(1) Department
Authorization Required. Written authorization by the Department pursuant to
this rule is required for any person to alter, remove, or install landscaping
on the Department's right-of-way. Whenever the construction or maintenance of
utilities causes the displacement of landscaping on the Department's
right-of-way, restoration will be conducted as specified in the
Utility
Accommodation Manual, incorporated by reference under rule
14-46.001, F.A.C. Requests to
remove, cut, or trim, vegetation that screens outdoor advertising signs for
which outdoor advertising sign permits have been issued pursuant to chapter
479, F.S., must be made in accordance with rule
14-10.057, F.A.C.
(2) Definitions.
(a) "Abutting Private Property Owner" means
any person or non-governmental entity having lawful control of land which
adjoins, or is contiguous to, Department non limited access
right-of-way.
(b) "Department"
means the Florida Department of Transportation.
(c) "Landscape Project" means any planned or
actual landscape or landscaping on Department right-of-way, including
construction or installation, planning, beautification, and maintenance
thereof, by a local government entity, non-governmental entity, or abutting
private property owner.
(d)
"Landscape" or "Landscaping" means any vegetation, mulches, irrigation systems,
and other landscape components, such as, street furniture, specialty paving,
tree gates, walls, planters, fountains, fences, and lighting (excluding public
utility street and area lighting).
(e) "Local Governmental Entity" means as
defined in section 11.45(1)(e),
F.S.
(f) "Non Governmental Entity"
means any person or organization, other than a governmental entity, who seeks
approval of a landscape project.
(g) "Screen" or "Screening" means the
planting or installation of any vegetation or other landscape material which
will reach a height greater than the height of the bottom of the lowest sign
face, as viewed from a height of 3.5 feet above the roadway surface at the edge
of the travel lane closest to the outdoor advertising sign.
(h) "View Zone" means as defined in section
479.106(6),
F.S.
(3) Approval
Criteria.
(a) Approval is based on review of
a complete set of landscape plans. The District Landscape Architect can be
consulted during preparation of landscape plans. The following plan preparation
guidelines must be used:
1. Project data must
be included on sheet 1 of the plans, and must include a location map with
beginning and end of project mile posts, index of plans included in the set,
state road number, local government and contact information, and name and
address of the person and firm who prepared the plans.
2. Plans must be drawn to scale, exhibiting
an accurate and legibility representation of existing conditions (above and
below ground), and all proposed work. Plans must show all dimensions necessary
to demonstrate compliance with this rule. If there is a baseline survey or
centerline of construction, station points are to be used for linear landscape
projects. For interchange and non-linear projects, such as ponds, plazas and
rest areas, dimensioning can be from a fixed point or station point. All
dimensions must be noted in English system measurements (inches, feet, yards,
miles, etc.). Plans must be plotted to scale on 11'' x
17'' multipurpose paper. Scale shall be such that clarity and ligibility are
preserved. Plans must contain a graphic scale and north arrow with standard
orientation on each plan sheet, and reference the state road number, section
number, milepost, and local street names. Plans must also include curbs, edge
of pavement, edge of travel lanes, guardrails, right-of-way fence and/or
right-of-way lines, sidewalks, intersections, median breaks, driveways, bike
lanes, transit facilities, surveying monuments, signs, view zones of permitted
outdoor advertising signs, lighting, traffic signals, other traffic control
devices, drainage features, limits of clear sight, set backs and clear zone
limits, existing off site features and conditions which affect or are affected
by the project, easements, above and below ground utilities, and all existing
vegetation. Details and text must be large enough to be legible on all plan
sheets.
3. Electronic files will be
accepted when requested by the Department.
4. All proposed landscaping must be
identified on the plans. For all plants, give the following information in
tabular form:
Common Name
Botanical Name, including variety or cultivar
Quantity
Size when installed (height, caliper, spread, container size,
clear trunk, multi-trunk, or any other descriptive aspect of the desired
plants)
Maximum maintained or typical mature height, spread, and
trunk diameter of normal mature plant specimens measured 6 inches above the
ground.
5. Landscape plans
must include written specifications for materials and installation.
6. Landscape plans must include graphic
installation details and demonstrate that lateral offsets and sight distances
at intersections will not be adversely impacted.
7. The approval of landscape plans requires a
work zone traffic control plan in accordance with FDOT Design Standard 600
series incorporated in the
Utility Accommodation Manual by
reference in Rule
14-46.001, F.A.C., and the
Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices as incorporated by
reference under Rule
14-15.010, F.A.C.
8. A comprehensive maintenance plan must
accompany the plans. The intent of design elements, such as to screen a view,
maintain a clear sight distance, or assist with water retention, must be
included in a description of the project, accompanied by a written or graphic
guide describing the performance requirements of the entity responsible for
maintaining the project. The maintenance plan must include requirements
necessary to maintain and manage sight distance, horizontal and vertical
clearance, accessibility, plant health, form, height and spread, mulch
thickness and cover, edges, weeds and litter, irrigation system(s), hardscape,
lighting, benches, and landscape components, and any other requirements
necessary for the design intent to be achieved. The maintenance plan must
include a work zone traffic control plan, and define the limits of the mowing
and litter control that will be performed as part of the landscape project.
When the landscape project is to be maintained by the Department, a maintenance
cost estimate based on anticipated maintenance activities must be an attachment
to the plans.
9. Plans must be
prepared by a person who meets the requirements of chapter 481, part II,
F.S.
(b) No planting or
installation of vegetation or other landscape components for landscape
projects, or issuance of permits for such planting or installation, including
construction and beautification projects, is allowed on Department right-of-way
which screens or which, when mature, will screen an outdoor advertising sign
permitted under chapter 479, F.S. This prohibition also applies to outdoor
advertising signs on the state highway system, located within urban areas and
not required to obtain a Department permit pursuant to section
479.07(1), F.S.
This prohibition applies to all landscape, construction, and beautification
projects on Department right-of-way regardless of the source of funds for the
project, except for landscape projects approved by the Department prior to the
date of the original state sign permit for the sign. For purposes of this rule,
a landscape, construction, or beautification project is approved when it is
specifically identified in the Department's five year work program, is a
permitted landscape project, is part of an executed agreement between the
Department and a local government, or has been approved in writing by the
Department for installation at a later date by a local government.
1. Screening is prohibited within an
established view zone. The District Landscape Architect can verify the location
of view zones within the project limits.
2. When a landscape project is proposed
within 1,000 feet approaching legally erected and permitted outdoor advertising
signs the person preparing the landscape plan will notify the sign permittee in
writing at the address provided in accordance with rule subsection
14-10.011(2), F.A.C.
(c)
A local governmental entity may request approval to alter, remove, or install
landscaping on the Department's right-of-way through submission of a landscape
plan. When public health, safety, and welfare, operation of the transportation
system, or the quality of the environment may be jeopardized, the Department
will require that plans be signed and sealed by a registered landscape
architect. After review by the Department, and the making of any necessary
revisions by the local governmental entity, the Department will prepare a
written agreement requiring the local governmental entity to properly construct
and maintain the landscape project, including the entire landscape irrigation
system. The landscape plan will become an exhibit to the agreement. If
separate, the maintenance plan as described in subparagraph (3)(a)8. will
become an additional exhibit of the agreement. When the agreement is executed,
and a Notice to Proceed is issued by the Department, the local governmental
entity may proceed with the project.
(d) Non-governmental entities may seek
approval to alter, remove, or install landscaping on the Department's
right-of-way through submission of a landscape plan, and a resolution from the
appropriate local government that commits the local government to execution of
an agreement to properly construct and maintain the landscape project as
described in paragraph (3)(c) above.
(e) An abutting private property owner is not
required to comply with paragraph (3)(d) of this rule and may apply for a
permit to alter or install landscape materials on the Department's non-limited
access right-of-way directly abutting the owner's property between the
right-of-way line and the nearest edge of pavement through submission of a
Permit for Landscaping on State Road Right of Way, Form 650-050-09, Rev. 09/08,
which is incorporated herein by reference at
https://www.flrules.org/Gateway/reference.asp?No=Ref-06101
and is available at:
www.dot.state.fl.us/projectmanagementoffice/beauty/beauty.shtm. When public
safety, operation of the transportation system, or the quality of the
environment is jeopardized, the District Landscape Architect will require
abutting private property owners to submit for approval a landscape plan,
maintenance plan, and work zone traffic control plan.
(f) Non-governmental entities or abutting
private property owners seeking approval to install landscaping on the Turnpike
right-of-way shall submit a completed Form 650-050-09 to the District Landscape
Architect, Florida's Turnpike Operations Center, P.O. Box 9828, Fort
Lauderdale, Florida 33310. The application must be accompanied by a landscape
plan, maintenance plan, and work zone traffic control plan.
(g) Approval will only be granted when it is
determined that all plans meet the requirements of this rule. No permit will be
issued to an abutting private property owner to provide visibility of such
property through the cutting, trimming, or removal of trees, shrubs, or
herbaceous plants.
(6) Donation of Landscape Projects. The
Department will accept donations of plants, materials, installation, and
maintenance for landscape projects on the State Highway System that meet the
requirements of this rule. The donated landscape projects must substantially
improve the appearance or manageability of the median or roadside. An agreement
must be on file with the Department before installation of plants, materials,
or signs. The agreement must stipulate that the sign and the landscape project
may be removed by the Department for failure to meet the requirements of this
rule chapter or the agreement.
(a) Signs
acknowledging donated landscape projects by an individual or entity may be
erected on the right-of-way, when the donation includes installation and
maintenance or solely maintenance pursuant to an executed agreement. Such signs
will remain in place for a term of five years, unless otherwise specified in
the agreement. Signs recognizing donated landscape projects are a feature of
the landscape project, not a traffic control device. Signs within the same
local governmental jurisdiction should have a unifying theme represented
through the sign appearance, design, fabrication, and installation and can
include the local governmental jurisdiction logo as part of the sign design.
The sign face must be non-retroreflective, have no moving parts, not be
illuminated, and not contain commercial logos, business slogans, tag lines,
telephone numbers, web addresses, or trademarks, or give the impression of
promotional advertising. Color combinations or shapes that are similar to
warning and regulatory signs are prohibited. Signs cannot interfere with any
official traffic control device. Signs will be placed at each end of the
landscape project. Any sign acknowledging donated landscape projects not
meeting the requirement of this rule will be removed by the
Department.
(b) Interstate
Highways: The sign acknowledging donation of landscape projects on the
Interstate Highway System will be provided by the Department. The text will
state "Landscape by" and the name of the contributor. The signs shall be
installed and maintained by the Department.
(c) Arterial Highways: The sign acknowledging
donation of landscape projects on arterial highways will be rectangular and no
larger than 18 inches tall and 24 inches wide. The text shall state only
"Landscape by" and the name of the contributor. The sign must be mounted on
break away posts. The top of signs will be a maximum of no more than 2 feet
above grade. Installation of signs is contingent upon an agreement with the
appropriate local governmental entity. The approved sign panel(s) must be
provided and replaced by the local governmental entity. Signs will be placed
according to the approved landscape plan.