off-street loading shall be provided
in accordance with the applicable standards of this Part 3. Loading
and unloading areas must be of sufficient size and dimensions to accommodate
the numbers and types of vehicles that are likely to use and maneuver
in the area. Loading and unloading areas shall be located and designed
so that vehicles can maneuver safely and without obstructing a public
right-of-way or any parking space, parking lot aisle, fire lane, vehicular
circulation lane or pedestrian path or sidewalk or pedestrian crossing.
(2)
Parking lot setback and landscaping.
(a)
Parking lots shall be set back a minimum of 20 feet from the
right-of-way of a public street. The setback area shall be landscaped
with shade trees and shrubs adaptable to the location and able to
provide low-level screening of the view of the parking lot. At least
one shade tree for each 40 feet of frontage shall be provided.
(b)
In addition to landscaping at the periphery of the parking lot along public streets as required in Subsection C(2)(a) above, the interior of the parking lot shall be landscaped with at least one tree for every 20 parking spaces, which shall be planted in suitably prepared and protected landscaped islands.
(3)
Signs. Business signs shall be permitted, subject to the provisions of Article XXV, Signs, except as modified below by the following restrictions and standards:
(a)
A maximum of one freestanding business sign and one wall-mounted
business sign is permitted per property, except that on properties
with access and frontage on more than one street, each such frontage
may be permitted one freestanding sign and one wall sign.
(b)
On properties containing more than one building or having a
building occupied by multiple tenants, each building or tenant may
have one wall-mounted business sign on the building facade.
(c)
No wall-mounted business sign shall exceed 10% of the facade of the building wall on which it is located. Where a building is permitted more than one wall sign as provided in Subsection C(3)(b) above, then each sign shall be limited to 10% of the facade area of that portion of the building wall on which it is mounted that is attributable to that business.
(d)
Freestanding business signs.
[1]
A freestanding business sign shall not exceed 80 square feet
in area or a height in excess of 20 feet. Freestanding business signs
shall maintain a ground clearance of at least eight feet if such signs
are more than six feet in height.
[2]
The information displayed on a freestanding sign shall be limited
to the name of the development and its logo and the street number.
If more than one business use occupies the site, then each such business
use which occupies 35% or more of the total building floor area on
the site may also display its business sign and logo on the freestanding
sign. The use of a freestanding sign in the CP District as a directory
sign to display the names, logo, or designation of a use which occupies
less than 35% of the total building floor area is not permitted.
(e)
No freestanding business sign which is six square feet or more
in area shall be located any closer than 100 feet to a freestanding
business sign which is six square feet or more in area.
(f)
No roof-mounted signs shall be permitted.
(g)
A signage plan shall be required with the submission of any
site plan for approval. The signage plan shall identify the location
and type of all proposed business signs and visually represent their
lettering, illumination, color and height. The approving authority
may apply such restrictions on color(s), size, location, sign types,
letter height, illumination, or mounting height as it deems appropriate
to the purpose of encouraging coordinated design to achieve a desirable
visual environment. Signs subsequently displayed by the development
or an activity within the development shall comply with the approved
signage plan.
(4)
Outdoor storage and display. There shall be no storage, sale
or display of merchandise outside a completely enclosed building.
[Added 6-21-2010 by Ord. No. 10-09]
A.
Purpose of district. The purpose of the Commercial Industrial District
is to encourage well-planned, larger-scale commercial development
in a comprehensive manner, integrating the needs of pedestrians, employees
and vehicles. All of the parcels on the east and west side of Terminal
Avenue and on Central Avenue and on the south side of Westfield Avenue
which are currently zoned IL Limited Industrial are included in the
new CI Commercial Industrial district. The larger commercial properties
on Central Avenue which are currently zoned CG should also be included
in the new CI zone.
B.
Permitted uses. In the CI District, only the following uses shall be permitted, except as provided in Subsection C:
(1)
Retail establishments.
(2)
Personal and consumer service uses.
(3)
Supermarkets.
(4)
Wholesale price clubs and big-box retail stores.
(5)
Restaurants and eating and drinking establishments.
(6)
Banks and financial institutions, including drive-through banks.
(7)
Art, music and dance studios.
(8)
Shopping centers and mixed-use development.
(9)
Motor inns and hotels.
(10)
Banquet and catering facilities.
(11)
General, administrative, executive and professional offices.
(12)
Hospitals and related uses.
(13)
Medical offices.
(14)
Veterinary hospitals and animal clinics.
(15)
Computer and data processing centers.
(16)
Research laboratories for scientific or industrial research
or testing.
(17)
Limited manufacturing as defined herein.
(18)
Public uses and buildings.
(19)
Indoor commercial recreational facilities.
(20)
The following accessory uses shall be permitted:
(a)
Outdoor seating in conjunction with a permitted restaurant or
eating and drinking establishment.
(b)
Other accessory uses, structures and buildings which are customary
and accessory to the principal use.
(c)
Day-care center.
(d)
Off-street parking.
(f)
Signs.
(g)
Storage areas.
(h)
Structured parking garages, either within the principal building or as a standalone structure, including below- and above-grade parking, and notwithstanding § 195-190D, shall be subject to the same area, yard and building dimensions as principal uses in the CI Overlay District, except that the height shall be restricted to 36 feet in height.
D.
Area, yard and building dimensions. In any CI District, the following
dimensional requirements shall apply:
E.
Parking requirements.
(1)
Minimum parking requirements shall adhere to the requirements as set forth in Article XXIV and to the following requirements:
(2)
Parking design.
(a)
For properties with frontage on Terminal Avenue, not more than
10% of all required parking facilities shall be located between the
building line and the street line.
(b)
No parking shall be located nearer than 20 feet to any property
line or street right-of-way line. This does not apply to interior
lot lines in the case of multiple lots developed as a single comprehensive
development.
(c)
All parking and service areas shall be screened from the view
of streets.
(d)
The parking setback area shall be landscaped with shade trees
and shrubs adaptable to the location and able to provide low-level
screening of the view of the parking lot. At least one shade tree
for each 40 feet of frontage shall be provided.
(e)
In addition to landscaping at the periphery of the parking lot along public streets as required in Subsection E(2)(d) above, the interior of all surface parking lots shall be landscaped with at least one tree for every 20 parking spaces, which shall be planted in suitably prepared and protected landscaped islands.
F.
Additional requirements.
(1)
Design. The design standards for nonresidential development provided in Article XVI shall be addressed.
(2)
Outdoor storage. Any area used for outdoor storage shall not
be located within the front yard and shall be enclosed by a wall or
fence. Landscaping shall also be provided if visible from a public
roadway or residential dwelling. There shall be no storage, sale or
display of merchandise outside a completely enclosed building or storage
area.
[Added 4-15-2013 by Ord. No. 13-06]
A.
Purpose of district.
(1)
The Limited Commercial Industrial District (LCI) includes the
properties on the block formed by the Garden State Parkway, Central
Avenue, Raritan Road and Walnut Avenue, with the exception of the
office development in the existing COH Zone.
(2)
It is the purpose of the LCI District to encourage the beneficial
redevelopment of property currently occupied by obsolete industrial
buildings and/or existing retail and commercial buildings with comprehensively
designed developments integrating buildings, parking, landscaping,
signage, lighting, pedestrian walkways, vehicular access, and attractive
architectural elements.
(3)
The vision for a retail and commercial center in Clark depicts
a vibrant hub of community activity. We envision a future in which
this area is highly accessible to pedestrians, bikers, transit, and
automotive modes of travel. This area should be a place where people
will come to stroll, walk, talk, work, buy food and drink, and conduct
their daily business.
(4)
This area should be planned to develop over time into a thriving,
economically sustainable commercial center that provides many of the
goods and services that residents need on a daily basis to reduce
the number of resident trips outside of the Township.
(5)
Consistent with this vision, any future development should be
designed to allow this area to evolve into a community focal point
and should evoke a sense of place on a human scale that is consistent
with the suburban nature of the remainder of the town.
(6)
Clark Township's dedication to a vision for our suburban community
should be evidenced in our commercial center by our dedication to
environmentally friendly and green building practices. A central architectural
focus such as a fountain, plaza, clock tower or landscaped boulevards
should encourage people to linger and enjoy the ambiance of the suburban
setting.
B.
Permitted uses. In the LCI District, only the following uses shall be permitted, except as provided in Subsection C:
(1)
Excluding a supermarket, no more than one additional retail
establishment may occupy space measuring between 45,001 square feet
and 80,000 square feet.
(2)
Retail establishments of 45,000 square feet or less.
(3)
Supermarkets of 80,000 square feet or less.
(4)
Personal and consumer service uses.
(5)
Hotels.
(6)
Restaurants and eating and drinking establishments.
(7)
Banquet and catering facilities.
(8)
Banks and financial institutions, including drive-through banks.
(9)
Art, music and dance studios.
(10)
Pharmacies, including drive-through windows.
(11)
General, administrative, executive or professional offices.
(12)
Public uses and buildings.
(13)
Medical offices.
(14)
Veterinary hospitals and animal clinics.
(15)
Computer and data processing centers.
(16)
Indoor commercial recreational facilities, including but not
limited to health clubs, gyms and fitness centers.
(17)
Shopping centers comprised of some or all of the preceding principal
uses.
(18)
Day-care or child-care center.
(19)
The following accessory uses shall be permitted:
(a)
Outdoor seating in conjunction with a permitted restaurant or
eating and drinking establishment.
(b)
Other accessory uses, structures and buildings which are customary
and accessory to the principal use.
(c)
Day-care or child-care center.
(d)
Off-street parking and loading. Structured parking is allowed, provided it meets the requirements of § 195-136.1B(20)(h).
(f)
Signs, as permitted herein and in accordance with Article XXV.
[Amended 2-16-2021 by Ord. No. 21-08]
(g)
Storage buildings, limited to the storage of materials owned
and used only by the permitted use(s). Outside storage is not allowed.
(h)
Fences and walls.
E.
Area, yard and building dimensions. In the LCI District, the following
dimensional requirements shall apply:
(3)
(4)
Once final site plan approval has been given to a shopping center, the requirements in Subsection E(1), (2) and (3) above shall not apply to any proposed subdivision of the property, whether the lots are in common ownership or not, provided that appropriate cross easements for access, parking, drainage, utilities, other shared facilities and the maintenance of common areas have been executed between the owners of the lots and have been provided to the Township of Clark for review and approval in order to ensure that the development will continue to function in accordance with the approved site plan.
F.
Parking and loading requirements.
(1)
Notwithstanding Article XXIV, the minimum parking requirements shall adhere to the requirements as set forth below, which shall take precedence over Article XXIV in the case of any conflict:
(a)
For all retail uses within shopping centers or mixed-use developments:
one parking space per 200 square feet of gross floor area.
(b)
For medical office uses: one parking space per 150 square feet
of gross floor area.
(c)
For a freestanding restaurant on a separate pad site: one parking
space per three seats.
(d)
There shall be no additional parking requirement for any square
footage devoted solely to ancillary storage, office or employee lunchrooms
on any mezzanine space within that portion of a building occupied
by the individual use to which the storage, office and/or employee
lunchroom is ancillary.
(e)
Notwithstanding the provisions of § 195-141A(2) and (3) of Article XXIV, each parking space within a shopping center or mixed-use development shall be a minimum of nine feet by 18 feet, and each aisle providing access to perpendicular parking spaces shall be a minimum of 22 feet for one-way aisles and 24 feet for two-way aisles.
(f)
Notwithstanding the provisions of § 195-91F, the development shall be required to provide safe and adequate pedestrian circulation throughout the complex and minimize to the greatest extent possible conflicts between pedestrians and vehicles.
(g)
Deferred or land-banked parking requirements for the LCI District.
[1]
When an applicant can demonstrate that fewer than
the total number of parking spaces than required will satisfactorily
meet the parking requirements of the proposed use, the Planning Board
may defer or land-bank that number of parking spaces that are not
immediately needed, subject to the following:
[a]
No more than 20% of the total number of required
spaces shall be land-banked.
[b]
The applicant shall provide a site plan that shows
that the required number of spaces, if needed, can be provided on
site without exceeding the maximum impervious coverage.
[c]
All land-banked spaces are required to meet all
of the applicable requirements of the Township zoning and design requirements,
including drainage and lighting, and, to the extent necessary, variances
and waivers shall be applied for and obtained.
[d]
Those parking spaces which are not immediately
required shall be maintained in the interim as lawn or landscaped
open space, until and if such spaces are needed in the future.
[e]
The land-banked parking area shall not count towards
the minimum open space requirement for the site.
[f]
Within one year of initial occupancy, a post-construction
parking analysis shall be conducted by the applicant to demonstrate
that sufficient parking is available on site without the provision
of the land-banked spaces.
[g]
The construction of the land-banked parking spaces
may occur either when the Zoning Officer of the Township or the Planning
Board, upon a vote of its members, determines that such spaces are
required to fulfill the parking needs of the tenant or user of the
site, or if and when the owner so chooses.
[h]
No amendment to the site plan shall be required
for such installations, but a building permit shall be required.
[i]
Such spaces shall be constructed within six months
of such action.
[j]
The property owner shall provide a performance
bond sufficient to cover the costs of construction of the land-banked
parking area. The Planning Board shall authorize the release of the
performance bond upon submittal and acceptance of the post-construction
analysis.
(2)
Parking design.
(a)
For properties with frontage on Walnut Avenue, none of the required
parking facilities shall be located between the building line and
Walnut Avenue, and screening with landscaping and/or fences or walls
shall be provided between the street and any structure on the property.
(b)
No parking shall be located nearer than 20 feet to any property
line, paved access drive or street right-of-way line. This does not
apply to interior lot lines in the case of multiple lots developed
as a single comprehensive development.
(c)
All parking and service areas shall be screened with landscaping
and/or fencing.
(d)
The parking area shall be landscaped with shade trees and shrubs
adaptable to the location and able to provide low-level screening
of the view of the parking lot. At least one shade tree for each 40
feet of frontage shall be provided unless adequate evergreen screening
is provided. No shade tree shall obstruct the view of any use or sign
in close proximity to the street.
(e)
In addition to landscaping at the periphery of the parking lot along public streets as required in Subsection F(2)(d) above, the interior of all surface parking lots shall be landscaped with at least one tree for every 25 parking spaces, which shall be planted in suitably prepared and protected landscaped islands or medians.
(3)
Loading requirements.
(a)
No loading dock or service area may be directly located on or
visible from any street frontage.
(b)
Shared loading areas are encouraged. Individual uses on pad
sites are not required to provide a designated loading area, provided
that the use can demonstrate that none is needed and loading/unloading
activities occur at off-peak hours for the business and/or the shopping
center.
(c)
No loading or unloading shall occur between 11:00 p.m. and 7:00
a.m. for any business/occupant located within a building abutting
a residential zone.
(d)
Motor vehicles shall not idle more than three minutes in accordance
with New Jersey state statute.
G.
Additional requirements.
(1)
Notwithstanding the provisions of § 195-146C of this chapter, where a lot in the LCI Zone has a minimum of 1,000 feet of frontage on a public street, more than one driveway shall be permitted along that street, provided that the vehicular circulation to and from the street will be facilitated by a traffic signal at the main entrance to any shopping center or mixed-use development measuring at least 100,000 gross square feet (GSF) and that the center lines of separate driveways shall be spaced at least 350 feet apart.
(2)
[1]For applications in the LCI Zone:
(a)
A traffic impact study of the proposed development and surrounding
areas shall be required.
(b)
A fiscal impact study shall be required and submitted as part
of the site plan review process.
(c)
A conceptual plan shall be submitted to the Planning Board for
approval prior to the submission of a site plan application.
[1]
Editor’s Note: Former Subsection G(2), Signage, was
repealed 4-6-2015 by Ord. No. 15-06. Said ordinance also redesignated
former Subsection G(3) as Subsection G(2).
A.
Permitted uses. In any I District, no other than the following uses shall be permitted, under the performance standards in § 195-122, except as provided in Subsection B:
(1)
Light manufacturing; laboratory for scientific or industrial
research or testing; packaging and bottling establishment, but not
a cannery; wholesale business establishment; distribution plant or
food locker; indoor storage building or warehouse, but not including
a truck terminal.
(2)
The following accessory uses shall be permitted:
(a)
Storage areas and buildings as accessory uses shall preferably
be confined to enclosed buildings, but may be permitted in outdoor
areas or compounds, providing that such an area or compound shall
be screened on all sides by a solid masonry wall, solid fence or dense
evergreen planting not less than six feet in height. Such accessory
storage shall not exceed 10% of the lot area and shall be so arranged
at the rear of the building as to be minimally visible from a street.
No unscreened outdoor storage areas shall be permitted.
(b)
Customary other accessory structures and buildings.
(3)
Printing or publishing establishment.
(4)
Public buildings and uses.
(5)
Craftsman's or contractor's shop, such as carpentry, plumbing,
welding, electrician or machine shop.
B.
Conditional uses. In any I District, the following conditional uses may be permitted pursuant to the provisions of Article XXVIII:
(1)
Public utility installations.
(2)
Contractor's storage yards and other similar yards for the storage
of materials and heavy machinery, and lumberyards and garden supply
and equipment centers, provided that such uses shall be adequately
screened by evergreen plantings or fences in the manner required and
are located at least 400 feet distant from any residential district.
C.
Area, yard and building dimensions. In any I District, the following
dimensional requirements shall apply:
(3)
Maximum building dimensions:
(a)
Height: 40 feet and three stories.
(b)
Lot coverage: 35% buildings; 50% parking areas and access driveways;
15% open space, minimum.
(c)
No building shall be located any less than 150 feet from any
dwelling in an adjacent R District. This provision shall also apply
to outdoor storage areas, but shall not include off-street parking
areas.
(d)
No building or outdoor storage area shall be located any less than 50 feet from an abutting R District, and, in such instances, outdoor storage areas shall be screened in the manner prescribed in § 195-145.
(e)
Floor area (minimum): 5,000 square feet.
D.
Design and site requirements.
(1)
Landscaping.
(a)
All portions of a lot not covered by buildings and outdoor storage
enclosures and pedestrian and vehicular surfaces shall be landscaped
and thereafter maintained in good condition. "Landscaping" shall mean
the planting of grass, shrubs, trees and other comparable ground cover.
Appropriate foundation plantings along the front building line shall
be provided.
(b)
When the lot, or portion thereof, on which parking or loading
spaces are located abuts the rear line or sideline of, or is across
the street from, any land in a residential district, a solid wall,
solid fence or compact evergreen planting no less than four feet in
height shall be provided and maintained in good condition. Such screen
shall be located adjacent to parking or loading areas rather than
on the periphery of the lot.
(c)
No luminaries on off-street parking areas shall be more than
10 feet above ground level and shall be arranged and designed so as
not to cause offensive light or glare in abutting or nearby residential
properties.
(2)
Architectural appearance. No permit shall be granted in an I
District for a building or use if the design or construction of the
building is so markedly incongruous with the character of the neighborhood
as to be seriously detrimental to the value of adjacent or nearby
property. For this purpose, the Planning Board shall review all plans.
[Added 6-21-2010 by Ord. No. 10-11]
A.
Purpose of overlay district. The purpose of the COR Overlay District
is to permit the development of modern, functional and comprehensive
research and development facilities, including administrative and
executive offices and accessory facilities, such as training and educational
facilities, cafeterias and conference centers, that will contribute
to the economic welfare of the Township and will constitute an attractive
and harmonious development within Clark Township.
B.
Permitted uses. In the COR Overlay District, only the following uses shall be permitted, except as provided in Subsection C:
(1)
Research laboratories for scientific or industrial research
or testing.
(2)
Pilot plants as defined herein.
(3)
Limited manufacturing as defined herein.
(4)
General, administrative, executive and professional offices.
(5)
Banks.
(6)
Computer and data processing centers.
(7)
Public uses and buildings.
(8)
The following accessory uses shall be permitted:
(b)
Day-care centers for children of employees only.
(c)
Restaurants or cafeterias serving meals only to employees and
guests of the principal uses.
(d)
Conference and in-service training facilities.
(e)
Indoor and outdoor recreation facilities, such as but not limited
to tennis courts, basketball courts, jogging paths and exercise stations.
(f)
Other accessory uses, structures and buildings which are customary
and accessory to the principal use.
(g)
Structured parking garages, either within the principal building or as a standalone structure, including below- and above-grade parking, and notwithstanding § 195-190D, shall be subject to the same area, yard and building dimensions as principal uses in the COR Overlay District, except that the height shall be restricted to 36 feet in height.
(h)
Off-street parking.
(i)
Signs.
(j)
Storage areas.
D.
Area, yard and building dimensions. In any COR District, the following
dimensional requirements shall apply:
(2)
Minimum yards:
(a)
Front: 40 feet.
(b)
Rear: 25 feet.
(c)
Side: 30 feet for one; a total 60 feet for both side yards.
[1]
For interior lot lines, in the case of multiple
lots developed as a single comprehensive development, zero lot lines
shall be permitted. If developed as a single comprehensive development,
subject to a joint development plan, such lots need not be under common
ownership.
E.
Parking and loading requirements.
(1)
Minimum parking requirements in the COR Overlay District:
(a)
For research and development facilities: one parking space per
500 square feet of gross floor area or one parking space per 1.5 employees,
whichever is lesser.
(b)
For office space separate and apart from research and development
facilities: one parking space per 250 square feet of gross floor area.
(c)
For pilot plants or space used for limited manufacturing: one
parking space per 400 square feet of gross floor area.
(2)
Deferred or land-banked parking requirements for the COR Overlay
District.
(a)
When an applicant can demonstrate that fewer than the total
number of parking spaces than required will satisfactorily meet the
parking requirements of the proposed use, the Planning Board may defer
or land-bank that number of parking spaces that are not immediately
needed, subject to the following:
[1]
No more than 25% of the total number of required
spaces shall be land-banked.
[2]
The applicant shall provide a site plan that shows
that the required number of spaces, if needed, can be provided on
site without exceeding the maximum impervious coverage.
[3]
All land-banked spaces are required to meet all
of the applicable requirements of the Township zoning and design requirements,
including drainage and lighting, and, to the extent necessary, variances
and waivers shall be applied for and obtained.
[4]
Those parking spaces which are not immediately
required shall be maintained in the interim as lawn or landscaped
open space, until and if such spaces are needed in the future.
[5]
The land-banked parking area shall not count towards
the minimum open space requirement for the site.
[6]
Within one year of initial occupancy, a post-construction
parking analysis shall be conducted by the applicant to demonstrate
that sufficient parking is available on site without the provision
of the land-banked spaces.
[7]
The construction of the land-banked parking spaces
may occur either when the Zoning Officer of the Township or the Planning
Board, upon a vote of its members, determines that such spaces are
required to fulfill the parking needs of the tenant or user of the
site, or if and when the owner so chooses.
[8]
No amendment to the site plan shall be required
for such installations, but a building permit shall be required.
[9]
Such spaces shall be constructed within six months
of such action.
[10]
The property owner shall provide a performance
bond sufficient to cover the costs of construction of the land-banked
parking area. The Planning Board shall authorize the release of the
performance bond upon submittal and acceptance of the post-construction
analysis.
(3)
Parking design.
(a)
For properties with frontage on Terminal Avenue, not more than
10% of all required parking facilities shall be located between the
building line and the street line.
(b)
No parking shall be located nearer than 20 feet to any property
line or street right-of-way line. This does not apply to interior
lot lines in the case of multiple lots developed as a single comprehensive
development.
(c)
All parking and service areas shall be screened from the view
of streets.
(d)
The parking setback area shall be landscaped with shade trees
and shrubs adaptable to the location and able to provide low-level
screening of the view of the parking lot. At least one shade tree
for each 40 feet of frontage shall be provided.
(e)
In addition to landscaping at the periphery of the parking lot along public streets as required in Subsection E(3)(d) above, the interior of all surface parking lots shall be landscaped with at least one tree for every 20 parking spaces, which shall be planted in suitably prepared and protected landscaped islands.
F.
Additional requirements.
(1)
Design. The design standards for nonresidential development provided in Article XVI are applicable to all development applications.
(2)
Outdoor storage. Any area used for outdoor storage shall not
be located within the front yard and shall be enclosed by a wall or
fence. Landscaping shall also be provided if visible from a public
roadway or residential dwelling. There shall be no storage, sale or
display of merchandise outside a completely enclosed building or storage
area.
A.
Purpose of district. This district is to apply to areas owned and
occupied by the Township, county or state, or agencies thereof, on
a permanent basis, for public purposes.
B.
Permitted uses. Permitted uses shall include public buildings and uses, subject to the performance standards in § 195-122.
C.
Zoning in the event of reversion to private use. If the public use
of any areas in the P Public District is discontinued, and the property
reverts to private ownership or use, no new use shall be established
until another zone district is applied to this property by the Township
Council, following the submission of a recommendation by the Township
Planning Board.
A.
Purpose of district. It is the intent of this section, in furtherance
of the objectives of the Comprehensive Master Plan, to establish certain
districts wherein both land and water resources shall be preserved
free from encroachment by any residential, commercial or industrial
uses and buildings. The preservation of these designated areas in
their open and natural state is deemed necessary:
(1)
To reduce the amount of soil erosion along stream and river
banks to minimize sedimentation of such bodies of water.
(2)
To preserve the natural amenities of such areas.
(3)
To create and preserve open areas as separations between densely
settled urban areas or neighborhoods.
(4)
To preserve as much as possible the natural drainage characteristics
of the watershed to minimize floor or high-water damage.
(5)
To preserve the quality of bodies of water as sources of water
supply.
(6)
To provide opportunities for the use of these areas as parks
and recreation areas readily accessible to all parts of the community
and for the enjoyment of all inhabitants thereof.
B.
Permitted uses. In any O District, no other than the following uses shall be permitted, except as provided in Subsection C:
A.
Purpose of district. The purpose of the GC District is to allow for
development of a nine-hole, regulation-length golf course, while protecting
any wetland areas, on the sixty-seven-acre former Hyatt-General Motors
site, Block 143, Lot 1, to provide opportunities for use of this area
as a recreation area readily accessible to all parts of the community
and for the enjoyment of all inhabitants thereof.
[Added 6-21-2010 by Ord. No. 10-13]
A.
Purpose of district. The purpose of the R-TH Residential Townhouse
District is to allow moderate-density townhouses to be developed as
a transitional use between single-family homes and more intensive
nonresidential uses. Single-family detached residences as per the
R-75 District requirements are also permitted.
B.
Permitted uses. In any R-TH district, only the following uses shall be permitted, except as provided in Subsection C:
(1)
Single-family residences, subject to the minimum and maximum requirements set forth in § 195-126 for the R-75 District.
(2)
Townhouses.
(3)
Public buildings and uses.
(4)
Home occupations.
(5)
The following accessory uses shall be permitted:
(a)
In conjunction with townhouses, swimming pools, clubhouses and
similar indoor and outdoor recreation for use by residents and their
guests only.
(b)
Attached or detached private parking garages and/or off-street
parking.
(c)
Other accessory uses, structures and buildings customary and
accessory to the principal use.
(d)
Signs.
(e)
Parking to serve the principal use, located within 200 feet
of the property.
C.
Conditional uses. In the R-TH District, the following conditional
uses may be permitted pursuant to the provisions of this section:
(1)
Public utility installation.
D.
Area, yard and building dimensions. In any R-TH District, the following
dimensional requirements shall apply:
(1)
For single-family detached residences, the provisions in the R-75 District in § 195-126 shall apply.
(2)
Townhouses:
(b)
Minimum perimeter setback: 20 feet between a building and the
exterior lot line.
(d)
Maximum number of units per building: six units.
(f)
Maximum density: eight units per acre of site area.
(h)
Minimum open space coverage: 35%.
(i)
Minimum parking requirements shall be provided as per RSIS Standards.
(j)
Circulation shall be designed so that access to parking garages
shall be from on-site driveways, not the adjoining street. Parking
lots shall not be located between the building line and the street
line.
(k)
Affordable housing set-aside. A minimum of 20% of the units
shall be affordable to low- and moderate-income households, pursuant
to N.J.A.C. 5:97-6.4 and N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.
[Added 5-15-2017 by Ord.
No. 17-09; amended 9-18-2017 by Ord. No. 17-16]
A.
Purpose of district. The purpose of the R-B District is to allow
for the construction of multifamily residential buildings, including
townhouses and garden apartments, meeting the minimum density requirement
for inclusionary housing and providing for the required set-aside
of units within such developments affordable to low- and moderate-income
families, complying with the obligation of the Township to provide
a regional fair share of low- and moderate-income housing.
B.
Permitted uses. The permitted uses are townhouses and garden apartments.
C.
Development standards.
(1)
Definition of uses. Garden apartments include multiple dwellings
arranged in flats, up to 40 feet in height. Townhouses comprise single-family
dwellings attached side by side, up to 2 1/2 stories in height.
A half story is one within a gable roof, in which not over 1/2 of
the floor area of the full story below has a full ceiling height.
(2)
Density. The maximum density shall be 16 units per acre of site
area.
(3)
Affordable housing requirements. A minimum of 20% of the housing units shall be deed-restricted so as to be affordable to and occupied only by qualified low- and moderate-income family households, including very-low-income households, if applicable, in full accordance with the Township's Court-approved Affordable Housing Ordinance (Chapter 66 of the Township's Code).
(4)
Building requirements, garden apartments. Maximum building height
shall be 40 feet, and maximum building length shall be 120 feet.
(5)
Building requirements, townhouses. Maximum building height shall
be 2 1/2 stories and 35 feet, and there shall not be more than
six housing units per structure.
(6)
Setbacks and spacing, garden apartments. The minimum setback
from street and property lines shall be 50 feet, except that accessory
garages, if provided, may be within 20 feet of side or rear lot lines.
The minimum distance between buildings shall be 35 feet between fronts
and backs, and 20 feet end to end. The minimum setback from parking
areas and driveways shall be 10 feet.
(7)
Setbacks and spacing, townhouses. The minimum setback from streets
and property lines shall be 50 feet. The minimum separation between
buildings shall be 50 feet between fronts and backs, and 25 feet end
to end. The minimum setbacks from driveways and parking areas shall
be 20 feet from building fronts and 25 feet from building rears, and
20 feet on building ends.
(8)
Landscaped areas, buffer areas, and recreation facilities. All
areas not occupied by buildings, driveways, walkways, and parking
areas shall be suitably landscaped and shall be arranged such that
appropriate active and passive recreation facilities will be provided.
Where the site adjoins other zones on the side or rear, a suitable
landscaped buffer strip of at least five feet in width shall be provided
to form a visual screen.
(9)
Parking areas and access drives. A minimum of two parking spaces
shall be provided for each dwelling unit. For townhouses, one of these
spaces shall be provided within the unit or in a garage, except that
this requirement shall not apply to lower-income units. All off-street
parking areas shall be surfaced in accordance with Township standards.
No off-street parking shall be located within front yards or within
less than 10 feet from side and rear property lines.
D.
Affordable housing requirements.
(1)
LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLD
MODERATE-INCOME HOUSEHOLD
VERY-LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLD
Definitions. As used in this section, the following terms shall
have the meanings indicated:
A household with a total gross annual household income equal
to 50% or less of the regional median household income by household
size.
A household with a total gross annual household income in
excess of 50% but less than 80% of the regional median household income
by household size.
A household with a total gross annual household income equal
to 30% or less of the regional median household income by household
size.
(2)
Affordable units in this district shall not be age-restricted.
(3)
Affordable units in this district shall be architecturally similar
to the market rate units and shall be distributed among the market-rate
units rather than isolated.
[Added 5-15-2017 by Ord.
No. 17-09; amended 6-19-2017 by Ord. No. 17-11; 9-18-2017 by Ord. No. 17-16; 11-20-2017 by Ord. No. 17-22]
A.
Purpose of district. The purpose of the R-B District is to allow
for the construction of multifamily residential buildings, including
townhouses and garden apartments, meeting the minimum density requirement
for inclusionary housing and providing for the required set-aside
of units within such developments affordable to low- and moderate-income
families, complying with the obligation of the Township to provide
a regional fair share of low- and moderate-income housing.
B.
Permitted uses. The permitted uses are townhouses and garden apartments.
C.
Development standards.
(1)
Definition of uses. Garden apartments include multiple dwellings
arranged in flats, up to 45 feet in height. Townhouses comprise single-family
dwellings attached side by side, up to 2 1/2 stories in height.
A half story is one within a gable roof, in which not over 1/2 of
the floor area of the full story below has a full ceiling height.
(2)
Density. The maximum density shall be 20 units per acre of site
area. A minimum of 168 units are permitted, with three-bedroom units
permitted for both market-rate and affordable units. At the applicant's
option, the maximum units permitted would be 177, provided that the
only permitted three-bedroom units would be affordable units to meet
the Township's obligation.
(3)
Lower-income housing requirements. A minimum of 16% of the housing units shall be sold or rented and shall be maintained for a minimum period of 30 years so as to be affordable to families and persons of low- and moderate-income, under the lower-income housing requirements specified in Subsection D below. If the total unit count is 168 units, the affordable housing set-aside shall be 27 units. If the total unit count is 177 units, the affordable housing set-aside shall be 28 units.
(4)
Building requirements, garden apartments. Maximum building height
shall be 45 feet.
(5)
Building requirements, townhouses. Maximum building height shall
be 2 1/2 stories and 35 feet, and there shall not be more than
six housing units per structure.
(6)
Setbacks and spacing, garden apartments. The minimum setback
from street and property lines shall be 50 feet, except that accessory
garages, if provided, may be within 20 feet of side or rear lot lines.
The minimum distance between buildings shall be 35 feet between fronts
and backs, and 20 feet end to end. The minimum setback from parking
areas and driveways shall be 10 feet.
(7)
Setbacks and spacing, townhouses. The minimum setback from streets
and property lines shall be 50 feet. The minimum separation between
buildings shall be 50 feet between fronts and backs, and 25 feet end
to end. The minimum setbacks from driveways and parking areas shall
be 20 feet from building fronts and 25 feet from building rears, and
20 feet on building ends.
(8)
Landscaped areas, buffer areas, and recreation facilities. All
areas not occupied by buildings, driveways, walkways, and parking
areas shall be suitably landscaped and shall be arranged such that
appropriate active and passive recreation facilities will be provided.
Where the site adjoins other zones on the side or rear, a suitable
landscaped buffer strip of at least five feet in width shall be provided
to form a visual screen.
(9)
Parking areas and access drives. A minimum of two parking spaces
shall be provided for each dwelling unit. For townhouses, one of these
spaces shall be provided within the unit or in a garage, except that
this requirement shall not apply to lower-income units. All off-street
parking areas shall be surfaced in accordance with Township standards.
No off-street parking shall be located within front yards or within
less than 10 feet from side and rear property lines.
D.
Affordable housing requirements.
(1)
LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLD
MODERATE-INCOME HOUSEHOLD
VERY-LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLD
Definitions. As used in this section, the following terms shall
have the meanings indicated:
A household with a total gross annual household income equal
to 50% or less of the regional median household income by household
size.
A household with a total gross annual household income in
excess of 50% but less than 80% of the regional median household income
by household size.
A household with a total gross annual household income equal
to 30% or less of the regional median household income by household
size.
(2)
Affordable units in this district shall not be age-restricted.
(3)
Affordable units in this district shall be architecturally similar
to the market-rate units and shall be distributed among the market-rate
units rather than isolated.