This chapter regulates the location, design, construction, alteration, occupancy, and use of structures and the use of land in the Town of Gardiner, dividing the Town into land use districts. This chapter is enacted pursuant to the authority and power granted by the Municipal Home Rule Law of the State of New York, Article 2, § 10 et seq., and Chapter 62, Article 16, of the Consolidated Laws, in conformance with the updated Town of Gardiner Comprehensive Plan, adopted by the Town Board in December 2004 (as it may be modified from time to time), to advance the goals of the Town of Gardiner Comprehensive Plan. This chapter is adopted to protect and promote public health, safety, comfort, convenience, economy, natural, agricultural, and cultural resources, aesthetics, and the general welfare, and for the following additional specific purposes:
A. To conserve the natural resources and rural character of the Town by encouraging development in appropriate locations and by limiting building in areas where it would adversely affect the Town's predominantly rural pattern and scale of settlement;
B. To minimize negative environmental impacts of development, especially in visually and environmentally sensitive areas such as the Shawangunk Ridge, along the Wallkill River, Shawangunk Kill, Palmaghatt Kill, Mara Kill, and their tributaries, in aquifer and aquifer recharge areas, and on steep slopes, erodible soils, wetlands and their buffers, floodplains, active farmlands, and other designated open space resources identified in the Comprehensive Plan;
C. To encourage a range of business activities in appropriate locations which are compatible with the Town's rural character and scale, concentrating retail businesses in and near hamlets, allowing large-scale business and industry in well-buffered locations with good transportation access;
D. In recognition of the economic value of Gardiner's natural beauty and environmental amenities, to protect the integrity of scenic views, ridgelines, steep slopes, agricultural land, existing and potential recreation areas, waterways, ground- and surface water supplies, ecological systems, wetlands, wildlife habitat, and natural vegetation, and to maintain environmentally significant open space in its predominantly undeveloped state, in order to maintain property values and preserve the open and rural character of the Town;
E. To preserve and protect lands and buildings that are historically significant and to enhance the aesthetic and architectural quality of the entire community;
F. To encourage the continuation of agriculture and the preservation of open space, and to avoid regulating agricultural uses in a manner that unreasonably restricts or regulates farm structures or farming practices, while encouraging other economic activities that require large areas of contiguous open space, such as forestry, tree farming, and recreation, as well as the support services and industries that add value to all of these uses, such as wood products, food processing, resort, and tourist facilities;
G. To regulate building density in order to concentrate population in appropriate locations where municipal infrastructure is available, and to ensure access to light and air, conserve open space, facilitate the prevention and fighting of fires, minimize the cost of municipal services, and accomplish the other purposes enumerated in § 263 of the Town Law of New York State;
H. To integrate harmoniously different types of housing and varied land uses in hamlet centers to encourage pedestrian activity and reduce automobile traffic;
I. To provide a range of housing opportunities for all segments of the local population with due consideration for regional housing needs;
J. To protect residences from nonagricultural nuisances, odors, noise, pollution, and unsightly, obtrusive, and offensive land uses and activities;
K. To improve transportation facilities in areas designated for intensive settlement and to maintain a network of smaller country roads in areas designated for low-density development and the protection of open space, agriculture, steep slopes, and rural character;
L. To reduce traffic congestion on major roads by establishing a pattern of settlement and circulation that reduces the need for driving, provides alternative routes between destinations, and encourages walking, bicycling, and the use of public transportation;
M. To encourage the conservation of energy and the appropriate use of solar and other renewable energy resources;
N. To preserve the natural beauty of the Town as provided in the Comprehensive Plan, especially the unique ecological and scenic resources of the Shawangunk Ridge and escarpment, and to guide development consistent with maintaining the Town's natural, scenic, and ecological resources.
O. To provide a flexible system of land use regulation that enables the Town's economy and population to grow, while preserving the most important natural, historic, scenic, architectural, and cultural features; and
P. To base such flexible land use regulations on the unique characteristics of the landscape, the needs of the people of the Town of Gardiner, the property rights of landowners to make economically beneficial use of their land, and the impact of proposed land uses on the natural and human environment, and to avoid patterns of development that adversely affect the scenic, historic, rural, and natural character of the Town.