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Springdale council rules nonconforming house not fully removed; sends code rewrite to planning commission
Summary
The council interpreted town land‑use rules to mean a building remains 'nonconforming' when its foundation and utilities remain, even if the above‑ground framing was removed for rot or decay. Council members voted to direct the planning commission to tighten definitions and add a demolition permit process to close ambiguities.
The Springdale Town Council on Sept. 10 concluded that an extensively dismantled dwelling in town had not been "removed" under the town's nonconforming‑building rules because the foundation, crawl space and utilities remained in place. The ruling followed a lengthy discussion with staff, the project’s structural engineer and members of the public about when ordinary maintenance becomes demolition that would require the property to meet current zoning. Why it matters: The council’s interpretation will apply townwide: if a building’s below‑grade elements remain, the structure can retain its nonconforming status and be rebuilt within the existing footprint. At the same meeting the council directed the planning commission to revise Chapter 10‑21 of…
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