Cary Site Plan Application

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedAugust 2, 2006
Docket183-09-05 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of Cary Site Plan Application (Cary Site Plan Application) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Vermont Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cary Site Plan Application, (Vt. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT ENVIRONMENTAL COURT

} Cary Site Plan Application } Docket No. 183-9-05 Vtec (Appeal of Cary) } }

Decision and Order on Motion for Summary Judgment

This matter concerns an appeal by James C. Cary from the decision of the Town of Milton (Town) Development Review Board (DRB), denying site plan approval for his proposed thirty-eight unit multi-family building off of Centre Drive. Appellant Cary is represented by Allan W. Ruggles, Esq., and the Town is represented by Gregg H. Wilson, Esq. Appellant has moved for summary judgment on whether his proposed multi-family building meets the site plan review standards contained in Zoning Regulations § 802.3. At issue is the adequacy of the site plan and its impact on traffic circulation, parking and loading facilities; the adequacy of the site plan’s traffic study; the adequacy of the site plan’s landscaping, screening and outdoor lighting; and the suitability of the site for the proposed development, particularly as it relates to the proposal’s storm water management system. The Town has not responded to Appellant’s motion. Nevertheless, we must evaluate Appellant’s site plan in accordance with the site plan review standards in Zoning Regulations § 802.3. Factual Background The following material facts are undisputed: 1. Appellant’s application for site plan approval consists of a rectangular, 65´ x 22.5´,1 thirty-eight unit multi-family residence, entitled Marketplace Condominiums, with a fifty- seven-space, two-level parking garage located on the northerly side of the parcel. Each of the thirty-eight units is proposed to contain two bedrooms. Appellant’s lot is westerly of Centre Drive in the Milton Crossroads Marketplace Center (M1) zoning district. 2. Appellant’s parcel is an interior2 1.24-acre lot that is roughly shaped like a right triangle with sides of approximately 260, 304 and 457 feet. The hypotenuse of the triangle is on the northerly side of the lot. The lot is accessed by a sixty-foot-wide right-of-way from Centre

1 This measurement is approximate, as it was taken by scale from Appellant’s site plan. 2 Meaning a lot without road frontage. Access is over a right of way from Centre Drive.

1 Drive. The right-of-way is proposed to be improved by paving a twenty-four-foot-wide access driveway to serve Appellant’s condominium building. Appellant also proposes to construct sidewalks along the access right-of-way and in front of the multi-family building. 3. Appellant’s parcel is surrounded by commercial and religious uses with a Building Home Center and auto repair shop to the north, a pizza pub and self storage facility to the east, a fitness center to the south and the Assemblies of God church to the west. 4. Appellant’s proposal, properly characterized as a multi-family dwelling, is a permitted use in the M1 District, Zoning Regulations § 412(3), and satisfies all of the M1 District’s dimensional standards, including the minimum lot size of 5,000 square feet, the minimum front setback from zero to twenty feet, the 40% building coverage limit, the 80% lot coverage limit, the five-story or seventy-foot building height limit and the 65,000 square-foot building footprint limit, all as per Zoning Regulations § 414. Appellant’s proposed development is on a lot that is approximately 39,520 square feet in area, has a lot coverage of 67.1%, has a building coverage of 33.7%, has a building footprint of 18,200 square feet and has a height of seventy feet. Appellant’s proposal also meets the Zoning Regulations’ parking standards of 1.5 spaces per unit for apartments, as the proposal calls for a total of fifty-seven parking spaces. 5. In addition to the twenty-four-foot-wide access road from Centre Drive, Appellant proposes that the road split to create a Y-shaped driveway with a twenty-four-foot-wide section running northeasterly along the parcel’s southeasterly boundary and another twenty-four-foot- wide driveway running northwesterly along the parcel’s southwesterly border. Each of the two driveways on the parcel serves the two-level parking garage in the rear of the building. The southeasterly and southwesterly driveways are connected by a fifteen-foot-wide loading/unloading driveway that runs along the façade of the multi-family building. This loading/unloading driveway is proposed to be covered by a canopy that extends twenty-five feet from the front of the building. 6. In conjunction with his application for site plan approval, Appellant arranged for a traffic management plan to be prepared that estimates the number of vehicles added to the surrounding roadways, based on the Institute for Transportation Engineers (ITE) Trip Generation Manual. During the average weekday, 224 trips will be generated by the thirty-eight-unit condominium building, with seventeen trips during the A.M. peak hour and with twenty trips during the P.M. peak hour. Appellant’s traffic study also evaluated the three access points at

2 which the condominium proposal would generate turning movements during the A.M. and P.M. peak hours—at U.S. Route 7 and Bombardier Road, Bombardier Road and Centre Drive, and U.S. Route 7 and Centre Drive. The study found that only at Centre Drive and U.S. Route 7 would more than five turning movements be made in the A.M. peak hour. 7. Appellant also submitted a landscaping plan with his site plan review application in which he proposes spending $10,915.50 to screen the proposed multi-family building from U.S. Route 7 and surrounding properties. Appellant proposes planting numerous trees around the outside of the building and property, including Norway Spruce, Autumn Blaze Callery Pear, Winter King Green Hawthorn, Louisa Crabapple and Chancellor Littleleaf Linden. Appellant’s landscaping has been redesigned since its original proposal so as to not interfere with power lines and fire trucks responding to an emergency. The trees are proposed to be planted close to each other to achieve the desired level of screening from the neighboring commercial uses and U.S. Route 7. Appellant has yet to outline how he will produce a landscaping performance bond, which is required before the issuance of a zoning permit for the project. 8. The Town Water/Wastewater Superintendent expressed a concern that “[t]here are several plantings that are directly over or within the tree fall of the sewer and water systems. The plantings should be located so that their root systems will not infiltrate the sewer or water joints.” Appellant offered no evidence in response to the Superintendent’s concerns, nor does Appellant counter the Superintendent’s conclusions about his planting plan. 9. Appellant also proposes to include a storm water management system with his development of the multi-family building that has the capacity to handle a ten-year, twenty-four hour storm and that complies with the goals and requirements of the Vermont Stormwater Management Manual. Because a majority of the existing, highly permeable soils (with a high permeability rate of 6.3 to 20 inches per hour) will be replaced by impervious surfaces, Appellant proposes installing a subsurface infiltration chamber system consisting of one isolator row contained in four chamber rows to prevent runoff from reaching neighboring properties. The chambers of the subsurface infiltration system will be installed under the two driveways on Appellant’s parcel and are strong enough to withstand travel on the driveways by tractor-trailers and fire trucks. The system works by trapping dirt, sediment and other material by settling and filtration in the isolator row. The isolator row then allows filtered water to flow vertically and horizontally into the other storage chambers. One of the principle benefits of this type of system

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Related

In Re Appeal of Lorentz
2003 VT 40 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2003)
In re Glen M.
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Bluebook (online)
Cary Site Plan Application, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cary-site-plan-application-vtsuperct-2006.