News
Lukes Wood Road Homeowner Appeals P&Z Decision To Deny Pillars at End of Driveway
|
The owners of a Lukes Wood Road home on Monday are appealing the New Canaan Planning & Zoning Commission’s denial of their request to allow higher-than-allowed pillars for a gate at the end of their driveway. The pillars—which stand about six and seven feet above grade, given the slope of the land, against the four feet allowed by the New Canaan Zoning Regulations (see Section 6.5.C.3.a on page 126 here)—already are in place at the plaintiffs’ home at 309 Lukes Wood Road. That’s because they were re-installed when the homeowners reconfigured the driveway following municipal approvals and a lengthy process that involved the rare purchase of town-owned land to make the new, safer layout possible, according to a complaint filed in state Superior Court in Stamford. But town officials said a special permit was needed to retain the pillars, and an application for that permit was denied 8-1 last month by the Planning & Zoning Commission, the complaint says. The decision was: reached by weighing inaccurate information; unsupported by the record; based on irrelevant arguments and findings; and “contrary to and inconsistent with applications of the standards and requirements of the Town of New Canaan Zoning Regulations with regards to pillars, gates and walls in the Town of New Canaan,” according to the complaint.