§ 152.002 DEFINITIONS.
   For the purpose of this chapter, the following definitions shall apply unless the context clearly indicates or requires a different meaning. The word LOT includes the word PLOT or PARCEL; the word BUILDING includes the word STRUCTURE; the word SHALL is always mandatory; the word USED or OCCUPIED as applied to any land or building shall be construed to include the words INTENDED, ARRANGED OR DESIGNED TO BE USED OR OCCUPIED.
   ACCESSORY BUILDINGS AND USES. A subordinate building or a portion of the main building, the use of which is incidental to, or customarily found in connection with, and (except as otherwise provided in this chapter) located on the same lot as the use of the main building or principal use of the land. An ACCESSORY USE is one, which is incidental to, or customarily found in connection with, (except as otherwise provided in this chapter) on the same lot as, the main use of the premises. When ACCESSORY is used in the text, it shall have the same meaning as ACCESSORY USE.
   AGRICULTURAL ACTIVITY. The growing, harvesting and storage of crops, including legumes, hay, grain, fruit or vegetables, truck gardening, floriculture, horticulture, mushroom growing, orchards, forestry; and the keeping, raising and feeding of livestock or poultry (except commercial feed lots), including dairy, poultry, swine, sheep, beef cattle, pony and horse production.
   ALTERATIONS, USE. A change or rearrangement of the structural parts of a building or structure such as foundations, bearing walls, columns, beams or girders; or the expansion or enlargement of the building or structure to accommodate a change in the use. ALTERATIONS shall not include painting, window replacement, siding replacement, wallpapering, repaneling, wallboard repair, roof repairs or other similar activities.
   ANIMAL BOARDING. An establishment offering indoor overnight care for domestic pet animals but not including an animal hospital in which the overnight boarding of animals is necessary for and accessory to the diagnosis and medical treatment of the physical disorders of animals.
   ANIMAL CLINIC. Any establishment used for the offices of one or more licensed veterinarians for the examination and treatment of animals on an out-patient basis only.
   ANIMAL DAYCARE. An establishment offering indoor non-overnight care for domestic pet animals.
   ANIMAL GROOMING. Indoor services provided to domestic pet animals including clipping, bathing and related services.
   ANIMAL HOSPITAL. Any establishment which is devoted primarily to the maintenance and operation of facilities for the diagnosis and treatment or care of animals which may be admitted for overnight stay or longer in order to obtain veterinary treatment for illnesses, diseases, injuries and deformities.
   ANIMAL RUN. An enclosed outdoor area intended for the exercising and/or containment of dogs and similar animals in the context of a commercial establishment.
   ASSISTED LIVING RETIREMENT COMMUNITY. A residential complex developed as a cohesive unit containing multi-family dwellings designed for and principally occupied by senior citizens. Those facilities may include a congregate meals program in a common dining area, but excludes institutional care such as is provided by a nursing home. The facility generally provides residents with a program of assisted living services to deal with the activities of daily living, and may include limited assistance with medical issues.
   BED AND BREAKFAST ESTABLISHMENT. An operator-occupied residence providing accommodations for a charge to the public with no more than two guestrooms for rent. Breakfast only may be provided exclusively to the guests of the facility. BED AND BREAKFAST ESTABLISHMENTS shall not include motels, hotels, boarding houses or food service establishments. OPERATOR shall mean the owner of the bed and breakfast establishment, or the owner’s agent, who is required by definition to reside in the bed and breakfast establishment. The GUEST ROOM shall mean a sleeping room intended to serve no more than two transient guests per night, for no more than seven consecutive nights.
   BLOCK FRONT. All of the property on one side of the street between two intersecting streets or between an intersecting street and the dead-end of a street.
   BUILDING. Any structure including a roof supported by walls, designed or intended for the support, enclosure, shelter or protection of persons, animals, chattels or property forming a construction that is safe and stable; the word BUILDING shall include the word structure.
   BUILDING, ATTACHED. A building having one or more walls in common with another building or located within two feet of another building. Breezeways between two buildings that provide a roof, but no enclosing walls shall not be considered as making two BUILDINGS ATTACHED.
   BUILDING, DETACHED. A building having no walls in common with another building and located more than two feet away from another building.
   BUILDING, HEIGHT OF. The vertical distance from the grade (elevation of curb, sidewalk or average elevation of the ground around the structure) to the highest point of the coping of a flat roof, or to the deck line of a mansard roof, or to the mean height level between eaves and ridge for gable, hip or gambrel roofs.
   BUILDING INSPECTOR. The person designated by the Village Administrator to perform inspections of the construction of buildings, structures and improvements within the village to determine conformance with various village ordinances and standards.
   BUILDING, ROW HOUSE. A building which contains a row of single-family attached dwelling units, each unit being separated from the adjoining units in each story by a party wall or walls without openings, and each unit having independent access to the exterior of the building in the ground story and each unit being located on a separate lot.
   BUILDING, TOWNHOUSE. A building that has single one-family dwelling units erected in a row as a single building, in which adjoining units are separated by a common wall or walls without openings extending from the basement floor to the roof line, and in which each unit has independent access to the exterior of the building in the ground story, and each building being separated from any other building by space on all sides.
   BUFFER STRIP. An area, property, lot, tract of land, or portion thereof, either vacant or landscaped with screen planting as herein specified, which shall serve as a separating space between dissimilar land uses or districts, established to provide protection between adjoining land uses or districts.
   CARPORT. A roofed structure not more than 50% enclosed by walls, either attached to or detached from the main building designed for the storage of motor vehicles and accessory to the main dwelling(s).
   CELLAR or BASEMENT. A portion of a building located partly or wholly underground and having one-half or more of its floor-to-ceiling height below the average grade of the adjoining ground.
   CERTIFICATE OF OCCUPANCY. A permit, issued by the Village Administrator or Village Building Inspector authorizing the occupancy or use of a building or structure.
   CLINIC. An establishment where patients are not lodged overnight but are admitted for examination and treatment by a group of physicians or dentists practicing together.
   CLUB. Buildings and facilities owned or operated by a corporation, association, person or persons for a special, educational or recreational purpose, but not primarily for profit and not primarily to render a service which is customarily carried on as a business.
   COMMERCIAL FEEDLOT. A yard, corral, pen or other area wherein cattle, horses, sheep, goats, swine or other large animals are raised and maintained in close quarters for the purpose of feeding and growth of livestock for shipment to market prior to slaughter.
   COMMERCIAL OUTDOOR RECREATION. A recreational land use conducted in open, partially enclosed, or screened facilities. This use shall include the COMMERCIAL OUTDOOR RECREATION, CONCENTRATED and COMMERCIAL OUTDOOR RECREATION, GENERAL USES as defined below.
   COMMERCIAL OUTDOOR RECREATION, CONCENTRATED. A recreational land use conducted outside of a building, characterized by potentially substantial impacts on traffic, the natural environment, and the surrounding neighborhood, including aerial tramway; alpine or water slide; amphitheater; amusement ride, auto, cycle and go-cart race track; campgrounds without recreational vehicles; coliseum, stadium; drive-in theater; and any other outdoor recreational use not specifically cited in COMMERCIAL OUTDOOR RECREATION, GENERAL.
   COMMERCIAL OUTDOOR RECREATION, GENERAL. A recreational land use conducted outside of a building, characterized by minimal to moderate impacts on traffic, the natural environment, and the surrounding neighborhood, including athletic fields; miniature golf; skateboard park; swimming, bathing, wading and other therapeutic facilities; tennis, handball, basketball courts; batting cages, trampoline facilities, arboretum, botanical garden, country club, golf course, historic site, radio controlled car tracks and motorized model airplane flying facilities.
   COMMISSION. The Plan and Zoning Commission of the village.
   CONFINED SPACE FACILITY. A lot or building or combination of lots and buildings intended for the confined feeding, breeding, raising or holding of livestock, poultry or other animals in a specifically designed confinement area.
   CONFORMING USE. Any use of a building or land which conforms with the use regulations of the district in which the building or land is situated. If the use is a permitted use but does not conform with the intensity of use regulations of the district in which it is situated, then the use shall not be deemed to be a CONFORMING USE.
   CONSTRUCTION. The excavation of earth to provide for a foundation basement or cellar; and/or, the addition to or removal of earth from a lot or tract of land so as to prepare the lot or tract of land for the construction of a structure; and/or the act of placing or affixing a component of a structure upon the ground or upon another component; and/or the placing of construction materials in a permanent position and fastening of the materials in a permanent manner; and/or the demolition, elimination and/or removal of an existing structure in connection with the construction.
   CONVENIENCE STORE. A retail store selling predominantly food items that has a total floor area of the use less than five thousand (5,000) square feet.
   DAY CARE CENTER. Any child care facility which regularly provides day care for less than 24 hours per day for more than eight children at any one time in a family home or private school type facility.
   DAY CARE HOME. Any child care facility in a home which regularly provides day care for a maximum of eight children at any one time for less than 24 hours per day.
   DECK. An above grade, flat, floored, roofless, attached or detached structure or platform which is not glassed-in or otherwise walled or enclosed above a height of two and one-half feet. Open guardrails shall not be construed as a violation of the enclosed height limitations.
   DRIVE-IN FACILITY. A building or portion thereof which is designed to provide either wholly or in part, service to customers in vehicles that are parked in a parking space.
   DRIVE-THROUGH FACILITY. A building or portion thereof which is designed to provide either wholly or in part, service to customers in vehicles that are stacked in a service lane.
   DRIVEWAY. A private roadway providing access for vehicles from a public right-of-way to a parking space, garage, parking lot or other structure.
   DUPLEX. A structure containing two (2) dwelling units on a single lot.
   DWELLING. Any building or portion thereof designed and used exclusively for residential purposes.
   DWELLING, COMMON LOT LINE. A dwelling unit that adjoins another dwelling unit with a party wall at a common lot line with each single dwelling unit being located on its own separate lot.
   DWELLING, COMMUNITY LIVING FACILITY. A dwelling operated under state license or certification, or contract to provide supervision, food, lodging or other services to a service dependent population as herein defined, living and cooking together in a single cooperative housekeeping unit, consisting of:
      (1)   A basic group of members of a service dependent population; and
      (2)   Additional staff persons providing supervision of service to the basic group, as specified in aforesaid licensing, certification or contract regulations. COMMUNITY LIVING FACILITIES are limited to one per structure.
   DWELLING, COMMUNITY LIVING FACILITY, CATEGORY I. A community living facility dwelling with a basic group limited to not more than five service dependent individuals plus a maximum of two resident (live-in) staff at any given time, subject to a higher number of staff if required to meet state or federal regulations. The facility is intended for permanent placements, and shall not be for crisis or short-term, transient placements.
   DWELLING, COMMUNITY LIVING FACILITY, CATEGORY II. A community living facility dwelling with a basic group limited to not more than eight service dependent individuals plus a maximum of two resident (live-in) staff at any given time, subject to a higher number of staff if required to meet state or federal regulations. The facility is intended for permanent placements, and shall not be for crisis or short-term, transient placements.
   DWELLING, COMMUNITY LIVING FACILITY, CATEGORY III. A community living facility dwelling with a basic group limited to not more than 15 service dependent individuals plus a maximum of four resident (live-in) staff at any time, subject to a higher number if required to meet state and federal regulations. The facility may be used for temporary placement of service dependent individuals.
   DWELLING, MULTIPLE-FAMILY. A dwelling which is designed for or occupied by three or more families occupying separate living quarters, but not including a row house building.
   DWELLING, ROW HOUSE. A dwelling unit which is part of a row house building.
   DWELLING, SINGLE-FAMILY. Any building or portion thereof designed or occupied exclusively by one family.
   DWELLING, TOWNHOUSE. A dwelling unit which is part of a townhouse building.
   DWELLING UNIT. A room or group of rooms within a dwelling and forming a single habitable unit with facilities for living, sleeping and cooking.
   FAMILY. A person living alone, or two or more persons living together as a single housekeeping unit in a dwelling unit, as distinguished from a group occupying a rooming house, motel, hotel, fraternity or sorority house, provided, however, that for the purpose of definition, FAMILY shall not mean more than four persons unrelated to each other by blood, marriage or legal adoption. FAMILY shall include members of a service dependent population living in community living facilities as herein defined.
   FARM. A tract of land of at least five acres used for the growing and storage of the usual agricultural crops such as grain, vegetables and fruit, or for the raising thereon of the usual farm animals such as horses, cattle, dairy cows, sheep and swine on a limited basis. The term includes the utilization of the land for one or more of the above uses, including the necessary operations for treating or storing the produce incidental thereto. Any tract on which the principal use is the raising of fur-bearing animals such as mink, muskrats, rabbits and the like, shall not be considered a FARM. A commercial feed lot or a confined space facility for the raising of sheep, cattle, chickens, swine, turkeys, dairy cows or fish shall not be considered a FARM. Residential structures occupied by persons primarily engaged in farming are included in the term FARM; however, there shall not be more than two single-family dwellings on any one FARM.
   FENCE. A constructed barrier erected as a means of protection or confinement to enclose or screen areas of land.
   FENCE, ELECTRONIC. An underground means of controlling the movement of an animal by emitting an electrical signal when the animal wearing an electronic collar nears the boundary of the fence.
   FLOOR AREA. The sum of the gross horizontal areas of all floors of a building, measured from the exterior faces of the exterior walls or from the centerline of walls separating buildings, but not including cellar or basement space not used for retailing and not including accessory off-street parking or loading space.
   GARAGE, PRIVATE. An enclosed structure either attached or detached from the principal residence structure primarily used for the storage of vehicles owned and operated by the occupants of the premises, inside which no business, occupation or service for profit is in any way conducted, and which also may contain incidental storage of personal property related to the maintenance of the home and lot or items for private recreational purposes.
   GARAGE, PUBLIC. A garage other than a private garage.
   GUEST QUARTERS. An accessory building or portion of the main building located on the same lot as the main building and used as living quarters for guests and not rented or otherwise used as a separate domicile, and containing no kitchen facilities.
   HOME OCCUPATION. An accessory use within a dwelling, involving an occupation or activity related to the provision or sale of goods or services, which is carried on by the residents of the dwelling unit, and which use is clearly incidental and subordinate to the use of the premises for dwelling.
   HOTEL. A building in which lodging or lodging and meals are provided for transient guests, having a lobby for the common use from which individual rooms or suites are accessible.
   KENNEL. An establishment, use or structure intended and used for the breeding of animals for sale or for the outdoor training or outdoor overnight boarding of animals for persons other than the owner of the property.
   LOT. A parcel of land occupied or intended for occupancy by a use permitted in this chapter, including one main building together with its accessory building, and the open space and parking spaces required by this chapter, and having its principal frontage upon a street.
   LOT COVERAGE. The portion of a lot that is covered by a dwelling, a principal building, an accessory building or a carport.
   LOT, EXTERIOR ROW HOUSE. A lot which is intended to be a site for a row house with a similar row house attached on only one side.
   LOT FRONTAGE. The portion of a lot (a lot line) abutting a street.
   LOT, INTERIOR ROW HOUSE. A lot which is or is intended to be a site for a row house with a similar row house attached on each side.
   LOT LINE. The property line or title line bounding a lot.
   LOT OF RECORD. A lot or parcel of land, the plat, map or deed to which has been recorded in the Office of the County Recorder prior to the adoption of this chapter.
   LOT WIDTH. Minimum lot widths are established in § 152.090. For regularly shaped lots, the LOT WIDTH shall mean the average distance between the side lot lines, measured at right angles to the depth of the lot along the lot frontage. For irregularly shaped or wedge-shaped lots, the LOT WIDTH shall be the distance between the side lot lines measured along the curvature of the arc at the points of intersection of the front setback line with the side lot lines. Through the subdivision plat review process, the front yard setback line may be adjusted to increase the front yard setback to meet the minimum lot width requirement for irregular lots, but in no case shall the lot frontage at the front lot line be less than 40 feet.
   LOT, ZONING. One or more buildable lots located within a single block, which is designated as a tract to be used, developed or built upon as a unit under single ownership or control. A ZONING LOT may or may not coincide with a lot of record and shall be located entirely within one zoning district.
   MAJOR STREET. A street designated as a major street or master street on the Official Street Plan.
   MICRO-BREWERY. A licensed commercial establishment manufacturing beer in quantities not exceeding 50,000 gallons (all beverages combined) per year.
   MIXED USE. The use of a tract of land or structure with two or more different principal uses.
   MIXED USE DEVELOPMENT. An area, parcel of land, or structure developed in a compact form for two or more different, principal land uses, such as but not limited to residential, office, retail, service, public, light manufacturing, or entertainment, and planned as a unified complementary whole, and functionally integrated to the use of shared vehicular and pedestrian access and parking areas.
   MIXED USE STRUCTURE. A building or structure which includes two or more principal, compatible uses, such as but not limited to residential, office, retail, service, public, light manufacturing, or entertainment, and planned as a unified complementary whole, and functionally integrated to the use of shared vehicular and pedestrian access and parking areas.
   MOBILE HOME OR TRAILER. A vehicle equipped to carry materials or to function as a dwelling unit and designed to be hauled or transported along a highway, including camping trailers, house trailers, tent trailers, boat trailers, materials trailers and farm wagons.
   MOBILE HOME OR TRAILER COURT. An area where one or more inhabited mobile homes can be or are intended to be parked.
   MODULAR HOME. A prefabricated building manufactured in whole or in part off the site and transported to the site and which must be provided with and placed upon a permanent fixed foundation as a part of its installation at the site.
   MOTEL. A building or group of buildings in which lodging and individual automobile parking space in close proximity are provided for transients traveling by motor vehicle.
   NONCONFORMING USE. Any building or land lawfully occupied by a use at the time of passage of this chapter and all amendments thereto which does not conform with the use regulations of the district within which it is located.
   NURSING HOME. A home for the aged or infirm in which three or more persons not of the immediate family are received, kept or provided with food and shelter or care for compensation; but not including hospitals, clinics or similar institutions devoted primarily to the diagnosis and treatment of the sick or injured.
   OCCUPANCY. The residing of an individual overnight in a dwelling unit, or the use of equipment, merchandise or machinery in any public, agricultural, commercial or industrial building, or the utilization of a parcel or structure for any permitted or conditional use set forth in this chapter.
   OPEN SPACE. The portion of the total land area excluding area set aside or used for living units, storage, maintenance and mechanical buildings, parking, loading, driveways and streets. Land and accessory buildings devoted exclusively to recreation purposes to include swimming pools, tennis courts and similar recreation uses shall be considered OPEN SPACE.
   PARKING SPACE. A surfaced area, not less than nine feet wide and 20 feet long, enclosed or unenclosed, connected to a public street or alley by a surfaced driveway and permanently reserved for the parking or storage of one motor vehicle.
   PLAT, LOT. A drawing of a lot showing its dimensions, the building arrangement thereon and other information as may be needed for enforcement of this chapter.
   PORCH. A ground level or first story above grade, enclosed, roofed platform structure, supported from the ground and extending out from the main part of the building.
   PREMISES. A lot, together with all buildings and structures thereon.
   RESTAURANT. A facility that prepares and sells food directly to consumers for immediate consumption. It does not include facilities that provide food to interstate conveyances, central kitchens, and other similar facilities that do not prepare and serve food directly to consumers.
   SALVAGE OR JUNK YARD. Any land or building, or other structure used for the storage, collection, processing or conversion of any worn out, cast off or discarded metal, paper, glass or other material which is ready for destruction, or has been collected or stored for salvage or conversion to some use. This includes, but is not limited to, such things as automobiles, machinery, farm implements, household appliances and construction material.
   SERVICE DEPENDENT POPULATION. A group of individuals who, by reason of mental or physical disability, require supervision offered in connection with residence in a community living facility as herein defined, but do not require medical or nursing care on site. The groups shall reside as members of a single housekeeping unit in a quasi-parental relationship with staff. The groups shall not include persons for whom the services are a requirement of a sentence upon conviction of a criminal offense or whose need for the services arises during or immediately following a sentence of incarceration for a criminal offense nor for the treatment or rehabilitation of drug or alcohol addiction.
   SETBACK. The required minimum horizontal distance between the buildable area of a lot and the related front, rear or side property line.
   SETBACK LINE. A line within a lot parallel to a corresponding lot line, which is the boundary of any specified front, side or rear yard established to govern the location of buildings, structures or uses.
   SHOPPING CENTER. A single tract of land or lot containing five or more independent commercial establishments and a total business space of more than 5,000 square feet that is planned, constructed and administered as a total entity with shared parking for customers and employees provided on-site.
   SIGN. A sign is any structure or part thereof, or any device attached to, painted on or represented on a building or other structure, upon which is displayed or included any letter, work model, banner, flag, pennant, insignia, decoration, device or representation used as, or which is in the nature of an announcement, direction, advertisement or other attention-directing device. A SIGN shall not include a similar structure or device located within show windows. A SIGN includes any billboard or poster panel, but does not include the flag, pennant or insignia of any nation or association of nations, or of any state, city or other political unit, or of any political, charitable, educational, philanthropic, civic, professional, religious or like campaign, drive, movement or event.
   SIGN AREA. That area within a line including the outer extremities of all letters, figures, characters and delineations or within a line including the outer extremities of the framework or background of the sign, whichever line includes the larger area. The support for the sign background, whether it be columns, a pylon or a building or part thereof, shall be excluded in the SIGN AREA.
   STORY. The 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 is no floor above it, the space between the floor and the ceiling next above it. A HALF-STORY is a partial story under a gable, hip or gambrel roof, the wall plates of which on at least two opposite exterior walls are not more than four feet above the floor of the story.
   STREET. Any public or private way set aside as a permanent right-of-way for street purposes.
   STRUCTURAL ALTERATION. Any change in the structural members of a building, such as walls, columns, rafters, beams or girders.
   STRUCTURE. Anything constructed or erected, the use of which requires permanent location on the ground.
   SWIMMING POOL. An artificially created permanent pool or tank either above grade, below grade, or partially below grade, which has a depth of more than 24 inches covering more than 25 square feet or that has a capacity of more than 200 gallons of water, created for the purpose of swimming, wading or water recreation.
   TEA ROOM. A restaurant when located in a pre-existing residential structure, that serves tea, coffee, snacks, light lunches, and has seating capacity of no more than 20 persons, and is only open between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. daily.
   TRAILER. Any structure used for living, sleeping, business or storage purposes which has no foundation other than wheels, blocks, skids, jacks, horses or skirting and which has been, or reasonably may be, equipped with wheels or other devices for moving the structure from place to place, whether by motive power or other means. No TRAILER, as herein defined, shall be construed as a dwelling.
   TRAILER CAMP. Any lot or parcel used for one or more trailers, house or camp cars or other portable or mobile shelters used for living purposes.
   TRAVEL PLAZA OR TRUCK STOP. A use primarily engaged in the maintenance, servicing, storage, parking or repair of commercial vehicles, including the sale of motor fuels or other petroleum products, and the sale of accessories or equipment for over-the-road trucks and similar commercial vehicles. A TRAVEL PLAZA OR TRUCK STOP may also include overnight accommodations, showers, vehicle scales, restaurant facilities, game rooms, and/or other services and diversions intended mainly for use by truck drivers and interregional travelers.
   USE. The specific purpose for which land, a structure or premises is designed, arranged, intended or for which it is, or may be, occupied or maintained.
   USE, CONDITIONAL. A use, the character of which is not ordinarily permitted in a zoning district, but which may be appropriate under certain specific conditions as established by the Board of Trustees in accordance with §§ 152.120 and 152.121.
   USE, PERMISSIVE. A use permitted or lawfully established in a particular district, provided that it conforms to all of the requirements, regulations and performance standards of the district.
   USE, PRINCIPAL. The predominant or main use to which land or buildings are devoted.
   VISIBILITY OBSTRUCTION. Any physical barrier which impairs visibility; provided, however, it shall not include wire fences or chain link fences which are more than 95% open. And provided further, it shall not be construed to include any physical barrier which is less than two feet or more than seven feet from the mean grade of the lot within the visibility triangle. Traffic controls, illuminators, trees, flag poles or public utility devices and items which are less than twelve inches in width will not be defined as VISIBILITY OBSTRUCTIONS.
   VISIBILITY TRIANGLE. The area within the vertices of an isosceles triangle whose two equal legs are to be measured along the right-of-way lines of the adjoining or intersecting streets or roads (or extensions thereof). The TRIANGLE shall be formed by connecting two points on the right-of-way lines of the intersecting streets located 30 feet from the point of intersection at the street right-of-way lines.
   YARD. An open space on the same lot with a building, unobstructed from the ground upward from any human made structure, except roof overhangs, cornices and ornamental features, and measured as the minimum distance between the lot line and main building.
   YARD, FRONT. An area extending across the front of a lot between the side lot lines, and being the minimum horizontal distance between the right-of-way line and the main building or any projections thereof other than the projections of uncovered porches. On corner lots, the front yard shall be considered as parallel to all streets upon which the lot has frontage.
   YARD, REAR. A yard extending across the rear of the lot between the side lot lines and measured between the rear lot line and the rear of the main building or any projection other than steps, unenclosed porches or entrance way.
   YARD, SIDE. A yard between the main building and the side lot line, and extending from the front yard line to the rear yard line, and being the minimum horizontal distance between a side lot line and the side of the main building or any projections thereof.
12-01-01, passed 1-24-2012; Ord. 17-09-02, passed 9-26-2017; Ord. 17-11-06, passed 11-28-2017; Ord. 20-12-01, passed 12-15-2020)