HomeMy WebLinkAboutZBA-10/26/2006 Hearing
1
2
e 3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
tit 14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e 25
[. ..
.1, to LF
"".r <; t 4 ,~_......
'f ) ,It -)
I
.\ L/..Ior,;Y'
TOWN OF SOUTHOLD
COUNTY OF SUFFOLK
ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS
STATE OF NEW YORK
--------------------------------------------x
TOW N
SOU THO L D
o F
Z 0 N I N G
o F
A P PEA L S
BOA R D
--------------------------------------------x
Southold Town Hall
53095 Main Road
Southold, New York
October 26, 2006
9:30 a.m.
Board Members Present
RUTH OLIVA, Chairwoman
GERARD P. GOEHRINGER, Board Member
LESLIE KANES WEISMAN, Board Member
JAMES DINIZIO, Board Member
MICHAEL SIMON, Board Member
LINDA KOWALSKI, Board Secretary
KIERAN CORCORAN, Assistant Town Attorney
OfUGINAIl
COURT REPORTING AND TRANSCRIPTION SERVICE (631) 878-8047
2
1
2
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: This is October 26,
2006. The Board will come to order. I need a
resolution that all our hearings are negative
declarations.
(See minutes for resolution.)
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: I see you are all here
this morning. Our first hearing is for Jeremy and
Lauren Hamilton; is there someone to speak on
this?
MS. DROZDOWSKA: Yes, I'm Aggie
Drozdowska. I'm representing Mr. and
Mrs. Hamilton. We have come to the Board in
request of a one foot variance of an existing
structure in a front yard setback. We are
proposing additions of a front covered porch along
with an additional second floor above the existing
nonconforming setback. It's all located within
the 39 foot setback.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Nice little house down
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
there.
12
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: I have a question.
It seems like a very modest sort of change and
it's a good size lot one of the ziterata that's
cited in the statute has to do with whether
there's any other way of obtaining the benefits of
the addition. Now that particular house has a
huge amount of land behind the house and one could
wonder why, even a one foot variance In the front
of the house where it's relatively close to the
edge of the property is necessary; could you speak
to that?
MS. DROZDOWSKA: Well, the covered porch
In the front is actually located within an
existing concrete stoop, which is being
removed. The steps already there is actually
the steps of the stoop go beyond the proposed
covered porch. So that in a way is still located
within the existing context of the home
itself. Then on the second floor as the addition
lS on the right side of the home as you all saw
when you went out to look at the property,
basically it's just a reverse gable coming across
what's already there in the front. So the only
other way -- there is possibilities, obviously we
could set the roof back, but that would still
require a variance because we would still at the
time still need to do some sort of structural
element to the roof itself in order to step it
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
3
1
9
back, that's to me the 40 foot setback. So, in
the long run, one way or the other, we would be in
front of the Board asking for the same variance.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Thank you.
MS. DROZDOWSKA: You're welcome.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Jerry, do you have any
questions?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: I have no
objections, if it looks anything like the house
she's doing on New Suffolk Avenue that we have
discussed that was by it, by the way, this
morning, really looks very nice.
MS. DROZDOWSKA: Thank you.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Leslie?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: No. The plans are
very clear. I see what you're doing. Nice
elevation.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Jim?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: No questions.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Is there anyone in the
audience that wishes to speak on this application?
Mr. Edwards.
MR. EDWARDS: My name lS Bill Edwards. I
live at 1600 Park Avenue directly across from the
house in question. I would urge the Board to
approve this application. I think it's perfectly
appropriate to the neighborhood. This morning I
paced off to see what impact it had on my
property, my house is 500 feet back from the road,
I can't even see their house. The neighborhood is
a neighborhood of rather larger houses. I think
this would be perfectly appropriate, it wouldn't
impinge on anybody, and I urge its adoption.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Thank you. Is there
anyone else that wishes to speak on this
application?
(See minutes for resolution.)
2
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
23
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: The next hearing is for
Mark and Ellen Weiderlight on Fanning Road, New
Suffolk.
MS. DROZDOWSKA: Good mornlng.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Good morning
again. From what I understand, it looks to me
like we're turning this house around, sort of.
MS. DROZDOWSKA: Well, the reason why we
came in front of the Board again, is that it is an
existing nonconforming garage at the moment and we
21
22
24
.
25
October 26, 2006
4
1
9
are doing additions beyond that to the home itself
of a second floor as you saw in the drawings. But
all of that is contained in the appropriate
setback of all -- of both front and sides. The
element in question is the existing garage, which
is being converted to a living space and the
garage then is being located in the rear as you
say. So, yes, in effect it is being rotated.
The reason -- well, first of all, the
existing garage does not have a subfloor so we
will be putting a structural element of that and
changing the roofage of the existing garage. At
the moment the pitch is about 6 and 12. We will
be changing it to 10 and 12 pitch. So an existing
nonconforming, again.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Jim?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: What would be the
problem of just tearing down the building and
putting a new one there?
MS. DROZDOWSKA: Well, it would be
lessening the square footage of the house
basically. And we fit under the 20 percent lot
coverage and we'd like to keep the -- the
foundation is already there. We're not putting a
second floor above that garage so that's not a
concern within itself. So we'd like to basically
keep it as it is. We're taking the square space
of the home, putting siding on. Making that space
a habitable space and keeping it within the same
confines basically just changing the roof line.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Leslie?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: That's a very large
piece of property. You have plenty of room to do
all you want.
2
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
22
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Jerry?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER:
about the -- I apologize, I don't
notice of disapproval here. Were
third story?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: No, there it is.
It's setback 30 feet instead of 35.
MS. DROZDOWSKA: 30.4 feet.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: What is the
highest possible roof line comprised? And the
purpose of my saying this and asking this question
is I don't want these nice people to have to come
back. There was the exact same thing down on Ruch
Road, and they had to come back.
Can we talk
seem to have my
you denied for a
19
20
21
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
5
1
9
MS. DROZDOWSKA: The highest possible roof
line of what it would be?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: What is the
cupola of the widow's walk?
MS. DROZDOWSKA: Oh, the widow's walk,
that is a 30 foot down to the midridge. We have
about another four feet up from that.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Does that
comprise -- would you like me to refer to you as
Aggie?
MS. DROZDOWSKA: That's fine.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Aggie, is it a
habitable room?
MS. DROZDOWSKA: Yes, it is. It's a
mezzanine type of deal open to the below office
space.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Is it open or
does it have a flooring?
MS. DROZDOWSKA: It has a flooring.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Okay. I'm going
to tell you that we have done several of these and
I'm going to tell you that I think the Building
Department missed it. And I'm going to tell you
that maybe what you should do is discuss it with
them, and not taking the words out of the
Chairperson's mouth, but you might want to go back
to them and show it to them today, just in case
they're considering this to be a third story
because I'd like to take care of the whole thing
right now rather than have these nice people --
and yourself included in those nice people -- come
back again, meaning the Weiderlights, because the
only element to that third story is going to be
the necessity of a sprinkler system.
MS. DROZDOWSKA: We fully understand
2
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
that.
22
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Okay, what would
you like to do regarding that?
MS. DROZDOWSKA: I would like to go to the
Building Department and explain to them what type
of a space that actually will serve per se.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Because you did, you
gave us the drawings here after you had gotten
your notice of disapproval according to the
date.
20
21
23
24
e
25
MS. DROZDOWSKA: Not to mean to be
ignorant but we're not treating it as a third
floor. In essence, I know that's something we
October 26, 2006
6
1
.
3
have to speak to the Building Department
about. But it is being treated in our mind and
Mr. and Mrs. Weiderlight's minds as basically an
overlook tower up on whether it does have a roof
above it.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: I agree with Jerry
2
4
5
though.
9
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: We've done this
before, okay, this is the fifth one, and everyone
of them was construed to be a third story. And
I'm just asking you, see, the advantage of taking
this meeting and bringing it to a daily basis as
opposed to a nice basis in 2001 was the ability to
go back to the Building Department and say, are
you going to construe this to be a third story
because In that case the Weiderlights aren't going
to be able to get a building permit.
MS. DROZDOWSKA: Definitely.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: And the winter's
coming, and if you're going to work on this in the
winter, it only makes sense for you to deal with
it at this point.
MS. DROZDOWSKA: Yes, I would like to
visit the Building Department.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: The only
lS if the Building Department denies it
additional variance on the third story,
to amend your application.
MS. DROZDOWSKA: I think we would make
accommodations at that point. Accommodations to
actually meet the requirements of the Building
Department, not to go with the third story effect.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: This is well within
the height restrictions.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER:
to do with it.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: It's habitable
above the second floor. The scale is not
inappropriate at all.
MS. DROZDOWSKA: May I ask you if In
effect we do decide to go to a mezzanine where
it's actually a balcony within the floor itself
within that space, a balcony lS open down to the
below room, would that be a consideration to the
Board not to make it a third floor?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Only if there
was no floor in it, and it was used strictly for
lighting purposes, meaning the lighting to the
difficulty
for an
you need
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
.
14
15
16
17
18
19
It has nothing
20
21
22
23
24
.
25
October 26, 2006
7
1
.
3
second floor.
MS. DROZDOWSKA: So when I go back to the
Building Department, would you like me to corne
back to you prior to your finishing your hearing
today?
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Yes, that would be
2
4
5
great.
9
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: No. Actually you'd
have to let us know if you want to adjourn it to
this afternoon because you haven't decided yet?
MS. DROZDOWSKA: Yes, I'd like to do that;
we'll make the decision.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Yes, corne back this
afternoon.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: I'm a little
unclear as to what it is that you're going to ask
them. I looked at the front elevation. I see
three windows on top of each other. And to my
mind that means a third story. In the notice of
disapproval there is not a mention of that.
MS. DROZDOWSKA: No.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: So I understand
that. So my assumption is that the Building
Inspector saw that and didn't think anything of
it. If you go back today and go to the Building
Inspector and they say, oh, no, no, that's a third
story, you are at least a month behind.
MS. DROZDOWSKA: Well, what I would like
to do is I have to refer to Mr. Weiderlight to
consider making it on top of the roof for light
access.
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
.
14
15
16
17
22
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Hold on a minute.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: We really don't
know how it's going to be construed by the
Building Department.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Here's my concern,
you go back to them and they say, oh, no, no, we
qot to amend the disapproval. Then your
application, what we advertised for today, is
thrown out the window. You're starting the
process again.
MS. DROZDOWSKA: I know.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Actually, I was
looking on the date of the plan, it's dated after
the disapproval. So the Building Department
hasn't even seen the third story.
MS. DROZDOWSKA: The reason why I did it
~s I don't put the disapproval date on the
18
19
20
21
23
24
.
25
October 26, 2006
8
1
.
3
drawings.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: The drawings are
dated September 11th, and the disapproval is in
August. So, they would need to review that
plan.
MS. DROZDOWSKA: That's when they were
2
4
5
issued.
8
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Why don't we adjourn to
this afternoon?
MS. DROZDOWSKA: That's fine.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Is it also
possible, I notice in my set of documents there's
an existing and proposed first floor plan, but
there is no second floor plan or cupola.
There's no plan for that submitted. So it's
difficult to interpret how that will connect
vertically through the section. If you have that,
I'd like to see that.
MS. DROZDOWSKA: Sure, I'll bring that.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: That will be
helpful.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Thank you.
MS. DROZDOWSKA: What time, do I call?
Who do I call to see what time I come back in?
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: We'll give you a
time to come back in; we would make it 1:15.
MS. DROZDOWSKA: Thank you.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Is there anyone In the
audience that wishes to comment on this
application? If not, then I'll make a motion to
adjourn to 1:15 this afternoon.
(See minutes for resolution.)
6
7
9
10
11
12
13
.
14
15
16
17
18
19
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Next hearing is for the
House of Daige accepting written submissions and
concluding the record. Mrs. Doty, do you have
anything to say?
MS. DOTY: I have a lot to say, but I'm
gOlng to resist. I did not receive any additional
green cards. I want you to know that what you
have lS what I have so far. And I realize that
you are not going to allow testimony, so I will
back off. Thank you.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Okay. Is there anyone
in the audience that wishes to comment on this
application? If not, I'll make a motion to close
the hearing and reserve decision until later.
(See minutes for resolution.)
20
21
22
23
24
.
25
October 26, 2006
9
1
2
5
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Next hearing is for the
Prestons on Reydon Drive in Southold. Just out of
curiosity, how do you get to that private
driveway? I was looking all around.
MR. PRESTON: As you go in you go left and
there's a quick right, it's kind of a dirt
road. It's not really marked or anything.
There's a sign that says Old Dirt Road that's put
up.
e
3
4
6
9
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Okay.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: I love our town.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: It was good
climbing. Anyway, go ahead.
MR. PRESTON: My name is Walter
Preston. I'm a summer resident out here with my
wife. Eventually, we hope to be full time
residents, but I'm still a few years away from
that. But what we want to do is we want to build
a garage on the lot there with a pool, a swimming
pool.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: And the cabana?
MR. PRESTON: Yes, basically a changing
area for the swimming pool. One of the things ~~
I think the main reason we're getting the variance
is because technically we have two front yards
because of this dirt road. So everything, it's
kind of a mishmash with all that. Every other
house in our area there that's on that access road
has a garage and we don't. So we feel that it
would pretty much conform to what's going on
there. I draw the plans for the garage trying to
keep in mind a nice architecture, a nice east end
type of architecture. I think it's a fairly
attractive building. I don't think it would be
out of place. Then the swimming pool is something
that we have, four kids.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: It's a big pool.
MR. PRESTON: I have a fairly large lot
there too. Which we were kind of fortunate when
we bought the house that we did get the large lot,
and there are six of us. As it is now, there's no
place to put the bikes or the lawn mower or the
boat in the winter, we really need this extra
space. The swimming pool is, we'd like to get
that also because our long term plans are to
retire out at the house, and when the beach gets
cold in August or early September, we'd have a
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
10
1
e
3
month or so on the end of the season to enjoy it
and that kind of stuff.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: I have a question about
your cabana there. What kind of bath are you
talking about, a toilet and a sink?
MR. PRESTON: It's a half bath, exactly.
It's not going to be a whole bath, a three piece
bath.
2
4
5
6
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Will there be a
shower?
7
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: No, no shower.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: You can have an outside
shower if you want.
MR. PRESTON: Yes, we understand. There's
no shower in the building.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Jerry?
MR. PRESTON: For some reason the driveway
that's on there now lS a bit exaggerated; it's not
to scale for some reason. It's just happened on
the plan but that would all be corrected
anyway.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: The one that's
drawn is the --
MR. PRESTON: It's not that big now. The
house is probably very accurate.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: It is a small house.
MR. PRESTON: There's six of us In there,
there's no place to put anything, the bikes or
lawn mower or anything.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: The setback In your
plan looks appropriate, but when I was out there
it seemed that there are garages allover the
place, but none of them seemed to be quite that
close or that big to that private road. It looks
really large relative to the others and much
closer to that road. And even though it looks
like you have a 12 foot side yard setback for the
pool, it looked to me from the stakes, aside from
the trees you're going to have to chop down,
really close to your neighbor. And I'm just
wondering whether or not it wouldn't be possible
to -- because you have a really big yard -- to
kind of move the pool over a little bit, farther
away from that property line, a little closer to
towards your house? Just for visual impact on the
neighbors; have you spoken to your neighbors about
it?
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
MR. PRESTON: Yes.
I don't think there's
October 26, 2006
11
1
9
any objections to it. We have spoken to them
about it. Eventually, we are gOlng to try to
build a house there. I mean, the structure that's
there now, it's just a bungalow and it doesn't
even have a foundation. It's sitting on cinder
blocks. It's very small. So I think, I mean, I
agree with you that there is a lot of space on the
lot. But if we ever were to build a house we
would have to pull it back from the front road,
I'm sure, because of the setback. And by the time
we did that it really would be right on top of the
pool if you kept in mind all the setback on the
other side also.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Could you move it over
at least, instead 12 feet, 15 feet?
MR. PRESTON: Yes.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: I think so. I
mean, it's like trying to compromise so that
there's a little bit more privacy and more room,
and also I'll be interested to know where the pump
equipment is going to be located and if there's
any nOlse abatement and any kind of screening that
you're planning?
MR. PRESTON: I want to try to keep most
of that in the garage if possible, just to keep it
out of sight.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: On the pool?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Also it would help
with noise a little.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: What about
screening between the dirt road and the pool? Or
the property line, the 12 feet or 15 feet that
we're talking about; are you gOlng to screen the
pool from the road, from the old road in the back?
MR. PRESTON: The pool isn't adjacent to
the road. The pool is more to the property line.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: But he's saying even
along the property line.
MR. PRESTON: Along the property line
2
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
then?
22
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Yes.
MR. PRESTON: In the past I've planted
arborvitaes and cypresses, that kind of thing, a
natural screening. Okay. I said In the past, I
mean on myoId house in Northport.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Are you planning
on doing that here?
MR. PRESTON: Yes.
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
12
1
7
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA:
put that in our decision?
MR. PRESTON: No, that's fine.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: And the garage, it's
going to be upstairs?
MR. PRESTON: For
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA:
MR. PRESTON: Yes,
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA:
ridge in the garage?
MR. PRESTON: To the ridge?
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Yes.
MR. PRESTON: I had drawn it to the middle
of the ridge, which I understood to be one of the
codes in talking with one of the guys at Penny
Lumber.
You wouldn't mind if we
2
e
3
4
5
storage.
Stairs to go up?
yes, storage up there.
How high is it to the
6
8
9
10
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA:
I think it said 18
feet?
15
MR. PRESTON: 18 to the middle of the
ridge, and then I think what it turns out is 23 to
the actual ridge. The middle of the rafters.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: You're showing
windows which are okay in your elevation on your
two car garage, we just want to make sure that the
height of this building is appropriate as an
accessory structure and that the use of it will be
strictly -- you do have a stair; is it a pull down
stair?
11
12
13
e
14
16
MR. PRESTON: No, I didn't plan on a pull
down stair.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Regular stair.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: I see that. So
that makes somewhat of a difference in terms of
possible use.
MR. PRESTON: That's fine, those pull down
17
18
19
stairs.
20
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: They're very
awkward. But one of the reasons we're talking
about this is we want to make sure that that
second floor is not habitable anyway; it isn't
high enough to be habitable. We're talking about
attempting to make sure that people understand,
when they build accessory structures that there is
no living space, that it's purely storage. Light,
a window is fine, natural light is fine up
there. We wanted to make sure.
MR. PRESTON: I don't even have plans to
heat it or anything.
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
13
1
e
3
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Does that
include the cabana?
MR. PRESTON: I hadn't even thought about
that, but I'm not really sure. I hadn't gotten
that far.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: We have to
2
4
5
know.
8
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Well, we can put
that in. No shower, no heat.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: It's for your summer
use anyway.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: It's seasonal. I
think you should write that in. Okay.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Jim?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Well, it looks to
me like right now you come off that private road
and that's your front yard. It looks to me like
you're utilizing where your driveway is, that's
your front yard?
MR. PRESTON: No. We consider that the
back yard. We consider Reydon Drive the front
yard.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: So you're going to
enter the house and the garage from which way?
MR. PRESTON: Back yard.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: So you're going to
drive around and come in the back way for your
garage. Now, when you build your new house,
whereabouts are you going to put it?
MR. PRESTON: Well, I consider the main
road Reydon Drive, goes straight through, then the
lot slopes through up the dirt road in the back.
When we would like to build a house, I'm going to
have to go a little bit further from the front
yard.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Well, 35 feet.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: From Reydon?
MR. PRESTON: Yes. Right now it's 25 or
30. We have to come back and we have to come
closer to the dirt road in the back.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: So we're going to
end up with your pool in the side yard?
MR. PRESTON: Yes.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Partially in the
side yard, actually where your house is located
now --
6
7
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: A couple of feet at
least.
October 26, 2006
14
1
9
MR. PRESTON: The pool we oriented, we
originally had it drawn 90 degrees the other
way. But then it would have been too much in the
front yard so we thought bringing it back this way
was the right way to go.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: If you scoot it
back a little bit more toward your cabana and
connect them with a deck or something, that would
push the pool a little bit farther behind your
house and out of the side yard?
MR. PRESTON: It's connected by a patio
now. The patio doesn't have to be that big.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: It's tweaking it a
little bit, move it a little this way, push it
that way. Without compromising your intent now I
understand your future plans and why you want to
preserve the potential for building in the side
and rear yard or your other front yard. But
another way to think about it would be to make a
little bit closer connection between the pool and
cabana and bring them a little closer together to
push it back a little bit from Reydon Drive; would
that be a problem for you at all?
MR. PRESTON: No, not at all.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Honestly, I am not
happy with any of this. Quite honestly, this lot
lS large enough, the gentleman's talking about
tearing down a house and putting up a house in a
conforming zone anyway. I'm not so sure I want to
grant, before he builds a house, a pool In the
side yard. There's plenty of room on this pleCe
of property for him to do everything he needs to
do within the code. Honestly. I just feel with
our history, I feel this is going a little bit
more than we should be granting just out of --
this pool could go any place and be conforming
right now and you still have plenty of room to put
a house. The garage is the same way. The garage
lS 10 feet off a right of way.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Jim, he has two
front yards and two side yards.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: I agree, he does.
And people have to work with that. You know my
feelings on the geometry of that is, but In any
case, this lS a pretty good sized lot and he can
do a lot of things on here. I can see when he
comes back for the house what the comments are
gOlng to be and how large that house could be.
2
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
15
1
9
I'm willing to grant a garage, 10 feet away from
any right of way with the amount of land this
gentleman has. Now, he could build a house with a
garage at the end of this, so he could have a two
car garage on his house and now this place 10 feet
off a right of way with storage. How do you feel
about that? So, I'd like to see more
consideration toward making all of the components
of the gentleman's plan be more conforming.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: How many feet do
you think, it looks to me if this is in scale
based on your survey, your site plan, that you're
about six feet, I don't have the scale ruler with
me, but it looks like you're about six feet in
your side yard with the pool.
MR. PRESTON: Six feet into the side yard?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Yes, it's a 20 foot
pool, front and side. See where the pool is where
it says 48.5 from Reydon? I'm looking to see how
far forward that pool is in front of the rear wall
of your house. What you would consider the rear?
And it looks like it's about six feet.
MR. PRESTON: I see what you're saying.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: The wall that faces
the private road you mean?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Yes.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Okay. See where it
says 16 and 12 on the depth of the house, 28 and
20 would be 48. So it's actually behind that
wall. The scale is off.
MR. PRESTON: Reydon Drive has an arc to
it a little bit.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: N-T-S, it's not to
2
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
scale.
19
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI:
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN:
problem.
MR. PRESTON: Where does it say that?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Where does it say
Right.
Solves that
20
21
that?
22
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Right here. N-T-S
okay, that helps a lot. All it does it gives you
dimensions. So what that's saying -- but Linda
very accurately typed up, if you add together 16,
4 and 12, it would be -- and the deck's 28 plus
20, so it looks as though it's going to actually
be behind your house.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: So you got 48-4 for
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
16
1
6
the house, then you got 48-5 for the pool.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: 48-4, yes.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Then 48-5 for the
pool. That's in the side yard.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Yes, but I'm saying
if this gets moved back.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: But if there's a new
house, then the pool becomes mostly In the side
yard.
2
.
3
4
5
9
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: You
house and put it 15 feet from that
property line and build it all the
where it lS right now.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: That's theory
though. That's a potential.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO:
right now.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Can I just say
something, Mr. Preston, this is one of the
problems that you have when you put the cart
before the horse, so to speak. If had you glven
us a footprint of the house, even if you stayed
within the confines of a potential or proposed
house --
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Or a building
envelope.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Building
envelope, which I'm referring to as a footprint,
then we would be able to determine better what the
whole conceptual plan would be.
MR. PRESTON: I mean, this lS still 10 to
15 years down the road.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: It wouldn't make
any difference, you certainly know what size house
you're planning on doing, even at what the ages of
your children will be 10 or 15 years down the
line. And I don't think the necessary notice of
disapproval would even pertain to the house other
than the fact that we would have a conceptual
effect of what that thing would be, what that
structure would look like.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Actually, what I
would appreciate is simply, I don't need any more
elevations, if you want to keep them looking the
way they are, that's fine, but if you could get a
site plan that actually is in scale that shows
exactly where the relationship between this pool
is and your house in scale not with just
could take that
westerly
way over to
7
8
We're looking at it
10
11
12
13
.
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
.
25
October 26, 2006
17
1
8
dimensional information but actually accurate
placement. It would really help us understand
what you want. Particularly if you would consider
moving that side yard 15, pushing that pool over
to make sure that that --
MR. PRESTON: Push the pool away from the
easterly line and closer --
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: A little bit closer
to the house, okay, make that 15 instead of 12 and
then make sure that that front line of the pool
that's facing Reydon is behind your existing
house, closer to the cabana.
MR. PRESTON: So where it says 27, make it
maybe 22 or something; would that be right?
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: No, it says instead of
48.5, 50, 5l.
MR. PRESTON: But what you had mentioned
before is moving the pool closer to the cabana
also?
2
.
3
4
5
6
7
9
10
11
12
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN:
MR. PRESTON: So shift
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN:
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Yes.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: That would be a bit
more conforming certainly and --
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Well, that isn't my
concern. Quite honestly my concern is the garage,
10 feet from the property line.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Could you move the
garage over? Where would you want to move the
garage to, Jim?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: I don't know. I
just think that 10 feet to a property line is
pretty close considering we have denied people
with porches because they're that close. There's
no reason why it can't go back.
MR. PRESTON: That's not the front yard.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: It is according to
Yes.
in two
Yes.
directions.
13
.
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
Town code, sir.
MR. PRESTON: It's where everybody else's
garage is on that road.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: I don't have a
problem with the garage there, but I do think it's
quite close.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: If it's a back yard,
it's not common to have the driveway into the back
yard into the garage. So it's not just the back
yard. As far as the garage is concerned it's a
22
23
24
.
25
October 26, 2006
18
1
8
front yard. You don't ordinarily approach the
garage through the back yard, right?
MR. PRESTON: I don't know. I have two
front yards on this house, and I have no back
yard. BOARD MEMBER SIMON: And the garage
is close to the right of way. If you had a house
in which you didn't have the back and you put your
garage In the back yard as required, the driveway
would go from Reydon Drive to the garage.
MR. PRESTON: That's right.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: In which case the
driveway would not be anywhere near as close to
the rear boundary. But because you're not using
Reydon Drive as the source of your driveway quite
reasonably, then you can't claim that it's simply
not a front yard. Because as far as the garage is
concerned it is a front yard.
MR. PRESTON: The only way I can answer
that is that's the way 15 other houses on the
block have it.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: How are you entering
the garage from the private driveway there, on the
24 foot side or would you swing it around to the
32 foot side?
MR. PRESTON: Yes, 32.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: So you're gOlng to have
to bring your --
MR. PRESTON: The whole driveway's coming
out, but basically the driveway would connect to
the 32 side. The 32 side, that's where the two
garage doors are on that side.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: So you'd be comlng In
from that private drive?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Can I ask some
questions?
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: I tend to think about
Leslie, it would be so much better if we had to
scale.
2
.
3
4
5
6
7
9
10
11
12
13
.
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Hold on. I'm
sorry. If that's where you're going to enter, why
can't you just turn it around? You galn 14 feet,
24 feet wide. If you turned it around, make the
32 feet that's your entry, you gain another 14
feet just by doing that.
MR. PRESTON: Where would I park cars?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: In the garage.
You'd be 25 feet or 24 feet away from the property
line.
22
23
24
.
25
October 26, 2006
19
1
9
MR. PRESTON: I don't follow you.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Turn the garage 90
degrees and then you enter into the long side of
the garage directly from the private drive rather
than going around through the side of the garage,
and you'd have a longer driveway.
MR. PRESTON: No, I'd have a shorter
driveway. I wouldn't even be able to park the car
out in front of the garage.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: You mean between the
garage and the private drive? You'd have to use
the garage for cars rather than just ~~
MR. PRESTON: It would also be very
difficult to come out and turn around or anything.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: On the private drive?
MR. PRESTON: Yes. I mean the road lS 10
feet wide.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: What do other people
do? Do they back out on the private drive?
MR. PRESTON: They have it situated the
way I have it situated.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Nobody backed onto
the private drive, right?
MR. PRESTON: No, I would think they would
back onto it. I mean, I can't say nobody. But I
mean, I would say the majority of people have
their garage situated perpendicular to the road so
they kind of come down to it.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Mr. Preston, can
you consider the possibility of leaving these
placed where they are, but bringing that setback
from the private right of way? In other words,
conceptualize the pool, cabana and garage much
closer together so that the visual impact of the
SlZe of that garage, which is substantial and it
lS a typological precedent. They exist all down
that private road, and I don't have any problem
with that, but it is big and it's very close to
the road. So if it was simply scooted back and
you began to go like this to the private drive and
bring us something in scale. Go to Penny Lumber
and tell them to do something that's quarter inch
scale?
2
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
MR. PRESTON: Can I do that for this
afternoon? From what I understood before you were
meeting this afternoon also.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Sure. You want to move
the pool
e
25
October 26, 2006
20
1
5
MR. PRESTON: Summarize, if I move the
garage instead of 10 feet to the northerly side,
move that to 15, have the pool instead of being 12
from the easterly side, make that 15 and then
maybe move the pool where it says 27, make it say
22, move it over another five feet.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Not 27.
MR. PRESTON: You see 27 between the one
part of the garage and the pool? Oh, yes, I see.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: You're looking at
2
e
3
4
6
7
that?
8
MR. PRESTON: Move it over five feet?
It's actually moved five feet already.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Right, because of the
9
garage.
10
MR. PRESTON: So then move the pool over
another three feet or so?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: What I'm trying to
accomplish lS getting the front line of that pool
behind the rear of your house. And without a
scale, I'm not sure how much, but the important
thing is to understand --
MR. PRESTON: So does that technically
become the rear of the yard, the edge of the
house?
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: You're still going to
end up with two front yards.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Technically, yes,
but there is what we call the architectural front
yard, which is the logical front yard where your
house is fronting the street and then In your
case, you have a second front yard, but it's the
yard where accessory structures are more likely to
be.
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
MR. PRESTON: So if I were to just guess,
were to move the pool over another four feet,
would probably do it?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN:
back from Reydon?
MR. PRESTON: Towards more northerly?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Towards the private
drive, I think so, yes.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN:
if I
that
20
You mean pushing it
21
22
23
It's toward the
cabana.
24
MR. PRESTON: I'm moving it three feet
westerly and four feet northerly.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Yes, that works.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: No, the north lS
e
25
October 26, 2006
21
1
7
that way. The north lS sideways on your drawing.
MR. PRESTON: Right. But I'm moving it
towards the private drive.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Right.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Yes.
MR. PRESTON: So I'm moving it four feet
that direction and --
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: And three feet westerly
and the garage five feet southerly?
MR. PRESTON: Yes.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: So the cabana and
the pool are going to be much closer.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Which is okay, but
if you organlze a patio or deck or something
around it, it will make the same kind of effect.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Unless of course you
wanted to rotate the garage.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: To tell you the
truth, it would have a greater visual impact if
you rotated the garage on the private right of
way, at least you have the short end facing.
MR. PRESTON: You know, I look at the
elevation, and I think it's the nicest elevation
with the door and the two doors and the peak on
that side. That way I would get to look at that
as opposed --
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Aesthetics count,
and this way your garage is screening your cabana.
So, you know --
MR. PRESTON: We talked about the
screening too. I could also, if it's 15 feet, I
could put it between the garage and the private
drive also. Do a row of arborvitaes or something,
some of our neighbors have done that also.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: All right. Bring it
back to us this afternoon. About what time?
MR. PRESTON: I don't know, it's up to you
2
.
3
4
5
6
8
9
10
11
12
13
.
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
guys.
21
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: About 2:15?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: All right. You
will also include on this amended in scale site
plan the accurate placement of your house, right?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: All I need is for
you to show us on that plan the building envelope
without having had any need for an additional
variance.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: A building envelope
for what though?
22
23
24
.
25
October 26, 2006
22
1
e
3
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: For the house.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: For what house?
For the new house or for the existing house?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: No, for the new
2
4
house.
5
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Even though he doesn't
know what he's going to do with it?
MR. PRESTON: I don't even have a plan or
anything for the new house.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Here's what's gOlng
to happen. See, we're granting you a varlance now
as I see it, you move that back to 50 feet and the
front yard setback here is what, 35 feet? The
front yard setback without needing a variance
is --
6
7
8
9
10
MR. PRESTON: 35.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Okay. He's going
to be able to put a 15 foot house there without
the need for another variance.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: The only thing is
lS if he puts a building envelope there and the
building envelope does not meet the code, then
he's got to get an amended disapproval because you
might be approving a building envelope --
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: That's what I'm
talking about, that's what I'm saying. This guy
wants to put a 40 by 20 pool in the side yard.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: So, if you put a
building envelope, make sure it meets all the code
setback?
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: He really doesn't
have a choice. He has to put it in the side yard.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: No, but that's
assuming that he has to have a two car garage with
10 feet away from a property line. That's
assumlng that that he needs that for whatever
reason.
18
19
20
21
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: We're already
suggesting that he move it 10 feet. That's what
he's trying to do, going to try and show us. So
if you can come back and show us these amended
changes we'll be In a much better position to find
a way of creating more of a conformity and
allowing you to do what you want to do.
MR. PRESTON: Okay. I don't really
understand what you were saying with the building
envelope.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Just, it can be
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
23
1
5
whatever size, as long as it meets the setback,
just like a dotted line, that you would build the
house within that area, it doesn't mean you have
to -- the edge of the envelope would meet the
front yard and side yard and rear yard setback
according to code.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Try to imagine the
maximum size house.
2
tit
3
4
8
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN:
asking too much. I really do.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: I think the reason
don't think he's asking too much lS
it can't be done without the need for
I think that's
6
7
why you
because
another
variance.
9
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: He's going to
have to go for another variance.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Why don't we get it
done right the first time, then the gentleman
doesn't have to worry about that in the future.
He's going to need a variance, there's no doubt
about that, but quite honestly, In the past, if we
looked at a two car garage that's 32 by 24, we
considered that quite an intrusion on a property
line, especially on a front yard property line.
And in my opinion, what we're conceptualizing here
is that this is a rear property line, that this is
an accessory structure, and a 24 by 32 foot
building is pretty big. I understand that most of
the houses down there have these kinds of things,
they have been renovated and they do look nice,
but we're considering laws now concerning
accessory structures that are going to make this
particular building not legal. Quite honestly,
and eventually it's going to come to that. And I
mean, a cabana is nice but a cabana can be put
anyplace on this piece of property, sir. It
doesn't have to be on the back of your garage. It
doesn't even have to be attached to the back of
your garage. And if you took the cabana off and
you moved this building back to where the cabana
lS set, you could have no problem as far as I'm
concerned about setback. I mean, that would be
well within your right to have that considering
that you have two front yards, but I don't see
gOlng the extra yard just because you want to have
a cabana. I don't see that. That cabana could go
right up against the pool or it could go 15 feet
behind your house. It could be anywhere. It
10
11
12
13
tit
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
.
25
October 26, 2006
24
1
2
doesn't have to be behind that garage.
MR. PRESTON: The changes I'm proposlng
are to be closer to the pool right up on the
pool.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Right. So if
you're moving that thing back I think you can move
that thing back 20 feet. I think that wouldn't be
that difficult to do. I think you can. And I
think the whole neighborhood would benefit from
that.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Here's the point.
We're already talking about setting it back more
from that private road, and I think what you might
want to do is sit down and look at the maximum
setback that you can comfortably accommodate
keeping the garage and cabana oriented the way it
is and bringing the pool, just doing this away
from Reydon and away from the private drive. Sit
down and measure it so you know what we're talking
about and see what the maximum setbacks are that
you can still keep the things oriented the way
they are, and come back to us with that. And then
we can bring it up again, because it may be
possible that he can set it back more than 15
feet, but tell us what the maximum is for you to
achieve the garage, the cabana and the pool.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: In scale.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Yes, that should be
ln scale.
MR. PRESTON: I'll try to draw the
driveway in.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: It's misleading.
MR. PRESTON: Yes, it's three times the
actual size of what it is.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Let me make a motion to
adjourn this to 2:15 this afternoon.
(See minutes for resolution.)
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: The next hearing is for
Fudjinski on Fourth Street in New Suffolk. Yes,
ma'am. Hi, how are you this morning?
MS. FUDJINSKI: Very well, thank you.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Good, what would you
like to tell us?
MS. FUDJINSKI: That we would like to take
down that extension on the back of the house and
on the existing footprint put up a new structure
and of course that is over 77 years old. There's
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
25
1
2
a flat roof; there's no
place is deteriorating,
it and doing things and
of control.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA:
down that flat section?
MS. FUDJINSKI: Yes.
really foundation and the
and we have been repairing
it's getting a little out
e
3
4
So you want to take
6
is fine, it's like cast iron.
old.
The original house
It's like 132 years
5
9
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: I know. It's lovely.
MS. FUDJINSKI: But the back part it was
put in '29 and '30 and it's a problem.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: And then you want to
have just your own apartment and your own place
plus an apartment?
MS. FUDJINSKI: There's an existing two
apartments now, when we bought the house they were
there. Actually it was three, the other one's
been gone for a while; it's been used for storage,
and we're going to have just that one apartment
and then the other part is my kitchen.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: I was a little confused
where that other apartment was going to be.
MS. FUDJINSKI: Which side of the house?
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Bedrooms you were
having like, but I don't see the utility room, but
I don't see where the new apartment would have a
living room.
MS. FUDJINSKI: Well, it's a kitchen,
living room and then the bedroom.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: You have the new
apartment, the apartment's being renovated. New
kitchen, bedroom, and utility room, and then the
owner's existing kitchen to be removed; now 18
that going to be the sitting room on the
apartment?
MS. FUDJINSKI: Yes.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Because you don't say
that, you say owner's existing kitchen to be
removed.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: That's a living
room. Where the kitchen is now is going to be a
living room?
MS. FUDJINSKI: On the apartment, yes.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Okay. Because even
upstairs in the house you're going to have like
five bedrooms?
MS. FUDJINSKI: Yes.
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
.
25
October 26, 2006
26
1
2
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: They're existing
bedrooms. Keeping that?
MS. FUDJINSKI: That's not being touched
e
3
at all.
5
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Okay, then what is over
the apartment to be; lS that part of the house?
MS. FUDJINSKI: It's just going to be a
pitched roof and nothing.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: It's just a flat
roof now and they're pitching it.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: If I'm reading this
correctly, you're requesting that you change from
a multifamily residence to a single family
residence with two apartments; is that what you're
asking?
4
6
7
8
9
10
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: One apartment.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Your own and
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: And an accessory
apartment really?
MS. FUDJINSKI: When we bought it there
were apartments upstairs and whatever, so we have
taken over all the maln house for ourselves now.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: So, let me get this
straight. You're wanting to have a single-family
house with one apartment?
MS. FUDJINSKI: Yes.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Yes. And instead of
the flat section, you're removing the flat section
and put it with a pitched roof; is that correct?
MS. FUDJINSKI: Yes. Same footprint.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Okay, I understand that
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
better.
18
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Yes, because the
notice of disapproval says that you are asking to
make alterations to a two-family dwelling with
three apartments converting it to a single-family
dwelling with two apartments.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: There's a reason
for that because the first set of plans that were
done, Mrs. Fudjinski, we spoke quite a bit about
the first set of plans, and there was confusion on
there; it was labeled as Apartment 1 and Apartment
~, and Mrs. Fudjinski said no, it's only one
apartment.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: And your own living
quarters.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: And she went back
to the engineer.
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
27
1
8
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: And your own living
quarters.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: She went back to
the engineer who prepared this, James Richter, and
he corrected all that.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: All right. So it
is in fact, you want to make it a single-family
house with an -- with one apartment and will that
apartment be rented?
MS. FUDJINSKI: Yes, it may be. It may
not, I have a growing family, and eventually they
may just, one of them may go in there, and it
would only be used during the summer.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Is there heat in that
2
e
3
4
5
6
7
9
part?
10
MS. FUDJINSKI: No, not now. No, just our
kitchen.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Are you adding
11
heat?
12
MS. FUDJINSKI: Yes, we are adding heat
because it all affects the main part of the
house. This has been our problem too, we only
have been able to have one register in the kitchen
because there's really no foundation and boy the
draft goes into the rest of the house.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: It's cold.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: So it might be used
year round later.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: So, what do you use to
heat the main part of your house year round?
MS. FUDJINSKI: Gas hot air.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: So it would no longer
be White Cap Rental B & B?
MS. FUDJINSKI: Right. I think we'll
always just keep the name for historic reasons.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Do you know what's
going on, there's a red building under
construction right behind you?
MS. FUDJINSKI: That was the carriage
house to my house.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Do you own that or?
MS. FUDJINSKI: No, we own it, and what
happened 12 years ago we had a foundation put
there because it was going to fall down too, and
with all the raln we had, the front of it, the
whole foundation caved in and now we found out the
building was approved and it wasn't done right.
There were no rods put In it or filled the cement
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
.
25
October 26, 2006
28
1
9
blocks with cement and that wasn't done. So now
we have that.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: So faulty
foundation?
MS. FUDJINSKI: So now it's all poured.
The inspector's comlng tomorrow for that.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: So that's still a
part of your property then?
MS. FUDJINSKI: Oh, yes. That's the
carriage house.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: That's important
because I looked at that and said, what's the
relationship between these two structures, there's
very little privacy, but it's a compound.
MS. FUDJINSKI: Yes. And I think the lot
next door, which I would love to have, but, at one
time belonged to this property and I think the
carriage maybe came In that way and went around.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Okay.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Jerry?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: I think that
answers all our questions.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Jim?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: It looks like
you're just gOlng to do a little studio apartment
and the rest of it's going to be your house and
the front of the new apartment has a new kitchen
to the left, as you come in the door, and it looks
like maybe enough room there for maybe a table,
maybe couch and TV and then a bedroom, that's it?
MS. FUDJINSKI: Yes.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: That's all I have.
There's a lot of writing on my plans but you threw
all that out. You're no longer going to have a
kitchen where it says Apartment Number 2?
MS. FUDJINSKI: Right.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: No, I have no
further questions, I understand.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: My only question lS
what will become of this one story unit along
Fourth Street; this little rental unit?
MS. FUDJINSKI: No, no, no, that's my
kitchen now and then it was this apartment, which
we haven't been using that's going to be the
utility room.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: I see.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: So you're proposing
one apartment on the ground level with pitched
2
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
29
1
2
roof, that's one story, the rest of the house is
two story, and that's a single-family house that
you will occupy, that's it?
MS. FUDJINSKI: Right.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Any other questions?
Anybody in the audience wish to comment on this
application? I just have one question, that
owner's kitchen that's to be removed and that's
going to be the sitting room or living room for
the new apartment?
MS. FUDJINSKI:
e
3
4
5
6
9
to stay the same, we're
that apartment and take
apartment.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO:
No. Our kitchen is gOlng
just going to square off
a little more for oVr
7
8
It says renovated
10
not removed.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Okay, we got it
now. Does anybody else wish to comment on this
application in the audience? If not, I'll make a
motion to close the hearing and reserve decision
until later.
(See minutes for resolution.)
11
12
13
e
14
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Next application is for
the Polashock from New Suffolk on Third Street,
accessory structure. Good morning, sir.
MR. POLASHOCK: Good morning ladies and
gentlemen.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: How are you this
afternoon?
MR. POLASHOCK: Very good.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: What would you like to
tell us? You have that accessory building in the
rear that's illegal.
MR. POLASHOCK: As I wrote on the
application while I was building it, an obviously
nonconforming structure, for the past 30 years.
It was built by my father and our plans were
submitted to the Building Department which they no
longer have for some reason. It was already
built; it was all built to plans that were
submitted and for some reason there's no record of
this. And unfortunately when I started the wheels
turning to try and get this CO'd and everything,
they have permit issued, and I found some
paperwork cleaning out my mother's house, but
noted a variance that had been issued to move the
structure back into the corner of the property.
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
30
1
6
It was replacing an existing pole structure, dirt
floor, and the extent of the place it was
basically a garage, laundry room, it was a heated
structure. My father liked to do crafts, hobbies
whatever, to do woodworking, so he tried to make
it a year round type of thing with heat and
everything and same thing on the other side with
laundry for my mom. And since I wrote the last
note that's included in the submission, I spoke to
my sister and tried to reference that upstairs
apparently, and I never knew anything about it, it
was done as apparently an accommodation to my
sister and her family, at the time there were some
personal problems. But they were trying to make
some accommodation for her to come and stay there
as far as a guest quarters or something like
that. There has never been any use of the
upstairs of it; it's been strictly used as a
storage structure upstairs for like I say 30
some-odd years. It was never completed, never
painted, never anything, just closed in.
As far as height that had been discussed
on the original permit, and it was told to my
father that it was given information from the
floor to the peak, and he stayed within that and
even by today's structure, the 18 foot I believe
is the midline structure of a height of a roofline
of an accessory building. It still is not higher
than it could possibly be. I know with the flat
roof that's why they built that flat pitched roof
on the thing to stay away from height violations.
Now it's become a detriment to me. I need to get
rid of it and to get rid of the property.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: You want to sell the
property?
MR. POLASHOCK: Yes, I do.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: And therefore you need
this varlance because it's not legal.
MR. POLASHOCK: Yes, to accommodate the
structure. And again, that first variance was for
the setback for the --
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: You're about a foot off
the line there.
MR. POLASHOCK: It was given as a foot off
the line.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Yes, the setback
and lot coverage were approved.
MR. POLASHOCK: What happened was
2
e
3
4
5
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
31
1
2
apparently when they went to build the structure
whoever, Danowski, who is no longer with us,
whoever he had working for him and assuming,
looking at a monument that they picked the
dimension off the fourth side of the monument,
which accommodates that two and eleven-sixteenths
or two and five-eighths inches, that it's now too
close?
e
3
4
5
6
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Two and a half
inches too close.
MR. POLASHOCK: Approximately half the
width of a monument, so rather than split the
center of a monument, which they should have, they
picked it off the side of the monument.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: So it was measured
incorrectly in terms of the allowable.
MR. POLASHOCK: All down In the village,
everything is small, compact, several other places
within the village which you can see from the
overhead view.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: We were all down there.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: It's pretty clear
that that was never really used -- the 1968 permit
was granted for a garage that would house a car,
but it's pretty clear that for the last umpteen
years given the fact that there's a huge alr
handler sitting smack -- the compressor is sitting
smack In front of a picket fence, clearly storage,
woodworking, whatever, so that structure hasn't
been used for a garage, you have just a little
driveway that's grassed over now. How about
living accommodation? I mean, clearly there's a
bathroom upstairs, there's an outside stair; lS it
heated?
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
MR. POLASHOCK: Yes.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Has anyone been
living In it?
MR. POLASHOCK: Never.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Are they living In
20
21
it now?
22
MR. POLASHOCK: Never.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: So it's something
that was done to accommodate family, but it's not
used that way? Because it is obviously illegal to
have living quarters in an accessory structure.
You can't have two dwellings detached from each
other on a single lot. So in order to get a
C of 0, we have to make sure that there's no
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
32
1
2
living space in there.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: You have to take out
the living space.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: You have to take
out the bathroom upstairs.
MR. POLASHOCK: It's never been completed.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Is there a kitchen?
MR. POLASHOCK: No.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: It's drawn with
Just a bathroom. I didn't make inspection on the
inside.
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: It's pretty overgrown.
MR. POLASHOCK: There's no accommodation
for a kitchen or anything.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Did you want to --
MR. POLASHOCK: No accommodation for a
kitchen or anything.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Did you want to convert
it back into just a garage?
MR. POLASHOCK: I want to do the mlnlmum
that I have to do. The thing is becoming a real
financial hardship. In order to tear that down,
it's just not practical. Again, as far as
removing the bathroom upstairs or whatever
plumbing constitutes a bathroom that's usually
doable.
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: And heating.
MR. POLASHOCK: And heating?
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Yes, I would say so.
MR. POLASHOCK: No problem.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: I'll let our New
Suffolk person have a say so.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: He can remove the
heating and he probably won't be able to use it as
a laundry room either because the pipes would
freeze.
16
17
18
19
20
MR. POLASHOCK: You mean remove the
heating from the garage completely?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: From the garage.
MR. POLASHOCK: Oh, yeah, whatever.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Remove the heating
and the plumbing.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Without the plumbing
then you don't have a livable room.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: We'll give you the
height variance and a setback variance and a
strictly accessory use for storage of a car and/or
anything else you want to store In there.
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
33
1
2
MR. POLASHOCK: No problem.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Just a question about
the history of this. I understand as everyone
knows I live about a block away from there, your
family was there from something like 1947 or
something?
MR. POLASHOCK: We lived in the building
since 1947.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: And there was a
preexisting building, garage on that before that,
right, which was replaced by your father? So
there was this preexisting structure which was
apparently a mess that was replaced by this and
this structure that was built.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: This structure was
never really used very much at all. So it's no
hardship to you to disable it because it's not
disabling a place where anyone was living In. As
I understand your mother was living In the main
house for the last 10 or 15 years of her life, and
no one was occupying this structure at all was it?
MR. POLASHOCK: No.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: So you're just
trying to do as much as you need to do In order to
be able to get a C of 0 so that you can unload
this property to which no one has been living for
some years?
MR. POLASHOCK: Correct.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: That's about it. Jim?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: No questions.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: It's 22 feet high?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: It says 19' 5" on
the disapproval.
MR. POLASHOCK: To the midline.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: It's a hip roof but
you will need a height variance.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: 19.5 feet in height?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: You witnessed my
tirade on the gentleman before you. I am not
going to do that here. I'm just concerned with
after you sell the house that someone has the
impression that they can put an apartment and
things like that in there, so we want to be clear
In our decision that that's not the case.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: No habitable.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Any building permit
on that plece of property lS subject to ZBA
approval; there's got to be something like that so
.
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
.
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
.
25
October 26, 2006
34
1
2
when they do go to try and put windows in here
that they have to come before us in order to do
that because one foot on the property line just
simply -- I understand I'm of the school that when
the ZBA grants something, I don't care if it's In
1968, you have to live by that, and you did as far
as what I can tell in here. I just don't want any
new owners to be under preconception that, oh,
look, I have a nice little place I can put a
bungalow back there and find out that they
can't. So I was just hoping in our decision that
we can make it clear -- and I'm saying this so you
understand.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: I have to write
this one and I'll make sure that that's all in
here so it's very clear had you get your C of o.
MR. POLASHOCK: You guys again, you did
this before with the original ZBA, the only thing
I can say to the structure as far as height or
anything is the fact that it was built on a
drawing that it was approved. Where all that is,
God knows.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: It's a long time
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
a~.
14
MR. POLASHOCK: There was no intent to do
anything touchy or anything else.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: So our CO will state
there will be no habitable living space in there
at all.
15
16
17
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: And your neighbor
wrote a very nice letter saying it's been there
forever, nobody objects to it. So there's support
for the actual structure itself. We're concerned
with its legal use as a storage facility and
accessory rather than habitable space.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Is there anyone in the
audience that wishes to comment on this
application? If not, I'll make a motion to close
the hearing and reserve decision until later.
(See minutes for resolution.)
18
19
20
21
22
23
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Next
Fisher down in Kimogener Point.
Stoutenburgh.
MR. STOUTENBURGH: Good morning,
Board. It's a beautiful day. I'm here to answer
any questions there are.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER:
application is
Good morning,
for
Mr.
24
e
25
What can we
October 26, 2006
35
1
2
grill you on today? You know we have been so nice
to you, Peter, for all these years. Is there
anything that we can --
MR. STOUTENBURGH: No, I like the way
things work.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: A deck and a shower.
MR. STOUTENBURGH: That's it.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: The neighbors have
exactly the same thing you're proposing and the
setbacks are virtually identical. It's very
modest what you're proposing.
MR. STOUTENBURGH: The Board approved it
down there before we were able to get the
permission.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: I know.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: As you know, the
people that have come before us also of Kimogener
Point have some problems because of the extent of
the additions they were making on the Kimogener
Point house. But this does not involve a new
kitchen, this involves an outdoor shower.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: And I think a very
small deck.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: It's very tiny.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: There's no
additional -- aside from the shower, no additional
plumbing or heating or any kind of living space.
So it would not be a further burden on the already
over burdened land in the Kimogener Point area; is
that correct?
MR. STOUTENBURGH: Correct.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: As a matter of
fact, the neighbor's house lS much closer to the
gravel road than the Fishers' house. I don't
think it has any real impact on anything other
than improving the quality of life for the
owners.
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Jerry?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: No.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Jim?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: No questions.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: I want to say
for the record I think your analysis lS fine and
correct when it comes to this, with respect to
this. We have been grappling in past hearings
with what to do when there is more than one
dwelling on the property because our current code
doesn't allow you to build a second dwelling on
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
36
1
2
the property. Like I said, I think your analysis
is right with respect to this addition. I think
we have to do them sort of case by case. There is
an Appellate Court decision out there from the
Town of Southold that says that an accessory
second dwelling should have been considered a
nonconforming building as opposed to a
nonconforming use, the use, residential, which lS
permitted in the zone, and so you needed to Vlew
it as in accordance with your normal variance
criteria.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Whether it
increases the degree of nonconformance. I think
that same approach is taken here, and you have
historically allowed additions and alterations to
houses in Kimogener Point, and you're really just
looking at exactly what you're talking about
whether you're over burdening the land or the
neighboring homes, and are you changing the
character of the use; for example, if you were
adding additional kitchens or dwellings or
something like that which it doesn't appear at all
you're encroaching here. I just want the record
to be clear as sort of the analysis you use
because we're getting more and more applications
that involve more than one dwelling on a lot, and
we sort of have to approach each one carefully and
look at exactly what they're doing.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Counsel, we have
also denied applications when we felt that the
dwelling additions were substantial.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: Too much, yes,
and I think that's square within your discretion.
We have been talking about it and it's a tricky
issue to figure out how to handle, especially
because our code is a little silent on such lssues
and the case law I think is not necessarily
recognizing some of the issues that we deal
with. But this is more just to keep it in the
Board's mind as it considers these types of
applications but I think your analysis is square
on with this one.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Thank you. I have to
write it. Is there anyone In the audience that
wishes to comment on this application? If not,
I'll make a motion to close the hearing and
reserve decision until later.
(See minutes for resolution.)
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
37
1
2
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Can I just comment
on Kimogener Point? If at some point in time, can
we start to detract from the lot coverage for this
particular piece? Because it was my understanding
that the applicant is supposed to be the
corporation.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: As coapplication
e
3
4
5
really.
6
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: If that's the case
then we need to start adding this lot coverage.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: It's true.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Each one should say
by adding this one
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: Now we're at X
7
8
9
percent.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: We did this several
months ago.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Archer or Polio.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: We did this
actually a year ago, and I believe that we are
still well under that, but I think we might have
to recalculate it and have to
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: I didn't think for
a deck that I wanted to raise such a stink about
it, but I just think for the next kitchen that
comes in, or a bedroom.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: That's a very good
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
point.
16
(Whereupon, motions were
and reconvene for lunch recess.
resolution. )
made to adjourn
See minutes for
17
18
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Next application is for
the Meinkes down on Peconic Bay
Boulevard. Leslie, I think this is yours.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Yes. One side of
your house to the house behind, like a long
driveway?
MR. MEINKE: Standing on my street looking
at my house, the house on the left, the lot was
apparently subdivided and on the front 200 feet
there's a house, and I live in the second house
and the rear part was sold to Ellen Hinch, which
was an L-shaped back lot. On the right side, Druk
owns it, and it's the same size, 50 by 400 foot as
mine, but years ago it had two houses on it. So
Druk is in the back 200 feet, and a tenant is in
the front 200 feet. So there's two houses there.
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
38
1
5
But there's no right of way through, it's just a
long driveway along the side of my house to go to
the house in the rear, which is well behind my
garage.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Which is confusing
because you're sitting very close to that
driveway.
MR. MEINKE: Well, when you have a lot
that works out 47 feet wide, you can't get very
far from anybody.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: No, you can't.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Is this a rental
2
e
3
4
6
7
8
unit?
9
MR. MEINKE: I've owned it since '82, it
was a rental unit, I'm making some changes. I'm
going to live there for some length of time.
We're selling where we are, yes.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Consolidating.
MR. MEINKE: We're downsizing and
consolidating and enlarging the master bedroom and
enlarging the bath and making the house a better
year round.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: You're essentially
upgrading this house in order to move into it?
MR. MEINKE: Yes.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Good, I have no
questions.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: You're maintaining
the existing side yard setbacks, which are
nonconforming?
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Yes, he's just
extending in the rear.
MR. MEINKE: Yes, we're just pushing the
house straight back.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: With a bedroom and
porch addition and just a little bit on the front
elevation.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Jerry?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: No comment.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Jim?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: I just have a
question on the front yard because it didn't seem
to come in the disapproval.
MR. MEINKE: That's because it's
conforming.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: What is the
distance from the front line to the porch?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: It's fine, 38.4 and
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
39
1
2
37.
e
9
MR. MEINKE:
BOARD MEMBER
BOARD MEMBER
setback is what?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN:
and 43 feet on the other.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: There's got to
be an established front yard setback because the
houses farther down are even closer to the
property line.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: See, so we're
looking at it that way.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN:
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO:
question I had.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: For the record,
we had variances on the Druk house over the
years. When they originally purchased it, they
made some revisions. So you're aware.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Michael?
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: No further comments.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Does anyone in the
audience wish to comment on this application? If
not, I'll make a motion to close the hearing and
reserve decision until later.
(See minutes for resolution.)
37.
WEISMAN:
DINIZIO:
Is the house.
And the front yard
3
4
38.4 on one side
5
6
7
8
Right.
That's the only
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Next hearing is for the
Redmans again on Peconic Bay Boulevard, for a deck
construction.
MR. NATALIE: My name is Kevin Natalie.
I'm a landscape architect on behalf of the
Redmans.
17
18
19
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Just spell your
name for the record, please?
MR. NATALIE: N-A-T-A-L-I-E. What we were
proposing is two aspects, one was a reduction of
the existing rear deck in the back yard, reduction
of the existing out towards the rear property
line, but as you see here has a slight expansion
of the side yard, and there was an original
application for the egress landing on the side
yard, further relief of the side yard setback six
inches additional.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: That's going to
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
be 9'611?
MR. NATALIE: Yes, sir.
October 26, 2006
40
1
2
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: And the deck
that we see in the rear yard now will be reduced?
MR. NATALIE: Yes, sir.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: How much will
that be reduced?
MR. NATALIE: The square footage of
reduction, I don't have that calculation in front
of me. But as you can see, we pulled the plane of
the rear steps, which is the difference of
approximately three and a half feet from where the
steps started to the ending point of the proposed
steps. So we're taking approximately three and a
half feet of deck from the rear yard, steps
included, off the deck.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: This lS strictly
a one story deck, right?
MR. NATALIE: Yes, sir.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: And open to the sky
as it is now, you're just taking it down,
rebuilding it slightly smaller, and you need an
additional SlX inch side yard variance?
MR. NATALIE: Yes, the rear we're just
aligning the deck with the plan of the house and
also on the side egress landing which there was an
original application which the homeowners need
during construction. She evaluated how she was
hoping to have this egress the way it is with
steps on either side, and again just being 9'6",
the benefit is that side yard is already heavily
screened, so it's not obtrusive to the
neighbors.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Is there any
roof over that deck, the side yard?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: No.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Just be aware of
the fact that any future applications would mean
that that side yard be no further encroached upon
because that is needed specifically to get to the
rear of the house.
MR. NATALIE: No, there would be no
further.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: I have to write
this up.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Any other questions,
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
lJim?
e
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Which direction is
25
this?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Easterly side.
October 26, 2006
41
1
e
3
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: On the easterly
side, you need a six inch variance in order to
align the deck with the plane of the house.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: No further
encroachment beyond that?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: No.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Okay. Jim?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Nothing further.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Is there anyone else?
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: I just have a
question with this LWRP consideration, the
proposed distance to the deck, 76.4 feet, the
minimum setback is 100 feet required by the
code. Could you speak to the question of the
setback from the bulkhead?
MR. NATALIE: Well, I was just confirmed
by the Board of Trustees last Tuesday evening, and
the motion was approved. I've been glven -- it's
in the paperwork. They were actually
complimentary in the fact that we were actually
reducing the deck to the rear bulkhead.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: So therefore you made
your inconsistency less inconsistent.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: So you have responded
adequately.
MR. NATALIE: That's correct. I have
already filed and received approval from the Board
of Trustees.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Is there anyone in the
audience that wishes to comment on this
application? If not, I'll make a motion to close
the hearing and reserve decision until later.
(See minutes for resolution.)
2
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: The next application lS
for the Zannikoses on Sound Beach Drive In
Mattituck, who wishes to retain his shed that he
already has. Good morning, how are you today,
. ?
Slr.
20
21
22
MR. ZANNIKOS: Good morning.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: You just don't have any
other room, you need it for storage and stuff, I
sympathize.
MR. ZANNIKOS: I talked to the architect
before me that I don't have right to a shed, and I
told the architect what about building a shed, and
he said, well, the law is an 8 by 12 shed without
electricity is okay. That was the architect.
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
42
1
2
Then he says -- then he told me to go to the
Building Department and verify the story and I
did. But he never explained to me that I gave up
my rights to have a shed when I took a varlance
for the house. So I'm very disappointed so he
should have guided me in the right way. So I
build a shed and the inspector come around and he
showed me the letter and when I called the
architect, he said, gee, I'm sorry, I forgot. I
said --
e
3
4
5
6
7
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: And you pay him for
this?
9
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: You also pay him for
this varlance application.
MR. ZANNIKOS: I pay him extra for this to
keep on an eye on things.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: It would appear
that the agreement when you got your variances for
your house were to make sure that the lot coverage
didn't exceed 20 percent, and when you added the
shed it brought it up to 21.4 percent. So you are
now 1.4 percent over the lot coverage.
MR. ZANNIKOS: There was no way to know.
He should have informed me. I can ask for special
permission, not do the shed and then find out I
did something wrong.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: One question I have,
right now the back yard is completely paved
essentially?
MR. ZANNIKOS: It has pavers.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Was that the case at
the time the shed was built?
MR. ZANNIKOS: The pavers were there.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: So it's only because
of the technicality that that pavement does not
count as lot coverage. So putting the shed on
existing pavement did not exactly interfere with,
for example, the draining on the property. So
it's kind of a technical thing. If you had an
open field and you put a shed on it, then it would
be adding lot coverage in a meaningful sense, but
it's not an open field, it was a paved field.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Jim, do you have any
questions?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: No. I was always
under the impression that the person who told you
that if it's less than 100 square feet it didn't
impact on anything, but I see that it actually is
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
43
1
2
13 by 8, so it's a little larger.
MR. ZANNIKOS: That was my mistake, when I
bought the place it was 8 by 12. The shed inside,
it's 7'9" by 11'9", but when I add the
three-quarter plywood, he used the big corner
posts and it added to the width.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Yes, he added a
foot. But I mean that's the technicality. I
mean, I have no objection. But I see the reason
why the Building Inspector would then say that you
needed to come before us, just because of that
foot.
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
MR. ZANNIKOS: Yes, I have to apologize.
I didn't want to do things like I did something
wrong, but the person I hired to protect me.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: What kind of
storage do you have underneath your house?
MR. ZANNIKOS: Nothing, it's just level
with the outside.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: So you don't have
any basement at all?
MR. ZANNIKOS: No.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: So you really need
this for storage. You have kids, you have
stuff. Well, I think as I mentioned to you at
your home, that the home is lovely and your shed
lS very much in keeping with the architecture,
very well placed and I really don't have any
issues. I have to write this up. I just want to
make sure. It's 1.4 percent increase and I wish
that that had been addressed as a legal thing in
the same variance request we just simply allowed
to you to lncrease your lot coverage at the time,
and you wouldn't have had to go through this
rigmarole.
MR. ZANNIKOS: I think the architect
overlooked it too. He didn't think it was so
important, but he did say I'm sorry, I forgot. I
said, Mike, it doesn't help me.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Not at all, no.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Is there anyone else in
the audience that wishes to comment on this
application? If not, I'll make a motion to close
the hearing and reserve decision until later.
(See minutes for resolution.)
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Next application is for
LaChance, who wants to put the garage five feet --
October 26, 2006
44
1
2
three feet from the side yard.
MR. HOWLER: David Howler, architect for
Debra LaChance regarding the addition that's on
the submission, accessory garage. She's tried to
minimize the side yard variance, provide a place
to park the cars, match the setback that they
have, but make it smaller.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: You mean same as the
garage next door?
MR. HOWLER: We have one of them
approximately the same place as that one. And we
would construct it the similar style to the house,
shingle.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: It will be actually
smaller than the garage next door?
MR. HOWLER: Yes.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Considerably
smaller. It's the same setback as the one that's
set farther back.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: This lS a fairly
significant variance that is being asked for. To
what extent does your case depend upon the
preexisting, nonconforming garages that already
exist in the neighborhood?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: A lot.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: It's not because of
that, but if there were no other garages In the
neighborhood, would she think that she had a good
chance to get a variance for this garage, if it
were the only one there? We understand each
other.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: It's too big.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: To be honest
with you, sir, excuse me for jumping in on this,
it happens to be mine.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Is it a broad Jump or
long jump?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: It's a minimum
Jump. I think we have gotten to the point on this
block that once the house -- is this a
reconstruction on this house?
MR. HOWLER: An addition.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: An addition.
That it becomes a law of diminishing returns if a
person can have a garage. I have to write this
decision and I will write whatever this Board
wants, but I have posed to this Board that you
build an accessory building, that the accessory
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
45
1
2
building be built farther away from the property
line, farther away from the road, approximately
the same location and that the doors to that
accessory building be placed in the middle of the
building so that there's plenty of storage and
that the building be screened away from the road.
There's no doubt in my mind that an accessory
building is needed particularly on a waterfront
piece of property. But that's my suggestion of
the situation. I'm also going to suggest that the
accessory building not exceed 180 square feet,
which lS 10 by 18. But it's up to the Board to
make that determination. I would find it
unconscionable if this Board or myself In this
nature would eliminate any type of structure but
that's my particular opinion. I completely object
to the doors opening toward Ruch Lane, although I
know that there are existing garages that have
been preexisting for years, some of which are very
simply not going to make it. They will be back to
us agaln for a reconstruction situation in years
to come because some of them are laying almost on
the ground. So that's my proposal to the Board.
MR. HOWLER: Your preference is that the
driveway and drive and access lS actually on the
front yard rather than ~~
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: There will be no
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
garage.
16
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Yes, and it only
be used for storage purposes and yet have plenty
of access for the owner of the property to use the
garage for storage purposes.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: The problem is if
that's the case then the proportion has to change
in the way it's sited because right now, it's a
one~car garage; if you come in off the road,
you're going to come in off the ~~
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: It's not a
17
18
19
20
21
garage.
22
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Jerry just wants a
storage building.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: No, they want a
one~car garage.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: That's what they
want, but Jerry's proposing an alternative.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: I don't care
what they want.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON. Jerry, am I correct
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
46
1
2
in assuming that if they build what you're
recommending, they would not need a variance at
all?
e
3
4
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Oh, sure they
need a variance because it's in the front yard
area.
5
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: But only because of
the front, not because of setback or anything like
that?
6
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: No, the whole
7
thing.
8
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Yes, I'm
proposing a conforming setback on the side yard,
but I am not -- I'm proposing that the building be
set back 12 feet from the front property line.
Proposing it be set back five feet from the side
property line, and then I propose that the
building be no deeper than 18 feet in depth and no
wider than 10 feet in width.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: My question was could
be, if there were an accessory building that were
to be built without a variance, is there anyplace
on the property that could be?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: No.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Only on the beach
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
side.
15
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: No. You could put
one in the front yard.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: It has to be 35
feet back from the road -- you can't, the house lS
32 feet, right?
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: It could be on the
beach side, for example, if it were an accessory
building to be used for waterfront related
activities then there is no reason why it would
need to be on the road side at all.
MR. HOWLER: Was to have off street
parking.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: I understand. I
guess the thing is the code would allow off street
parking, but does not allow off street parking in
a garage because of the problem of the setback and
the rear yard. There's no rule against off street
parking, it's just covered off street parking.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Let me just say
this to you, I don't care if you enter the garage
from the house side, I'm not specifically stating
where the doors have to be, but the garage is only
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
47
1
8
going to be 10 by 18 in my proposal, okay, I don't
care if it's for a compact car, whatever. I don't
care if you let the car hang out the back of the
garage, but you are not utilizing seven feet of a
garage of where the car is gOlng to hang out or
you're gOlng to be backing out onto this road and
that's particularly my concern. What I'm saying
lS the provision should have been made within the
construction of the house to add a garage to the
house at the time of the construction. And I
think everybody down there has to start looking at
that in these situations and that's just an
opinion, you may not have been there at the time
of the reconstruction, and that's just an opinion.
Again, I'm only one vote, I'm just proposing it,
but it would be unkind of me not to tell you that.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Leslie?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: So you can still
use it as a garage for a car, you just want an
increased setback. I mean, I think relative to
the other structures, it is modest In Slze, and
it's sited -- where lS your septic system; where
are your cesspools? They have got to be in that
front yard.
MR. HOWLER: Yes, in looking at the
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Yes, I see it now.
So that's okay, you have plenty of room to bring
it back because I saw some holes with a lot of
garbage thrown into it, they're their own
dumpster. They have put their own dumpster into
the ground, but I was wondering where those were
with respect to the garage, but you do have the
option, you can bring it back a little farther.
My concern was if you in order to get a car into
that garage, and you need to use the long access
rather than the short access, and then you know,
entering it this way is impossible in terms of the
garage, that would mean you would have to flip the
thing orientation wise, and that's going to mean
you're covering most of the front of your house.
You see what I'm saying, Jerry?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: No, I'm saying
depending upon the Slze of the automobile, you can
put in anything if you want to, the provlslon In
the reconstruction of this house should have
included a garage.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN:
I'm just trying to say if you
That's fine, but
really do want to
2
e
3
4
5
6
7
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
.
25
October 26, 2006
48
1
2
use this accessory structure for a garage, then
you need the depth to pull the garage into. And
if you're trying to push it back exactly with the
same orientation and entering it from the side
let's say than from the end, you don't have enough
depth to put a car in.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: No, if it's 10 by 18.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Like I said,
it's really an accessory building, I don't care
what kind of doors they put on it or whatever the
case may be as long as the doors don't face the
road and that's it; that's their problem. They
established the problem, they caused the problem
by not including that within the renovations of
the house.
MR. HOWLER:
an inherited project
the house. That has
Trustees, so we just
application.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Of course, and I
want you to know that it's nothing personal on my
oplnion. I'm just saying that there comes a time
where my suggestion lS you're not gOlng to garner
my vote for construction of a garage that close to
the property line and that's it.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: I see it's applied
for the way it's applied for. I think probably
the point here is that at what point In time does
one begin to say existing precedent of all these
nonconforming structures is saturated. People
assume that because that's what's been done
forever In that neighborhood that that practice
should continue when in fact laws get changed to
improve life quality, reduce density and reduce
nonconformity. I guess what Jerry's talking about
is trying to find a compromise situation where you
can have an accessory structure there but
attempting to mitigate its nonconformance to
setback and so on. Even though you're absolutely
right, if you look at that streetscape, as you
did, you drew the elevation of the street, your
proposal is extremely modest and set back as far
as anybody else's. So I guess that's really the
issue.
The second floor addition was
that my client bought with
been passed by the Board of
worked within that
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: That's the
weighing aspect we deal with everyday.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: But there's also the
October 26, 2006
49
1
9
question of where the burden of proof lies. The
reason why the other garages are there lS because
they are being grandfathered. Now grandfathering
means that people don't have to tear down
preexisting structures, but then to argue that the
grandfathering could be used as an argument for
doing similarly illegal things, subsequently, then
the grandfathering thing is getting to be too
large. So I think the structure has to be
verified on its own terms, and I do think I'm
inclined to go for some sort of a compromise where
there could be some sort of smaller building that
would be consistent with it. By the way, as far
as the setback for accessory building, I believe
the code says if you're on waterfront property,
you can build in the back yard as long as you
conform to the relative setback. So 35 feet you
would be allowed to build in that yard as long as
you satisfied the setback. So I could imagine
some sort of compromise could be worked out
whether it's big enough for a car or not lS a
matter to be determined by architects and the
owners.
2
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
MR. HOWLER: I'm just trying to understand
why the recommendation is they have the doors on
the lawn side of the accessory building rather
than facing the street. It changes the nature of
the front yard.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: The Board could
out vote me on this and they could also suggest
that we change that situation. The point In
question has always been and the precedents -- and
I'm not speaking for the Board -- but to be able
to get the car out of the garage and still keep
the car on the property, and that's the problem.
Okay, most of these houses are no longer seasonal
houses, they're being utilized if not every day of
the week at least three days of the week, which
are Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. If not
Saturday and Sunday and Monday, okay, so therefore
the activity on that road has gotten much more
substantial. And we have had a phenomenal amount
of applications down there. Now, if you would
have proposed to me that 12 feet was not enough
and if we were to continue with the 10 by 18
structure on that conceptual approach and to push
that closer to the house, then that's a
possibility. Because now we could get at least 16
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
50
1
5
or 17 feet in to allow the car to remain on the
property in the driveway.
MR. HOWLER: That would be our preference
to maintain a property fit to maintain the
character of a front yard.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: I actually think
that's not only more contextual and
architecturally sound, but I think just from the
mechanics of a car, that's really a better way to
do it. I would opt to have them orient it the way
that they have it, but to push it way back.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: As close to the house
as possible.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Yes, as close to
the house as possible with the biggest side yard
possible without really blocking the front of the
house.
2
.
3
4
6
7
8
9
10
11
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: That would be
the purpose of making it smaller.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: I understand that
and it could be a little bit smaller and still be
a one-car garage. So the proposal ought to be
what is the minimal size that you feel you can get
one car into.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Why don't you
think about that and get back to us on that
figure, what you think the minimum size would
be. My original suggestion was that of a storage
building. But if we want to go back to the garage
approach, tell us what the smallest garage is.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: And the biggest
setback is?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: The biggest
setback is whatever the length of the car is
depending upon -- I'm suggesting a five foot
setback on the side yard, which is fine, you don't
want to go any more than that because you don't
want the garage to monopolize the house.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: That's fine, five
foot lS fine.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: So that's the
story. And of course we're talking about a
one-story garage with a maximum height of 12 feet
with a gable end roof; is that correct?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Uh-huh. That's
very modest.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: How much space is
between the house and the garage?
12
13
.
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
.
25
October 26, 2006
51
1
6
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: 44 feet.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: No, between the
house and the garage.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN:
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO:
about 15 or 20 feet.
MR. HOWLER: I wanted to mention because
there's an angle to the yard.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Yes, you're gOlng
to have one corner longer than the other corner
because of the angle of the road.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: So, what do you
want this gentleman to do, get back to us?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Can I comment on
We don't know.
It looks like it's
2
e
3
4
5
7
8
9
this?
13
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Yes.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: I feel like Jerry
does. Our law on a waterfront lot lS you're not
supposed to exceed the principal setback, which lS
the setback from setback of the house could be
from the road, which is 35 feet in this instance
and every bit of this building is beyond that.
And all the other garages were made nonconforming
when we started our when we started zoning
basically. So they're all nonconforming and if
you do anything on those pieces of property you
come before the ZBA. Then we had another decision
called the Walz decision that just made it even
worse, more restrictive. So, for us to now allow
you to have a garage this close to the road, In my
mind can't happen. You have the choice of moving
it back and almost touching the house, adding it
on to the house. I'm thinking myself, seven feet,
which lS the closest distance on your house right
now. I understand the line's a little bit skewed
and maybe Jerry's five feet works with that
angle.
10
11
12
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Side yard.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Yes, side yard, but
the front yard, it's got to be 20 feet, or 15
feet, I think a car is 15 feet. A car lS 20 feet,
so In order to comfortably put a car In there, I'm
sure you're going to be right up against one wall
and you'll be able to close the door on the other
side with a couple of feet, so maybe a car lS 18
feet. I'm not one to deny a garage, but if that's
all you need, or if you need storage then it's got
to be a little smaller. If you say it's a car and
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
.
.
.
52
1
2
you want to put a car there, you're going to move
it back.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Can you then just,
you could even do this by hand. If you've got it
on AutoCAD just revise it with an increased
setback.
MR. HOWLER: I think I will talk to my
client and resubmit it.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Great.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: So we keep the
hearing open.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Do you want to do
it in writing or do you want to adjourn the
hearing?
MR. HOWLER: By mail.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: By mail instead of
adjourning it.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Oh, yeah, this is
minor. Because we will be deliberating.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: We would need it by
next Friday.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Just to clarify,
we're looking at probably 15 feet from the
property line?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: At least.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: No sense in him
submitting something, us closing the hearing and
then
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: A compact car
that would allow you to close the door or at least
open the door has got to be 18 feet back.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: So you want it 18
17
18
feet?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Yes, it's got to
19
be.
20
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: And five feet from
the property line. So anything like that lS
probably pretty good.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Do you want to close
the hearing subject to his resubmission of setback
from the side yard and the front yard?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Of the proposed
21
22
23
garage.
24
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Of the proposed garage.
That's a motion.
(See minutes for resolution.)
25
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Our next hearing is for
October 26, 2006
53
1
9
Mr. Volpe on Oak Drive in Southold. Good
mornlng.
MR. VOLPE: Good morning.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Very interesting
piece of property and a very nice piece of
property Mr. Volpe.
MR. VOLPE: We had a lot of wind today, I
wish I was out sailing.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: So you're
building over the existing garage?
MR. VOLPE: Yes, extending the house over
the top of a two-car garage.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Right. It lS a nlce
piece of property and your hot tub too.
MR. VOLPE: And the hot tub is
preexisting. I didn't realize at the time that we
actually needed a permit for it because it's on a
deck, it's flush and it's theoretically portable.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Could we
determine that if you took that hot tub out or you
decided not to have it anymore that it would be,
you could put it back or put a new one back but
it's specifically for hot tub use or something of
that nature rather than --
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Yes, something else.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: In other words, it
would be conditioned for it being used for nothing
but a hot tub.
MR. VOLPE: Yes.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: So if you
removed it, it would be for the deck underneath it
or whatever is holding it up.
MR. VOLPE: Yes.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: I'm saying that
Mr. Volpe or subsequent owners did not want a hot
tub that it would be removed and the only thing
that would be left would be what was underneath
it.
2
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Oh, this lS not
livable.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: No.
MR. VOLPE: We would probably opt to take
it with us.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: The problem with
that Mr. Volpe is if you don't do that, these
things tend to be part of the house In years to
come.
22
23
24
e
25
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Then everybody runs
October 26, 2006
54
1
5
into trouble.
MR. VOLPE: Okay.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: It's sited
perfectly, it's fine, very well screened by
evergreens. It's in a reasonable place and I
don't have any problem with it.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: This isn't my
application, I'm just suggesting in future
situations.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Anybody else have any
questions? Anybody in the audience have any
questions? If not, I'll make a motion to close
the hearing and reserve decision until later.
(See minutes for resolution.)
2
e
3
4
6
7
8
9
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: That's it for the
10
morning.
11
(Whereupon, the Board adjourned and
reconvened after lunch recess. See minutes for
resolution. )
12
13
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Next hearing is for
Charles and Lisa Drake on Wunneweta Road in
Cutchogue.
MR. GORMAN: Bill Gorman, New England
Homes, for Charles and Lisa Drake.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: What can you tell us
about the deck?
MR. GORMAN: The deck was built about
eight years ago, and it's 21' by 31' behind the
house. The deck was built by the owner without
realizing a building permit was needed, there was
a lot of excitement with other house renovations
that were being done. The Drakes would like to
sell the house now. The shed that exists is being
removed.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: How close is the deck?
MR. GORMAN: The deck is 30.1 feet I think
from the line. We're asking for 19.9 feet in this
variance.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Mr. Dinizio?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: No questions.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Ms. Weisman?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: The deck is open,
21' by 31' without a roof. The site survey shows
a setback 30.1 feet from the northerly boundary
line. The deck area appears to be well-screened
with trees and fencing, and will have little
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
55
1
2
visual impact where it exists.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: The fencing and
trees and hedges will remain? There are three
front yard areas.
MR. GORMAN: Yes. It is a very private
e
3
4
lot.
5
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Is there anyone in the
audience that wishes to comment? If not, I'll
make a motion to close the hearing and reserve
decision until later.
(See minutes for resolution.)
6
7
8
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Next hearing is for
Susan Jeffries at East End Road. Miss Moore.
MS. MOORE: What they did, and the
architects can certainly speak to this, they had
begun with the thought of renovating the existing
house but then over time there was ultimately a
decision that really it made more sense to do new
construction. They have for the most part taken
the same footprint that they presently try to
follow the existing footprint. The only deviation
is in the center, the living area because the
existing house right now is a relatively small
ranch style. The second issue that the Building
Department raised is an issue of the two story.
When it was designed that's not the way it was
read so it was designed without the thought that
it was a third story. I would remind you that
when you went to the property, you came in the
driveway that goes into a walk-in garage. The
garage is actually below grade and that's being
maintained, the below grade portion is the portion
that you see on the right-hand side of the
drawing, it is what's going to be garage and staff
rooms and then above that is the living area,
which is what we have today is the living area.
It's all on the same plane on grade, on the
average grade there, and then what would be a
second floor is the library. The Building
Department looked at that and questioned it and
thought maybe it was the third floor and the
architects can certainly discuss how they designed
that library space and how we don't believe it's a
third story space, but again, it's here before the
Board, and you have the cross section that depicts
it a little more clearly than through your
interpretation, your decision-making you can find
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
56
1
5
that this lS actually not a third story space.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Well, because the
grade slopes substantially you have a potential
for habitable space. And if you take the average
grade then the grade, which lS where your master
bedroom and your actual primary living spaces are
at a common grade, and you're keeping the ridges
all the same height. So the part of the house
will look taller, but it will not because of the
elevational changes, the ridges aren't gOlng to be
higher than one part of the composition.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Can we question
the applicant?
MS. MOORE: Sure, that's why they're here.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: We, of course,
have had the luxury of seeing this property In its
present situation and of course my colleagues will
agaln to my left and to your right is much more
well versed in this, however, when I looked at the
site, I noticed that that section that I'm looking
at on the right-hand side appeared to be, I don't
know, I would say the elevation was much farther
down than the rest of the site, and my question to
you is the issue of the library, is there a
stairwell going to this library?
MS. MOORE: Yes.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: I can
specifically state that the Building Department lS
probably correct in its determining that we have a
third story, regardless of making a decision or
not at this time, the issue is lS the house going
to be sprinklered; is there going to be an
internal comprehensive sprinkler water suppression
system to take care of any fire problems?
MS. SAGAN: At this time, no. I would
like to point out that area, that's the bathroom
and the garage at the front of the house, that is
actually below grade.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Right, that's
what I meant.
MS. SAGAN: That entire lower level lS not
all above grade. From that that would lead toward
the back, toward the ocean because of the slope.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: As it falls away.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: But it slopes both
this way and latitudinally and longitudinally.
MS. SAGAN: If you remember, when you come
into the house you had to walk up a series of
2
e
3
4
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
57
1
9
stairs to get up there and then it drops off again
on the other side.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: On the road side of
the house, what we're talking about is on the
left-hand side, facing the house from the street.
MS. SAGAN: It looks exactly the same.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Right. The
basement is where the stairs were, you don't see
that level from the front, it's only from the back
and that's because it slopes down into the nice
little creek there or whatever it lS.
MS. SAGAN: From the front entry portion,
from the street.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Well, it would be
one and a half story, with the dormer.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: How big lS the
library square footage wise.
MS. SAGAN: In the library, because it is
In the attic space, what we did was there's a
rafter, and there's a track there to walk down the
middle, and we just put the bookcases there,
utilize that within the rafter space.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: It's a galley.
MS. SAGAN: But basically the walking area
is about four foot wide.
BOARD MEMBER SIMONA: But what lS the
actual square footage of the library area?
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Can we have your
2
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
name?
17
MS. SAGAN: M.J. Sagan, S-A-G-A-N.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: So there's not even
going to be any room for a chair there.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Oh, yes, there
will. These are stacks.
MR. ARCHER: The length of it is 18 feet
wider. This spot here where we have bookshelves
lS really about four by six.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: With the
shelving put In.
MR. ARCHER: This lS essentially wider
because of the dormer.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: So this lS not an
18 foot room.
MS. MOORE: It's an attic.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: And you have
another exterior deck there.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Let me just
finish up with that, Leslie. Is there any problem
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
58
1
9
with doing any type of fire suppression system to
that section of the home to allow for anybody that
might get stranded in that attic or anybody that
may go up to that attic if there were a fire, lS
there any problem with that?
MS. SAGAN: No. Like I said, we don't
consider it three stories, but if it's your
interpretation that it is and the sprinklers are
required then --
MS. MOORE: Well, some kind of fire
suppression because we don't know, you could do
dry, you might even do the attic space with the
egress and that's it.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: That's what I'm
referring to.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Technically it's a
third floor not a third story, but the way the
Building Department is going to interpret it lS
gOlng to be based on what -- if your client's
willing to just avoid the whole thing by simply
creating some sort of fire suppression, then that
ends that problem. Then you're just looking at
setback from the bluff.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: The statement is
do I particularly care about that library, only
from a fire suppression point of view. I have no
objection to anybody utilizing underneath the eves
of that house for the purposes of this.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: How many sets of
stairs do you have to go down to get outside?
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Three.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: No, I think it's
only one, right?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Then you're on the
main level.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: You're on the main
floor. It's not high. It's a third floor but not
a third story.
MS. MOORE: It would be the attic of a
second story in a normal house.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: So it's a -- you're
gOlng down one set of stairs to get outside.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Yes, that's all.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Jimmy, it's 61
feet 10 inches high.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO:
MS. MOORE: That's if
No, it's not.
you're gOlng out
the
2
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
.
25
window.
October 26, 2006
59
1
2
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: You can come down
here and exit.
MS. MOORE: Right, 33 to the garage
entrance.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: I'm just saYlng
that's my opinion. It's a multimillion dollar
construction.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: I don't think
that's a very costly thing to avoid the
interpretation and delays.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: No, to be safe.
MS. MOORE: If you make it a condition --
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: I would argue in
favor of your actual interpretation, the way your
architect, that's the way I would interpret it.
Because you've got grade slope In two directions
so partially below grade where a car goes we don't
care and habitable space because it's at grade on
the other side.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: I'm looking at it
this way, there's no way for you to get out of
there through a window.
MS. MOORE: No, you have to
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: I mean, those
windows are not fire windows, they're not the
right size.
MS. SAGAN: On the library?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Yes. They're not
supposed to be. They're dormers so you have no
way out except the set of stairs but you only have
to go down one set of stairs. I think we're
interpreting it because we're looking at the worst
case of this house, from the outside it looks like
a Cape Cod house.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: It's a little bigger.
MS. SAGAN: If we would have done this
exact same diagram looking from the other side,
what you would be seeing is the same as what
you're seeing at the master bedroom.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Right.
MS. SAGAN: There would have been a garage
underneath instead of a car.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: My point is, you
can't jump out, you're not going to jump three
stories.
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: No.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO:
even count this as a third
I don't know that
story.
you
October 26, 2006
60
1
2
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: That's what I'm
e
saying.
3
MS. MOORE: I'll let you guys debate it.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Better to be safe than
4
sorry.
5
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: You are reducing
the setback from the original footprint, correct?
MS. MOORE: No. I had to actually
highlight mine.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: The dotted line lS
actually the footprint
MS. MOORE: Exactly.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: It's not a
reduction.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Pat, how many feet to
the edge of the bluff, 52 feet?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: According to this
site plan at its closest, it's 52 feet.
MS. MOORE: Yes.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: What is the
existing house?
MS. MOORE: 58 on one corner, but then
it's maybe another
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: But they're not
calling that out.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: It's not 52 for the
existing, it's closer to 58 for the existing.
MS. MOORE: Yes, that's what they -- 58 on
the south end, the proposed --
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Could you take
out your ruler please and tell us at its closest
point, at that 52 feet, what the closest point of
the existing house is?
MS. MOORE: Add another 16.
MR. ARCHER: So 67.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Another 10, 12
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
feet.
21
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: That's the existing.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: That's only in
that location.
MS. MOORE: Only in that location
because --
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Where are you
measuring from, from the dotted line, from this
corner?
22
23
24
e
25
MS. MOORE: Yes.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: 67
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER:
to 52.
In the way of
October 26, 2006
61
1
5
the house, what does that comprise?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Oh, that's the
living room.
MS. MOORE: If I could just point out,
notice that we had to relocate, remove the
existing sanitary, you see a manhole up by the
freshwater wetlands, that had to be removed. That
will be abandoned. The new sanitary system is in
the center like around the turnaround; that was
the most appropriate engineered location.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Okay.
MS. MOORE: So the house lS being
maintained where it presently is, plus because of
the angles it pushes a little bit closer to the
bluff, but as you can see the bluff lines, the
house then moves back away from the bluff line.
So we've given you the closest point.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: It's only a small
portion of the house. The rest lS swung back.
MS. MOORE: Exactly.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: It might have
been the ride out, all of us In the Volvo,
fortunately I sat in the front seat, but one
gentleman who we had an application with and Jimmy
sat in the back, but we forgot to ask the owner if
there has been any change in coastline over the
body of the past 10 or 15 years. If you would
In my educated thoughts, based upon the nature of
that coastline, I saw no change.
MS. MOORE: No. Because it's natural rock
revetment there.
MS. SAGAN: There's actually labeled, an
existing path, wood walk. I walked down there
because I wanted to get closer to the water and
that wood walk lS in pretty bad shape. Actually I
didn't walk on it, so I'm assuming it's been there
for a pretty long time, and it was pretty far away
from the water. I don't know if that's an
indication or not, but if nothing else, it seems
like the water hasn't gotten any closer.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Can I see the
landscape plan?
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: I would have a
question I'd like to ask the neighbors. There's a
letter September 15th from the DEC in which it
says that -- I'm reading one paragraph, that third
paragraph -- in mitigation for substantially
larger house, which is 17 feet closer to the
2
e
3
4
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
62
1
5
freshwater wetlands boundary, it must be by
planting a 10 foot wide restoration area of native
shrubs. And I don't see any response to that
MS. MOORE: No, actually we have done it.
We brought it with us if you would like it. It
didn't really deal with your lssues. The plan is
being resubmitted to the DEC. We were waiting for
the landscape architect and the surveyor to put
their information together.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: There is also a
letter from the Department of Environment
Conservation saying we were unable to do an
inspection because of expense; what was the lssue
there?
2
e
3
4
6
7
8
9
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Just general.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: There lS a letter
from -- I think it's this report saying they have
reviewed and they have approved it. However, it's
becoming clear in the last couple of weeks that
the Trustees cannot simply assert that everything
is okay with them whether there has been an LWRP
finding that says that it's inconsistent with the
LWRP, unless it's somewhere else. I don't see
that in these papers as though the Trustees have
even read the LWRP findings.
MS. MOORE: I know from the hearing
process that the LWRP report was submitted; that
they did consider it. It would be part of the
transcript of their hearing. They felt that there
had been mitigation here because the sanitary was
removed from the wetlands, away from wetlands;
there are dry wells and hay bales being proposed
and essentially this particular bluff, call it a
bluff, lS not subject to the erosion that they
typically --
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: I can understand,
these are reasonable reasons for finding to be
consistent where it initially had been
inconsistent, but one of the things that now the
Trustees are learning that is that they just can't
simply discuss this amongst themselves privately,
it's supposed to be part of the hearing.
MS. MOORE: It's been put on the record.
Every hearing that I've had with Trustees they
take the LWRP report, you get the inconsistent
because that's the way it's been written and
everything that's nonconforming is inconsistent.
And then they say we feel that we can address this
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
63
1
5
and mitigate and make it more consistent by
adopting these modifications.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: The issue is whether
they need to specify their reasons or rather
assure us that if we look at the transcript of the
hearing, we'll find out that they didn't ignore
it. That is currently under discussion and
perhaps at the time that this was done, they were
not aware that they had to do any more than they
have already done.
MS. MOORE: I can't speak
or didn't know. The hearing only
month ago.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: I don't think
it's this Board's purview to decide whether the
Trustees' approval was appropriate or not. So if
you get an approval from them, I think you live
with it. Their procedural issues, what they're
working on notwithstanding, you've got to sort of
take their word for it, if you have their
approval.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI:
Michael was thinking that, but
In here that would help to say
variance was granted, how that
LWRP?
to what they
took place a
did
2
e
3
4
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
I don't know if
lS there anything
why, if the
helps mitigate the
e
14
15
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN:
your own analysis.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Right.
attorney has an engineer's report or
regarding the bluff, erosion rate or
that.
You have to do
16
The
something
anything like
17
18
MS. MOORE: We don't have it with us now,
but once the LWRP has come, is each Board gOlng to
review the LWRP?
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Only the part that's
In our jurisdiction.
MS. MOORE: I don't know how internally
you were operating with these because you do one
LWRP that starts with the Trustees and works its
way down to whatever.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: If the LWRP review
says that there lS something that is specifically
within the ZBA's domain and that it is
inconsistent, then if we decide that that is not a
problem, we have to state so; we have to state our
reasons in a report that concerns our domain.
Anything that you can give to help us.
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
64
1
9
MS. MOORE: I would point out, yes, that
with respect to LWRP, the fact that the sanitary
system is only 20 feet from a wetlands that is a
significant mitigation that we have already
incorporated into this plan. The impact of water
runoff on the bluff lS not an lssue here because
of the slope of the bluff and the property. As
you know from both the topos as well as your site
inspection, the bluff lS actually at a higher
point than the house; that lS precisely why we
have issues of first story, second story, third
story. You have a walk out because the entire
property actually slopes away from the bluff and
then down away from the road. So there are kind
of plateaus here and there's no water runoff issue
that is a problem here. Even if there were, we
have the dry wells that will catch all water
retention from the roof runoff.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Wherever the dry wells
are placed.
MS. MOORE: There are several of them.
Some of them are actually on the seaward side, so
it will be catching anything before it goes to
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Are they on the
2
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
plans?
15
MS. MOORE: Yes, circles on the outside
perimeter. We have to keep a certain distance
from the sanitary. You can't have dry wells close
to -- the sanitary really had to be placed here
first because of the topography and the slopes of
the property. The sanitary really was the most
crucial lssue and then beyond that we work with
the other infrastructure.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Pat, I was just
wondering if it's possible, is there something
that would help us enter that into the decision
regarding the erosion rate?
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: On the bluff.
MS. MOORE: I would have to get that for
you at a later date. And maybe Dick Strauss can
provide that based on his prior mapping.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: We can close the
hearing subject to receiving something like
that.
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: The landscaping is
actually going to help with runoff.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: That's another
mitigating factor.
e
25
October 26, 2006
65
1
2
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: That's another
mitigating factor you might want to consider.
MS. MOORE: Thank you, I forgot about
e
3
that.
4
5
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: It's--
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Can we keep that?
MS. MOORE: Yes. I actually brought that
for the hearing.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: We don't have one.
It's a really beautiful access to the foyer from
this gravel, very nice stepping up.
MS. MOORE: Do you still want the erOSlon
6
7
8
rate?
9
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Yes.
MS. MOORE: Okay.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: What lS this
erosion rate thing, it's fairly new to me.
a formal report?
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: No.
MS. MOORE: Correct me if I'm wrong, but I
think it would be by way of a letter, but I think
I would ask the surveyor to please review based
upon prior mapping that these done and aerials
historic aerials, what the rate of erosion lS of
this particular bank. Which I think will be
negligible given the stone bank.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: I do too, but it's good
to have it In the record.
MS. MOORE: Richard Straus, he's the
surveyor/engineer. Richard Straus does most of
the work on Fisher's.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: That would be very
helpful.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: For
what is the total square footprint of
MS. MOORE: Footprint? About
not that big.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: That's pretty big.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: For one floor that's
pretty big.
MS. SAGAN: For the house, other than that
it's the garage and the staff and that little
attic.
Is it
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
the record,
the house?
3/500, it's
20
21
22
23
24
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Was there a SlZe
glven for the library?
MS. MOORE: Four feet wide by 18 feet
long, and then wider in certain areas.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Thank you, that's
e
25
October 26, 2006
66
1
2
what I thought.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Thank you.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Anyone else have a
comment on this application? If not, I'll make a
motion to close the hearing and reserve decision
until later.
(See minutes for resolution.)
e
3
4
5
9
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Next hearing is for
who is our 1:15?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Mr. and Mrs.
Wheeler.
MS. DROZDOWSKA: I have gone to the
Building Department and I spoke to Damon, and we
made a decision to keep the existing overall look
of the home the way we have proposed to the Board,
but I did show him our proposed second floor
layout, and it's all going to be open, so it's
going to become a three-story space. That's
versus open to below. I have seven copies of the
plan if I could submit that to you.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Sure, thank you.
MS. DROZDOWSKA: I have also a letter
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
stating
14
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: And the plan that
you're giving for the record is the second floor
plan?
MS. DROZDOWSKA: It's the second floor
with the clear story.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: The upper area.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: So there's no
floor in there?
MS. DROZDOWSKA: He said if we do decide
in the future to do anything with that to come to
the Building Department to obtain a building
permit with them. We may, which then I'm
basically keeping if we would like to apply for
the mezzanine with the Building Department beyond
the Zoning Board, we have to keep the roof line
within the main roof of the second floor, which
may be an accessible thing to us, but at that time
that would be something that we have to --
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Great, okay. Does
anybody have any other questions of Aggie?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: That's straight
forward enough, thank God for AutoCAD.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: At least now you
you won't get a stop work order.
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
67
1
2
MS. DROZDOWSKA:
permit, right?
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: I'll make a
close the hearing and reserve decision
later.
We took my name off the
.
3
motion to
until
4
(See minutes for resolution.)
5
6
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Next hearing is for
Garipian. I'll make a resolution to adjourn
without a date.
(See minutes for resolution.)
7
8
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Next hearing is for the
Isabellas on Westview Drive in Mattituck.
MR. HERMANN: Rob Hermann of EnConsultants
for the applicants.
I think this is the smallest variance I
have ever asked for in any town, so I hope that
does me some good.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: That doesn't
mean we're not going to grill you.
MR. HERMANN: I know it's one of those
things, I don't know how well prepared I am
because I don't know what you could -- if you look
at the survey, I'm going to try to make this
brief. It's a one story house, which is the sort
of the dwarf of this street and the Isabellas are
looking to put on a second story.
The house was built at a slight angle to
the property line. So while the road side of the
house actually conforms to the 10 foot setback, as
it angles seaward, it loses that 10 feet. So
we're at 9.6 and I guess based on a prior case and
legal interpretation, the Building Inspector and
this Board is required to determine pursuant to
code that even though we aren't encroaching any
further on that property that we're increasing the
nonconformity effectively by adding a second story
on a preexisting nonconforming structure, no
matter how small.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: That's right.
MR. HERMANN: The extension of the deck
then in line with that house also creates that
second variance you mentioned, where the deck
would be 9.3 feet from the property line rather
than 10 feet. There is mitigation that was
proposed as part of this project really unrelated
to your Board but related to the permits that were
9
10
11
12
13
.
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
.
25
October 26, 2006
68
1
e
3
obtained from the DEC and the Trustees. The
existing septic system is being replaced in favor
of a Suffolk County Department of Health Services
conforming system closer to the road, farther from
Mattituck creek, a drainage system of dry wells lS
being installed to retain and recharge roof
runoff, and there was a nonturf buffer established
along the bulkhead by the Trustees for a prior
permit. So while those were not obviously in all
honesty designed for your Board, they were
designed and incorporated as part of the project
and certainly act as any environmental mitigation.
I have photos if you want to see them.
I'm sure you folks are familiar with the
neighborhood. This house looks like a shed
compared to the houses that are on either side of
it. It will not create any change in the
character of the neighborhood or cause any adverse
impact to this community.
So we are here asking for your blessing
for a few inches, literally. If you have any
questions I'd be happy to address them.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: The deck would
remain open to the sky?
MR. HERMANN: Yes, sir.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Will the steps be
any closer to the bulkhead?
MR. HERMANN: Well, there are steps that
are proposed that come off the seaward side of the
new deck, so the steps are closer to the bulkhead,
yes.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: How much? It looks
like it's about three feet, I'm guessing.
MR. HERMANN: I was hoping you weren't
going to ask me a question requiring a scale
because I noticed as I sat down my scale has
vanished from my bag; does anyone at the Board
have an engineer's scale?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: No, but In the
future I'll bring one. No, I've got an
architectural scale.
MR. HERMANN: That's not going to help me.
I really do apologize. My calculator and scale
are both suddenly missing. But it is just what
you see on the plan, there are access steps to
provide lngress and egress to the deck.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Yes. Although this
house lS actually set back farther from the
2
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
tit
25
October 26, 2006
69
1
2
creek.
e
3
MR. HERMANN: It's set back a little bit
farther and again, is much tinier.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: I do think we need
to know.
4
9
MR. HERMANN: I'm just wondering what the
issue is with the steps because it all exceeds the
required 75 feet from the bulkhead; that is not at
issue here. The bulkhead setback is not at issue,
and the Building Inspector actually looked at this
twice, I believe Miss Kowalski sent it back for
his second review because of the setback that's
shown to the wetlands to the south, which is less
than 75 feet and that setback is shown for the
benefit of the environmental review, whereas the
rear yard or in this case bulkhead setback for
buildings and zoning purposes are drawn from the
applicant's bulkhead, which is
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: That's why we sent
5
6
7
8
10
11
it over.
12
MR. HERMANN: For clarification.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: We had never seen a
decision in writing on that.
MR. HERMANN: I'm glad you did because my
point is to say that they have looked at this
twice, and there is no component of it that
doesn't meet your setback, so the steps should not
be at issue.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Well, the steps
they were on that first plan that you submitted,
right?
MR. HERMANN: Yes.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: The steps are
fairly significant in tread numbers because of the
height.
MR. HERMANN: That's correct. I don't
know, I mean I do have a photo if it would help.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: That's why I
brought it up because I can see that maybe it's
not an issue, but it's certainly an addition in
terms of the --
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Steep slope going back
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
there.
24
MR. HERMANN: And these are the houses
either side of it much closer to the water and
larger in scope.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: It's also possible
that the Building Department leaves that up to the
e
25
October 26, 2006
70
1
5
ZBA to decide on the step areas because it's all
inclusive on the permit.
MR. HERMANN: I'd really hate to tell the
Isabellas that I can't get a decision because of
the steps.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: No. I'm just
saying it's up to the ZBA to decide on the step
area that's on the plan.
MR. HERMANN: Okay. Can you render a
decision pending my leaving for 10 minutes and
coming up with an area calculator? What is it
that you're looking for about the steps, just what
the dimensions are?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Right now you have
some steps that are X number of feet from the
bulkhead, and you're adding steps that are closer
to the bulkhead, and I just simply want to make
sure that's incorporated in the decision. I don't
have any problem with it.
MR. HERMANN: I know you don't have any
problem. I guess my question is if they conform
to the building requirement, if they conform to
the setback requirement, why do the steps become
part of your decision?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: We're just
saying they could impinge upon that 75.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: There could be that
2
e
3
4
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
chance.
16
MR. HERMANN: So you're wanting to know
that exact setback.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: To make sure that
it isn't nonconforming.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: You don't have
to do that this minute; you can drop us a line or
a note.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: The decision lS In
two weeks.
MR. HERMANN: Okay, regardless.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: And you don't have
to come back later, we'll put that in the
decision.
MR. HERMANN: That's what I was trying to
determine, if this Board wouldn't render a
decision on this matter in the next five minutes
either way.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: No, two weeks.
MR. HERMANN: Okay, Linda, I will have
that faxed to you today. I'm sorry about that.
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
71
1
2
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI:
It's fine. They're
9
going to meet in two weeks.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Can I make a
comment? In any case, you can turn those steps
sideways.
MR. HERMANN: If there was an issue, I'm
fairly certain there isn't, but I appreciate it.
If there is, we would change it in a way that it
doesn't become a problem.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Have you thought
about the gauge of the siding you're going to be
using? That's a joke. I mean, I really want to
know why you're here.
MR. HERMANN: You'll have to attribute my
gullibility to your humor, in other towns that I
work in I also have no idea but I also --
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: I understand the
fear you have.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Let me make a motion to
close the hearing pending the acceptance of the
dimensions of the steps.
(See minutes for resolution.)
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Next application is for
Mr. Diller at 60 Great Peconic Bay Boulevard in
Laurel. Good afternoon.
MR. PALUMBO: Good afternoon, I'm Tony
Palumbo from the law firm Goggins and Palumbo on
behalf of Mr. Diller. I think Mr. Goggins
appeared a few times on this.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Yes, he has.
MR. PALUMBO: And this is for submission
on an affidavit on behalf of Mr. Diller because
he's receiving some medical procedures so he was
unable to be here today.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: That's all right.
MR. PALUMBO: (Handing.) I believe that
was really the main purpose.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: There was another
letter that was received regarding the alternative
relief. Mr. Diller has accepted alternative
relief from the Board, I believe.
MR. PALUMBO: That I'm not sure of, I
apologize.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Seventy-five feet from
the bulkhead.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Do you want to read
the letter from your firm? This is the last
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
72
1
2
letter that we got (Handing).
MR. PALUMBO: And that was sent with this?
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: We didn't get the
affidavit. If it's there, I don't recall seeing
the affidavit.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: But basically agrees to
the setback of 75 feet but then he asks that we
not reduce the height of the building, at least to
some degree.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: As long as the
building doesn't exceed two stories.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: That's the
question.
MR. PALUMBO: Whether or not he's creating
a third story.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: That's correct.
MR. PALUMBO: I know that was an lssue.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: We will not do that?
MR. PALUMBO: Under no circumstances will
that be approved, so he's not going to do that.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: It's my
decision, Mr. Palumbo, to write. I mean,
notwithstanding the fact that a person is allowed
to have a cathedral ceiling In their house, the
point is what happens to the cathedral ceiling;
does it become part of -- does any portion of
that, upper portion of that be utilized for
anything that creates that third story situation
that I think that I'm just pointing out to you.
MR. PALUMBO: You mean outside the open
alr aspect of the cathedral, the roof line that
continues and there's storage or what have you.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Well, there was
a deck area that he was showing on his original
plan, and that was the issue that brought up the
comment of a third story. And there was a doorway
and a gable end facing the water showing an upper
story deck. There's some way they have to get to
that deck from the internal portion of the house,
so, I mean, that's the issue. I mean, if we're
talking two stories, we're talking two stories.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: I believe the Board
was going to limit the height to 25, 26 feet to
the top of the ridge. And Mr. Diller seems to
agree to that on the first affidavit on September
29th.
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: He does say here, we'll
also put In this: "If however, the Board should
October 26, 2006
73
1
2
require that the proposed house be located further
away from the bay than it is applied for, then it
is requested that the Board not reduce the
building height permitted by the building code In
such cases by such height may be necessary to
offset at least to some degree the narrow field of
vision." So he isn't happy about it, but he'll
e
3
4
5
9
take it.
MR. PALUMBO: Right.
caveat that he would agree to
he were allowed to keep it in
location. But if you --
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Move
MR. PALUMBO: -- require
back, then he would ask that you
current height.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Well, not really, he
said at least to some degree, so he puts a little
caveat in there that we can reduce it somewhat.
What was the height that he applied for?
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: I believe he asked
for 29 feet. So it's a four foot reduction.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: So a three foot
reduction.
I think that was the
reduce the height if
the current proposed
6
7
8
it back.
him to move it
keep it at the
10
11
12
13
e
14
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Three or four
feet.
15
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Yes, the original
plan shows 29 feet to the ridge.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Mr. Palumbo, do
you know the exact square footage of the house?
MR. PALUMBO: I was just looking for --
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: You can furnish
us with that, if you don't have it today, that's
no problem.
MR. PALUMBO: If the Board is going to
require him to move it back that additional
distance that I think has pretty much been
decided.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Yes.
MR. PALUMBO: Then you're also
contemplating reducing the height as well now?
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Three feet?
MR. PALUMBO: Because I know that was a
sticking point.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Yes.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Because of the side
yards, the side yards don't meet the code.
MR. PALUMBO: So a pyramid-type thing. I
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
.
25
October 26, 2006
74
1
5
want to explain this to him because he wants me to
speak to him.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: I'll let Leslie do it,
she's the architect so she can probably explain it
better than I.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: What we're simply
doing is as you step it back, you're going to be
reducing -- you can actually just simply flatten
the ridge somewhat and reduce the height that way,
because it's not habitable that way, it's attic
anyway. So we're simply talking about not only
mitigating the setback but a little bit of the
height. The view should not be affected --
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: No.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: -- by a reduction
of three feet in the ridge. So it has less visual
impact. Because the side yards are really close.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: They are. And the
cottages on either side are small. The one is
fairly -- it's a year round one, the other one lS
definitely just Mr. McNulty's summer cottage. But
the other houses going down, it's out of scale,
it's too high for the rest of the community. But
26 feet at least is reasonable.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: He can change the
roof line to gambrel or something different, as
long as he doesn't exceed that 26 feet to the top
of the ridge.
MR. PALUMBO: Got you, okay, so he's
proposed 29, and --
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Just remember
it's to the ridge not to the mean.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: From 29 to 26.
MR. PALUMBO: 29 to the ridge.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: He has proposed 29
to the ridge, 18 feet to the eves, and also
there's a deck, an open roof deck and that doesn't
have to change at all. That's fine. We're just
talking about dropping the ridge of that portion
of the house three feet.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: As long as the
access to that deck is not internal into the house
as I just discussed with Mr. Palumbo, which would
denote a third story for the purposes of access to
that deck because you've got living room, bedroom
and outside deck.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Do you mean he has
to have an outside stairs, Jerry?
2
e
3
4
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
75
1
2
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: That's a third
e
story.
5
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI:
have an outside stairway?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: No, no.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Then how would you
get to the deck?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: That's the
question.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Let's look at the
second floor plan. Well, you have eight foot
clearance here. Right now you've got from the
second floor plan, you're going up a flight of
steps to a landing and a door.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Oh, boy.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Now those steps
will be partly enclosed by the roof of the second
story. That's really what's enclosing those
steps. So what we have to do is see if we have
enough -- I don't have a section in that
direction, I need a longitudinal section; I've
just got a latitudinal section here. This end of
the house, this shows you how the floors are
stacked, when you come out here on the deck, what
I don't have is a section this way.
MR. PALUMBO: Okay.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN:
how those stairs are running,
So then you have to
3
4
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
Which would tell
where the landing
us
16
lS.
17
MR. PALUMBO: So it's your folks' position
that even if he has access and even has a landing
above the second story that that would constitute
a third story, even though it's not livable, it's
just a landing and access, a three by three
access.
18
19
20
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: No, I would not say
that's a third story if it's 23 feet to the
ridge -- I'm sorry, 26 feet to the ridge. And you
could still put the riser to runway, show it, you
can still get that in there, and it's strictly an
access out.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Out.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Well, you'd have to
go out and in. It works both ways.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Well, I've got to
tell you, I thought we made a decision down there
on Bay Shore Road, the guy was going to put a flat
roof up, wanted a deck on the top of the house,
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
76
1
2
which lS above the second story, and the reason
why we did turn it down was because he had a
doorway there that was stuck above this deck that
said this is a third story. I see this as being
no different other than it's a peaked roof instead
of a flat roof on top of there where he wanted to
put a little utility shed on top.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: See what this lS is
this door is actually sitting on the elevation,
sitting on the rear elevation back here. And the
door is in the gable, right in the gable. So it's
not habitable -- what it is is the corridor that
leads up through the attic space and up through
the deck. It's not habitable; it is interior but
it's just literally a corridor that runs up to a
door In the gable.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: This is exactly
that Bay Shore Road house.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: The point I'm
trying to make is if you have to drop that by
three feet, you may not have room for that
door. You see what I'm saying? This door lS
going to be lower than this gable.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: You won't have room.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Is the bottom of the
door flush with the deck?
MR. PALUMBO: Yes.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: You don't want them
to crawl out. They have to walk out.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: I think the deck
lS x-nayed on the third story. There's no egress
that's protected.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: The problem is
always with people standing up on that third story
and gawking down on their neighbors. That was the
reason why we gave for turning that one on Bay
Shore.
tit
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
tit
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: You're right, Jim.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: The only other
thing lS if the Board denies the deck and/or you
could reapply for the deck area and then have the
Board come out and include that. He can apply
later.
22
23
24
MR. PALUMBO: I don't think you can
distinguish that deck from something where you're
on top of the building and you've got access to
it, an exterior access like the one you're talking
about. The other one that you're trying to
e
25
October 26, 2006
77
1
9
compare it to saYlng that that's a flat roof and
whether it would constitute a third story or not,
I guess because of the aesthetics where you think
you were denying it. But this is something where
he has an interior access. It's significantly
different. With a flat roof you had that
entire --
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: No, no. The deck
is a flat roof and quite honestly, if he had built
a pyramid on top instead of putting a square roof
where the stairwell was, it would have been
exactly this.
MR. PALUMBO: We're just talking height
restriction issue regarding building over that
flat roof. That's my point.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: It was a code
restriction, I don't think it was 24 feet high.
But the point is, we have already dealt with the
privacy issue and the neighbors concerning decks
on top of homes. And quite honestly, I'm willing
to grant a deck above a second story.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: I tend to agree
with you.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Tucking it In
between these two gables, and stepping the roofs
back.
2
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: You're not gOlng to
convince me in all honesty.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Regardless of where
it's accessible from we just will not like to see
the deck on top.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: I think you're better
off just denying it period. Forgetting the deck.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: This way, if
something occurs later, he can always come back.
MR. PALUMBO: Okay. So just so I'm clear
now, he's denied the variance with regard to the
distance from the water.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Correct.
MR. PALUMBO: He's denied the height
application.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Correct.
MR. PALUMBO: He's denied the deck.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Correct.
MR. PALUMBO: So he's being granted the
side yard variance only subject to him moving it
back and the other mitigation that we discussed.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Right.
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
78
1
5
MR. PALUMBO:
clear to Mr. Diller.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: You've got it.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Well, he's granted
isn't it 100 foot from there?
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Seventy-five.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: So we're granting
side yard variances subject to 75 feet from the
bulkhead and 26 to the ridge.
MR. PALUMBO: Twenty-six feet to ridge and
75 feet from the bulkhead; I know there was a bit
of a round and round regarding mean high water and
so forth.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Which bulkhead?
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: The upper one.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Meaning the higher
bulkhead, the landward?
MR. PALUMBO: That's what you're talking,
75 feet from that?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: From the
landward.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Yes.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: From the upper
bulkhead, the closer one.
MR. PALUMBO: I won't
I know that was a big issue.
subsequently. I'm sure there
record on that.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: All right?
MR. PALUMBO: Understood.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Fine. Does anyone else
want to comment on this application?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: I just have one
more thing, talking about electric right of way or
something.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Right. He had made an
affidavit that he would make sure that his next
door neighbor, Mr. McNulty, would be given the
electricity that comes across that.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: That wouldn't be
discontinued during construction phase; lS that
what it was? It's actually built across the
property, Mr. Palumbo, so the point in question it
has to be taken off of John's house. So there was
a question at the first hearing if John was gOlng
to apply for it -- Mr. McNulty was going to apply
tor it or Mr. Diller was going to be applying tor
it; and he subsequently gave us an affidavit
Okay, just so it's crystal
2
e
3
4
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
even start on that,
He put it in
is an extensive
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
.
25
October 26, 2006
79
1
2
saying that he was going to apply for it. And I
suspect they're going to run it down between both
property lines and then share it going out.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: And it says he'll
provide electric service.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Can we make that
part of the decision?
e
3
4
5
9
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Sure.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: Can we just
discuss the retaining wall issue for a minute?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Sure.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: Just explain
to me why we're measuring the 75 feet from the
retaining wall.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: It's a double bulkhead.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: Is it a double
bulkhead or a retaining wall?
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: It's a double
bulkhead. If it's a retaining wall, it looks more
like a bulkhead to me.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: They call it out as
a retaining wall, but In fact it really is a
bulkhead.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: It's a bulkhead
from what Mr. McNulty said in the hearing,
helped rebuild that because of the erOSlon
Larry Tuttle, Senior.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: I understand,
but we have definitions -- and I'm not disagreeing
with you but you just have to make sure your
decision's right because the code defines bulkhead
as intended to separate earth from water, and
retaining wall to separate earth from earth.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: It really doesn't
say that.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: We're separating
and,
that
with
he
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
earth from earth.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: And I believe the
plans were measuring from the bulkhead along the
waterfront edge.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: Correct.
MR. PALUMBO: Inserted and then ultimately
what we're calling a retaining wall.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: In other words, the
retaining wall could have been avoided obviously
only if the bulkhead were made twice as high.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: I don't know.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: I think it should be
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
80
1
5
back from the retaining wall.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: His house is
reached back farther than the neighbor's houses
quite a bit.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Mr. Diller's would be?
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Quite a bit back
further.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: Because you're
granting the side yard variance, you can condition
it however far back you want, but the normal 75
feet rule is from the bulkhead.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Yes, but if you have
a stepped bulkhead.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: You could
determine that the retaining wall is actually a
bulkhead and that it's designed to protect the
upland from the water to serve that purpose.
You've just got to find that that's what you're
going to do as opposed to stopping this upland
earth from caving into the down 1 and earth.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: I think the
Building Inspector did that already.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Did what?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: He denied it from
that bulkhead.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: From the
retaining wall?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: From the second,
the nearest wood bulkhead, the nearest one from
the house.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: No. He measured
from the bottom.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: No, it says
proposed new dwelling will be set back 20 feet
from the nearest wood bulkhead; what does that
mean?
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: That's the retaining
2
e
3
4
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
wall.
21
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: That's where he
denied it.
BOARD
good, Jimmy.
BOARD
MEMBER GOEHRINGER: That was very
22
23
MEMBER DINIZIO:
I don't agree with
it.
24
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: You just need
to make clear what you're doing.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Again, we could make
it clear that somebody could certainly construct a
e
25
October 26, 2006
81
1
5
step, a three-step bulkhead, and it would be
measured from the farthest one In.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Okay.
MR. PALUMBO: I believe between that
second bulkhead, that retaining wall and the
bulkhead it's lawn, and it's well established and
I believe the Trustees are -- I believe they're
making them put ln a five foot buffer, if I'm
reading this correctly, looking at the most recent
survey. I know there's been plenty of discussion,
but of course, our position is that that is the
retaining wall because it is lawn between the
waterfront bulkhead and this retaining wall;
that's been there for years.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Well, certainly I
think some of the paperwork says that the lowest
part of that particular bulkhead is 12 feet above
sea level.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: I'm sorry, it's got to
be from the upper one.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Well, I think what
we should probably do is look at this very
carefully in deliberation. We maybe need to go
back to the site.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: I'm just looking at the
fetch, and hurricanes down there, and I'll go back
to what Mr. McNulty said in his testimony.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: John?
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Tom. Because to me
they have done something to try to protect it and
hold it ln, but the upper one too, they obviously
had enough erosion that they felt that they needed
both.
2
.
3
4
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
.
14
15
16
17
18
19
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN:
intended to supplement the purpose
one.
If it's
of the first
20
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: If you look at the
next door property, their bulkhead is ln line with
what someone wants to call a retaining wall. So
it simply looks like a step bulkhead. That's not
a lawn between the first bulkhead and the second
bulkhead. It's sand with some green stuff growing
ln there occasionally.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Beach grass.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Beach grass.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Can I comment?
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Sure.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Regardless of what
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
82
1
2
we say, I think the Building Inspector has the
final say in this, and he's basically saying it's
that first one, the one closest to your house. I
mean, your remedy is to protest that and file an
Article 78, but we have to base our decisions on
what the Building Inspector says. He's the guy
who does the code.
MR. PALUMBO: Where are you getting that
.
3
4
5
6
from?
7
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: The notice of
disapproval.
MR. PALUMBO: Okay.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: The first 20 feet
from the upper bulkhead.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: I don't think we
have to deliberate any more on this.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: I don't either. If no
one else has any comments, I'll make a motion to
close the hearing and reserve decision until
later.
8
9
10
11
12
(See minutes for resolution.)
13
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Next hearing is for the
Anselmos.
MS. MOORE: Mr. and Mrs. Anselmo are here
and Angelo Chorno, the architect is also here. I
had submitted this back October 16th to try to
address some of the issues that we had. Last time
we were here they heard from you that you were not
pleased with the fact that we would be demolishing
the structure and asking to rebuild the structure.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: No. I think what we
said is you should build a structure that's closer
to the house or next to the house that would be
part of the house.
MS. MOORE: What they want to do now is
just keep the structure that they have. We met
with Mike Verity. The only structural -- I don't
want to say structural change -- what we need to
do lS certainly put a slab under this building
because it needs the structural support under the
building. The existing building for the most part
is in good structural condition. When we take the
exterior surfaces off and the roofing off, you may
have damage, termite damage or water damage, that
will need to be replaced as needed. But for the
most part the building is intended to be just
picked up, put a slab under, and set down. The
.
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
tit
25
October 26, 2006
83
1
2
building can be made conforming in its setback
because since you're putting a foundation on the
ground, you can set it back from the property
line. So there are really two lssues here. One
lS, can you have an accessory use In an accessory
building, and what I did was I went through the
code, and I wrote what I thought would be a
helpful memorandum to the Board looking at the
definitions in the code looking at the way Rathpos
defines accessory uses, a case from East Hampton
that seemed right on point with respect to
accessory uses.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA:
That's not In our code,
.
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Miss Moore.
MS. MOORE: I would respectfully disagree
that the code right now specifically says that an
accessory use is a use that is to be accessory
incidental to the main use. We only want to have
a piano, a music room. Okay, you can have a music
room as accessory to your main house just as you
would have a gymnasium to your main house or any
other type of hobbies that you might have. That
lS standard. The house is a residence. You have
a private music room, just as if you had a private
art studio. Private. These are private
uses. The code specifically says, an accessory
use is a permitted use. It's not a music room --
lS not excluded from the list of accessory uses.
There is a specific provision In the code which
allows for any customary and incidental; the code
just does not say pool houses, does not list pool
houses, but then all of us know that lately pool
houses have become the customary and incidental
use to the pool. You may have beach cabanas that
are the equivalent of pool houses; those became
accessory and incidental. Certainly In the '50s
they were hugely popular in Southold. What we
want to do is take this barn that means a lot to
the clients, that they do not want to lose this
barn, and make it usable to the family. They
don't have agriculture that they are tilling.
They don't have tractors to be storied and they
don't have migrant workers, which the second floor
of this building now has. It's very clear, and I
asked you last time if you had a chance to go
inside because if you look at the second story
space of this barn, it is linoleum flooring. It
has the wood stove that at one time worked. They
10
11
12
13
.
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
84
1
2
e 3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e 14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e 25
want to keep it just for cosmetic. It's a
beautiful antique wood burning stove. It probably
would not pass code, so we talked about that, it
doesn't have to be connected, they just love it,
it's beautiful. And what I did is we attached to
the drawings so you can see it, it's a photograph
that's attached to the drawings so you can see
that it's there. That's a picture taken inside
the building, and you can see that it has the open
rafters structure. It was clearly habitable
living space at one time. The building inspector
at one point in time when the property -- there
were COs being obtained, must have determined --
and I don't think he went inside because anybody
going inside would see that it's habitable space
but nonetheless it could be a storage building. I
know I have other applications coming before this
Board with some of these beautiful old barns that
people want to use them. They are cultural
historic structures that this community has said,
we are an agricultural community and we have old
barns, we do not want to lose them. This property
owner does not want to lose this barn. They just
want to use the space. They want to enjoy the
space and the one thing that she does is she plays
the piano and she wants to put a piano in there.
I pulled from the code language specifically of
why this really shouldn't even be before this
Board because the Building Department, when I met
with Mike, he said, well, maybe over time it might
become something that he doesn't even send to this
Board because the code and the community changes.
What is incidental and accessory will change over
time depending on what becomes the interest, the
hobbies of the community. You may have people
that are telecommuting. We have a lot of people
that are setting up shops here locally. They
might want to put a computer in their old building
and use it as an office. I know this Board has
looked at those in the past. More and more people
are using these old buildings as they have the
financial wherewithal to renovate them to keep
them and to make them part of their property. So
what I provided for the Board was the memorandum
citing language specifically from the code and
from zoning treatises on how you're supposed to
interpret an accessory use. The code doesn't say
an accessory use has to be part of the principal
October 26, 2006
85
1
9
building. It specifically says it can be in the
accessory building, it doesn't have to be in the
principal building. And I even attached the East
Hampton case which was the Martha Stewart case I
call it because it was in East Hampton, they get a
lot of reuse of old barns, of old buildings, and
the building department routinely grants permits
to convert to do these accessory buildings that
allow for gymnasiums and whatever other things
that the home owners ask for.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: May I ask a question?
First of all I think I agree with everything you
say and I think almost all of it is irrelevant to
the case before us.
MS. MOORE: Why?
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Because the issue I
remember, maybe I misremember the hearing, was not
whether she could put a studio in the abandoned
barn, but whether the building originally could be
torn down and replaced with one which looked like
the barn and had a studio in it.
And now the issue as I understand it lS
whether you can reconstruct it, which also means,
moving it to a slightly different location. So
the issue is not how you can use it. I don't
think there's any serious dispute over your legal
citations or anything like this. I don't think ~~
MS. MOORE: I don't think the rest of the
2
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
Board
17
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Let me finish.
MS. MOORE: Okay.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: I don't think there
would be an issue before us of whether she could
put a piano in the barn that you would need any
special permission for accessory use and all of
the argument of how you can have a computer and so
forth. It was what kinds of things can you do to
the building while you're in the process of
creating a wonderful studio. And I think what we
said was you can build a studio, which lS
appropriate if you tear down the barn, or you can
keep the barn as it is and try to make an
accommodation to it, but you can't do both. And
if I'm right about that, then all of these
questions about what you can use your barn for in
the Hamptons or wherever is completely irrelevant
to what is before us. Maybe the Board will
disagree with me but that's my recollection.
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
86
1
6
MS. MOORE: Do you have a comment?
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: Yes, I do. I
think the fact that you're proposlng to move it,
you could build an accessory structure, a new one
or move this one to a conforming place. I think
we're all in agreement on that, right? But I do
think the issue of what you can use it for is a
sticking point for this town.
MS. MOORE: But then you're disagreeing
with what he just said.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: Maybe I'm
2
e
3
4
5
7
wrong.
9
MS. MOORE: That's what I got.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: But I think
that's what the Building Department has told you.
MS. MOORE: The Building Department has
raised the issue of use because they're saying
can --
8
10
11
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN:
Can you build
12
a piano room in an accessory.
MS. MOORE: Can you build a plano room In
an accessory building.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: And a bathroom.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: Now the East
Hampton case is instructive. I think it's not
right on point, it's instructive. It's not right
on point because it deals with East Hampton law
and their history of granting variances and
granting permission for the types of uses that
were sought in that case. We don't necessarily
have that here. You're not coming to us and
saying you've granted three standing piano rooms
on five separate occasions, so you must do that
for us. The decision in that case -- first of
all, the decision was upholding the decision of
the ZBA which granted it. It wasn't challenging
it. And it was supporting the ZBA's history in
that case of approving such uses. So this Board I
think has to decide whether it wants to grant such
free standing uses as accessory uses. I think you
make all the right arguments as to how to construe
accessory uses, and I think you make all the
appropriate arguments, let me say that instead of
the right arguments. But I still think this Board
and this town need to decide whether and what kind
of uses they want In freestanding uses.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: I think we have
already, quite honestly. I think you have to take
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
87
1
5
it to the next step, Pat, which is define for me
what a piano room is. How do you construct a
piano room and what supports that piano room? I'm
talking about it needs running water and it needs
heat, and if it needs that, then I think it's not
customary for accessory.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: You're right.
MS. MOORE: I would respectfully disagree
because I have come before this Board for an art
studio with heat and water, washing paint brushes,
having water with actually a toilet because you're
allowed to have a bathroom in an accessory
building, and often times to have a bathroom you
have to have heat because otherwise your pipes
would freeze. So as a matter of routine you have
heated accessory structures that some you don't
even see because the Building Department just
grants it because it permits a bathroom rn an
accessory building. You can call it storage, you
can call it your garage with a workroom, and you
can have it heated. There are lots of garages
that you have granted that have climate control
because people have the hobby of antique cars.
You have granted pianos -- excuse me, art studios,
you have granted --
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Let's go back to
the art studio. First of all, it was in one
section of a garage, and it was a small section.
It was a section facing the portion of the house.
Now, let me go back and digress on how these
buildings that your client has came to be all
right. The farmers in this illustrious town
needed these buildings for their part time
workers, their part time seasonal workers that
came; they sent them train tickets down south.
These people came up, they started here in April
to plant the crops that they subsequently
harvested this August, September, October. By the
time November came around, they were back down
south agarn. They were seasonal buildings. The
heating source rn this building was used for
seasonal purposes and only seasonal purposes.
That rs not the case today. Today we don't use
that source of these people. The source that we
use today are different ethnic backgrounds that
have moved up here, have either been supplied
housing which they pay for on a year round basis,
or they buy their own houses after working for a
2
.
3
4
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
.
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
.
25
October 26, 2006
88
1
8
certain period of time. So, it's a stretch to me,
and I don't mean this, Pat, In any derogatory
sense, to create a year round situation and that's
what you're anticipating in this particular
building. I think this building reconstructed
would probably be one of the most beautiful things
that I have ever seen because I happen to like
these kinds of buildings. The question is how
much is going to be involved. There's no question
that the lower half of this building or most of
the lower half of this building was used for
storage purposes.
MS. MOORE: And it continues to be used
for storage.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: For tractors,
for all kinds of related equipment that was
related to the farm area. All of which were
around and have been sold off to certain people,
one of which is a 46 acre parcel which was
subdivided into a 46 acre parcel and must remain
in a 46 acre parcel. It belongs to a person in
Cutchogue, which is completely contiguous to this
piece of property and he uses it for hunting
purposes. So, the question is, if you tell us
what section of the building you want, you are
anticipating for the purposes of this studio --
MS. MOORE: Just the second floor.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Okay, and what
you intend to put up there, then we will further
discuss the stretch, and that is the stretch that
I'm referring to, and the stretch that we are
dealing with in all the situations of today and
all the requests that we have.
Now, I'm going to go back briefly before I
finish this discourse and discuss the cabana
issues because we had a cabana application to
which this gentleman to your right, my left lS
sitting right over here and we told him
specifically this morning, no heat and it's
attached to a 32 by 24 foot garage, no heat. And
why did we do that? Because we're not concerned
about his use of the building, we're not concerned
about your neighbor's use, I'm not concerned,
excuse me, we're concerned about future uses of
this property.
MS. MOORE: I understand.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: There lS no
question that your client lS probably an extremely
2
e
3
4
5
6
7
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
89
1
6
gifted person and deserves the right to have these
particular things. We need restrictions on these
buildings, that is the concern that all of us
have.
MS. MOORE: And that is why I'm glad you
said all that because it's precisely why they come
to you sometimes from the Building Department.
Because not only can you impose the condition but
you have the right to ask for a covenant and
restriction which clients are willing to file a
covenant that is on the land that says this is a
music studio or an art studio or whatever it is
you grant because the application before you.
There are applications that say you can't deny
something based on how somebody might illegally
convert it. We want it to be a music studio, it
is not to be sleeping quarters. They know it full
well, it's not designed as sleeping quarters.
They love this building, they obviously
love historic structures because the primary
structure is a very historic structure, and they
want to use this space. Right now the second
story is finished space, but it probably couldn't
hold up a piano, correct? Doesn't look like it
would.
2
e
3
4
5
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Pat, what is the square
footprint of the second floor?
MS. MOORE: I can get that for you.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: We need the
square footprint for both floors.
MS. MOORE: The first floor the existing
is 16 by 33 as it is, and it's all storage space.
It can be unheated space.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: First floor shows
16
17
18
19
16-6.
20
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Here it shows 15.
MS. MOORE: I gave you guys drawings of
the foundation.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: We're not looking
at the foundation, we're looking at the first and
second floor.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: We're looking at
the revised.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: The foundation plan
is different from the first and second floor.
Would you like to see the first floor plan?
MS. MOORE: Well, the first floor is right
here, it's storage.
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
90
1
5
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: What lS the date on
that one?
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: This one is
1/25/06.
MS. MOORE: 10/16/06 when I gave you
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: We don't have
those, sorry.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN:
Pat, this is the
2
e
3
4
6
reconstruction.
MS. MOORE: That's the reconstruction.
This is what the Building Department got.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: So the first plan.
MS. MOORE: No the demolition plan is the
one that -- we went back and we said we are going
to keep the existing building exactly as it is.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Let me ask you
one question before you get to that point. Where
does the building sit on the property now?
MS. MOORE: Seven feet from the property
7
8
9
10
11
line.
12
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Okay, and the
new plan calls for 10 feet.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: You're cranking the
building?
MR. CHORNO: Yes.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: I actually have
seen these photographs. So there's no longer a
bathroom upstairs, just a sink?
MS. MOORE: It has a sink now, and we are
proposing we keep the sink.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Right. You're
moving the wood burning stove over.
MS. MOORE: We have the wood burning stove
now. We are not moving.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: That's staying. It
was moved in the previous plan?
MS. MOORE: Yes.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Is it a workable wood
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
stove?
22
MS. MOORE: We don't know, it's a
beautiful antique.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: How are you going to
keep the piano if you don't have heat?
MS. MOORE: No. The second floor must be
23
24
heated.
e
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: You're relocating the
25
septic.
MS. MOORE: See we have to pour a new
October 26, 2006
91
1
5
foundation. Rather than pouring a
in that nonconforming location, we
pouring the new foundation 10 feet
property line.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO:
you need from us?
MS. MOORE: The toilet.
to be a full bathroom.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Let me state
architecturally. First of all I think it's
wonderful the idea of preserving these old
buildings. And adaptive reuse is absolutely an
appropriate future trend that we're gOlng to see
In this town and we should see in this town.
we don't currently have available to us are
definitions of uses. That essentially because
most of the uses, accessory uses, have been
unheated storage or seasonal and we will be
increasingly seeing requests that are not
altogether in my mind unreasonable, for a
habitable space that is not sleeping space.
MS. MOORE: What I'm saying to you, and I
don't think you realize that when I pulled the
definitions and I put it in writing to show you,
that the code is written for flexibility, and it
says what lS ancillary and customary. Twenty
years ago self-service stations were not
considered customary and necessary. Now, good
luck In finding someone that doesn't have one.
That's a changing community. So, the customary
and accessory depends on do you have a house, it
can apply for any principal use that you have.
It's the principal use that dictates. And as
long as you don't operate a business and you don't
create the second dwelling lssue, which I said
that you can control the second dwelling issue
with just a covenant and it doesn't even have to
come from you, it could come from the Building
Department or a CO that says not sleeping quarters
because eventually someone's gOlng to get it.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: I think legally
you're correct but historically C and Rs have not
necessarily prevented -- in fact, there's a very
good article actually in the town's association
magazine this month on the use of covenants and
restrictions.
new foundation
would be
from the
2
tit
3
4
So what lS it that
There's not going
6
7
8
What
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
.
25
MS. MOORE: But if I could raise one thing
that I always advise clients when they ask me, and
October 26, 2006
92
1
5
that lS that you cannot use it for something
lS not legally permitted to be used for, and
I'm going to give you an example, the tennis
player In Southampton.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER:
Geurulitis.
MS. MOORE: Thank you. He was sleeping in
a pool house. When he died in what was a pool
house, I worry about the kinds of insurance issues
because what happens is when you have someone that
sleeps In and dies in a building that lS not
considered habitable space, your insurance company
will not insure you; you are creating such
incredible liability that most times when I point
out that example they say, okay. So it wouldn't
be considered. It isn't something that today's
society, with the litigious society that we have,
I think it's way too risky to go there. Are
people going to violate the law? Of course.
People speed, people murder, they do things that
are illegal, but I think we have to address the
community and make these buildings usable for
people because they deteriorate if they don't get
rehabilitated and maintained. And I think you're
taking a whole cultural aspect of this community,
agricultural community, by giving homeowners the
choice of do we tear it down because we can't use
it for anything other than storage, and we already
have enough storage space or do you rehabilitate
it.
that
I say
2
e
3
4
Vitas
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Miss Moore, I think we
have just gotten these plans, have you run these
plans by the Building Department?
MS. MOORE: Yes, I met with Mike Verity
18
19
first.
20
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: But we do not have a
new notice of disapproval.
MS. MOORE: I understand that.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: So that we will
require. I would like to adjourn the hearing,
have you take these to the Building Department,
get a new notice of disapproval for it because you
have a CO for a nonhabitable accessory barn.
MS. MOORE: I understand that but Mike
said, I'm just going to relay the conversation,
what he said was we can take this building, repair
it and so on that the only thing that we would
need, the variance issue is the use, whether or
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
93
1
5
not we're allowed to use it for a private piano
music room, and I guess the question of whether or
not you can put it on -- did he say the slab was
okay too?
MR. CHORNO: No crawl space and no
basement.
MS. MOORE: The slab for the building was
fine, the restoration of the building was fine.
MR. CHORNO: There's a little deck in the
corner that overlooks the fields.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: I see that, a 12
foot deck, 14 by 12, and you're 19'4" to the
ridge?
MS. MOORE: Yes. That's what it lS now.
MR. CHORNO: The median lS within the 18
feet even including the one foot that we're
pushing the building up in order to separate the
siding from the ground.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: I have a different
question. This is a question not a speech. Last
time we discussed whether the building could be
rebuilt, torn down and rebuilt on the spot to the
specifications of the barn, and the impression was
that would probably not be possible, but the
question was not whether they can build an
accessory building if the other one was renovated
but how it could be built. So, if I'm right about
this --
2
e
3
4
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
MS. MOORE: I'm not sure I understand.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: If there's going to
be a new building built.
MS. MOORE: This is a renovation.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Okay, I know, but
what is special about it being a renovation? Why
lS it important that it be a renovation?
MS. MOORE: It's in-kind/in-place.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: But it's not going to
be in-kind/in-place because you said it's going to
be moved.
MS. MOORE: The goal of the Board is to
make things more conforming. So in our efforts to
make it more conforming, we have to put a
foundation, we'll push it away from the property
line. So you need 10 feet.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: But the goal of the
Board lS also to adhere to the law as written?
MS. MOORE: But that's what I have
written.
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
94
1
9
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: We're not talking
about the law, the part of the law that what
counts as an accessory use, but the question of
what kind of new structure can be built, and I'm
I'm not sure what is gained by fudging the issue
of between a renovation and a new construction.
MS. MOORE: I thought that that was where
the Board felt more comfortable on an existing
barn not rebuilding the same structure because to
rebuild it you need to meet state building code
with height requirements.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Right.
MS. MOORE: And we would have to raise it
a little bit so that right now, the existing barn
on a slab is existing, we don't need any height
varlance, nothing for the existing structure. All
we're dealing with is the adaptive reuse of the
existing structure.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Then the lssue lS
putting a slab that lS 10 feet over from the
existing counts as a reuse or whether it counts in
effect as a new building.
MS. MOORE: That's up to you guys.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: That's up to the
Building Department.
MS. MOORE: We're willing to not move it.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: You didn't quote
Michael Verity on that question?
MS. MOORE: We're willing to not move
it. We just think that using common sense and
making the structure conforming to the extent you
can is the goal in the zoning code.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: I thought one of the
things that was mentioned last time was that you
could renovate the barn in situ.
MS. MOORE: Rebuild?
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Right, rebuild it In
the same footprint. Then the only question was
the accessory use. Now I think we're sort of
saying you can renovate the barn; you said it was
prohibitively expensive, so we wanted to be able
to start over again.
MS. MOORE: Yes, but the client, despite
the expense, doesn't want to lose it. So they
want if the only way they can preserve this
building is to do a restoration of it.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Is it a moving?
MS. MOORE: If you say no, we don't want
2
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
95
1
5
you to move it, we won't move it. We don't have
to move it.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: I think you're gOlng to
have to resubmit it, Pat.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: The way it was
advertised.
MS. MOORE: We're trying to address
2
e
3
4
lssues.
8
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: It's not properly
before the Board for an answer on that. I haven't
advertised it, you haven't applied for it. All
the paperwork is for a renovation. You have
applied for it as a demolition with
reconstruction. So you have to start from the
beginning.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: No, no, no, no.
May I comment? Please, hold on. They came to us.
They wanted to do this thing. They wanted to put
it right back in the same place and have a couple
of bathrooms, whatever. We can say no, but you
can do this. And one of the things is you got to
move it back, pick it up and move it back. They
don't need any permission from us to put it in a
conforming spot. They don't need any permission
to move the building unless they're going to do it
to go to a nonconforming location. So I'm sitting
here wondering, what is it exactly that you need
from us.
6
7
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
MS. MOORE: Just the authorization to use
it as an accessory building as a piano, as a music
room.
17
18
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Okay, as a plano
room, it's going to need heat, which is something
we look at on occasion, which we grant with
restrictions. So we say, yeah, you can have a
piano, we understand your hardship because a piano
costs $10,000
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: You wish.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: I know, but you're
going to keep it there. You want to have it in a
controlled environment. That's pretty much why
you would need the heat there.
MS. MOORE: Yes.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Now, you can't
sleep there. We don't want you to put a kitchen
In; it must be insulated, but we don't need to
know that it's insulated, we don't grant that;
that's something that the building inspector I
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
96
1
2
suppose does or whatever. The only thing that
we're looking at here is you want to put a piano
in a room on the second story of the existing barn
that you're going to make more conforming; is that
correct?
e
3
4
5
MS. MOORE: Yes.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: And to move the
building.
MS. MOORE: But for the Board's
accommodation not because we have to.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: If they pick up
this building today and moved it, they would not
need any permission from us to do it.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: That's why we're
saying, why is she here then.
MS. MOORE: I already spent a tremendous
amount of money asking for a variance for this
music room, and rather than say deny and start
over where I have to --
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: I'm not saying
start over with us. I'm saying if you don't need
a variance and you're not here go to the Building
Department and get a building permit.
MS. MOORE: No, because the issue of the
use remains.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Right.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Well, that's what
we don't have in writing from the Building
Department, and that's why I'm saying get the
disapproval amended to say that because they're
not really --
MS. MOORE: I have no problem. I tried to
start there to ask for it and unfortunately timing
Wlse, Mike wasn't able to produce it.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: I don't think Mike
wrote it, I think one of the other's wrote it. He
doesn't usually write them.
MS. MOORE: Well, I met with Mike because
really as the head of the department
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: The way this notice
of disapproval is written it's really an area
variance and what you're really talking about is a
use variance for an accessory structure.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: No.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: I don't understand
then. You're talking about this current notice of
disapproval is about height.
MR. CHORNO: Excuse me, you told us you do
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
97
1
6
the demolition never existed. So, we came back
and we said, we won't demolish, we're gOlng to
restore. But while we restore, we raise the
building and move it ln order to do the
foundation. When we do that, we either put it
back where it was or we put it conforming to the
code. We would like to put it conforming to the
code because at the same time we are asking to put
like a balcony. The balcony would not be
conforming because if we are not conforming with
the building footing, with the building location,
we are going to be less for the balcony, so
instead of moving 10 feet, we moving 16 feet. We
allow six feet for the balcony, and 10 feet -- now
10 10 or five -- 10 will be conforming and that's
it. That's it.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: No. You're making
it confusing, sir, you're confusing us. Because
you're not asking for the balcony, the balcony is
going to be conforming.
MS. MOORE: Yes. But it depends on how
you're interpreting.
MR. CHORNO: Then the balcony will not be
your lssue, will be the Building Department issue.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: That's right.
MS. MOORE: I just want to make sure that
they don't say, oh, we should have gotten your
approval for the balcony. Because when I looked
at the notice of disapproval it was three
issues -- use, which we're still here on; height
of the new because the accessory building; the new
building, a reconstructed building, would have
required instead of 18 a little bit higher, 19-4
because of state building code issues.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Is that a subject
2
.
3
4
5
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
.
14
15
16
17
18
19
now?
20
MS. MOORE: No, because it's existing and
it's at 18 to the mean.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: So one thing so far
that we're here for. Okay, you're going down, I
want to be clear.
MS. MOORE: And the third issue was the
setback because the survey that we had at the time
had the building at five or seven, whatever the
setback was, we were prepared to move it. At the
time the building inspector looked at it it was
in-kind/in-place, so it was in the same spot.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: So that's no longer
21
22
23
24
.
25
October 26,
2006
98
1
2
on the table.
MS. MOORE: So that was the third variance
which we don't need any more because of the fact
that we moved it away.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: So, let's go over
this now. What is it that you're here for?
MS. MOORE: Just allowed to convert this
building to a piano room.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Heated?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Heated accessory
e
3
4
5
6
7
use.
8
MS. MOORE: Not in the same location, in a
conforming location.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: I don't think
that's a subject of this hearing, but if you
wanted to add that to an approval --
MS. MOORE: I want to include it so that
the Building Department doesn't say, well, we
moved it so get the okay from you.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: She's right on
9
10
11
12
that.
13
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: But as your
father has clearly stated, this could be an
in-kind/in-place reconstruction.
MS. MOORE: We could do that.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: Not with the
balcony.
MS. MOORE: Well, the balcony could be
modified, which would be a shame because really
the only thing they want to look at is the fields,
not Route 48.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: And there's no year
round heat.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Well, there's going
to be heat.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: You're proposing
heat in the piano room.
MS. MOORE: No. The use incorporates all
that lS required for a year round music.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: What about
subdividing this building, well, making other
rooms up there; what about that? You're not
feeling like you're going to put any other rooms
In there, so if we restricted that on the current
dimensions --
MS. MOORE: We have offered that day one,
to condition the permit if you feel that it's not
enough we put a covenant on the property, which is
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
99
1
6
a recorded document that says it's an accessory
building.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: To be inspected maybe
once a year.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: I think the reason
behind these questions, as you recall, I think the
original application called for two bathrooms, and
that's what --
MS. MOORE: We had the bathrooms, we were
just replacing them. They have a bathroom with a
shower.
2
e
3
4
5
7
8
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: There was never gOlng
to be two bathrooms?
MS. MOORE: Now we only need one bathroom.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: It's shown
downstairs.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Powder room.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: What you're
proposing is a space on the second floor that is
33' by 16.6; is that correct?
MR. CHORNO: That's what it is.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: It's not called out
on the second floor plan. On the second floor
it's 33 by 16.6?
MR. CHORNO: Yes.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: So if we approved
it and said you had to have a room upstairs by
those dimensions, that would be okay?
MS. MOORE: That's what we're asking for.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Nonsubdivided.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: There's a bathroom
on the first floor and heat?
MS. MOORE: No. We eliminated it.
MR. CHORNO: There's a toilet on the first
floor, nothing in the second.
MS. MOORE: I'm sorry.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: That toilet will
also have to have heat.
MS. MOORE: Do you want us to put it
upstairs instead of downstairs so you don't have
to heat the first floor; can we do that?
MR. CHORNO: I can do it but I don't
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
know.
24
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Architects can do
anything.
MR. CHORNO: Because the way it is now lS
the way it is shown with that sloping roof, if you
look at that photograph, you can see the building.
e
25
October 26, 2006
100
1
5
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: It's a little shed.
MS. MOORE: Shed that was a bathroom?
MR. CHORNO: So, if I have to take it out,
I cannot put it on top of there because of course
that would make a second floor.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: What mechanicals
will you have in the mechanical room?
MR. CHORNO: There is a space, a system
which lS open.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: The bathroom's
being renovated on the first floor with this
insulation; that's what the renovation was?
MR. CHORNO: No, windows and insulation in
the walls otherwise --
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: So it's being
reconstructed that area.
MR. CHORNO: Remove the siding and
insulation.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: You said the roof?
MS. MOORE: They're cedar shingles with
asbestos on top so when you take it off you're
gOlng to have to put plywood down and reshingle
probably.
MR. CHORNO: When we open that building we
don't know what we're going to find.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: You'll have a lot
of rot. You'll have to do a lot of sistering and
rafters and who knows what. The bones will tell
you.
2
e
3
4
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: So wrapping this
up, what do we need from these people?
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: What do we need
regarding the notice of disapproval so that we can
continue?
MS. MOORE: Do you need a notice of
disapproval?
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: The way it's been
advertised, it's for a demolition and
reconstruction, and I know we got these plans from
you the other day. The Board's reviewing them for
the first time. I would feel more comfortable if
the application is readvertised so that notice can
be given again to make sure when the Board
approves it everybody's aware that it's no longer
a demolition, and that it's clear what type of
alterations are being done to the building. If
you glve a check list or something we can attach
it to the plans.
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
101
1
6
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: Do any of the
alterations require a variance?
MS. MOORE: No, it's only the use.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: Was that part
of the original advertisement?
MS. MOORE: Yes.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: Then, if the
only variance you're going to give it is to allow
this use and restrict its use, then you're
probably okay with the notice.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: What lS the notice
for a music studio?
MS. MOORE: It was noticed for that. It's
the first issue which said accessory uses.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Yes, it was
advertised in our public notice. It also included
related game room activities.
MS. MOORE: Right, that we were gOlng to
use the first floor as a game room.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: But you don't
have to grant any of that. It's really a matter
of what you need. If all you're asking right now
lS for the variance for the use, this Board can
ignore all the other relief, grant the variance
for the use, not grant any setback or any other
relief, give you the use with whatever
restrictions it wants to place on it. If you can
take that and go get a building permit for what
you want, then I don't see a problem with that.
MR. CHORNO: I don't want them to come
back here for the moving of the building.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: They might.
MS. MOORE: I respect Linda because Linda
and I work on a daily basis with the Building
Department, make sure that they interpret it the
same way we all do. I think it would be a good
idea that I -- what I'll do is give this to the
Building Department, ask Mike to look at it and
give you the notice that says only the use, which
already is incorporated here. So it wouldn't
require the full hearing and everything else. If
he requires something else, then I understand we
have to readvertise.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: If he requires
a variance for moving it, then we're going to have
to readvertise it.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: So the hearing could
be closed if all we have to deliberate on is the
2
e
3
4
5
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
102
1
2
use because the arguments have been presented on
that.
e
8
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: That makes sense.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Has the Building
Department actually seen these plans?
MS. MOORE: No, verbally.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: That's what I'm
saying, we could just go and look at the use
question or if more than that is required from the
Building Department then they have to have time to
review the plans in detail.
MS. MOORE: That's okay.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: I do want to say
for the record that I really feel it's important
to begin to look at precedents for expanded
definition for uses in these buildings where
something that's not just seasonal but year round
can take place. You know, the problem is always
the fear of will it becoming a second dwelling
place, and that's an issue that the town really
has to address. It's a sensible thing to do.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: You have to
define the word "habitable."
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Habitable lS
usually defined as sleeping space with eating
facilities.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Then there has
to be another section.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: The code for
3
4
5
6
7
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
fire --
17
MS. MOORE: Nonhabitable gets interpreted
to mean as you can't use it at all.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: That's what I
said, you have to determine something between the
word between uninhabitable and habitable.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: I think if you look
at the state building code you'll find that.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: There are codes
that talk about that that have to do with light,
ingress and egress, there are life safety codes
that define what's habitable. But we're really
looking at the kind of future in which we see
these things increasingly.
MS. MOORE: I already have another one
coming to you in which I filed which is a gorgeous
barn. Absolutely gorgeous barn and it's right now
and they want to use it. So you'll get it.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: We will
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
103
1
8
increasingly get them because the farming use as
you point out is no longer appropriate to this
time, but restoring those lovely buildings lS
always appropriate for any time.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: It's much eaSler
for them to build a butler building that is
totally insulated for their agrarian uses for
their grapes.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: The
restoration of a barn is sort of the nlce spin on
this, but if you allow something In a barn you're
going to have to allow something to build a brand
new whatever looking building they want and have
the same use in it.
MS. MOORE: It's accessory building.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: It's a nlce
advantage to be able to use barns for this purpose
but the issue is the use. If you can use a barn
for it, you can use anything, a cardboard box for
it.
2
.
3
4
5
6
7
9
10
11
12
MS. MOORE: Legislatively if they want to
start narrowing it down, fine, or just as we have
done before, which is these uses come to the
Zoning Board so you can evaluate whether or not if
it's appropriate, not appropriate, does it fit.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: It's actually
a little odd that it comes before the Zoning Board
because Leslie raised an interesting lssue, it's
not a use variance because it mayor may not be a
permitted use depending on how this Board
interprets it. And we're almost treating it like
a special exception. In order for the Building
Department to allow it, they want the ZBA to bless
it with their conditions.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Raise that lssue
because that's really where it should be treated.
MS. MOORE: That might be a good solution
to these altogether by allowing them by special
exception.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: It's kind of
what you're doing.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: We're de facto
granting that variance anyway.
MS. MOORE: Just labeling it.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: I'll make a motion to
close the hearing and reserve decision until
later.
13
.
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
.
25
(See minutes for resolution.)
October 26, 2006
104
1
2
e
6
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: The next hearing is to
reconvene Mr. Preston. Hi, Mr. Preston.
MR. PRESTON: Thank you for giving me the
chance to come back. I just went down to Penny
Lumber.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: That's nice.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: That's fine by me.
MR. PRESTON: One of the points was about
the garage and the location. There is one
neighbor who does have the garage facing the
street and he actually parks with his car three
feet into the road. I don't want that situation
also.
3
4
5
7
8
9
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Looks a lot better.
MR. PRESTON: There's some screening.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: That would give you a
lot of room for the planned down the road house to
the west.
MR. PRESTON: Yes, and one of the
important things with the pool is where it's
located now it does get a lot of sunlight. If I
move it to another side of the lot then it's going
to get a lot of shade from the neighbor's tree and
that sort of thing.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: You're going to
have to cut some trees down for the garage and the
pool. You have a lot of open space behind your
house without trees, but you will have to cut
trees for this.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: And you will have a
grading problem too.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: To me this makes a
lot more sense. Can you see the wisdom for the
proposal?
MR. PRESTON: Yes. I appreciate the
opportunity to come back as opposed to a couple
months down the road. We did move the pool three
feet. It does make it close to the cabana area
there. It's only about seven feet off.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: But that's all
right. You have a nice brick something or other.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: I'll make a motion to
close the hearing and reserve decision until
later.
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
(See minutes for resolution.)
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Again, this is
an advantage of being available during the day as
October 26, 2006
105
1
2
opposed to our old night meetings.
e
9
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Next hearing is for the
Bajadas. We have an incomplete application
regarding Plan C as submitted?
MS. MOORE: This is, again, a very
simplified application. We're keeping everything
as lS. The only thing we need structurally is a
new foundation because it has rot on the
foundation. Part of the existing building has a
footing and the other part has crawl space.
Remember it's built in two phases. In '71 it was
added to and that's when they did the crawl
space. My client wants to do a continuous crawl
space under the whole thing. And Mike says the
only thing I need a variance for is because of an
interpretation that you guys had recently given to
him which is if you keep slab to slab you're okay,
but if you go slab to crawl space you need a
variance, or if you go crawl space to basement you
need a variance. All we're doing here is we have
half slabs, half crawl space, and we're doing all
crawl space. So that's why Mike said he probably
still needed to your get your okay on this, but
otherwise everything is fine.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: This is the
Walz issue that Jim raised at the Cutchogue New
Suffolk Library matter where you are within the
setback or closer than the preexisting or not and
you rather than expand up, which is what Walz was
based on, you expand down into that space. And
the Walz decision used the term vertical as
opposed to just up, and suggests that a variance
may be required if you increase the mass anywhere
vertically in that plain. So that's the question,
right?
MS. MOORE: Yes, and I would propose to
you that when you're dealing with truly
nonhabitable space, you're doing a slab to a crawl
space, you're not increasing the degree of
nonconformity. You can't use a basement for
example, you can't make more living space in a
full basement. I would understand the rationale.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: It's building
mass. It would be the same issue if it was a
garage.
3
4
5
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
MS. MOORE: But it's below grade
mass. It's not even visible. Walz was due to the
October 26, 2006
106
1
2
visible mass that was created where you have --
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: It didn't use
the word visible.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: It used bulk. And
quite honestly, the decision that he's basing it
on, because I expect that my interpretation was if
you're increasing the livable space of that
particular library, take something that wasn't
used, make it larger and let people go down in
there.
e
3
4
5
6
7
MS. MOORE: Like Southold Library.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Right. And people
go down in there and that increases that space.
The usable bulk of that building is going to be
increased, that's the nature of Walz.
MS. MOORE: But I think you have to go
back to Walz a little bit and see what the purpose
of that was, and it was to not increase the mass
when you have adjacent properties. But when
you're talking about basements, are you increasing
any, are you having any impact on your neighbor
because it's all below grade.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: It has more to do
with the bulk of the building, the mass of the
building.
MS. MOORE: But mass would have no
relationship to this if it wasn't that you were
too close to the property line.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: But you have to say
if. You can't just say mass has no relationship
to this.
MS. MOORE: Okay.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: You have to add the
if. You have to say if this and then if that.
Quite honestly, mass is mass. A building lS a
building. Listen, Pat --
MS. MOORE: I think nonhabitable makes a
big difference.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: If it says
nonhabitable mass.
MS. MOORE: Walz has kind of morphed.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Bingo.
MS. MOORE: Now we're dealing with Walz
and which way it has now morphed to. And again,
originally this application was we wanted to add a
garage. In order to add a garage without
increasing the largeness of the building, we
wanted to relocate it to the part of the first and
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
107
1
9
second floor. That was a problem, I understand.
The clients understand. They said you know what,
forget the garage, we'll build a detached garage;
we'll do it on this property without variances.
Therefore, we just need -- we waited to do the
repalrs for this building the standard ordinary
maintenance that you need to do to a building --
they waited because they thought that they were
going to be putting this garage on. Now it's time
to do it because since they're going to keep it
and do typical renovations that we need for our
own home. There is dry-rot and water problems and
the foundation again, it was done In two phases.
So all we want to do is put a new crawl space.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: So it's really
restoration.
MS. MOORE: Yes. And no variance is
required. Building Department, this one Mike, we
sat with him, and he said you can get a building
permit.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: No increase In
anything.
MS. MOORE: Because--
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Yes, because of
your question raised, you trouble maker.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: What is the
actual square footage of the building?
MS. MOORE: It had to be a minimum of 800
square feet under the original zoning varlance so
I think it's about 800 square feet.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: That's what we
wanted to check. It calls it a cottage, it
doesn't call it a dwelling.
MS. MOORE: The CO calls it a dwelling.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: I don't think
it's 850.
MS. MOORE: I think the Zoning Board said
it had to be a minimum of 800. Remember in '71?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: We have a
property card in here?
MS. MOORE: Yes, there is one and I have
COs In there too. The preexisting CO lS for a one
family dwelling and --
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: All you're
doing lS rebuilding the foundation, right?
MS. MOORE: Yes, exactly on the same
footprint. Right now I said we have two parts of
this; we have a crawl space and a slab, and he
2
e
3
4
5
6
7
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
e
e
e
108
1
2
wants to do a crawl space.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: What is the square
footprint for the findings when we write it up?
MS. MOORE: I could get that, I just don't
have that.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: This Board
needs to answer the question whether it's going to
require the Walz variance for the increase
downward.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: No, because the
downward is already there.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: It's going
down further.
MS. MOORE: Half a slab is now being crawl
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
space.
10
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: We can tweak the Walz
interpretation.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: Of course you
11
can.
12
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: If there was no
down, if it was just pilings or just physically
laying on the ground, then there would be a down,
but since there is already some sort of structural
foundation underneath the building --
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Support footings
and things, right?
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Yes. And then
there's no down.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Just rebuilding,
renovating.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: That's my
oplnion.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: So then, Pat,
how is this going to work?
MS. MOORE: I think internally you just
need to give a memo to Mike that it's not a Walz
and then go and therefore we can go get a building
permit for it. I think that's what Mike got based
on
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: Well, I talked
to Mike after the Cutchogue New Suffolk issue. I
said this question's come out. It's a legitimate
question, if you read the decision it seems to
invoke these sorts of things; what do you think?
He said, well, I'd like to take it case by case,
but this seems to be the most minimal case and it
still came to this Board.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: If you're going to
23
24
25
October 26, 2006
109
1
6
make a change in Walz that we already made a
decision on, you got to come out with some good
reasons to do that.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: I just gave you
a good reason.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: I don't think
that's a good reason. I mean, we're still talking
about the definition that Walz did that basically
defined the code, and you now want to interpret it
a little differently than it has been interpreted.
MS. MOORE: I think Mike has always
interpreted it that a basement renovation was not
an expansion. But you do a -- I don't know how
you describe it.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: That's just it,
Pat, that's just it. You can't do it without
stuttering. It is an increase in the mass of that
building. No matter how you look at it.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: So you're safe,
just grant a variance.
MS. MOORE: The only thing is it hasn't
been noticed under Walz, it was noticed under
something else. So what I'm doing is a lesser, I
wouldn't necessarily agree that you have to
renotice when you're asking for less relief than a
neighbor has received for a request for relief.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: On the question of
interpretation, Jim, does the word lrmassl! occur in
the Walz opinion?
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Yes. So does
2
e
3
4
5
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
bulk.
18
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: Mass and bulk.
MS. MOORE: Look at what they have been
asked to review. It was external walls and
ceiling and roof heights because you were looking
at the mass of a structure next to another
structure, the Captain Kidd example. You reviewed
one today.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON:
19
20
22
for a variance.
interpretation.
MS. MOORE:
It's not an
That's an argument
argument for
21
No.
That's what brought Walz
23
in.
24
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: I understand that but
the difference is if the word mass did not occur
in there, what you can do is you can say by mass
we mean above ground mass and up to now it's been
unspecified. That would be an interpretation.
e
25
October 26, 2006
110
1
2
The arguments you're giving are good arguments for
a variance even if the new interpretation isn't
given so we could have a general rule. We could
specify Walz more precisely, then these things
wouldn't have to keep coming up as far as up and
down.
MS. MOORE: I would like to see that.
Because I have a stupid application that was just
finished.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: Well, you see the
e
3
4
5
6
7
point.
9
MS. MOORE: Yes.
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN: I think whatever we
have to legally do in order to expedite this at
this point.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: Again it's not
really before you at the moment. I think Pat's
asking for an advisory opinion.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: I think if we're
going to make changes to Walz, you better have an
interpretation hearing. If you want to do an
interpretation now, you have to advertise for it.
You're gOlng to be changing basically what the
Building Inspector bases three quarters of its
decisions on now.
MS. MOORE: But so far none affecting
basements.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: That's because it
was never brought up before the library decision.
BOARD MEMBER GOEHRINGER: Because the
library decision lS being used and utilized.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: You could do
8
10
11
12
13
e
14
15
16
17
18
it --
19
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Put it down in
writing.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: I think Jim's
right. You don't necessarily need to have it as
an interpretation, you just need to have it as a
variance. And just grant the variance.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: We'll be granting
another 10 percent more.
MS. MOORE: Yes. You're increasing your
volume. Every time the interpretations grow, you
increase your -- good for me but it's frustrating.
BOARD MEMBER SIMON: The interpretation
may narrow too, and then we reduce the case load.
MS. MOORE: But Mike has taken that by way
of sending it back that narrows the scope of the
20
21
22
23
24
e
25
October 26, 2006
III
1
7
decision by saying, well, this isn't one that we
meant.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: You're going
to get your disapproval and will then seek a
variance. At the same time you can ask for an
interpretation, does this invoke Walz.
MS. MOORE: But why ~~
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: Then don't ask
for an interpretation and then you can do it every
time and make money off of bills every time. I
don't care.
MS. MOORE: The reason I'm here lS that
Mike said only most recently ~~
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: Put it in writing.
MS. MOORE: I put it in writing.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: The Building
Department is not in here because they don't have
this new plan.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: You're
essentially asking do I need a variance.
MS. MOORE: Because he wasn't sure what
the Board wanted to do with it.
ASST. TOWN ATTY. CORCORAN: Right. And
Jim lS saYlng I'm uncomfortable with allowing it
to go without formal action. I think that's a
legitimate point.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: The whole Walz
thing was brought before us for the exact same
reason you just gave us. Because Mike was ~~ for
whatever reason ~~ had a brain cloud to suddenly
decide that people living next door can't build up
if they don't go out. Now, two weeks before that
he granted someone a building permit to do just
that. So here we are. And quite honestly, if you
want to change that, I submit to you that you must
at least interpret it, and then we're going to
need to have of course this other little paragraph
that no one in the code book ~~ no one can find in
the code book but they'll know that there's an
interpretation at least that says if you want to
build a crawl space 50 percent, you can do it.
MS. MOORE: All of these interpretations,
just as a practicing lawyer I say could you please
package them all up In one place so that I can see
them because when I ~~ I only know from history
what interpretations are. But In fairness to the
public, maybe having them all packaged so that we
know where they are because otherwise I have to
2
.
3
4
5
6
8
9
10
11
12
13
.
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
.
25
October 26, 2006
112
1
2
ask specifically for the application and some of
these I don't remember the names of the
applications. I remember some just from right of
way issues and things like that.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: Being a local.
MS. MOORE: That gives me benefit, thank
goodness. I think it would be helpful to the
public at large, even architects if they're
designing so they don't design something that
doesn't match your intentions.
BOARD MEMBER DINIZIO: That's a fair
.
3
4
5
6
7
point.
8
BOARD MEMBER WEISMAN:
I think that's a
9
very fair comment.
MS. MOORE: This is all I want to do. Can
we do what we did before; do you want me to
adjourn this, give it to Mike, say Mike, renotice
it.
10
11
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: You should give the
Building Department the plan procedurally. Let
him decide on a disapproval so it's properly
before the Board and we'll close the hearing
subject to receiving that today, and then the
Board can rule on it.
MS. MOORE: I can't guarantee you're going
to get a notice of disapproval today. Just so you
know the history, I met with Mike on October 12th
and gave him the letter that I attached to my
letter to you. He was thinking about it because
initially we didn't think it needed any variances,
and then because of the conversations you guys had
about basements or whether or not it fit into
Walz. Then I sent on October 20th because Mike
was away, I finally submitted to this Board. I
can't do any more, I don't know what I need to do.
So at this point --
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: This is where we
are. It's the same as the last application. It
was amended at the last minute. I won't have to
readvertise it as long as it's as we talked about.
If Mike glves the disapproval and says it
obviously only needs a variance because it's the
increase in the bulk, then the Board can rule on
it. If you want to ask for an interpretation, I
would ask you for a new application under a new
disapproval.
MS. MOORE: My client is not going to pay
for another dime on this.
12
13
.
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
.
25
October 26, 2006
113
1
5
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Then I'll advertise
it that way.
MS. MOORE: No, I know. It's not your
fault. We try different approaches to try to do
it. I think you guys on your own could do an
interpretation of Walz since Walz was your baby.
BOARD SECY. KOWALSKI: Procedurally a
different way.
CHAIRWOMAN OLIVA: I make a motion to
close the hearing pending receipt of a new notice
of disapproval from the Building Inspector.
(See minutes for resolution.)
2
.
3
4
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
. 14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e 25
October 26, 2006
114
1
2
e 3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
e 14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
e 25
C E R T I FIe A T ION
I, Florence V. Wiles, Notary Public for the
State of New York, do hereby certify:
THAT the within transcript is a true record of
the testimony given.
I further certify that I am not related by
blood or marriage, to any of the parties to this
action; and
THAT I am in no way interested in the outcome
of this matter.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my
hand this 26th day of October, 2006.
.;~ . f ..
. - ; r.
;::-~! r II
/! /u[~{~f,
. / J
<i/
tUUd
L/ Florence V. Wiles
October 26, 2006