[HISTORY: Adopted by the City Council of the City of Englewood 2-4-1986 by Ord. No.
86-01; amended in its entirety 7-23-2019 by Ord. No. 19-06. Subsequent amendments noted where applicable.]
The Legislature of the State of New Jersey has in N.J.S.A. 40:48-1
et seq. and N.J.S.A. 40:55D-1 et seq. delegated the responsibility
to local governmental units to adopt regulations designed to promote
the public health, safety, and general welfare of its citizenry.
A.
The flood hazard areas of the City of Englewood are subject to periodic
inundation which results in loss of life and property, health and
safety hazards, disruption of commerce and governmental services,
extraordinary public expenditures for flood protection and relief,
and impairment of the tax base, all of which adversely affect the
public health, safety, and general welfare.
B.
These flood losses are caused by the cumulative effect of obstructions
in areas of special flood hazard which increase flood heights and
velocities, and when inadequately anchored, damage uses in other areas.
Uses that are inadequately floodproofed, elevated or otherwise protected
from flood damage also contribute to the flood loss.
It is the purpose of this chapter to promote the public health,
safety, and general welfare, and to minimize public and private losses
due to flood conditions in specific areas by provisions designed to:
A.
Protect human life and health;
B.
Minimize expenditure of public money for costly flood control projects;
C.
Minimize the need for rescue and relief efforts associated with flooding
and generally undertaken at the expense of the general public;
D.
Minimize prolonged business interruptions;
E.
Minimize damage to public facilities and utilities such as water
and gas mains, electric, telephone and sewer lines, streets and bridges
located in areas of special flood hazard;
F.
Help maintain a stable tax base by providing for the sound use and
development of areas of special flood hazard so as to minimize future
flood blight areas;
G.
Ensure that potential buyers are notified that property is in an
area of special flood hazard; and
H.
Ensure that those who occupy the areas of special flood hazard assume
responsibility for their actions.
In order to accomplish its purposes, this chapter includes methods
and provisions for:
A.
Restricting or prohibiting uses which are dangerous to health, safety,
and property due to water or erosion hazards, or which result in damaging
increases in erosion or in flood heights or velocities;
B.
Requiring that uses vulnerable to floods, including facilities which
serve such uses, be protected against flood damage at the time of
initial construction;
C.
Controlling the alteration of natural floodplains, stream channels,
and natural protective barriers, which help accommodate or channel
floodwaters;
D.
Controlling filling, grading, dredging, and other development which
may increase flood damage; and
E.
Preventing or regulating the construction of flood barriers which
will unnaturally divert floodwaters or which may increase flood hazards
in other areas.
Unless specifically defined below, words or phrases used in
this chapter shall be interpreted so as to give them the meanings
they have in common usage and to give this chapter its most reasonable
application.
Areas subject to inundation by one-percent-annual-chance
shallow flooding (usually areas of ponding) where average depths are
between one and three feet. Base flood elevations (BFEs) derived from
detailed hydraulic analyses are shown in this zone.
Areas subject to inundation by one-percent-annual-chance
shallow flooding (usually sheet flow on sloping terrain) where average
depths are between one and three feet.
A request for a review of the local administrator's
interpretation of any provision of this chapter or a request for a
variance.
A designated AO, AH, or VO Zone on a community's Flood
Insurance Rate Map (FIRM) with a one-percent or greater annual chance
of flooding to an average depth of one to three feet where a clearly
defined channel does not exist, where the path of flood is unpredictable
and where velocity flow may be evident. Such flooding is characterized
by ponding or sheet flow.
The land in the floodplain within a community subject to
a one-percent or greater chance of flooding in any given year. It
is shown on the FIRM as Zone V, VE, V1-30, A, AO, A1-A30, AE, A99,
or AH.
The flood having a one-percent chance of being equaled or
exceeded in any given year.
The flood elevation shown on a published Flood Insurance
Study (FIS), including the Flood Insurance Rate Map (FIRM). For Zones
AE, AH, AO, and A1-30, the elevation represents the water surface
elevation resulting from a flood that has a one-percent or greater
chance of being equaled or exceeded in any given year.
Any area of the building having its floor subgrade (below
ground level) on all sides.
The most recent available flood risk guidance FEMA has provided.
The best available flood hazard data may be depicted on but not limited
to Advisory Flood Hazard Area Map, Work Map or preliminary FIS and
FIRM.
The most recent available flood elevation FEMA has provided.
The best available flood hazard data elevation may be depicted on
an Advisory Flood Hazard Area Maps, Work Maps or preliminary FIS and
FIRM.
A wall that is part of the structural support of the building
and is intended through its design and construction to collapse under
specific lateral loading forces without causing damage to the elevated
portion of the building or supporting foundation system.
Any man-made change to improved or unimproved real estate,
including but not limited to buildings or other structures, mining,
dredging, filling, grading, paving, excavation or drilling operations,
or storage of equipment of materials located within the area of special
flood hazard.
A nonbasement building built, in the case of a building in
an area of special flood hazard, to have the top of the elevated floor
elevated above the base flood elevation plus freeboard by means of
piling, columns (posts and piers), or shear walls parallel to the
flow of the water, and adequately anchored so as not to impair the
structural integrity of the building during a flood up to the magnitude
of the base flood. In an area of special flood hazard, "elevated building"
also includes a building elevated by means of fill or solid foundation
perimeter walls with openings sufficient to facilitate the unimpeded
movement of floodwaters.
The process of gradual wearing away of land masses.
A manufactured home park or subdivision for which the construction
of facilities for servicing the lots on which the manufactured homes
are to be affixed (including, at a minimum, the installation of utilities,
the construction of streets, and either final site grading or the
pouring of concrete pads) is completed before the effective date of
the floodplain management regulations adopted by a community.
The official map on which the Federal Insurance Administration
has delineated both the areas of special flood hazard and the risk
premium zones applicable to the community.
The official report provided in which the Federal Insurance
Administration has provided flood profiles, as well as the Flood Boundary
- Floodway Map and the water surface elevation of the base flood.
A general and temporary condition of partial or complete
inundation of normally dry land areas from:
Zoning ordinances, subdivision regulations, building codes,
health regulations, special purpose ordinances (such as a floodplain
ordinance, grading ordinance and erosion control ordinance) and other
applications of police power. The term describes such state or local
regulations, in any combination thereof, which provide standards for
the purpose of flood damage prevention and reduction.
Any combination of structural and nonstructural additions,
changes, or adjustments to structures which reduce or eliminate flood
damage to real estate or improved real property, water and sanitary
facilities, structures and their contents.
The channel of a river or other watercourse and the adjacent
land areas that must be reserved in order to discharge the base flood
without cumulatively increasing the water surface elevation more than
0.2 foot.
A factor of safety usually expressed in feet above a flood
level for purposes of floodplain management. "Freeboard" tends to
compensate for the many unknown factors that could contribute to flood
heights greater than the height calculated for a selected size flood
and floodway conditions, such as wave action, bridge openings, and
the hydrological effect of urbanization of the watershed.
The highest natural elevation of the ground surface prior
to construction next to the proposed or existing walls of a structure.
Any structure that is:
Listed individually in the National Register of Historic Places
(a listing maintained by the Department of the Interior) or preliminarily
determined by the Secretary of the Interior as meeting the requirements
for individual listing on the National Register;
Certified or preliminarily determined by the Secretary of the
Interior as contributing to the historical significance of a registered
historic district preliminarily determined by the Secretary to qualify
as a registered historic district;
Individually listed on a state inventory of historic places
in states with historic preservation programs which have been approved
by the Secretary of the Interior; or
Individually listed on a local inventory of historic places
in communities with historic preservation programs that have been
certified either:
The lowest floor of the lowest enclosed area (including basement).
An unfinished or flood-resistant enclosure, usable solely for the
parking of vehicles, building access or storage in an area other than
a basement is not considered a building's lowest floor, provided
that such enclosure is not built so to render the structure in violation
of other applicable nonelevation design requirements of 44 CFR 60.3.
A structure, transportable in one or more sections, which
is built on a permanent chassis and is designed for use with or without
a permanent foundation when attached to the required utilities. The
term "manufactured home" does not include a recreational vehicle.
A parcel (or contiguous parcels) of land divided into two
or more manufactured home lots for rent or sale.
Structures for which the start of construction commenced
on or after the effective date of a floodplain regulation adopted
by a community and includes any subsequent improvements to such structures.
A manufactured home park or subdivision for which the construction
of facilities for servicing the lots on which the manufactured homes
are to be affixed (including, at a minimum, the installation of utilities,
the construction of streets, and either final site grading or the
pouring of concrete pads) is completed on or after the effective date
of the floodplain management regulations adopted by the municipality.
The draft version of the FIRM released for public comment
before finalization and adoption.
A vehicle which is:
Built on a single chassis;
Four hundred square feet or less when measured at the longest
horizontal projections;
Designed to be self-propelled or permanently towable by a light-duty
truck; and
Designed primarily not for use as a permanent dwelling but as
temporary living quarters for recreational, camping, travel, or seasonal
use.
For other than new construction or substantial improvements
under the Coastal Barrier Resources Act (P.L. No. 97-348),[1] includes substantial improvements and means the date the
building permit was issued, provided that the actual start of construction,
repair, reconstruction, rehabilitation, addition, placement, or other
improvement was within 180 days of the permit date. The actual start
means either the first placement of permanent construction of a structure
on a site such as the pouring of a slab or footings, the installation
of piles, the construction of columns, or any work beyond the stage
of excavation, or the placement of a manufactured home on a foundation.
Construction does not include land preparation, such as clearing,
grading and filling, nor does it include the installation of streets
and/or walkways, nor does it include excavation for a basement, footings
or piers, or foundations or the erection of temporary forms, nor does
it include the installation on the property of accessory buildings,
such as garages or sheds not occupied as dwelling units or not part
of the main structure. For a substantial improvement, the actual start
of construction means the first alteration of any wall, ceiling, floor,
or other structural part of a building, whether or not that alteration
affects the external dimension of the building.
A walled and roofed building, a manufactured home, or a gas
or liquid storage tank that is principally aboveground.
Damage of any origin sustained by a structure whereby the
cost of restoring the structure to its before-damaged condition would
equal or exceed 50% of the market value of the structure before the
damage occurred.
Any reconstruction, rehabilitation, addition, or other improvement
of a structure, the cost of which exceeds 50% of the market value
of the structure before the start of construction of the improvement.
This term includes structures which have incurred substantial damage,
regardless of the actual repair work performed. The term does not,
however, include either:
Any project for improvement of a structure to correct existing
violations of state or local health, sanitary or safety code specifications
which have been identified by the local code enforcement officer and
which are the minimum necessary to assure safe living conditions;
or
Any alteration of an historic structure, provided that the alteration
will not preclude the structure's continued designation as an
historic structure.
A grant of relief from the requirements of this chapter which
permits construction in a manner that would otherwise be prohibited
by this chapter.
The failure of a structure or other development to be fully
compliant with this chapter. A new or substantially improved structure
or other development without the elevation certificate, other certifications,
or other evidence of compliance required in 44 CFR 60.3(b)(5), (c)(4),
(c)(10), (e)(2), (e)(4), or (e)(5) is presumed to be in violation
until such time as that documentation is provided.
[1]
Editor's Note: See 16 U.S.C. § 3501 et seq.
This chapter shall apply to all areas of special flood hazard
within the jurisdiction of the City of Englewood.
A.
The areas of special flood hazard for the City of Englewood, Community
No. 340031, identified and defined on the following documents prepared
by the Federal Emergency Management Agency:
(1)
A scientific and engineering report entitled "The Flood Insurance
Study of Bergen County, New Jersey (All Jurisdictions)" dated August
28, 2019.
(2)
Flood Insurance Rate Map for Bergen County, New Jersey (All Jurisdictions)
as shown on Index and Panels 34003C0211H, 34003C0212H, 34003C0213H,
34003C0214H, 34003C0276H, 34003C0277H, whose effective date is August
28, 2019.
(3)
Best available flood hazard data. These documents shall take precedence
over effective panels and FIS in construction and development regulations
only. Where the effective mapping or base flood elevation conflict
or overlap with the best available flood hazard data, whichever imposes
the more stringent requirement shall prevail.
B.
Any revisions thereto are hereby adopted by reference and declared
to be a part of this chapter. The Flood Insurance Study is on file
in the office of the City Clerk, City Hall, 2-10 North Van Brunt Street,
Englewood, New Jersey, and is available for public inspection during
regular office hours.
No structure or land shall hereafter be constructed, relocated
to, extended, converted, or altered without full compliance with the
terms of this chapter and other applicable regulations. The failure
to comply with any of the provisions of this chapter (including the
failure to comply with any conditions and safeguards established in
connection with conditions) shall constitute a violation. Any person
who violates this chapter or fails to comply with any of its requirements
shall, upon conviction thereof, be fined not more than $1,000 or imprisoned
for not more than 90 days, or both, for each violation. Nothing herein
contained shall prevent the City of Englewood from taking such other
lawful action as is necessary to prevent or remedy any violation,
including injunctive relief.
This chapter is not intended to repeal, abrogate, or impair
any existing easements, covenants, or deed restrictions. However,
where this chapter and other ordinances, easements, covenants, or
deed restrictions conflict or overlap, whichever imposes the more
stringent restrictions shall prevail.
In the interpretation and application of this chapter, all provisions
shall be:
The degree of flood protection required by this chapter is considered
reasonable for regulatory purposes and is based on scientific and
engineering considerations. Larger floods can and will occur on rare
occasions. Flood heights may be increased by man-made or natural causes.
This chapter does not imply that land outside the areas of special
flood hazard or uses permitted within such areas will be free from
flooding or flood damages. This chapter shall not create liability
on the part of the City of Englewood, any officer or employee thereof
or the Federal Insurance Administration for any flood damages that
result from reliance on this chapter or any administrative decision
lawfully made thereunder.
Nothing contained herein shall be construed so as to relieve
nor shall any approvals granted hereunder have the effect of relieving
an applicant for development from obtaining any and all New Jersey
Department of Environmental Protection permits or approvals otherwise
required by law.
A.
A development permit shall be obtained before construction or development begins, including placement of manufactured homes, within any area of special flood hazard established in § 222-7. Application for a development permit shall be made on forms furnished by the local administrator and may include, but not be limited to, plans in duplicate drawn to scale showing the nature, location, dimensions, and elevations of the area in question; existing or proposed structures, fill, storage of materials, drainage facilities; and the location of the foregoing.
B.
Specifically, the following information is required:
(1)
Elevation in relation to mean sea level of the lowest floor (including
basement) of all structures;
(2)
Elevation in relation to mean sea level to which any structure has
been floodproofed;
(3)
Certification by a registered professional engineer or architect that the floodproofing methods for any nonresidential structure meet the floodproofing criteria in § 222-17B(2); and
(4)
Description of the extent to which any watercourse will be altered
or relocated as a result of proposed development.
The Construction Code Official is hereby designated as the local
administrator to administer and implement this chapter by granting
or denying development permit applications in accordance with its
provisions.
Duties of the local administrator shall include, but not be
limited to:
A.
Permit review.
(1)
Review all development permits to determine that the permit requirements
of this chapter have been satisfied.
(2)
Review all development permits to determine that all necessary permits
have been obtained from those federal, state or local governmental
agencies from which prior approval is required.
(3)
Review all development permits to determine if the proposed development is located in the floodway. If located in the floodway, assure that the encroachment provisions of § 222-17C(1) are met.
B.
Use of other base flood and floodway data. When base flood elevation and floodway data have not been provided in accordance with § 222-7, Basis for establishing areas of special flood hazard, the City Manager shall obtain, review, and reasonably utilize any base flood elevation and floodway data available from a federal, state or other source, in order to administer § 222-17B(1), Residential construction, and § 222-17B(2), Nonresidential construction.
C.
Information to be obtained and maintained. The local administrator
shall:
(1)
Obtain and record the actual elevation (in relation to mean sea level)
of the lowest floor (including basement) of all new or substantially
improved structures, and whether or not the structure contains a basement.
(2)
For all new substantially improved floodproofed structures:
(a)
Verify and record the actual elevation (in relation to mean
sea level); and
(b)
Maintain the floodproofing certifications required in § 222-13B(3).
(3)
Maintain for public inspection all records pertaining to the provisions
of this chapter.
D.
Alteration of watercourses. The local administrator shall:
(1)
Notify adjacent communities and the New Jersey Department of Environmental
Protection, Bureau of Flood Control, prior to any alteration or relocation
of a watercourse and submit evidence of such notification to the Federal
Insurance Administration.
(2)
Require that maintenance is provided within the altered or relocated
portion of said watercourse so that the flood-carrying capacity is
not diminished.
E.
Substantial damage review. After an event resulting in building damages,
assess the damage to structures due to flood and nonflood causes.
(1)
Record and maintain the flood and nonflood damage of substantial
damage structures and provide a letter of substantial damage determination
to the owner and the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection,
Bureau of Flood Control.
(2)
Ensure substantial improvements meet the requirements of § 222-17B(1), Specific standards, Residential construction, § 222-17B(2), Specific standards, Nonresidential construction, and § 222-17B(3), Specific standards, Manufactured homes.
F.
Interpretation of FIRM boundaries. The local administrator shall make interpretations, where needed, as to the exact location of the boundaries of the areas of special flood hazards (for example, where there appears to be a conflict between a mapped boundary and actual field conditions). The person contesting the location of the boundary shall be given a reasonable opportunity to appeal the interpretation as provided in § 222-16.
A.
Appeal procedure.
(1)
The Planning Board of the City of Englewood shall be designated as
the appeal board to hear and decide appeals and requests for variances
from the requirements of this chapter; provided, however, that with
respect to an appeal or a request for a variance concerning any application
for development which would otherwise require the approval of the
Zoning Board of Adjustment, the Zoning Board of Adjustment shall act
as the appeal board.
(2)
The Planning Board shall hear and decide appeals when it is alleged
there is an error in any requirement, decision, or determination made
by the Construction Code Official in the enforcement or administration
of this chapter, and requests for variances from the requirements
of this chapter.
(3)
Hearings respecting such appeals or requests for variances shall
be conducted, and notice thereof provided, in accordance with the
provisions of N.J.S.A. 40:55D-10 and 40:55D-12.
(4)
Decisions rendered by the Planning Board shall be final, and any
further appeal therefrom shall be taken to the courts in accordance
with the applicable rules of court.
(5)
In passing upon such applications, the appeal board shall consider
all technical evaluations, all relevant factors, standards specified
in other sections of this chapter, and:
(a)
The danger that materials may be swept onto other lands to the
injury of others;
(b)
The danger to life and property due to flooding or erosion damage;
(c)
The susceptibility of the proposed facility and its contents
to flood damage and the effect of such damage on the individual owner;
(d)
The importance of the services provided by the proposed facility
to the community;
(e)
The necessity to the facility of a waterfront location, where
applicable;
(f)
The availability of alternative locations for the proposed use
which are not subject to flooding or erosion damage;
(g)
The compatibility of the proposed use with existing and anticipated
development;
(h)
The relationship of the proposed use to the Comprehensive Plan
and floodplain management program of that area;
(i)
The safety of access to the property in times of flood for ordinary
and emergency vehicles;
(j)
The expected heights, velocity, duration, rate of rise, and
sediment transport of the floodwaters and the effects of wave action,
if applicable, expected at the site; and
(k)
The costs of providing governmental services during and after
flood conditions, including maintenance and repair of public utilities
and facilities such as sewer, gas, electrical, and water systems,
and streets and bridges.
(6)
Upon consideration of the factors of § 222-16A(5) and the purposes of this chapter, the appeal board may attach such conditions to the granting of variances as it deems necessary to further the purposes of this chapter.
(7)
The Construction Code Official shall maintain the records of all
appeal actions, including technical information, and report any variances
to the Federal Insurance Administration upon request.
B.
Conditions for variances.
(1)
Generally, variances may be issued for new construction and substantial improvements to be erected on a lot of 1/2 acre or less in size contiguous to and surrounded by lots with existing structures constructed below the base flood level, provided that items in Subsection A(5)(a) through (k) in this § 222-16 have been fully considered. As the lot size increases beyond the 1/2 acre, the technical justification required for issuing the variance increases.
(2)
Variances may be issued for the repair or rehabilitation of historic
structures upon a determination that the proposed repair or rehabilitation
will not preclude the structure's continued designation as an
historic structure and the variance is the minimum necessary to preserve
the historic character and design of the structure.
(3)
Variances shall not be issued within any designated floodway if any
increase in flood levels during the base flood discharge would result.
(4)
Variances shall only by issued upon a determination that the variance
is the minimum necessary, considering the flood hazard, to afford
relief.
(5)
Variances shall only be issued upon:
(a)
A showing of good and sufficient cause;
(b)
A determination that failure to grant the variance would result
in exceptional hardship to the applicant; and
(c)
A determination that the granting of a variance will not result in increased flood heights, additional threats to public safety, extraordinary public expense, create nuisances, cause fraud on or victimization of the public as identified in § 222-16A(5), or conflict with existing local laws or ordinances.
(6)
Any applicant to whom a variance is granted shall be given written
notice that the structure will be permitted to be built with a lowest
floor elevation below the base flood elevation, and that the cost
of flood insurance will be commensurate with the increased risk resulting
from the reduced lowest floor elevation.
A.
General standards. In all areas of special flood hazard, compliance
with the applicable requirements of the Uniform Construction Code
(N.J.A.C. 5:23) and the following standards, whichever is more restrictive,
is required.
(1)
Anchoring.
(a)
All new construction and substantial improvements shall be anchored
to prevent flotation, collapse, or lateral movement of the structure.
(b)
All manufactured homes shall be anchored to resist flotation,
collapse or lateral movement. Methods of anchoring may include, but
are not to be limited to, use of over-the-top or frame ties to ground
anchors. This requirement is in addition to applicable state and local
anchoring requirements for resisting wind forces.
(2)
Construction materials and methods.
(3)
Utilities.
(a)
All new and replacement water supply systems shall be designed
to minimize or eliminate infiltration of floodwaters into the system;
and
(b)
New and replacement sanitary sewage systems shall be designed
to minimize or eliminate infiltration of floodwaters into the systems
and discharge from the systems into floodwaters; and
(c)
On-site waste disposal systems shall be located to avoid impairment
to them or contamination from them during flooding.
(d)
For all new construction and substantial improvements, electrical,
heating, ventilation, plumbing and air-conditioning equipment and
other service facilities shall be designed and/or located so as to
prevent water from entering or accumulating within the components
during conditions of flooding.
(4)
Subdivision or development proposals.
(a)
All subdivision and other new development proposals shall be
consistent with the need to minimize flood damage;
(b)
All subdivision and other new development proposals shall have
public utilities and facilities such as sewer, gas, electrical, and
water systems located and constructed to minimize flood damage;
(c)
All subdivision and other new development proposals shall have
adequate drainage provided to reduce exposure to flood damage; and
(d)
Base flood elevation data shall be provided for all subdivision
and other new development proposals.
(5)
Enclosure openings. For all new construction and substantial improvements,
that fully enclosed areas below the lowest floor that are usable solely
for parking of vehicles, building access or storage in an area other
than a basement and which are subject to flooding shall be designed
to automatically equalize hydrostatic flood forces on exterior walls
by allowing for the entry and exit of floodwaters. Designs for meeting
this requirement must either be certified by a registered professional
engineer or architect or must meet or exceed the following minimum
criteria: A minimum of two openings in at least two exterior walls
of each enclosed area having a total net area of not less than one
square inch for every square foot of enclosed area subject to flooding
shall be provided. The bottom of all openings shall be no higher than
one foot above grade. Openings may be equipped with screens, louvers,
or other covering or devices, provided that they permit the automatic
entry and exit of floodwaters.
B.
Specific standards. In all areas of special flood hazard where base flood elevation data have been provided as set forth in § 222-7, Basis for establishing areas of special flood hazard, or in § 222-15B, Use of other base flood and floodway data, the following standards are required:
(1)
Residential construction. New construction and substantial improvement
of any residential structure located in an A or AE Zone shall have
the lowest floor, including basement, together with the attendant
utilities (including all electrical, heating, ventilating, air-conditioning
and other service equipment) and sanitary facilities, elevated at
or above the more restrictive base flood elevation (published FIS/FIRM)
plus one foot, the best available flood hazard data elevation plus
one foot, or as required by ASCE/SEI 24-14, Table 2-1.
(2)
Nonresidential construction. In an area of special flood hazard,
all new construction and substantial improvement of any commercial,
industrial or other nonresidential structure located in an A or AE
Zone shall have the lowest floor, including basement, together with
the attendant utilities and sanitary facilities as well as all electrical,
heating, ventilating, air-conditioning and other service equipment:
(a)
Either:
[1]
Elevated at or above the more restrictive, base flood elevation
(published FIS/FIRM) plus one foot, the best available flood hazard
data elevation plus one foot, or as required by ASCE/SEI 24-14, Table
2-1;
(b)
Or:
[1]
Be floodproofed so that below the more restrictive base flood
elevation (published FIS/FIRM) plus one foot, the best available flood
hazard data elevation plus one foot, or as required by ASCE/SEI 24-14,
Table 6-1;
[2]
The structure is watertight with walls substantially impermeable
to the passage of water;
[3]
Have structural components capable of resisting hydrostatic
and hydrodynamic loads and effects of buoyancy; and
[4]
Be certified by a registered professional engineer or architect that the design and methods of construction are in accordance with accepted standards of practice for meeting the applicable provisions of this subsection. Such certification shall be provided to the official as set forth in § 222-15C(2).
(3)
Manufactured homes.
(a)
Manufactured homes shall be anchored in accordance with § 222-17A(1)(b).
(b)
All manufactured homes to be placed or substantially improved
within an area of special flood hazard shall:
[1]
Be consistent with the need to minimize flood damage;
[2]
Be constructed to minimize flood damage;
[3]
Have adequate drainage provided to reduce exposure to flood
damage;
[4]
Be elevated on a permanent foundation such that the top of the
lowest floor is at or above the more restrictive base flood elevation
(published FIS/FIRM) plus one foot, the best available flood hazard
data elevation plus one foot, or as required by ASCE/SEI 24-14, Table
2-1;
[5]
The manufactured home chassis is supported by reinforced piers
or other foundation elements of at least equivalent strength that
are no less than 36 inches in height above grade and be securely anchored
to an adequately anchored foundation system to resist flotation, collapse,
and lateral movement.
C.
Floodways. Located within areas of special flood hazard established in § 222-7 are areas designated as floodways. Since the floodway is an extremely hazardous area due to the velocity of floodwaters which carry debris, potential projectiles, and erosion potential, the following provisions apply:
(1)
Encroachments, including fill, new construction, substantial improvements, and other development, are prohibited unless a technical evaluation demonstrates that encroachments shall not result in any increase in flood levels during the occurrence of the base flood discharge. All encroachments require permits and/or waivers from the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection. If this Subsection C(1) is satisfied, all new construction and substantial improvements shall comply with all applicable flood hazard reduction provisions of § 222-17, Provisions for flood hazard reduction.
(2)
The placement of any manufactured homes, except in an existing manufactured
home park or existing manufactured home subdivision, is prohibited.
(3)
In all areas of special flood hazard in which base flood elevation
data have been provided and no floodway has been designated, the cumulative
effect of any proposed development, when combined with all other existing
and anticipated development, shall not increase the water surface
elevation of the base flood more than 0.2 foot at any point.