Greening Ordinances
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Greening Ordinances for detailed guidance

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Greening Ordinances means structuring zoning and development ordinances to conserve priority habitats alongside development.

 

Nature-Friendly Zoning

 

Nature-friendly zoning ordinances establish land use patterns that will preserve key habitats while concentrating intensive growth in less environmentally sensitive areas.


Examples include:

  • Athens-Clarke County, Georgia Greenbelt Zone —This county has worked to establish a “greenbelt” outside of its urban area. At present, the greenbelt area is zoned for a ten acre minimum lot size, but a conservation subdivision is allowed at one unit per five acres.

  • Town of Chapel Hill, North Carolina Rural Buffer —The Town of Chapel Hill has established a “rural buffer” surrounding Chapel Hill and Carrboro that defines the urban services boundary and growth limits.  

Nature-Friendly Development Ordinances

 

Nature-friendly development ordinances can help your community implement science-based standards for development in the following areas:

  • Development application requirements
  • Protection of Natural Heritage sites
  • Protection of important wildlife habitats
  • Conservation developments
  • Stream, wetland, and floodplain protection
  • Protection of trees and native vegetation
  • Steep slope protection
  • Wildfire hazard and smoke management

 

Example Ordinances:

Tampa, Florida’s Upland Habitat Protection Ordinance —Designed to protect important plant communities and wildlife habitat in Tampa, the ordinance establishes an upland habitat overlay district.  Approved upland habitat plans are required before development can occur within the district.

 

Boulder County, Colorado Wildlife Impact Reports —Boulder County’s Land Use Code  requires development proposals to include a wildlife impact report whenever the project is located within critical wildlife habitats, significant natural areas, or wildlife corridors shown on conservation maps in the county’s comprehensive plan. 

 

Orange County, North Carolina Natural Heritage Conservation Requirements —Orange County’s Code of Ordinances (Chapter 36, Article IV) requires development projects to protect sites identified in the county’s Natural Heritage Inventory. 

 

Chatham County, North Carolina Watershed Protection Ordinance—Chatham County’s ordinance requires field delineations and strong buffer requirements for all streams, springs, seeps and wetlands prior to development plan approval.

 

Park City, Utah Sensitive Area Overlay Zone —This policy establishes a series of overlay zones for protection of different sensitive natural areas, including steep slopes and ridgelines, important wildlife habitats, wetlands, and other important open spaces. 

 

Carroll County, Maryland Forest Conservation Ordinance —This ordinance requires forest protection plans to accompany development applications, and requires reforestation activities to accompany any type of land development. 

 

Jefferson County, Colorado Wildfire Hazard Overlay District—This ordinance limits land uses within the district, and requires hazard mitigation strategies around any dwellings and/or the submission of a wildfire mitigation site plans for developments located within the district.