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A Custom Fit
The Tour
Ann Matesi, Contributing Editor
July 1, 2004
Luxury Home Builder
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"The number of deed restrictions imposed by local governing bodies on a lakefront home in our area can be daunting," says Tringali. These include architectural style, building height, lot coverage, setbacks and open-space requirements. "All of these must be taken into consideration from the initial design stages of the house."
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For this project, the height restriction was 35 feet - measured from building grade to the highest point on the roof. In addition, because there were existing homes on either side of it, the building envelope for this home's deep, but narrow site was restricted, because larger-than-normal, side- and front-yard setbacks, as well as a severe rear-yard (lake-side) setback, caused by a line-of-sight setback, says Tringali.
The purpose of a line-of-sight setback is to preserve the water views for existing homes when a new one is built. "This is determined by drawing an imaginary line connecting the rear decks of the adjoining homes," says Tringali. "The new one cannot exceed that line. This tells us how close to the lake we can set the home."
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© 2008, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.


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