[MassHistPres] demolition and 'partial demolition'
James J O'Rourke Jr
jamesjorourkejr321 at gmail.com
Mon Dec 31 22:49:23 EST 2018
Chris:
As I understood Daniel's post, Medfield incorporated by reference the State
Building Code ("SBC") definition of demolition and partial demolition into
their bylaw. The Building Commissioner and the Historical Commission must
follow the SBC definitions, whatever they may be. It appears to me the
Building Inspector's position is the right one if the applicable SBC
provision does not define a partial demolition.
Frankly, I would suggest that the Town "uncouple" the demolition definition
in their bylaw from the SBC. The bylaw is concerned with historic
preservation while the SBC's primary concern is safety. Most demolition
delay bylaws I have reviewed have not linked the definition of demolition
with the SBC's definition. (In November 2018 Dennis De Witt posted to
listserv a definition recently adopted in Brookline which is very good.)
If people disagree with my position, I would like to hear the reasons why
linking the demolition delay bylaw definition to the SBC is a good idea. I
have had some experience with the definition of "Historic Building" under
the SBC and found it to be a "moving target." The SBC is linked to the
International Existing Building Code ("EBC"). There have been several
editions of the EBC since 2012. The one that Massachusetts adopted (the 9th
edition) is not available for free online.
Jim O'Rourke, Chairman, Somerset Historical Commission
From: MassHistPres <masshistpres-bounces at cs.umb.edu> On Behalf Of Skelly,
Christopher (SEC)
Sent: Monday, December 31, 2018 9:20 AM
To: masshistpres at cs.umb.edu
Subject: Re: [MassHistPres] demolition and 'partial demolition'
Daniel, demolition delay bylaws typically have their own definition for
demolition within the bylaw itself. It is my understanding of the Medfield
demolition delay bylaw that it includes no definition of demolition or
partial demolition.
If your bylaw refers to partial demolition as being regulated, then I'm not
clear how it can be entirely ignored by the building commissioner. What is
the current language included in your definition section of the bylaw?
I'd start with deciding, as the commission, what constitutes a partial
demolition. Discuss your definition with the building commissioner.
Ideally, at an upcoming town meeting, your bylaw would be changed to include
definitions for demolition and partial demolition if they aren't there now.
In the meantime, including these definitions within your operating rules and
regulations/rules of procedure would be a good idea. Chris.
Christopher C. Skelly
Director of Local Government Programs
Massachusetts Historical Commission
<mailto:Christopher.Skelly at state.ma.us> Christopher.Skelly at state.ma.us
_____
From: MassHistPres [masshistpres-bounces at cs.umb.edu] on behalf of Daniel
Bibel [dbibel at verizon.net]
Sent: Saturday, December 29, 2018 8:07 AM
To: <mailto:masshistpres at cs.umb.edu> masshistpres at cs.umb.edu
Subject: [MassHistPres] demolition and 'partial demolition'
The bylaws in the Town of Medfield (and those in a number of other
Massachusetts' cities and towns) refer to 'demolition and partial
demolition' as defined in the State Building Code ("SBC").
We have been informed by the current Building Commissioner in Medfield that
the current edition of the SBC no longer has a definition for 'partial
demolition.' As a result, his attitude is that he will only forward to us
applications for the total demolition of structures.
How are other Historical Commissions dealing with this? A large number of
the reviews which we have done over the past dozen years have dealt with
major changes to the exteriors of building, but were not total demolitions.
I would imagine this would also be true for other Historical Commissions.
Daniel Bibel
co-chair, Medfield Historical Commission
<mailto:dbibel at verizon.net> dbibel at verizon.net
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