A.
Applicability of section. The following regulations shall govern the erection and alteration of buildings or structures and the use of land in the Residential District, except that they shall not apply to existing buildings or structures nor to the existing use of any building or structure but shall apply to any alteration of a building or structure for use for a purpose or in a manner substantially different from the use to which it was put before alteration. However, no building or structure qualifying as a nonconforming use shall be occupied for a greater portion of the year than such building or structure was occupied as a prior nonconforming use unless minimum lot size, setbacks, frontage, building line, and all other dimensional requirements for this district are met or a variance is granted by the Board of Adjustment. In either case, the requirements for septic systems, as stated in Chapter 391, Article I, of the Salem Code, shall be met. Additionally, no building permits or variances shall be granted that would be likely to result in an increase of the portion of the year during which a building or structure qualifying as a nonconforming use will be occupied if such increased occupation will affect adversely public health standards, water quality, sewage treatment requirements or the water quality of any lake, stream or surface water system. The restrictions of § 490-202, minimum lot size, minimum frontage, and minimum width at the building line, shall not apply to lots shown in a plat approved by the Salem Planning Board prior to the adoption of this chapter until January 1, 1981, except that if two or more lots are contiguous and are held in identical ownership and none of the lots are improved by a house, then the restrictions of § 490-202, minimum lot size, shall apply forthwith. Discontinuance of a nonconforming use for whatever reason for 12 consecutive months shall subject such property to all of the requirements of this section.
[Amended by the 1986 Town Meeting]
B.
Permitted uses. The following uses shall be permitted in the Residential
District:
(1)
One-family and two-family dwellings.
(2)
Private garages, gardens and orchards incidental to residential
use.
(3)
Churches, parish houses, convents, public and parochial schools,
municipal buildings and libraries, including structures and uses normally
incidental thereto.
(4)
Casual sales, such as garage sales, may be authorized by the
Selectmen on such terms and conditions as they may impose. However,
no person shall be granted permission to conduct such sales for more
than 36 hours in any calendar year. Neither shall any person be granted
permission to conduct such sales on more than three calendar days
in any calendar year.
(5)
Family day-care homes, as defined in RSA 170-E:2, if licensed
by the State of New Hampshire to operate as such under RSA 170-E.
(6)
In-law unit within a single-family dwelling.
C.
Restrictions. The following restrictions shall govern permitted and
all other uses in the Residential District:
(2)
When applicable, regulations and restrictions in the following
sections shall be met:
D.
Exception. The Board of Adjustment shall grant the following exceptions
in the Residential District upon finding that the specified conditions
exist:
[Amended by the 1995 Town Meeting]
(1)
The use of land for parks, playgrounds of a nonprofit type,
other private schools and hospitals, if the Board of Adjustment shall
find that all restrictions of this section are met, or an exception
or variance therefor granted, and that such land is reasonably adapted
to the use, and either that the use will so alleviate the burden of
similar facilities in the Town or that such use will be advantageous
to the health, morals, and general welfare of such numbers of persons
in such degree as will outweigh any diminution of property values
created thereby.
(2)
Relief from any of the provisions of this section shall be granted
for a specified temporary period of time if the Board of Adjustment
shall find either:
(a)
That a public emergency exists or is threatened of so serious
a character as to outweigh any diminution of surrounding property
values, or any fire or health dangers or any overcrowding of land
or public facilities occasioned by such relief; or
(b)
That such relief from any such provisions for one year would
be reasonably necessary for the ultimate use or development of land
in a permitted and desirable way, other than as a one-family dwelling,
and that such relief would be outweighed by the advantages available
from such ultimate use of the land.
E.
Variances. In granting variances, the following shall be generally
considered contrary to the spirit of this chapter in the Residential
District:
A.
Applicability of section. The following regulations shall govern the erection and alteration of buildings or structures and the use of land in the Rural Districts, except that they shall not apply to existing buildings or structures nor to the existing use of any building or structure but shall apply to any alteration of a building or structure for use for a purpose or in a manner substantially different from the use to which it was put before alteration. However, no building or structure qualifying as a nonconforming use shall be occupied for a greater portion of the year than such building or structure was occupied as a prior nonconforming use unless minimum lot size, setbacks, frontage, building line, and all other dimensional requirements for this district are met or a variance is granted by the Board of Adjustment. In either case, the requirements for septic systems, as stated in Chapter 391, Article I, of the Salem Code, shall be met. Additionally, no building permits or variances shall be granted that would be likely to result in an increase of the portion of the year during which a building or structure qualifying as a nonconforming use will be occupied if such increased occupation will affect adversely public health standards, water quality, sewage treatment requirements or the water quality of any lake, stream or surface water system. The restrictions of § 490-202, minimum lot size, minimum frontage, and setbacks, and § 490-804, Proximity to water bodies, shall not apply to lots shown in a plat approved by the Salem Planning Board prior to the adoption of this chapter until January 1, 1981, except that if two or more lots are contiguous and are held in identical ownership and none of the lots are improved by a house, then the restrictions of § 490-202, minimum lot size, shall apply forthwith. Discontinuance of a nonconforming use for whatever reason for 12 consecutive months shall subject such property to all of the requirements of this section.
B.
Permitted uses. The following uses shall be permitted in the Rural
District:
(1)
Any use permitted in the Residential District.
(2)
Farming and agriculture activities, as defined and restricted
by RSA 21:34-a; forestry; the keeping of cows, goats, sheep, horses,
and other domestic noncommercial livestock (excluding the keeping
of pigs); and greenhouses and nurseries as defined in RSA 433:21,
provided that no such use shall be allowed on a lot less than five
acres in size.
[Amended by the 1993 and 2009 Town Meetings]
C.
Restrictions. The following restrictions shall govern uses under
this section in the Rural Districts:
(2)
When applicable, regulations and restrictions in the following
sections shall be met:
D.
Exceptions. The Board of Adjustment shall grant the following exceptions
in the Rural District upon finding that the specified conditions exist:
(1)
The uses of land for the purposes specified in § 490-301D(1), if the Board of Adjustment shall find that the conditions specified in the respective sections are met.
(2)
Relief from any of the provisions of this section shall be granted
for a specified temporary period of time if the Board of Adjustment
shall find either:
(a)
That a public emergency exists or is threatened of so serious
a character as to outweigh any diminution of surrounding property
values, any fire, health or aesthetic dangers or any overcrowding
of land or of public facilities occasioned by such relief; or
(b)
That such relief from any such provisions for such temporary
period not exceeding one year would be reasonably necessary for the
ultimate use or development of land in a permitted or desirable way,
and that any disadvantage of such relief would be outweighed by the
advantages available from such ultimate use of the land.
(3)
Golf courses and ancillary structures such as clubhouses, driving
ranges, equipment sheds and other buildings necessary for the normal
operation of golf courses if and to the extent that the Board of Adjustment
shall find that such relief will not create a fire, sanitation, odor,
health or traffic hazard, and that such relief would tend to promote
more advantageous use of land in the immediate area, and that such
relief would not seriously diminish the value of surrounding property,
and that such relief would not be contrary to the spirit of this chapter.
[Added by the 1990 Town Meeting]
E.
Variances. In granting or denying variances in the Rural Districts,
the Board of Adjustment shall consider:
(1)
That variances which will or may require disproportionate expenditures
of public funds during the period in which the residential and commercial
districts are being developed are not in the spirit of this chapter
nor generally in the public interest.
(2)
The use of land for commercial or domestic piggeries shall be
considered contrary to the spirit of this chapter.
A.
Applicability of section. The following regulations shall govern the erection and alteration of buildings or structures and the use of land in the Rural Districts, except that they shall not apply to existing buildings or structures nor to the existing use of any building or structure but shall apply to any alteration of a building or structure for use for a purpose or in a manner substantially different from the use to which it was put before alteration. However, no building or structure qualifying as a nonconforming use shall be occupied for a greater portion of the year than such building or structure was occupied as a prior nonconforming use unless minimum lot size, setbacks, frontage, building line, and all other dimensional requirements for this district are met or a variance is granted by the Board of Adjustment. In either case, the requirements for septic systems, as stated in Chapter 391, Article I, of the Salem Code, shall be met. Additionally, no building permits or variances shall be granted that would be likely to result in an increase of the portion of the year during which a building or structure qualifying as a nonconforming use will be occupied if such increased occupation will affect adversely public health standards, water quality, sewage treatment requirements or the water quality of any lake, stream or surface water system. The restrictions of § 490-202, minimum lot size, setbacks, and minimum width at the building line, and § 490-804, Proximity to water bodies, shall not apply to lots shown in a plat approved by the Salem Planning Board prior to the adoption of this chapter until January 1, 1981, except that if two or more lots are contiguous and are held in identical ownership and none of the lots are improved by a house, then the restrictions of § 490-202, minimum lot size, shall apply forthwith. Discontinuance of a nonconforming use for whatever reason for 12 consecutive months shall subject such property to all of the requirements of this section.
B.
Permitted uses. The following uses shall be permitted in the Recreational
District:
C.
Restrictions. The following restrictions shall govern permitted and
all other uses in the Recreational District:
(2)
Sewage drainage disposal facilities, whether through septic
tanks, dry wells, leaching fields, or public systems, adequate for
the use intended, shall be available.
E.
Variances. In granting or denying variances in the Recreational District,
the Board of Adjustment shall consider:
(1)
That much of the land in the Recreational District has been
developed and used without regard to problems or public interest,
including but not limited to water pollution and sanitation, resulting
from such development and use.
(2)
That dangers of serious contamination of bodies of water, which
are great Town assets, and dangers of contamination of private water
supplies have resulted.
(3)
That the protection of such bodies of water and such water supplies
is in the public interest and in the spirit of this chapter.
(4)
That continuation of the practice of development of small lots
in the Recreational District is generally contrary to the public interest
and to the spirit of this chapter.
(5)
The use of land for mobile homes, mobile home developments and
trailers or trailer parks is considered contrary to the spirit of
this chapter.
A.
Permitted uses. In the Garden Apartment R-A District, a building
may be erected, constructed, reconstructed, altered, designed or used,
and a lot or premises may be used, for any of the following purposes
and for no other:
(1)
Any use permitted by right in the Residential District, in accordance
with the requirements of said district.
(2)
A dwelling for two or more families, provided that the entire
lot occupied by such dwelling shall be maintained in single ownership
throughout the life of the building.
(3)
A professional office or studio other than accessory to a use
otherwise permitted, provided that the number of such offices or studios
on any lot shall not exceed one for each 25 dwelling units or major
fraction thereof on the lot, and provided further that such office
or studio shall be located only on the street floor of any building
and shall have access provided thereto from other than a public hall.
(4)
Any accessory use permitted in the Residential District shall
be permitted in the R-A District.
B.
Restrictions.
(1)
Zoning dimensions: see § 490-202. Additionally:
(a)
No lot shall have an average depth of less than 150 feet. The
lot shall contain not less than 3,500 square feet for each dwelling
unit on each lot.
(b)
There shall be a front yard with a minimum depth of 40 feet;
side yards with no buildings erected nearer than 30 feet to any side
lot line; and a rear yard with a depth of not less than 30 feet. However,
cornices or cantilevered roofs may project not more than two feet,
and belt courses, windowsills, and other ornamental features may project
not more than six inches into a required yard. Paved terraces, steps
and walks (other than such as are needed for access to the buildings
on the lot) shall not project within 25 feet of a street or four feet
of a property line.
(2)
No building shall exceed a length of 160 feet.
(3)
A minimum distance of 40 feet shall be maintained between all
buildings on the same lot.
(4)
Any swimming pools provided on the lot shall conform to the
Town of Salem Swimming Pool Ordinance.
(5)
Open space. Except as otherwise required, usable open space
shall be provided on the same lot with dwellings containing three
or more dwelling units. Not less than 400 square feet for each dwelling
unit on said lot shall be provided. On any lot containing 15 or more
dwelling units, such usable open space shall be devoted to improved
and landscaped play and sitting areas for the use of the residents
thereof. The design, layout, and equipment of such play and sitting
areas shall be subject to approval by the Planning Board.
(6)
Outer courts. The minimum width of an outer court shall be 20
feet, and the depth thereof shall not exceed its width.
(7)
Inner courts. An inner court is permitted if the minimum dimension
of such court is equal to not less than 1/2 times the average height
of all surrounding walls in the case of nonresidential buildings and
not less than 1 1/2 times such height, but not less than 60 feet,
in the case of residential buildings. The height of walls surrounding
an inner court shall be measured from finished grade, at the base
thereto, to the top of such walls, except that in the case of roofs
with a slope exceeding five inches vertical to 12 inches horizontal,
the height shall be measured to the mean point between the top of
the said wall and the highest point of the roof.
(8)
Off-street parking requirements. For dwellings for three or
more families, there shall be provided garage space or paved off-street
parking space, or both, sufficient in area for the parking at one
time of not fewer than 1 1/2 times as many passenger vehicles as there
are dwelling units on the lot. Parking in front yards, within 10 feet
of any side or rear lot line or within 15 feet of any wall or portion
thereof of a three-or-more-family dwelling, which wall contains legal
windows, other than a legal bathroom or kitchen window, with a sill
height of less than eight feet above the level of said parking space,
is prohibited. If provided in the open, all required parking spaces
shall be individually identified by means of pavement markings.
C.
Exceptions. Any special exception use permitted in the Residential
District, upon approval of the Board of Adjustment.
[Amended by the 1982 Town Meeting]
A.
Applicability of section. The following regulations shall govern
the construction and alteration of buildings and structures and the
use of land in the Manufactured Housing Park District; except, however,
that these regulations shall not apply to an existing building, structure
or land if such existing building or structure or existing use of
any building, structure or land was a lawful use under the governing
provisions of prior zoning ordinances, nor to an alteration thereof
for a use or for any purpose or in any manner which is not substantially
different from that to which it was put before alteration. However,
in the event of discontinuance of a nonconforming use for whatever
reason for 12 consecutive months, then the following regulations shall
govern the erection and alteration of buildings and structures and
the use of land in the Manufactured Housing Park District.
D.
Exceptions. The Board of Adjustment shall grant the following exceptions
in the Manufactured Housing Park District upon finding that the specified
conditions exist: