Design Elements — Screening

Municipalities may choose to require enhanced screening from adjacent uses or roadways, particularly in rural locations where a denser development may seem out of character with the surrounding landscape patterns. Screening is accomplished much more efficiently if existing vegetation is preserved. The setbacks and required buffer yards from the tract perimeters should not be so onerous that they unnecessarily consume a high percentage of the required open space.

Ordinance Considerations

Setbacks and screening standards for conservation subdivisions should be the similar to those required for conventional subdivisions with comparable densities and housing types. That is, the uses proposed in the subdivision, whether single-family homes, twins, or townhouses, should be the controlling factor, not whether it is a conservation or conventional subdivision. While screening and buffering for privacy is desirable, the goal should not be total invisibility between uses of a similar nature.

Sample Ordinance Language

Section       : Screening

The following standards are hereby established to create an acceptable transition between different types and intensities of land uses and to reduce conflicts between those uses.

Applicability

Buffer yards and visual screening, consisting of the indicated Class A, B, C or D buffer, shall be required between the following uses, whether the use is proposed or existing.

*Note: It is recommended that municipalities include a preferred plant list and encourage the use of native species.

Buffer Class Standards

After determining the required buffer class, the applicant shall select an appropriate planting option listed in Figure 3-2. Plantings are not required to be aligned on property or right-of-way boundaries. Rather, the applicant is encouraged to site plantings within the required buffer yard as necessary to achieve the optimal screening level and to blend into the surrounding landscape. Plant materials shall be selected from the plant materials list* in Appendix       . No more than thirty (30) percent of a required buffer may consist of one type of plant species.

Figure 3-2

Buffer Class Minimum Buffer Yard Width Minimum Planting Requirements
Class A Twenty-five (25) feet One (1) canopy tree per forty (40) feet, plus one (1) evergreen per thirty (30) feet of boundary; or One (1) canopy tree per forty (40) feet, plus one (1) flowering tree per sixty (60) feet, plus one (1) evergreen per sixty (60) feet of boundary.
Class B Thirty-five (35) feet One (1) evergreen per fifteen (15) feet, and one (1) flowering tree per fifty (50) feet of boundary.
Class C Forty (40) feet One (1) evergreen per twenty (20) feet, plus one (1) berm four (4) feet high; or Six (6) foot high cedar or spruce fencing with one (1) flower or evergreen tree every thirty (30) feet.
Class D Thirty (30) feet The following planting shall be provided between the required fence and the street or property line:1 One (1) canopy or flowering tree at an average of one (1) tree per forty (40) feet, plus one (1) evergreen tree at an average of one (1) tree per twenty (20) feet; or One (1) canopy or flowering tree at an average of one (1) tree per forty (40) feet, plus one (1) shrub per eight (8) feet.

Buffer Class Standards

General Buffering Standards

Good Examples