Laserfiche WebLink
Screening includes security fencing and specifying camouflage as <br />well as emphasis on the attractiveness of the material and affect <br />produced. Most commonly, ordinances submitted to the APA require <br />landscaping around the base of the structure, with the height and <br />depth for vegetation landscaping and screening in many ordinances <br />while others required landscaping only for residential districts. <br />Other options include requirements for standards to be determined <br />by a local zoning board or design review board; requirement for a <br />percentage of total site to be landscaped or screened; tree - <br />planting requirements (such as one 6' tree for every 40' of <br />frontage or "street trees required:). Specific non -vegetative <br />screening commonly includes some form of screening around the base <br />with specific descriptions that include brick masonry walls, chain <br />link fences, solid wood fences, opaque barriers and berms. Some <br />require landscaping or screening height standards of 4-24 feet. <br />Finally, other ordinances require that the landscaping/screening be <br />done in a manner that is compatible with the surrounding character, <br />buildings or landscape <br />Structure requirements include compliance with Electronics Industry <br />Association (EIA standards and approval by a licensed structural <br />engineer approved or hired by the city. Some of the items I have <br />noted under design requirements probably are more appropriate to <br />this category. With respect to safety considerations, the most <br />conservative setback requirement specified 100 percent of the tower <br />height, plus additional distance of 10-20 feet from the nearest <br />Ob property line or street o protect adjacent property from damage. <br />The fact that some towers are designed to collapse within <br />themselves could also be cited. <br />• <br />Lot requirements could be added here. Although most cities do not <br />include such requirements in their ordinances, those that do, <br />provide for lot size based on the minimum allowed for whatever <br />zoning district the tower is to be sited in. Lot requirements most <br />often cited are given in square footage or acreage and range from <br />5,000 square feet to 2 acres. A common method for determining lot <br />size is to make it a function of 1) tower height, with the toppling <br />factor being the primary justification; and 2) the concern over <br />proximity of adjacent uses to an EMF source. Some cities provide <br />for separate accessory structure setbacks from both the property <br />line and tower itself. <br />Accessory buildings and equipment are treated in a wide variety of <br />ways. Some ordinances require that zoning district requirements <br />apply to accessory structures; others did not. Others require only <br />that the structures meet the building code. Others require that in <br />residential districts, structures be designed to fit with the basic <br />residential house design in the area. Others require design review <br />board approval, while others have separate accessory structure <br />setbacks from the property line and tower; others require the <br />structures to have their own landscaping or screening. Where the <br />III-= <br />