Chapter 327 |
2025 -- S 1085 Enacted 06/30/2025 |
A N A C T |
RELATING TO TOWNS AND CITIES -- ZONING ORDINANCES |
Introduced By: Senators Gu, Bissaillon, and Burke |
Date Introduced: May 23, 2025 |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
SECTION 1. Sections 45-24-31, 45-24-33 and 45-24-37 of the General Laws in Chapter |
45-24 entitled "Zoning Ordinances" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
45-24-31. Definitions. |
Where words or terms used in this chapter are defined in § 45-22.2-4 or § 45-23-32, they |
have the meanings stated in that section. In addition, the following words have the following |
meanings. Additional words and phrases may be used in developing local ordinances under this |
chapter; however, the words and phrases defined in this section are controlling in all local |
ordinances created under this chapter: |
(1) Abutter. One whose property abuts, that is, adjoins at a border, boundary, or point with |
no intervening land. |
(2) Accessory dwelling unit (ADU). A residential living unit on the same lot where the |
principal use is a legally established single-family dwelling unit or multi-family dwelling unit. An |
ADU provides complete independent living facilities for one or more persons. It may take various |
forms including, but not limited to: a detached unit; a unit that is part of an accessory structure, |
such as a detached garage; or a unit that is part of an expanded or remodeled primary dwelling. |
(3) Accessory use. A use of land or of a building, or portion thereof, customarily incidental |
and subordinate to the principal use of the land or building. An accessory use may be restricted to |
the same lot as the principal use. An accessory use shall not be permitted without the principal use |
to which it is related. |
(4) Adaptive reuse. “Adaptive reuse,” as defined in § 42-64.22-2. |
(5) Aggrieved party. An aggrieved party, for purposes of this chapter, shall be: |
(i) Any person, or persons, or entity, or entities, who or that can demonstrate that his, her, |
or its property will be injured by a decision of any officer or agency responsible for administering |
the zoning ordinance of a city or town; or |
(ii) Anyone requiring notice pursuant to this chapter. |
(6) Agricultural land. “Agricultural land,” as defined in § 45-22.2-4. |
(7) Airport hazard area. “Airport hazard area,” as defined in § 1-3-2. |
(8) Applicant. An owner, or authorized agent of the owner, submitting an application or |
appealing an action of any official, board, or agency. |
(9) Application. The completed form, or forms, and all accompanying documents, exhibits, |
and fees required of an applicant by an approving authority for development review, approval, or |
permitting purposes. |
(10) Buffer. Land that is maintained in either a natural or landscaped state, and is used to |
screen or mitigate the impacts of development on surrounding areas, properties, or rights-of-way. |
(11) Building. Any structure used or intended for supporting or sheltering any use or |
occupancy. |
(12) Building envelope. The three-dimensional space within which a structure is permitted |
to be built on a lot and that is defined by regulations governing building setbacks, maximum height, |
and bulk; by other regulations; or by any combination thereof. |
(13) Building height. For a vacant parcel of land, building height shall be measured from |
the average, existing-grade elevation where the foundation of the structure is proposed. For an |
existing structure, building height shall be measured from average grade taken from the outermost |
four (4) corners of the existing foundation. In all cases, building height shall be measured to the top |
of the highest point of the existing or proposed roof or structure. This distance shall exclude spires, |
chimneys, flag poles, and the like. For any property or structure located in a special flood hazard |
area, as shown on the official FEMA Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs), or depicted on the |
Rhode Island coastal resources management council (CRMC) suggested design elevation three foot |
(3′) sea level rise (CRMC SDE 3 SLR) map as being inundated during a one-hundred-year (100) |
storm, the greater of the following amounts, expressed in feet, shall be excluded from the building |
height calculation: |
(i) The base flood elevation on the FEMA FIRM plus up to five feet (5′) of any utilized or |
proposed freeboard, less the average existing grade elevation; or |
(ii) The suggested design elevation as depicted on the CRMC SDE 3 SLR map during a |
one-hundred-year (100) storm, less the average existing grade elevation. CRMC shall reevaluate |
the appropriate suggested design elevation map for the exclusion every ten (10) years, or as |
otherwise necessary. |
(14) Cluster. A site-planning technique that concentrates buildings in specific areas on the |
site to allow the remaining land to be used for recreation, common open space, and/or preservation |
of environmentally, historically, culturally, or other sensitive features and/or structures. The |
techniques used to concentrate buildings shall be specified in the ordinance and may include, but |
are not limited to, reduction in lot areas, setback requirements, and/or bulk requirements, with the |
resultant open land being devoted by deed restrictions for one or more uses. Under cluster |
development, there is no increase in the number of lots that would be permitted under conventional |
development except where ordinance provisions include incentive bonuses for certain types or |
conditions of development. |
(15) Co-living housing. A specific residential development with units which provide living |
and sleeping space which are independently rented and lockable for the exclusive use of an |
occupant, but require the occupant to share sanitary and/or food preparation facilities with the other |
units in the occupancy. This section shall not be read to allow the conversion of existing dwelling |
units into co-living housing unless authorized by a local zoning ordinance. |
(15)(16) Common ownership. Either: |
(i) Ownership by one or more individuals or entities in any form of ownership of two (2) |
or more contiguous lots; or |
(ii) Ownership by any association (ownership may also include a municipality) of one or |
more lots under specific development techniques. |
(16)(17) Community residence. A home or residential facility where children and/or adults |
reside in a family setting and may or may not receive supervised care. This does not include halfway |
houses or substance-use-disorder-treatment facilities. This does include, but is not limited to, the |
following: |
(i) Whenever six (6) or fewer children or adults with intellectual and/or developmental |
disability reside in any type of residence in the community, as licensed by the state pursuant to |
chapter 24 of title 40.1. All requirements pertaining to local zoning are waived for these community |
residences; |
(ii) A group home providing care or supervision, or both, to not more than eight (8) persons |
with disabilities, and licensed by the state pursuant to chapter 24 of title 40.1; |
(iii) A residence for children providing care or supervision, or both, to not more than eight |
(8) children, including those of the caregiver, and licensed by the state pursuant to chapter 72.1 of |
title 42; |
(iv) A community transitional residence providing care or assistance, or both, to no more |
than six (6) unrelated persons or no more than three (3) families, not to exceed a total of eight (8) |
persons, requiring temporary financial assistance, and/or to persons who are victims of crimes, |
abuse, or neglect, and who are expected to reside in that residence not less than sixty (60) days nor |
more than two (2) years. Residents will have access to, and use of, all common areas, including |
eating areas and living rooms, and will receive appropriate social services for the purpose of |
fostering independence, self-sufficiency, and eventual transition to a permanent living situation. |
(17)(18) Comprehensive plan. The comprehensive plan adopted and approved pursuant to |
chapter 22.2 of this title and to which any zoning adopted pursuant to this chapter shall be in |
compliance. |
(18)(19) Day care — Daycare center. Any other daycare center that is not a family daycare |
home. |
(19)(20) Day care — Family daycare home. Any home, other than the individual’s home, |
in which day care in lieu of parental care or supervision is offered at the same time to six (6) or less |
individuals who are not relatives of the caregiver, but may not contain more than a total of eight |
(8) individuals receiving day care. |
(20)(21) Density, residential. The number of dwelling units per unit of land. |
(21)(22) Development. The construction, reconstruction, conversion, structural alteration, |
relocation, or enlargement of any structure; any mining, excavation, landfill, or land disturbance; |
or any change in use, or alteration or extension of the use, of land. |
(22)(23) Development plan review. See §§ 45-23-32 and 45-23-50. |
(23)(24) District. See “zoning use district.” |
(24)(25) Drainage system. A system for the removal of water from land by drains, grading, |
or other appropriate means. These techniques may include runoff controls to minimize erosion and |
sedimentation during and after construction or development; the means for preserving surface and |
groundwaters; and the prevention and/or alleviation of flooding. |
(25)(26) Dwelling unit. A structure, or portion of a structure, providing complete, |
independent living facilities for one or more persons, including permanent provisions for living, |
sleeping, eating, cooking, and sanitation, and containing a separate means of ingress and egress. |
(26)(27) Extractive industry. The extraction of minerals, including: solids, such as coal and |
ores; liquids, such as crude petroleum; and gases, such as natural gases. The term also includes |
quarrying; well operation; milling, such as crushing, screening, washing, and flotation; and other |
preparation customarily done at the extraction site or as a part of the extractive activity. |
(27)(28) Family member. A person, or persons, related by blood, marriage, or other legal |
means, including, but not limited to, a child, parent, spouse, mother-in-law, father-in-law, |
grandparents, grandchildren, domestic partner, sibling, care recipient, or member of the household. |
(28)(29) Floating zone. An unmapped zoning district adopted within the ordinance that is |
established on the zoning map only when an application for development, meeting the zone |
requirements, is approved. |
(29)(30) Floodplains, or Flood hazard area. As defined in § 45-22.2-4. |
(30)(31) Freeboard. A factor of safety expressed in feet above the base flood elevation of |
a flood hazard area for purposes of floodplain management. Freeboard compensates for the many |
unknown factors that could contribute to flood heights, such as wave action, bridge openings, and |
the hydrological effect of urbanization of the watershed. |
(31)(32) Groundwater. “Groundwater” and associated terms, as defined in § 46-13.1-3. |
(32)(33) Halfway house. A residential facility for adults or children who have been |
institutionalized for criminal conduct and who require a group setting to facilitate the transition to |
a functional member of society. |
(33)(34) Hardship. See § 45-24-41. |
(34)(35) Historic district or historic site. As defined in § 45-22.2-4. |
(35)(36) Home occupation. Any activity customarily carried out for gain by a resident, |
conducted as an accessory use in the resident’s dwelling unit. |
(36)(37) Household. One or more persons living together in a single-dwelling unit, with |
common access to, and common use of, all living and eating areas and all areas and facilities for |
the preparation and storage of food within the dwelling unit. The term “household unit” is |
synonymous with the term “dwelling unit” for determining the number of units allowed within any |
structure on any lot in a zoning district. An individual household shall consist of any one of the |
following: |
(i) A family, which may also include servants and employees living with the family; or |
(ii) A person or group of unrelated persons living together. The maximum number may be |
set by local ordinance, but this maximum shall not be less than one person per bedroom and shall |
not exceed five (5) unrelated persons per dwelling. The maximum number shall not apply to |
NARR-certified recovery residences. |
(37)(38) Incentive zoning. The process whereby the local authority may grant additional |
development capacity in exchange for the developer’s provision of a public benefit or amenity as |
specified in local ordinances. |
(38)(39) Infrastructure. Facilities and services needed to sustain residential, commercial, |
industrial, institutional, and other activities. |
(39)(40) Land development project. As defined in § 45-23-32. |
(40)(41) Lot. Either: |
(i) The basic development unit for determination of lot area, depth, and other dimensional |
regulations; or |
(ii) A parcel of land whose boundaries have been established by some legal instrument, |
such as a recorded deed or recorded map, and that is recognized as a separate legal entity for |
purposes of transfer of title. |
(41)(42) Lot area. The total area within the boundaries of a lot, excluding any street right- |
of-way, usually reported in acres or square feet. |
(42)(43) Lot area, minimum. The smallest land area established by the local zoning |
ordinance upon which a use, building, or structure may be located in a particular zoning district. |
(43)(44) Lot building coverage. That portion of the lot that is, or may be, covered by |
buildings and accessory buildings. |
(44)(45) Lot depth. The distance measured from the front lot line to the rear lot line. For |
lots where the front and rear lot lines are not parallel, the lot depth is an average of the depth. |
(45)(46) Lot frontage. That portion of a lot abutting a street. A zoning ordinance shall |
specify how noncontiguous frontage will be considered with regard to minimum frontage |
requirements. |
(46)(47) Lot line. A line of record, bounding a lot, that divides one lot from another lot or |
from a public or private street or any other public or private space and shall include: |
(i) Front: the lot line separating a lot from a street right-of-way. A zoning ordinance shall |
specify the method to be used to determine the front lot line on lots fronting on more than one |
street, for example, corner and through lots; |
(ii) Rear: the lot line opposite and most distant from the front lot line, or in the case of |
triangular or otherwise irregularly shaped lots, an assumed line at least ten feet (10′) in length |
entirely within the lot, parallel to and at a maximum distance from, the front lot line; and |
(iii) Side: any lot line other than a front or rear lot line. On a corner lot, a side lot line may |
be a street lot line, depending on requirements of the local zoning ordinance. |
(47)(48) Lot size, minimum. Shall have the same meaning as “minimum lot area” defined |
herein. |
(48)(49) Lot, through. A lot that fronts upon two (2) parallel streets, or that fronts upon two |
(2) streets that do not intersect at the boundaries of the lot. |
(49)(50) Lot width. The horizontal distance between the side lines of a lot measured at right |
angles to its depth along a straight line parallel to the front lot line at the minimum front setback |
line. |
(50)(51) Manufactured home. As used in this section, a manufactured home shall have the |
same definition as in 42 U.S.C. § 5402, meaning a structure, transportable in one or more sections, |
which, in the traveling mode, is eight (8) body feet or more in width or forty (40) body feet or more |
in length, or, when erected on site, is three hundred twenty (320) or more square feet, and which is |
built on a permanent chassis and designed to be used as a dwelling with a permanent foundation |
connected to the required utilities, and includes the plumbing, heating, air-conditioning, and |
electrical systems contained therein; except that such term shall include any structure that meets |
all the requirements of this definition except the size requirements and with respect to which the |
manufacturer voluntarily files a certification required by the United States Secretary of Housing |
and Urban Development and complies with the standards established under chapter 70 of Title 42 |
of the United States Code; and except that such term shall not include any self-propelled |
recreational vehicle. |
(51)(52) Mere inconvenience. See § 45-24-41. |
(52)(53) Mixed use. A mixture of land uses within a single development, building, or tract. |
(53)(54) Modification. Permission granted and administered by the zoning enforcement |
officer of the city or town, and pursuant to the provisions of this chapter to grant a dimensional |
variance other than lot area requirements from the zoning ordinance to a limited degree as |
determined by the zoning ordinance of the city or town, but not to exceed twenty-five percent (25%) |
of each of the applicable dimensional requirements. |
(54)(55) Nonconformance. A building, structure, or parcel of land, or use thereof, lawfully |
existing at the time of the adoption or amendment of a zoning ordinance and not in conformity with |
the provisions of that ordinance or amendment. Nonconformance is of only two (2) types: |
(i) Nonconforming by use: a lawfully established use of land, building, or structure that is |
not a permitted use in that zoning district. A building or structure containing more dwelling units |
than are permitted by the use regulations of a zoning ordinance is nonconformity by use; or |
(ii) Nonconforming by dimension: a building, structure, or parcel of land not in compliance |
with the dimensional regulations of the zoning ordinance. Dimensional regulations include all |
regulations of the zoning ordinance, other than those pertaining to the permitted uses. A building |
or structure containing more dwelling units than are permitted by the use regulations of a zoning |
ordinance is nonconforming by use; a building or structure containing a permitted number of |
dwelling units by the use regulations of the zoning ordinance, but not meeting the lot area per |
dwelling unit regulations, is nonconforming by dimension. |
(55)(56) Overlay district. A district established in a zoning ordinance that is superimposed |
on one or more districts or parts of districts. The standards and requirements associated with an |
overlay district may be more or less restrictive than those in the underlying districts consistent with |
other applicable state and federal laws. |
(56)(57) Performance standards. A set of criteria or limits relating to elements that a |
particular use or process must either meet or may not exceed. |
(57)(58) Permitted use. A use by right that is specifically authorized in a particular zoning |
district. |
(58)(59) Planned development. A “land development project,” as defined in subsection |
(39), and developed according to plan as a single entity and containing one or more structures or |
uses with appurtenant common areas. |
(59)(60) Plant agriculture. The growing of plants for food or fiber, to sell or consume. |
(60)(61) Preapplication conference. A review meeting of a proposed development held |
between applicants and reviewing agencies as permitted by law and municipal ordinance, before |
formal submission of an application for a permit or for development approval. |
(61)(62) Setback line or lines. A line, or lines, parallel to a lot line at the minimum distance |
of the required setback for the zoning district in which the lot is located that establishes the area |
within which the principal structure must be erected or placed. |
(62)(63) Site plan. The development plan for one or more lots on which is shown the |
existing and/or the proposed conditions of the lot. |
(63)(64) Slope of land. The grade, pitch, rise, or incline of the topographic landform or |
surface of the ground. |
(64)(65) Special use. A regulated use that is permitted pursuant to the special-use permit |
issued by the authorized governmental entity, pursuant to § 45-24-42. Formerly referred to as a |
special exception. |
(65)(66) Structure. A combination of materials to form a construction for use, occupancy, |
or ornamentation, whether installed on, above, or below the surface of land or water. |
(66)(67) Substandard lot of record. Any lot lawfully existing at the time of adoption or |
amendment of a zoning ordinance and not in conformance with the dimensional or area provisions |
of that ordinance. |
(67)(68) Use. The purpose or activity for which land or buildings are designed, arranged, |
or intended, or for which land or buildings are occupied or maintained. |
(68)(69)Variance. Permission to depart from the literal requirements of a zoning ordinance. |
An authorization for the construction or maintenance of a building or structure, or for the |
establishment or maintenance of a use of land, that is prohibited by a zoning ordinance. There are |
only two (2) categories of variance, a use variance or a dimensional variance. |
(i) Use variance. Permission to depart from the use requirements of a zoning ordinance |
where the applicant for the requested variance has shown by evidence upon the record that the |
subject land or structure cannot yield any beneficial use if it is to conform to the provisions of the |
zoning ordinance. |
(ii) Dimensional variance. Permission to depart from the dimensional requirements of a |
zoning ordinance under the applicable standards set forth in § 45-24-41. |
(69)(70) Waters. As defined in § 46-12-1(23). |
(70)(71) Wetland, coastal. As defined in § 45-22.2-4. |
(71)(72) Wetland, freshwater. As defined in § 2-1-20. |
(72)(73) Zoning certificate. A document signed by the zoning enforcement officer, as |
required in the zoning ordinance, that acknowledges that a use, structure, building, or lot either |
complies with, or is legally nonconforming to, the provisions of the municipal zoning ordinance or |
is an authorized variance or modification therefrom. |
(73)(74) Zoning map. The map, or maps, that are a part of the zoning ordinance and that |
delineate the boundaries of all mapped zoning districts within the physical boundary of the city or |
town. |
(74)(75) Zoning ordinance. An ordinance enacted by the legislative body of the city or |
town pursuant to this chapter and in the manner providing for the adoption of ordinances in the city |
or town’s legislative or home rule charter, if any, that establish regulations and standards relating |
to the nature and extent of uses of land and structures; that is consistent with the comprehensive |
plan of the city or town as defined in chapter 22.2 of this title; that includes a zoning map; and that |
complies with the provisions of this chapter. |
(75)(76) Zoning use district. The basic unit in zoning, either mapped or unmapped, to |
which a uniform set of regulations applies, or a uniform set of regulations for a specified use. |
Zoning use districts include, but are not limited to: agricultural, commercial, industrial, |
institutional, open space, and residential. Each district may include sub-districts. Districts may be |
combined. |
45-24-33. Standard provisions. |
(a) A zoning ordinance shall address each of the purposes stated in § 45-24-30 and shall |
address, through reasonable objective standards and criteria, the following general provisions |
which are numbered for reference purposes only except as prohibited by § 45-24-30(b), § 45-24- |
30(c), or § 45-24-30(d): |
(1) Permitting, prohibiting, limiting, and restricting the development of land and structures |
in zoning districts, and regulating those land and structures according to their type and the nature |
and extent of their use; |
(2) Regulating the nature and extent of the use of land for residential, commercial, |
industrial, institutional, recreational, agricultural, open space, or other use or combination of uses, |
as the need for land for those purposes is determined by the city or town’s comprehensive plan; |
(3) Permitting, prohibiting, limiting, and restricting buildings, structures, land uses, and |
other development by performance standards, or other requirements, related to air and water and |
groundwater quality, noise and glare, energy consumption, soil erosion and sedimentation, and/or |
the availability and capacity of existing and planned public or private services; |
(4) Regulating within each district and designating requirements for: |
(i) The height, number of stories, and size of buildings; |
(ii) The dimensions, size, lot coverage, layout of lots or development areas and floor area |
ratios provided that zoning ordinances must exclude any portion of a basement as defined in § 45- |
24.3-5 from the calculation of floor area ratio; |
(iii) The density and intensity of use; |
(iv) Access to air and light, views, and solar access; |
(v) Open space, yards, courts, and buffers; |
(vi) Parking areas, road design, and, where appropriate, pedestrian, bicycle, and other |
circulator systems; |
(vii) Landscaping, fencing, and lighting; |
(viii) Appropriate drainage requirements and methods to manage stormwater runoff; |
(ix) Public access to waterbodies, rivers, and streams; and |
(x) Other requirements in connection with any use of land or structure; |
(5) Permitting, prohibiting, limiting, and restricting development in flood plains or flood |
hazard areas and designated significant natural areas; |
(6) Promoting the conservation of energy and promoting energy-efficient patterns of |
development; |
(7) Providing for the protection of existing and planned public drinking water supplies, |
their tributaries and watersheds, and the protection of Narragansett Bay, its tributaries and |
watershed; |
(8) Providing for adequate, safe, and efficient transportation systems; and avoiding |
congestion by relating types and levels of development to the capacity of the circulation system, |
and maintaining a safe level of service of the system; |
(9) Providing for the preservation and enhancement of the recreational resources of the city |
or town; |
(10) Promoting an economic climate that increases quality job opportunities and the overall |
economic well-being of the city or town and the state; |
(11) Providing for pedestrian access to and between public and private facilities, including, |
but not limited to, schools, employment centers, shopping areas, recreation areas, and residences; |
(12) Providing standards for, and requiring the provision of, adequate and properly |
designed physical improvements, including plantings, and the proper maintenance of property; |
(13) Permitting, prohibiting, limiting, and restricting land use in areas where development |
is deemed to create a hazard to the public health or safety; |
(14) Permitting, prohibiting, limiting, and restricting extractive industries and earth |
removal and requiring restoration of land after these activities; |
(15) Regulating sanitary landfill, except as otherwise provided by state statute; |
(16) Permitting, prohibiting, limiting, and restricting signs and billboards and other outdoor |
advertising devices; |
(17) Designating airport hazard areas under the provisions of chapter 3 of title 1, and |
enforcement of airport hazard area zoning regulations under the provisions established in that |
chapter; |
(18) Designating areas of historic, cultural, and/or archaeological value and regulating |
development in those areas under the provisions of chapter 24.1 of this title; |
(19) Providing standards and requirements for the regulation, review, and approval of any |
proposed development in connection with those uses of land, buildings, or structures specifically |
designated as subject to development plan review in a zoning ordinance; |
(20) Designating special protection areas for water supply and limiting or prohibiting |
development in these areas, except as otherwise provided by state statute; |
(21) Specifying requirements for safe road access to developments from existing streets, |
including limiting the number, design, and location of curb cuts, and provisions for internal |
circulation systems for new developments, and provisions for pedestrian and bicycle ways; |
(22) Reducing unnecessary delay in approving or disapproving development applications |
through provisions for preapplication conferences and other means; |
(23) Providing for the application of the Rhode Island Fair Housing Practices Act, chapter |
37 of title 34, the United States Fair Housing Amendments Act of 1988 (FHAA); the Rhode Island |
Civil Rights of People with Disabilities Act, chapter 87 of title 42; and the Americans with |
Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA), 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq.; and |
(24) Regulating drive-through windows of varied intensity of use when associated with |
land-use activities and providing standards and requirements for the regulation, review, and |
approval of the drive-through windows, including, but not limited to: |
(i) Identifying within which zoning districts drive-through windows may be permitted, |
prohibited, or permitted by special-use permit; |
(ii) Specifying requirements for adequate traffic circulation; and |
(iii) Providing for adequate pedestrian safety and access, including issues concerning safety |
and access for those with disabilities. |
(b) A zoning ordinance may include special provisions for any or all of the following: |
(1) Authorizing development incentives, including, but not limited to, additional permitted |
uses, increased development and density, or additional design or dimensional flexibility in |
exchange for: |
(i) Increased open space; |
(ii) Increased housing choices; |
(iii) Traffic and pedestrian improvements; |
(iv) Public and/or private facilities; and/or |
(v) Other amenities as desired by the city or town and consistent with its comprehensive |
plan. The provisions in the ordinance shall include maximum allowable densities of population |
and/or intensities of use and shall indicate the type of improvements, amenities, and/or conditions. |
Conditions may be made for donation in lieu of direct provisions for improvements or amenities; |
(2) Establishing a system for transfer of development rights within or between zoning |
districts designated in the zoning ordinance; and |
(3) Regulating the development adjacent to designated scenic highways, scenic waterways, |
major thoroughfares, public greenspaces, or other areas of special public investment or valuable |
natural resources. |
(4) Authorizing community living options such as co-living housing in areas serviced by |
transit and other services. |
(c) Slope of land shall not be excluded from the calculation of the buildable lot area or the |
minimum lot size, or in the calculation of the number of buildable lots or units. |
(d) Nothing in this section shall be construed to restrict a municipality’s right, within state |
and local regulations, to establish its own minimum lot size per zoning district in its town or city. |
45-24-37. General provisions — Permitted uses. |
(a) The zoning ordinance shall provide a listing of all land uses and/or performance |
standards for uses that are permitted within the zoning use districts of the municipality. The |
ordinance may provide for a procedure under which a proposed land use that is not specifically |
listed may be presented by the property owner to the zoning board of review or to a local official |
or agency charged with administration and enforcement of the ordinance for an evaluation and |
determination of whether the proposed use is of a similar type, character, and intensity as a listed |
permitted use. Upon such determination, the proposed use may be considered to be a permitted use. |
(b) Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, the following uses are permitted |
uses within all residential zoning use districts of a municipality and all industrial and commercial |
zoning use districts except where residential use is prohibited for public health or safety reasons: |
(1) Households; |
(2) Community residences; and |
(3) Family daycare homes. |
(c) Any time a building or other structure used for residential purposes, or a portion of a |
building containing residential units, is rendered uninhabitable by virtue of a casualty such as fire |
or flood, the owner of the property is allowed to park, temporarily, mobile and manufactured home, |
or homes, as the need may be, elsewhere upon the land, for use and occupancy of the former |
occupants for a period of up to twelve (12) months, or until the building or structure is rehabilitated |
and otherwise made fit for occupancy. The property owner, or a properly designated agent of the |
owner, is only allowed to cause the mobile and manufactured home, or homes, to remain |
temporarily upon the land by making timely application to the local building official for the |
purposes of obtaining the necessary permits to repair or rebuild the structure. |
(d) Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, appropriate access for people with |
disabilities to residential structures is allowed as a reasonable accommodation for any person(s) |
residing, or intending to reside, in the residential structure. |
(e) Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, an accessory dwelling unit |
(“ADU”) that meets the requirements of §§ 45-24-31 and 45-24-73(a) shall be a permitted use in |
all residential zoning districts. An ADU that meets the requirements of §§ 45-24-31 and 45-24- |
73(a) shall be permitted through an administrative building permit process only. |
(f) When used in this section the terms “people with disabilities” or “member, or members, |
with disabilities” means a person(s) who has a physical or mental impairment that substantially |
limits one or more major life activities, as defined in 42-87-1(5). |
(g) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this chapter, plant agriculture is a permitted |
use within all zoning districts of a municipality, including all industrial and commercial zoning |
districts, except where prohibited for public health or safety reasons or the protection of wildlife |
habitat. |
(h) Adaptive reuse. Notwithstanding any other provisions of this chapter, adaptive reuse |
for the conversion of any commercial building, including offices, schools, religious facilities, |
medical buildings, and malls into residential units or mixed-use developments which include the |
development of at least fifty percent (50%) of the existing gross floor area into residential units, |
shall be a permitted use and allowed by specific and objective provisions of a zoning ordinance, |
except where such is prohibited by environmental land use restrictions recorded on the property by |
the state of Rhode Island department of environmental management or the United States |
Environmental Protection Agency preventing the conversion to residential use. |
(1) The specific zoning ordinance provisions for adaptive reuse shall exempt adaptive reuse |
developments from off-street parking requirements of over one space per dwelling unit. |
(2) Density. |
(i) Co-living housing which meets the applicable requirements of the building and fire |
codes, may be allowed in adaptive reuse developments. |
(i)(ii) For projects that meet the following criteria, zoning ordinances shall allow for high |
density development and shall not limit the density to less than fifteen (15) dwelling units per acre: |
(A) Where the project is limited to the existing footprint, except that the footprint is allowed |
to be expanded to accommodate upgrades related to the building and fire codes and utilities; and |
(B) The development includes at least twenty percent (20%) low- and moderate-income |
housing; and |
(C) The development has access to public sewer and water service or has access to adequate |
private water, such as a well and and/or wastewater treatment system(s) approved by the relevant |
state agency for the entire development as applicable. |
(ii)(iii) For all other adaptive reuse projects, the residential density permitted in the |
converted structure shall be the maximum allowed that otherwise meets all standards of minimum |
housing and has access to public sewer and water service or has access to adequate private water, |
such as a well, and wastewater treatment system(s) approved by the relevant state agency for the |
entire development, as applicable. The density proposed shall be determined to meet all public |
health and safety standards. |
(3) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this chapter, for adaptive reuse projects, |
existing building setbacks shall remain and shall be considered legal nonconforming, but no |
additional encroachments shall be permitted into any nonconforming setback, unless otherwise |
allowed by zoning ordinance or relief is granted by the applicable authority. |
(4) For adaptive reuse projects, notwithstanding any other provisions of this chapter, the |
height of the existing structure, if it exceeds the maximum height of the zoning district, may remain |
and shall be considered legal nonconforming, and any rooftop construction shall be included within |
the height exemption. |
(i) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this chapter, all towns and cities may allow |
manufactured homes that comply with § 23-27.3-109.1.3 as a type of single-family home on any |
lot zoned for single-family use. Such home shall comply with all dimensional requirements of a |
single-family home in the district or seek relief for the same under the provisions of this chapter. |
SECTION 2. This act shall take effect on January 1, 2026. |
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LC002882 |
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