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Bellmead City Zoning Code

SECTION III

- Definitions.

For the purpose of this ordinance, certain terms and words are hereby defined. Words used in the present tense shall include the future; the singular number shall include the plural, and the plural the singular. The word "building" shall include the word "structure"; the word "lot" includes the word "plot", and the word "shall" is mandatory and not merely permissive or directory.

Accessory buildings and use: A subordinate building or a portion of the main building, the use of which is incidental to that of the main building or to the main use of the premises. An accessory use is one which is incidental to the main use of the premises.

Alley: A public or private thoroughfare which affords only a secondary means of access to property abutting thereon.

Apartment: A room or suite of rooms in a multiple dwelling, or in a building in which more than one living unit is established above the same floor or on the same floor as nonresidential uses, which room or suite is intended, or designed for use as a residence by one family and which includes culinary accommodations.

Apartment house: A building or portion thereof used or designed as a residence for three (3) or more families living independently of each other, and doing their own cooking in said building, including apartments and apartment hotels.

Boardinghouse: A building, other than a hotel, where for compensation and by prearrangement for definite periods, meals or lodging and meals are provided for three (3) or more persons, but not exceeding twenty (20) persons.

Building: Any structure designed or intended for support, enclosure, shelter, and protection of persons, animals, chattels, or property.

Carport. An accessory structure adjoining or attached to the main use building designed for or used for the housing of motor driven vehicles that is not totally enclosed.

Clinic: An office or group of offices for one or more physicians, surgeons, or dentists engaged in treating the sick or injured, but not including rooms for the abiding of patients.

Development review committee (DRC). A committee comprised of multiple departments for a full review.

District: A section or sections of the City of Bellmead, Texas, for which regulations governing the use of buildings and premises, the heights of buildings, the size of yards and the intensity of use are uniform.

Dwelling: Any building or portion thereof which is designed and used exclusively for residential purposes.

Dwelling, single-family: A building having accommodations for and occupied exclusively by one (1) family.

Dwelling, two-family or duplex: A building having accommodations for and occupied exclusively by two (2) families.

Dwelling, multiple: A building having accommodations for and occupied exclusively by more than two (2) families.

Family: One (1) person or two (2) or more persons related by blood, marriage or adoption, or a group of not more than three (3) unrelated persons, living together as a single housekeeping unit in a dwelling unit, subject to Texas Human Resources Code § 123.

Filling station or service station: Any building or premises used for the dispensing, sale or offering for sale at retail of any automobile fuels or oils. When the dispensing, sale or offering for sale is incidental to the conduct of a public garage, or retail store, the premises are classified as a public garage or retail store.

Frontage: All the property on one side of a street between two intersecting streets (crossing or terminating), measured along the line of the street, or if the street is deadended, then all the property abutting on one side between an intersecting street and the dead-end of the street.

Garage, private: An accessory building or portion of the main use building designed for or used for the housing of motor-driven vehicles which are the property of and for the private use of the occupants of the lot on which the private garage is located. Not more than one (1) of the vehicles may be a commercial vehicle and of not more than one and one-half (1½) tons capacity.

Garage, public: A building or portion thereof, other than a private garage, designed or used for equipping, repairing, hiring, servicing, selling or storing motor-driven vehicles.

Grade:

(a)

For buildings having walls adjoining one street only, the elevation of the sidewalk at the center of the wall adjoining the street.

(b)

For buildings having walls adjoining more than one street, the average of the elevation of the sidewalk at the center of all walls adjoining the streets.

(c)

For buildings having no wall adjoining the street, the average level of the finished surface of the ground adjacent to the exterior of the buildings.

Any wall approximately parallel to and not more than five (5) feet from the street line shall be considered as adjoining the street. Where no sidewalk exists, the grade shall be established by the City Building Inspector.

Height of building: The vertical distance from the grade to the highest point of the coping of a flat roof, to the deck line of a mansard roof, to the mean height level between the eaves and ridge of gable, hip and gambrel roofs.

Home occupation: Any occupation or profession engaged in by the occupants of a dwelling not involving the conduct of a retail business, and not including any occupation conducted in any building on the premises excepting the building which is used by the occupant as his or her private residence. Home occupation shall include, in general, personal services such as furnished by an architect, lawyer, physician, dentist, musician, artist and seamstress, when performed by the person occupying the building as his or her private dwelling and not including a partnership or the employment of more than one assistant in performance of such services.

Hotel: A building in which lodging or board and lodging are provided and offered to the public for compensation and in which ingress and egress to and from all rooms is made through an inside lobby or office supervised by a person in charge at all times. As such, it is open to the public in contradistinction to a boardinghouse, a lodging house, or an apartment house which are herein defined.

Lodging house: A building or place where lodging is provided (or which is equipped to provide lodging regularly) by prearrangement for definite periods, for compensation, for three (3) or more persons in contradistinction to hotels open to transients.

Lot: A parcel of land occupied or intended for occupancy by a use permitted in this ordinance, including one (1) main building with its accessory buildings, the open spaces and parking spaces required by this ordinance, and having its principal frontage upon a street or upon an officially approved place.

Lot, corner: A lot abutting upon two (2) or more streets at their intersection.

Lot, depth of: The mean horizontal distance between the front and rear lot lines.

Nonconforming use: Any building or land lawfully occupied by a use at the time of passage of this ordinance or amendment thereto, which does not conform after the passage of this ordinance or amendment thereto with the use regulations of the district in which it is situated.

Parking space: An area enclosed or unenclosed containing not less than one hundred and sixty (160) square feet exclusive of the driveways connecting said space with a street or alley. Said parking space and connecting driveway shall be durably surfaced and so arranged to permit satisfactory ingress and egress of an automobile.

Specific use permit (SUP). Permit recommended by the planning and zoning commission and granted by the city council for a use not listed in the code of ordinance under the zoning and/or a variance to a use not allowed within a specific zoning.

Story: That portion of a building, other than a basement, included between the surface of any floor and the surface of the floor next above it; or if there be no floor above it, then the space between the floor and the ceiling next above it.

Street: A public thoroughfare which affords the principal means of access to abutting property.

Structure: Anything constructed or erected, the use of which requires permanent location on the ground or attachment to something having a permanent location on the ground, including but without limiting, the general inclusiveness of the foregoing, advertising signs, billboards, poster boards and pergolas.

Structural alterations: Any change in the supporting members of a building such as bearing walls or partitions, columns, beams, or girders, or any complete rebuilding of the roof or the exterior walls.

Trailer: Any structure used for living, sleeping, business, or storage purposes having no foundation other than wheels, blocks, skids, jacks, horses, or skirtings and which is, has been, or reasonably may be equipped with wheels or other devices for transporting the structure from place to place, whether by motive power or other means. The term "trailer" shall include camp car and house car. For the purpose of this ordinance, a trailer is a single-family dwelling and shall conform to all regulations therefor when not located in a trailer camp as herein defined.

Trailer camp or trailer coach park: A lot or tract of land where facilities and accommodations are provided by the day, week, month or for a longer period of time, for or without compensation, for two or more trailers when such trailers are being used for human habitation.

Tourist court: (Auto courts) A group of attached, semidetached, or detached buildings containing individual sleeping units or living units, designed for or used temporarily by automobile tourists or transients with garage attached or parking space conveniently located to each unit and offering to the public daily as well as other longer term rental rates and maintaining a register of guests and/or their vehicles.

Yard: An open space on the same lot with a building, unoccupied and unobstructed by any portion of a structure from the ground upward except as otherwise provided. In measuring a yard for the purpose of determining the width of a side yard, the depth of a front yard, or the depth of a rear yard, the horizontal distance between the lot line and the main building shall be used.

Yard, front: A yard extending across the front of a lot between the side yard lines and being the minimum horizontal distance between the street line and the main building or any projection thereof other than the projection of the usual steps, unenclosed balconies or open porch.

Yard, rear: A yard extending across the rear of a lot, measured between the side lot lines, and being the minimum horizontal distance between the rear lot line and the rear of the main building or any projection other than steps, unenclosed balconies or unenclosed porches. On corner lots the rear yard shall be considered as parallel to the street upon which the lot has its least dimension. On both corner lots and interior lots, the yard shall in all cases be at the opposite end of a lot from the front yard.

Yard, side: A yard between the main building and the side line of the lot and extending from the front line to the rear yard line.

(Ord. No. 2001-001, § 1, 1-8-02; Ord. No. 2008-008, § 1, 6-10-08; Ord. No. 2020-08, § 1, 10-13-20)