HomeMy WebLinkAboutSECTION 8 SUPPLEMENTARY REGULATIONS-EXISTING 2012 ATM ARTICLE 34-AG SUBMITTAL SECTION 8 SUPPLEMENTARY REGULATIONS
8.1 Off Street Parking and Loading
1. Intent of Parking Requirements.
It is the intention of this Bylaw that all structures be provided with sufficient off-street parking
space to accomplish the following:
a) Meet the needs of persons employed at or making use of such structures;
b) Maximize the efficiencies of parking facilities and uses;
c) Ensure that any land use involving the arrival, departure, or storage of motor vehicles on
such land be so designed as to reduce hazards to pedestrians and abutters;
d) Reduce congestion in the streets and contribute to traffic safety by assuring adequate
space for parking of motor vehicles off the street;
e) Provide necessary off-street loading space for all structures requiring the large-volume
delivery of goods; and
f) Promote better site design through the use of flexible parking standards.
2. Applicability.
a) No permit or certificate of occupancy shall be issued by the Inspector of Buildings for (1)
a new structure, or(2) change of use, or (3)the enlargement, reconstruction, alteration, or
relocation of an existing structure, or (4) the development of a land use, unless off-street
parking and loading facilities have been laid out and approved in accordance with the
requirement set forth in Section 8.1.
b) The Planning Board shall be the Special Granting Authority (SPGA) for all Special
Permits under Section 8.1.9 and parking facilities that require a Site Plan Review Special
Permit under Sections 8.3 and 10.3 of this Bylaw.
3. Special Regulations
a) Any use in existence or lawfully begun on the effective date of this Section is not subject
to these parking requirements, but any parking facility thereafter established to serve such
use may not in the future be reduced below the requirements contained in this Section.
b) Changes of use of a structure that does not conform to these parking requirements are
permitted without being subject to these requirements provided that the new use does not
require more parking than the former use and the property has been vacant or unoccupied
for no more than three (3)years.
c) If the Inspector of Buildings is unable to identify a use with one (1) or more of the uses in
the schedule below, an application shall be made to the Planning Board for the purpose of
determining a sufficient quantity of parking spaces to accommodate the vehicles of all
customers, employees, visitors, occupants, members or clients consistent with the
provisions contained in the schedule below.
4. Off-Street Parking General Requirements
a) Number of Spaces Required. In all districts, unless otherwise stated herein, off-street
parking spaces shall be provided and maintained in connection with the construction,
conversion, or increase in units or dimensions of buildings, structures or use, such
spaces to be provided in at least the following minimum amounts provided in the
following Table of Off-Street Parking Regulations and accompanying notes below.
Table of Off-Street Parking Regulations
Use Parking Spaces Required
Residential
Single-Family Dwelling Unit
Multi-Family Dwelling Unit 2 per dwelling unit
Studio 1.25 per dwelling unit
One Bedroom 1.5 per dwelling unit
Two or More Bedrooms 2 per dwelling unit
Accessory Dwelling Unit 1 space per dwelling unit
Sleeping Room 1 space per unit or room; plus 2 for
owner/manager
1.25 per guest room; plus 10 per ksf
restaurant/lounge; plus 30 per ksf
Commercial Lodgings meeting/banquet room (<50 ksf per guest
room) or 20 per ksf meeting/banquet room
(>50 per guest room)
Elderly Housing Independent Unit 0.6 per dwelling unit; plus 1 per 2
employees
Elderly Housing Assisted Living 0.4 per dwelling unit; plus 1 per 2
employees
Group, Convalescent, and Nursing Homes 1 per room; plus 1 per 2 employees
Day Care Center 0.35 per person (licensed capacity)
0.4 per employee; plus 1 per 3 beds, plus 1
Hospital/Medical Center per 5 average daily outpatient treatments;
plus 1 per medical staff, plus 1 per
student/faculty/staff
Retail/Service
Grocery (Freestanding) 6.0 per ksf GFA
Discount Superstore/Clubs (Freestanding) 6.0 per ksf GFA
Home Improvement Superstores 5.0 per ksf GFA
Other Heavy/Hard Good (Furniture, Appliances, 3.0 per ksf GFA
Building Materials, etc.)
Personal Care Facilities 2 per treatment station, but not less than
4.3 per ksf GFA
Coin-Operated Laundries 1 per 2 washing and drying machines
2.7 per ksf GFA interior sales area, plus
Motor Vehicle Sales and Service 1.5 per ksf GFA interior or storage/display
area, plus 2 per service bay
Motor Vehicle Laundries/ Car Wash 2, plus 1 per each 2 peak shift employees
Other Retail Not Otherwise Listed Above 3.5 per ksf GFA
Food and Beverage
Restaurant (non-fast food and/or with no drive- 15.0 per ksf GFA
through facility)
Fast Food 15.0 per ksf GFA
Fast Food (with-drive through facility) 12.0 per ksf GFA
Office and Business Services
Data Processing/Telemarketing/Operations 6.0 per ksf GFA
Medical Offices (multi-tenant) 4.5 per ksf GFA
Clinic (medical offices with outpatient treatment: 5.5 per ksf GFA
no overnight stays)
Veterinary Establishment, Kennel or Pet Shop or 0.3 per ksf GFA
Similar Establishments
Bank Branch with Drive-in 5.5 per ksf GFA
Funeral or Undertaking Establishment 0.05 per ksf GFA
Other Business or Office Uses Not Otherwise 3.0 per ksf GFA
Listed Above
Industrial
R&D establishment, manufacturing, industrial 0.8 per ksf GFA
services, or extractive industry
Industrial 2.0 per ksf GFA
Manufacturing/Light Industrial (Single-Use) 1.5 per ksf GFA
Industrial Park (Multi-tenant or mix of service, 2.0 per ksf GFA
warehouse)
Warehouse 0.7 per ksf GFA
Storage 0.25 per ksf GFA
Other Industrial and Transportation Uses Not As determined by the Planning Board, but
Otherwise Listed not less than 0.25 per ksf GFA
Governmental and Educational
Elementary, and Secondary Schools 0.35 per student; plus 1 per 2 employees
College University Determined by parking study specific to
subject institution
Cultural/Recreational/Entertainment
Public Assembly 0.25 per person in permitted capacity
Museum 1.5 per 1,000 annual visitors
Library 4.5 per ksf GFA
Religious Centers 0.6 per seat
Single-Screen: 0.5 per seat; Up to 5
Cinemas screens: 0.33 per seat; 5 to 10 screens: 0.3
per seat
Theaters (live performance) 0.4 per seat
Arenas and Stadiums 0.33 per seat
50 per nine (holes); plus the parking
Golf Course or Country Club requirements for food or beverage uses
described above
Health Clubs and Recreational Facilities 2 per player or 1 per 3 persons permitted
capacity
Accessory Uses
1 per room used for office, or occupation
Home Occupation or Home Office space; plus 1 per non-resident employee;
plus 1 per dwelling unit
Notes:
1. ksa equals 1,000 square feet.
2. Where the computation of required parking spaces results in a fractional
number of 0.5 or above, the required number of parking spaces shall be
rounded up to the next whole number.
3. Where fixed seats are not used in a place of assembly, each fifteen (15)
square feet of floor area in the largest assembly area shall equal one (1)
seat.
4. Where uses are of the open-air type and not enclosed in a structure, each
square foot of lot devoted to such use shall be considered to be
equivalent to one fifth of a square foot of gross floor area.
5. Where development of a site results in the loss of on-street parking
spaces, the number of on-street parking spaces lost shall be provided on
the site, in addition to the number of spaces required for the use unless
otherwise stated herein.
6. The Planning Board shall have the discretion to allow between 4 - 6
parking spaces per 1,000 square feet of Gross Floor Area for retail
development in the Village Commercial District.
7. In appropriate circumstances, where the provision of adequate off-street parking is not
otherwise feasible, the Planning Board may include on-street parking within the determination of
adequate parking arrangements for a particular use, particularly in the so-called Downtown Area
which for the purposes of this Section shall be defined as the following areas: (i) Main Street
from Sutton Street to Merrimac Street, including 200 feet from Main Street on the following side
streets; Waverley Road, First Street, Second Street, and School Street; (ii) Sutton Street from
Main Street to Charles Street; (iii) Water Street from Main Street to High Street; and, (iii) High
Street from Water Street to Prescott Street.
b) Accessible Parking.
Parking facilities shall provide specially designated parking stalls for persons with disabilities in
accordance with the Rules and Regulations of the Architectural Access Board, as amended (521
C.M.R.) implemented by the Architectural Access Board of the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts Executive Office of Public Safety and Security or any agency superseding such
agency. Accessible parking shall be clearly identified by a sign stating that such parking stalls
are reserved for persons with disabilities. Said accessible parking shall be located in the portion
of the parking lot nearest the entrance to the use or the structure, which the parking lot serves.
Adequate access for persons with disabilities from the parking area to the structure shall be
provided. To the extent that any provision of this Section 8.1 conflicts with the Rules and
Regulations of the Architectural Access Board (521 CMR), the Rules and Regulations of the
Architectural Access Board shall govern.
5. Design Standards
All required parking areas shall have minimum dimensions as follows:
a) Dimensions of Parking Spaces and Maneuvering Aisles.
On any lot in any district, parking spaces and maneuvering aisles shall have the minimum
dimensions set for the in the following table and Section 8.1, unless specifically stated elsewhere
in this Bylaw and/or as modified upon the recommendation of the Planning Board.
Minimum Parking Space and Aisle Dimensions for Parking Lots (in feet)
Mifuimum- Minimum Maneuvering Aisle Width
Angle of Parking Sta11Vidth Stall Depth Setback From Maximum Curbeut
C}
LbfLie ne-Way Two-way
76-90 Degrees 9 18 3 25 20 25
61-75 Degrees 9 18 3 25 22
46-60 Degrees 9 18 3 25 16
45 Degrees 1 9 1 18 1 3 1 25 20
Parallel 1 8 1 22 1 3 1 12
b) Vehicular and Pedestrian Circulation.
Pedestrian walkways, driveways, and parking areas shall be designed with respect to topography,
integration with surrounding streets and pedestrian ways, number of access points to streets,
general interior circulation, adequate width of drives, and separation of pedestrian and vehicular
traffic so as to reduce hazards to pedestrians and motorists.
c) Entrance and Exit Driveway.
i) Single-family dwellings shall have a minimum driveway entrance of twelve
(12) feet.
ii) For facilities containing fewer than five stalls, the minimum width of
entrance and exit drives shall be twelve (12) feet for one-way use and
eighteen (18) feet for two-way use, and the maximum width twenty (20)
feet.
iii) For facilities containing five (5) or more stalls, such drives shall be a
minimum of twelve (12) feet wide for one-way use and twenty (20) feet
wide for two-way use. The minimum curb radius shall be fifteen (15) feet.
The maximum width of such driveways at the street line shall be twenty-five
(25) feet in all districts.
iv) The Planning Board may modify such width and radius limitations when a
greater width would facilitate traffic flow and safety. All such driveways
shall be located and designed so as to minimize conflict with traffic on
public streets and provide good visibility and sight distances for the clear
observation of approaching pedestrian and vehicular traffic.
d) Surfacing, Drainage, and Curbing.
Parking areas shall be graded, surfaced with asphalt, concrete, or other suitable non-erosive
material, and drained in a manner deemed adequate by the Planning Board to prevent nuisance of
erosion or excessive water flow across public ways or abutting properties, and natural drainage
courses shall be utilized insofar as possible. Curbing, with the addition of guardrails wherever
deemed necessary by the Planning Board, shall be placed at the edges of surfaced areas, except
driveways, in order to protect landscaped areas and to prevent the parking of vehicles within
required setback areas. Entrance and exit driveways shall be clearly defined by curb cuts, signs,
and striping. All curbing installed within the public way of such driveways shall be of granite.
Design standards and specifications for parking surfacing, drainage and curbing shall be those set
forth in the Rules and Regulations Governing the Subdivision of Land in the Town of North
Andover, as amended, unless waived or modified by the Planning Board in accordance with
Section 8.1.8.
e) Loading Bay Requirements.
i) In all districts, unless otherwise stated herein, off-street loading spaces shall
be provided and maintained in connection with the construction, conversion,
or increase in units or dimensions of buildings, structures or use, such spaces
to be provided in at least the following minimum amounts provided below.
Table of Off-Street Loading Regulations
Principal Use First Loading Facility Required For One Additional Loading Facility Required
Area Shown Below For Area Shown Below
Dorintory and Hotel Motel
Institutional Uses 10,000 50,000
Recreation and Entertainment
Restaurant and Fast Food
Office Uses 15,000 50,000
Retail Services 5,000 20,000
Personal and Consumer Services 5,000 25,000
Vehicular Services
Industrial Uses 10,000 25,000
Wholesale and Storage Uses
ii) Unless modified by the Planning Board pursuant to Section 8.1.8 all required
loading facilities shall have a minimum dimensions of twelve (12) feet wide,
twenty-five (25) feet in length, fourteen (14) feet in height clearance, and
located, arranged, and of sufficient number to allow service by the type of
vehicle customarily excepted for the use while such vehicle is parked
completely clear of any public way or sidewalk.
iii) The requirements of this section shall apply to individual users of new and
substantially altered structures, provided that when a building existing on the
effective date of this Bylaw is altered or expanded to increase the gross floor
area by at least five thousand (5,000) square feet, only the additional gross
floor area shall be counted toward the off-street loading requirements.
f) Lighting of Parking Areas.
All artificial lighting used to specifically illuminate any parking space, loading bay,
maneuvering space, or driveway shall be so arranged that all direct rays from such lighting fall
entirely within the parking or loading area and shall be shielded so as not to shine upon abutting
properties or streets. The level of illumination of lighting for parking and loading areas shall be
low so as to reduce the flow of ambient lighting perceptible at nearby properties or streets.
6. Location and Layout of Parking Facilities.
a) Proximity to Principal Use
Required off-street parking spaces and loading bays shall be provided on the same lot as the
principal or accessory use they are required to serve, except as allowed under Section 8.1.8(d).
b) Parking in Structures.
Require off-street parking spaces or loading bays may be wholly or partly enclosed in a structure.
When partly enclosed in a structure, such as in a building on support beams or stilts which are
readily visible from a street, all sides of such a building directly facing streets must be fully
enclosed with fixed building materials and/or sufficient natural buffering so as to screen the
structured parking areas from the streets.
c) Parking on Rights-of-Way.
No parking area or aisles shall be laid out on land, which is reserved as a vehicular right-of-way,
whether developed or undeveloped, and whether public or private unless otherwise permitted as
provided in Section 8.1.4.
d) Parking in Required Setbacks.
No unenclosed parking area shall be allowed within five (5) feet of a front lot line except on a
residential driveway.
e) Village Commercial District.
i) Parking lots shall be provided only at the side or to the rear of the
buildings. The Planning Board may, at their discretion, allow up to 50
spaces, or 25% of the total parking, whichever is greater, to be located to
the front of the structure as long as all other dimensional criteria are
adhered to.
ii) No single section of parking may contain more than twenty-five percent
(25%) of the total proposed parking spaces or more than fifty (50) spaces,
whichever is less. As a method of division, 6' wide parking lot islands
shall be installed to provide the proper break between adjacent parking
lots. For projects which require less than fifty (50) spaces in total, the
Planning Board may allow fifty (50) spaces to be located together if an
effective visual buffer is provided. Each landscaped island must be 6' in
width at the minimum. In locations where the possibility exists to enlarge
the entire island or portions thereof, the Planning Board would
recommend that such measures be taken.
f) Residential Zoning Districts.
i) For single- and multi-family dwellings, the front yard shall not be used for
parking for accessory uses.
ii) Parking or outdoor storage of one (1) recreational vehicle (camper, etc.)
and one (1) boat per dwelling unit may be permitted in an area to the rear
of the front line of the building. All other recreational vehicles and boat
storage (if any) shall be within closed structures.
iii) Garaging of off-street parking of not more than four (4) motor vehicles per
dwelling unit may be permitted, of which four (4) motor vehicles, not
more than two (2) may be commercial vehicles other than passenger
sedans and passenger station wagons, but not counting farm trucks nor
motor-powered agriculture implements on an agriculturally active farm or
orchard on which such vehicles are parked.
7. Exceptions.
The regulations of this section shall not apply to residential and non-residential uses or structures
whose minimum parking under the above schedule would amount to five (5) parking spaces or
less.
8. Special Permits.
The Planning Board as SPGA, may grant a Special Permit modifying certain parking/loading
standards of this Section and/or Section 8.4 (Screening and Landscaping Requirements for Off-
Street Parking), but only in the specific circumstances listed under "a" through "h" below. The
SPGA may grant such special permit only when: (a) consistent with the purposes set forth in
Section 8.1; (b) making the findings and determinations set forth in Section 10.3; (c) making a
finding that the requested relief falls within one or more of the categories for the specific relief
requested (any of cases "a" through "h" below); and, (d) upon a determination that the relief
does not cause detriment to the surrounding neighborhood based upon any of the following
applicable criteria:
(i) Increase in traffic volumes;
(ii) Increased traffic congestion or queuing of vehicles;
(iii) Change in the type(s) of traffic;
(iv) Change in traffic patterns and access to the site;
(v) Reduction in on-street parking; and/or,
(vi) Unsafe conflict of motor vehicle and pedestrian traffic.
If a proposed development or project seeking a Special Permit pursuant to this Section 8.1.8 also
requires the granting of a Site Plan Approval Special Permit pursuant with Section 8.3 (Site Plan
Review), the conditions and requirements under this Section 8.1 shall be incorporated into and
combined as a single application, review, and approval process for a Site Plan Review Special
Permit issued in accordance with Section 8.3.
The surface of the area where parking spaces may be reduced under a Special Permit for this
section shall be suitable landscaped but shall not be used for purposes of satisfying the Usable
Open Space requirements under the Zoning Bylaw. Circumstances under which the SPGA may
grant a Special Permit pursuant to this Section 8.1.8 are as follows:
a) Modification of Parking Requirements for Non-Conforming Structures, Lots and Uses.
Where the total number of new parking spaces required by this Bylaw is five (5) or fewer for
lots or sites that are determined by the Inspector of Buildings to be nonconforming with
respect to parking, as specified in Section 8.1.
b) Modification of Parking/Loading Area Design Standards.
Where the design of a parking lot, loading area or aisle width differs from the provisions of
Sections 8.1.5 or other parking provisions in this Zoning Bylaw, provided such design is
prepared by a certified professional engineer or architect in the case of a parking garage or other
structure, or by a certified professional engineer, architect or landscape architect in the case of a
parking lot. Modification of parking design standards may be permitted to allow "Tandem
Parking" (defined as two parking spaces placed one behind another in single file) on a temporary
basis for purposes including but not limited to valet parking for restaurant uses, for employee
parking, or other purposes upon such terms and conditions as may be acceptable to the Planning
Board.
c) Municipal Parking Facility. To allow the substitution of space on a particular lot with
parking spaces located within a municipal parking lot to satisfy the parking requirements of
this Section 8.1.4, provided the municipal parking lot where such parking spaces are located
is within a distance of five hundred (500) feet of the building or use (measured from
property line to property line), which is intended to be served and demonstration that doing
so will not exceed the cumulative peak demand of said municipal parking lot in a manner
which is inconsistent with the objectives of Section 8.1.
d) Parking on a Separate Lot/Satellite Parking.
i) Required off-street parking facilities shall be provided on the same lot or
premises as the principal use they are intended to serve, or on a lot in the same
ownership adjacent to such use. When practical difficulties, as determined by
the SPGA, preclude the establishment of the required parking spaces on such lot
or premises (or lot or premises adjacent thereto), the SPGA may allow the
establishment of parking on such other lot upon such terms and conditions as
the SPGA may deem necessary to ensure the continued availability of such
spaces.
ii) Where the applicant does not own such other lot, the applicant shall provide
executed instruments establishing to the satisfaction of the SPGA that sufficient
legal interest has been acquired in such premises to assure their availability for
required parking as long as the use served is in existence. The provision of
satellite (remote) parking areas, provided that:
1. The satellite parking spaces will be used solely by the
employees and, where practicable, the clientele of the
commercial use;
2. The off-site parking spaces shall be located to adequately
serve the proposed use and shall be within six hundred (600)
feet of the property served for clientele of the commercial use
as measured from property line to property line; and,
3. Off-site parking for employees of the business may be
located within a distance of one thousand two hundred
(1,200) feet, provided that shuttle vehicle arrangements are
provided as a condition of the approval.
e) Common Parking Areas and Multiple Use Facilities.
i) Notwithstanding the normal provisions of Section 8.1.4, where two or more
activities or uses provide the required parking or loading in a common parking
facility or loading area, the number of parking spaces or loading bays ordinarily
required may be reduced below the sum of the spaces or bays required for
separate activities or uses, if it can be determined that the hours, days, or peak
parking or loading demand for the uses are so different that a lower total will
provide adequately for all uses or activities served by the parking facility or
loading bay, and that the location of the parking facility in relation to the uses
proposed to be served by it is appropriate.
ii) A Special Permit authorizing such deviation from the normal standard shall only
be granted upon submission of calculated parking demand for combined land
uses based on methodologies and indices of the Institute of Transportation
Engineers, Urban Land Institute, or other recognized methodology approved in
writing by the Planning Board. A formal parking demand study may be waived
by the SPGA for small developments where there is established experience with
the land use mix and its impact is expected to be minimal.
iii) Where such facilities are shared by more than two (2) owners, the applicant
shall provide executed and filed instruments with the Registry of Deeds
establishing to the satisfaction of the SPGA that sufficient legal interest has
been acquired in such premises to assure that the property(s) have a shared
parking arrangement or peak hour parking arrangement and the availability for
required parking as long as the uses served are in existence.
f) Land Banked Parking.
To reduce the area of impervious surface, encourage open space, accommodate future changes in
land use and/or ownership, and shifts in shared parking demand, up to forty percent (40%) of the
land area that would otherwise be needed to provide the required amount of parking may be land
banked or set aside on the site to provide for the future construction of a parking area. The
parking facility shall be designed/engineered to enable the site to satisfy the requirements of the
Section 8.1 to meet the peak demands of the project(s) or use(s). Where it can be demonstrated
by the applicant in the future that there is a need to convert all or a portion of the land-banked
parking facilities because parking demand is in excess of 80% of parking supply on the property,
then the applicant may convert the requisite number of land banked parking spaces to
functioning parking spaces. For purposes hereof, parking demand shall be demonstrated through
a report of the applicant's (or the then current owner's traffic engineering consultant), as the case
may be, certifying that at any time during the four-hour peak demand period on a weekday or
Saturday, the actual parking demand and utilization is in excess of 80% of parking supply on the
property, with actual field site observations being conducted on two separate days during any
consecutive 45-day period. Upon the Planning Board's determination the applicant has
established the requisite parking need, and upon submission of the report to the Planning Board,
the Planning Board may allow the conversion of all or a portion of the land-banked parking.
g) Reduction in Parking.
Where it can be demonstrated that a use or establishment needs a lesser number of parking
spaces or loading bays than is required by Section 8.1.4, such as housing for persons with
disabilities, low rate of vehicle ownership, the availability and implementation of transportation
demand management alternatives, or other such circumstances as may be deemed appropriate by
the Planning Board, the number of such parking spaces or bays may be reduced by not more than
thirty-five percent (35%). An applicant shall submit documentary evidence satisfactory to the
SPGA that the parking or loading experience of the specific use justifies a lesser number of
spaces or bays. A Special Permit granted under this authority shall lapse upon change to a
different type of use unless otherwise determined by the Planning Board, and shall not be
considered to constitute a legal nonconformity with respect to parking for any new use.
h) Modification of Screening and Landscaping Requirements for Off-Street Parking.
Where it can be demonstrated to the satisfaction of the Planning Board that a plan for
screening and landscaping would be enhanced without detriment to the surrounding
neighborhood through the waiver or modification of one or more of the screening, landscaping
and other criteria set forth under Section 8.4.