Even person, firm, company or corporation making or causing to be made any excavation in or under any street, highway, sidewalk or public place, whether paved or otherwise, within the Village of Briarcliff Manor, in compliance with Ordinance No. 92 of the Village of Briarcliff Manor regulating the excavation of streets, sidewalks or public places within such Village, shall, in making such excavations, comply with the following regulations.
All locations and time of performing the work shall be approved by the Superintendent of Public Works.
The permittee shall arrange his or its work so as to cause a minimum of inconvenience and delay to vehicular traffic. The Superintendent of Public Works reserves the right to order the removal of any and/or all obstructions to traffic on Saturdays, Sundays, holidays and other periods of unusually heavy traffic volumes. The permittee shall erect and maintain suitable barricades to adequately delineate and protect the site during and in which his or its work is in progress. Warning flags, signs, flashing yellow lights and watchmen shall be provided as necessary. Excavated material should be stored in neat piles, so placed as to cause the least interference with the use of the roadway or sidewalks. Where the free flow of traffic is interfered with, the permittee shall place and maintain traffic control devices to adequately warn and direct traffic in a manner acceptable to the Superintendent of Public Works. All signs used at night shall be reflectorized with wide-angle, flattop, reflective sheeting. All devices used both day and night shall be mounted a minimum of five feet above the crown of the pavement. Traffic control devices shall be placed at least 100 feet in advance of obstructions to adequately warn and direct traffic. The Superintendent of Public Works reserves the right to order the correction of any unsafe condition and the installation of additional signs, lights or other traffic control devices.
Unless otherwise permitted, tight sheathing at least two inches in thickness shall be placed in all trenches having a depth in excess of four feet and within three feet of any pavement or other highway structure which is proposed to remain in place except where excavation is in rock. Sheathing shall be securely fastened in place with whalers and braces during all operations and shall be driven to a depth one foot below the lowest part of the structure proposed to be installed as the excavation progresses. In all such excavations having a depth in excess of six feet, such sheathing shall be left in place with a cutoff line 18 inches below ground surface. In the trenches having a depth of more than three feet and less than six feet, the sheathing shall be left in place if ordered by the Superintendent of Public Works. Sheathing may be omitted when permitted by the Superintendent of Public Works if the edge of the proposed trench is offset from the nearest edge of the pavement or other structure by a distance at least equal to the vertical depth of the trench as measured from the highest point of the adjacent pavement or structure.
Backfilling around completed structures shall be made of selected material, free from loose stones, as soon as the structure has attained sufficient strength to preclude injury and shall be made in successive horizontal layers not exceeding six inches in depth. Each layer shall be thoroughly compacted by tamping to the satisfaction of the Superintendent of Public Works. No frozen material shall be used in the backfill. Special care shall be taken to thoroughly compact the portion directly under the haunches, around the sides and for a depth of one foot over pipes or ducts. No rock shall be placed in the backfill within 12 inches of a pipe or duct. If permitted by the Superintendent of Public Works, the backfilling of trenches may be thoroughly puddled by depositing the earth in water. No backfilling of trenches by scrapers or other machinery will be allowed, except that on longitudinal trenches outside the pavement limits the use of power backfillers mounted on pneumatic tires may be used if provisions are made for adequate compacting of filled material. The work shall be so carried on that not over 300 linear feet of trench shall remain open at any time, unless otherwise authorized by the Superintendent of Public Works.
All surplus excavated material and debris shall be cleaned up and removed from the site of the work upon the completion of the work by the permittee, leaving the site of the work in a neat and orderly condition.
Where topsoil, seeded areas or sod are disturbed in the excavating, the permittee shall restore the ground surfaces to the same conditions.
Manhole covers, frames and other structures placed within the roadway limits shall be of sufficient weight and strength and of a suitable type and stability approved by the Superintendent of Public Works and shall be set flush with the surface of the pavement.
The permittee shall repair and maintain at his or its expense any present or future disturbance of the roadway and pavement which may have been caused by work done pursuant to the terms of the permit herein, said maintenance to cover a period of 90 days after completion of the work.
All small pipes or conduits crossing roadway pavements shall, wherever possible, be driven beneath the pavement without disturbance to the surface. Such pipes or conduits shall be enclosed in sleeves or larger pipes, so that required replacements may be made in the future without disturbance to the pavement. For the purpose of driving such pipes or conduits, no opening of a trench shall be made closer than two feet to the edge of the pavement. Tunneling under the pavement is prohibited. Driving of pipes or conduits having a dimension greater than eight inches shall be permitted only under such special terms and conditions as the Superintendent of Public Works may prescribe.
Permanent restoration of the finished pavement shall not be made until complete settlement of the trench backfill shall have taken place, as directed by the Superintendent of Public Works. Immediately after backfilling the trench, an acceptable temporary repair of cold patch, bituminous macadam or other acceptable flexible pavement material shall be placed which shall be maintained even with the roadway surface until permanent restoration of the pavement is ordered by the Superintendent of Public Works.
At such times as directed by the Superintendent of Public Works, the permanent replacement of pavement shall be made under the supervision and inspection of the Superintendent of Public Works, as follows:
A. 
On concrete pavements which become undermined or broken, the slabs shall be completely replaced on a prepared foundation with reinforced concrete nine inches thick in the proportions of 1:2:3 1/2 using high early-strength or quick-setting cement mixed by machine for at least two minutes. Materials and proportioning of aggregate shall be inspected and approved by the Superintendent of Public Works.
B. 
When cross trenches are excavated vertically without undercutting the concrete pavements, the slab shall be neatly cut back a distance of at least two feet on each side of the outer walls of the trench and replaced with a reinforced concrete patch. Where any portion of a patch is nearer than eight feet to an expansion joint, the patch shall be extended to the joint. Where longitudinal trenches have been made in concrete pavements, the entire slab shall be replaced.
C. 
In any event, the new patch must be reset upon undisturbed subgrade for at least two feet in all directions from the excavated area and must be at least 10 feet long as measured parallel to center line of pavement. In removing portions of slabs or reinforced concrete, care shall be taken not to remove all the reinforcing metal. New reinforcing shall be carefully tied and bonded to old reinforcing steel when making restorations. All reinforcement shall be three-eighths-inch bars, spaced 14 inches in each direction. Approved premolded expansion joints shall be inserted where directed, and all construction joints shall be poured with an acceptable asphaltic material. The concrete shall be completely wetted after placing and covered with six inches of hay and kept continuously saturated for 10 days. The use of an approved high early-strength cement, placed under approved methods, may be required by the Superintendent of Public Works for certain concrete pavement replacements where the delay and inconvenience to traffic is of sufficient importance to warrant same. Satisfactory curing of the concrete is of the greatest importance.
D. 
On wearing surface pavements (asphaltic concretes and blacktops, granite blocks, asphalt blocks, brick, etc.), a concrete foundation eight inches in thickness shall be placed on a prepared foundation, in the proportion of 1:2 1/2:5, using high early or quick-setting cement in the same manner as reinforced concrete pavements. The concrete shall be reinforced with approved wire mesh or three-eighths-inch reinforcing bars, placed two inches above bottom of concrete. This replacement shall cover an area for a distance of not less than two feet on each side of the outer walls of the trench as excavated and must be at least 10 feet long as measured parallel to center line of pavement. This concrete foundation shall be completely wetted after placing and kept covered with six inches of hay and kept continuously saturated for eight days. After this curing is completed, a wearing surface equivalent to pavement removed shall be placed in accordance with New York State Department of Public Works specifications, as directed by the Superintendent of Public Works.
E. 
At the option of the permittee, the requirement of steel reinforcement is hereby rescinded, provided the thickness of the concrete under Subsections A and C shall be 11 inches, and under Subsection D, 10 inches.
F. 
On macadam pavements, the replacement shall be the same as for wearing surface pavements, Subsection D.
The permittee shall replace or restore satisfactorily to the Superintendent of Public Works any pavement or other structure which may have been damaged during the progress of the work for which the permit was issued even though such pavement or structure was not proposed to be disturbed at the time of the granting of the permit.
A. 
In lowering curb for driveways, only bluestone, granite or integral curb will be allowed to be cut. All concrete curb must be removed and replaced with new concrete curbing to the required height.
B. 
On shoulder roads, the grade of driveway at the property line should be the same elevation as the center line grade of the road. Modification of this may be allowed if specifically permitted by the Village Engineer or his authorized representative.
C. 
Driveway entrances shall not begin within five feet of the point where the prolongation of the property line meets the edge of the pavement, unless otherwise authorized by the Village Engineer.
D. 
Points of ingress or egress to a Village street must be approved by the Village Engineer. Such points of ingress or egress shall not be more than 30 feet wide measured at the pavement edge, unless special approval is obtained from the Village Engineer or his authorized representative. The Village reserves the right, however, to require the construction of acceleration and deceleration lanes, together with channelization at certain types of high-traffic-volume generating facilities.
E. 
Driveways crossing sidewalks shall be constructed in accordance with Village specifications.
F. 
Wherever a driveway apron is installed, the area from the pavement to the property line shall be paved in accordance with Village specifications.