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13 <br />i <br />f <br />-M'J' <br />S 10.56 <br />2. No lot within 300' of a tributary and <br />approved for duplex use per Section 10.20^ Subd. 3 (I) shall be <br />less than 150 feet in width when no sewer is available, nor less <br />than 115 feet in width when sewer is available. <br />B. Lakeshore Access Lots. Lots intended as <br />accesses to public waters or as recreation areas for use by owners <br />of non-riparian lots within subdivisions are permissible and must <br />meet the following minimum standards: <br />1. Any such lakeshore access lot shall be <br />designated as an outlot, and shall not be considered as a buildable <br />residential lot. <br />2. Such an outlot shall not be subject to <br />minimum lot area or width standards, except that the number of <br />inland non-riparian lots which may gain access via such outlot <br />shall not exceed the number obtained by dividing the outlot width <br />measured at the shoreline by the required zoning district lot <br />width, rounded down to the nearest whcle number. <br />3. Such out-1 n-i- shall be jointly owned by all <br />owners of non-riparian lots in the subdivision who are provided <br />rip=»rian access rights on the access outlot. <br />4. No such access outlot shall be created as <br />part of a subdivision plat except when the building lots within the <br />subdivision are separated by an existing public or private roadway <br />from the lakeshore, and the land on either side of the roadway was <br />in common ownership as of the effective date of this ordinance. <br />5. Covenants or other equally affective legal <br />instruments must be developed that specify which lot owners have <br />authority to use the access lot and what activities arc allowed. <br />The activities may include watercraft launching, loading, storage, <br />beaching, mooring, or docking. They can also include other outdoor <br />recreational activities that do not significantly conflict with <br />general public use of the public water or the enjoyment of normal <br />property rights by adjacent property owners. Exeunples of the non­ <br />significant conflict activities include swimming, sunbathing, or <br />picnicing. The covenants must limit the total number of vehicles <br />allowed to be parked and the total nximber of watercraft allowed to <br />be continuously moored, docked, or stored over water, and must <br />require centralization of all common facilities and activities in <br />the most suitable locations on the lot to minimize topographic and <br />vegetation alterations. They must also require all parking areas, <br />storage buildings, and other facilities to be screened by <br />vegetation or topography as much as practical from view from the <br />public water, assuming summer, leaf-on conditions. Such covenants <br />are subject to City approval. <br />ORONO CC 376-10 <br />■i