Carol Jacoby v. Zoning Board of Adjustment of The , 442 N.J. Super. 450 ( 2015 )


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  •                  NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-0007-13T1
    A-0259-13T1
    A-0404-13T1
    CAROL JACOBY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    v.
    October 21, 2015
    ZONING BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF
    THE BOROUGH OF ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS               APPELLATE DIVISION
    and LG ELECTRONICS USA, INC.,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    _________________________________
    MARCIA DAVIS,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    and
    NEW JERSEY STATE FEDERATION OF
    WOMEN'S CLUBS, SCENIC HUDSON,
    INC., MARGO MOSS and JAKOB
    FRANKE,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF THE
    BOROUGH OF ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS
    and LG ELECTRONICS USA, INC.,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    __________________________________________________________
    CAROL JACOBY,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    ZONING BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF
    THE BOROUGH OF ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS
    and LG ELECTRONICS USA, INC.,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    _________________________________
    MARCIA DAVIS and NEW JERSEY STATE
    FEDERATION OF WOMEN'S CLUBS,
    SCENIC HUDSON, INC., MARGO MOSS,
    and JAKOB FRANKE,
    Plaintiffs-Respondents,
    v.
    BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF THE
    BOROUGH OF ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS
    and LG ELECTRONICS USA, INC.,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    ___________________________________________________________
    CAROL JACOBY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    ZONING BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF
    THE BOROUGH OF ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS
    and LG ELECTRONICS USA, INC.,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    ____________________________________
    MARCIA DAVIS,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    and
    2                      A-0007-13T1
    NEW JERSEY STATE FEDERATION
    OF WOMEN'S CLUBS, SCENIC
    HUDSON, INC., MARGO MOSS
    and JAKOB FRANKE,
    Plaintiffs,
    v.
    BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF THE
    BOROUGH OF ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS
    and LG ELECTRONICS USA, INC.,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    __________________________________
    Argued October 5, 2015 – Decided October 21, 2015
    Before Judges Fasciale, Nugent and Higbee.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Law Division, Bergen County, Docket Nos. L-
    2301-12 and L-2373-12.
    Louis L. D'Arminio argued the cause for
    appellants New Jersey State Federation of
    Women's Clubs, Scenic Hudson, Inc., Margo
    Moss and Jakob Franke in A-0007-13       and
    respondents   in  A-0259-13   and  A-0404-13
    (Price, Meese, Shulman & D'Arminio, P.C. and
    Law Offices of Angelo C. Morresi, attorneys;
    Mr. D'Arminio, Kathryn J. Razin, and Angelo
    C. Morresi, on the briefs).
    J. Alvaro Alonso argued the cause for
    appellant Carol Jacoby in A-0259-13 and
    respondent Carol Jacoby in A-0007-13 and A-
    0404-13   (Alonso   &    Navarette,   L.L.C.,
    attorneys; Mr. Alonso, on the brief).
    Michael I. Lubin, argued the cause for
    appellant Marcia Davis in A-0404-13 and
    respondent Marcia Davis in A-0007-13 and A-
    0259-13.
    3                        A-0007-13T1
    Michael B. Kates argued the cause for
    respondent Zoning Board of Adjustment of
    Englewood Cliffs in A-0007-13, A-0259-13 and
    A-0404-13 (Kates, Nussman, Rapone, Ellis &
    Farhi, L.L.P., attorneys; Mr. Kates, of
    counsel and on the brief).
    Nicholas G. Sekas argued the cause for
    respondent LG Electronics, USA, Inc. in A-
    0007-13, A-0259-13 and A-0404-13 (Sekas Law
    Group,   L.L.C.  and   Day Pitney,  L.L.P.,
    attorneys; Mr. Sekas and Christopher John
    Stracco, on the brief).
    Julien Neals, Bergen County Counsel, and
    Florio & Kenny, L.L.P., attorneys for amicus
    curiae County of Bergen, Kathleen Donovan,
    as Executive, and Bergen County Board of
    Chosen Freeholders in A-0007-13, A-0259-13
    and A-0404-13 (James X. Sattely, Melissa
    Bristol Paolella, Frank P. Kapusinski and
    Edward J. Florio, on the briefs).
    Eastern Environmental Law    Center, attorneys
    for amicus curiae Mayor      Paul H. Tomasko,
    Mayor Peter Rustin, Mayor   Sophie Heymann and
    Mayor Paul Hoelscher in     A-0007-13, A-0259-
    13 and A-0404-13 (Aaron     Kleinbaum, on the
    brief).
    Morningside Heights Legal Services, attorney
    for amicus curiae New Jersey Conservation
    Foundation,    Natural    Resources    Defense
    Council, Coalition to Protect the Palisades
    Cliffs, Fort Tryon Trust, National Trust for
    Historic Preservation, New Jersey Sierra
    Club, New York/New Jersey Baykeeper, New
    York   –   New   Jersey    Trail   Conference,
    Palisades   Park   Conservancy,   Preservation
    League of New York State and Regional Plan
    Association in A-0007-13, A-0259-13 and A-
    0404-13 (Susan J. Kraham, Edward Lloyd, Mark
    Izeman of the New York bar, admitted pro hac
    vice, Albert Butzel of the New York bar,
    admitted pro hac vice, and William Cook of
    4                          A-0007-13T1
    the South Carolina bar,              admitted    pro   hac
    vice, on the brief).
    Bradley M. Campbell L.L.C., attorneys for
    amicus curiae New York State Senator Jeffrey
    D. Klein,      United States Representative
    Eliot L. Engel, New York State Senator
    Adriano    Espaillat,   New    York    State
    Assemblyman Jeffrey Dinowitz and    New York
    City Councilman Andrew Cohen in A-0007-13,
    A-0259-13 and A-0404-13 (Mr. Campbell, on
    the briefs).
    Eric T. Schneiderman, Attorney General of
    the State of New York, attorney for amicus
    curiae the State of New York in A-0007-13,
    A-0259-14 and A-0404-13 (Oren L. Zeve,
    Assistant Solicitor General, on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    FASCIALE, J.A.D.
    The New Jersey State Federation of Women's Clubs, Scenic
    Hudson Inc., Margo Moss, and Jakob Franke (the intervenors),
    Carol    Jacoby,      and   Marcia        Davis   (Jacoby,     Davis,     and     the
    intervenors are collectively referred to as plaintiffs), appeal
    from    an   August    9,   2013    order      upholding   defendant      Board    of
    Adjustment of the Borough of Englewood Cliffs' (the Board) site
    plan    approval      and   grant    of     height   and     bulk   variances      to
    defendant LG Electronics USA, Inc. (LG).1                     Margo Moss, Jakob
    1
    We calendared plaintiffs' appeals back-to-back, conducted
    oral argument on each appeal simultaneously, and have resolved
    them in one opinion due to the substantially overlapping issues
    (continued)
    5                               A-0007-13T1
    Franke, Carol Jacoby, and Marcia Davis are residents in                                  the
    community.
    We    granted    amici        status      to    numerous      objectors     to    the
    granted height variance, including the State of New York; New
    York        State     Senator        Jeffrey          D.    Klein;     United       States
    Representative Eliot L. Engel; New York State Senator Adriano
    Espaillat; New York State Assemblyman Jeffrey Dinowitz;                                  New
    York   City     Councilman          Andrew    Cohen;       New   Jersey      Conservation
    Foundation;         Natural    Resources         Defense     Council;        Coalition    to
    Protect the Palisades Cliffs; Fort Tryon Trust; National Trust
    for Historic Preservation; New Jersey Sierra Club; New York/New
    Jersey      Baykeeper;        New    York    –       New   Jersey    Trail    Conference;
    Palisades      Park    Conservancy;          Preservation        League      of   New   York
    State; Regional Plan Association; Mayor Paul H. Tomasko; Mayor
    Peter Rustin; Mayor Sophie Heymann; and Mayor Paul Hoelscher.2
    The primary dispute involves the Board's grant of a height
    variance allowing LG to construct a 143.8-foot office building
    in a business zone where the maximum permitted building height
    (continued)
    and contentions of the parties. As a result, these back-to-back
    appeals are consolidated for the purposes of this opinion.
    2
    We also granted amici status to the County of Bergen,
    Kathleen Donovan, as Executive, and Bergen County Board of
    Chosen Freeholders, who supported the height variance.
    6                                 A-0007-13T1
    is 35 feet.3              The height of the building                         authorized by the
    variance dramatically affects the view of the historic Palisades
    Cliffs,        a     recognized          natural           treasure           that         has        been
    intentionally         preserved         for        decades.         The       opponents          to   the
    variance       maintain      that       the        building       would       ruin    the     natural
    beauty of the Palisades Cliffs because it would be visible on
    the west side of the Hudson River above the tree line from
    multiple       vantage      points      in     New       York     and    New       Jersey.            The
    intervenors also challenge the issuance of the bulk variance
    reducing the number of required parking spaces.
    We hold, where a structure substantially exceeds the local
    height restriction, that in determining whether the height of a
    building           would     be         "consistent              with         the      surrounding
    neighborhood[,]" a zoning board is obligated to consider the
    impact     that       the    structure             would        have     on     more       than       the
    municipality itself or the immediate vicinity of the structure.
    The "special reasons" necessary to establish a height variance
    "must     be       tailored        to        the        purpose        for     imposing          height
    restrictions         in     the    zoning          ordinance."               Here,    because         the
    proposed       structure          is    in     close       proximity          to     the     historic
    3
    The Board contends that the appeals are moot because the
    Borough of Englewood Cliffs amended the zoning ordinance after
    the judge entered the order, purportedly eliminating the need
    for a height variance.     We need not consider this argument
    because the Borough repealed that ordinance in August 2014.
    7                                        A-0007-13T1
    Palisades       Cliffs   and    can    be    seen       well    beyond    the    immediate
    vicinity or municipality, established principles of zoning law
    direct      that    "surrounding       neighborhood"           means     all    reasonable
    visual vantage points.
    We reverse the order upholding the granted height variance,
    and    remand       to   the    Board       to     conduct       further       proceedings
    consistent with this opinion, applying the enhanced standards of
    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(d)(6), and Grasso v. Borough of Spring Lake
    Heights, 
    375 N.J. Super. 41
    (App. Div. 2004).                                 We leave the
    details of the remand proceedings to the Board's discretion.                              We
    otherwise affirm the order upholding the bulk variance pursuant
    to N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(c)(2).
    I.
    LG   owns     approximately      27       acres    of    land   located     at    111
    Sylvan Avenue, Englewood Cliffs, otherwise known on a tax map as
    Block 207, Lot 6 (the property).                        The property sits atop the
    Palisades Cliffs and is approximately one mile north of the
    George Washington Bridge.             The landscape is unmarked by man-made
    structures above the tree line.
    LG   planned      to    use    the    property      as    its     North    American
    Headquarters.         LG intended to construct an eight-story building
    (the     main      building)     divided         into    sections        or    wings    (the
    project).          Three proposed structures of the project exceeded
    8                                     A-0007-13T1
    Englewood Cliffs' 35-foot maximum height limitation: the height
    of the main building would be 143.8 feet; a four-level garage
    would reach 48.8 feet; and a building situated between the north
    and south wings would be slightly over 35 feet tall.                        As a
    result, LG applied for a height variance.
    LG proposed allocating fewer parking spaces for the project
    than the 2466 minimum spaces required by ordinance.              Pursuant to
    LG's proposal, there would be a total of 1421 on-site parking
    spaces.     Consequently, LG primarily sought a bulk variance to
    accommodate its parking plan.
    The Board conducted six hearings between May and November
    2011.     LG produced testimony from two of its vice-presidents; an
    architect; a landscape architect; a professional planner; two
    professional     engineers;       and    an    environmental   sustainability
    design expert.      In opposition to the development, the executive
    director    of   the    Palisades      Interstate   Park   Commission    (PIPC)
    testified that the height of the main building would visually
    impact the nearby Palisades Interstate Park (the "Park") and the
    overall    scenic      corridor   of     the   Palisades   Parkway.        Other
    individuals expressed concerns that the project would visually
    affect the Palisades Cliffs and the Park's heritage.
    9                              A-0007-13T1
    In   February   2013,     the        Board   adopted   a   resolution
    memorializing its six-to-one vote granting site plan approval
    and the requested variances.    The Board found that
    [t]he building height enables substantially
    more landscape amenity and buffer features
    for nearby residents.   The Board finds that
    the   significant   increase   in    landscape
    coverage alone justifies the height variance
    required. . . .      In addition, the Board
    finds that the increased landscaping both
    conserves natural resources and prevents
    degradation of the environment and are
    special reasons for the grant of the height
    variance. The Board finds that the purposes
    of the Municipal Land Use Law [(MLUL),
    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-1 to -129] are advanced by
    [the] plan's height as adequate light[,] air
    and   open  space   are   preserved,   and   a
    desirable visual environment and the public
    welfare is promoted.
    2.   The building will be rated a LEED Gold
    building   standard,4  the  second  highest
    standard, just under Platinum, for energy
    use, recycling, and waste disposal.     The
    project promotes the [MLUL's] purpose of
    promoting utilization of renewable energy
    resources.
    . . . .
    Th[e height] variance . . . is justified in
    part, by the extremely large lot size of 27
    acres, the large amount of green space being
    increased from the present condition, and
    the large perimeter setbacks proposed.   The
    4
    A Leadership in Energy & Environmental Design (LEED) building
    standard refers to a building certification system whereby a
    building is rated based on its environmental impact, according
    to a point system.     A Gold rating is the second highest to
    Platinum.
    10                           A-0007-13T1
    Board specifically finds that the increased
    height will create no detriments to the
    neighborhood, or to the zone plan.        The
    increased    height    permits    significant
    additional landscaping and green buffers,
    which shield the height from residences.
    The   taller  building   is   set  far   from
    residential lots.   The benefits of granting
    the height variance outweigh any detriments.
    The building will not cast a shadow on
    adjacent properties.    The Board finds that
    the applicant proved that the site can
    accommodate the negative effects associated
    with taller buildings particularly as the
    tall building is situated within a large,
    well[-]landscaped lot.     The grant of the
    variance will not create a substantial
    detriment.    The Board specifically finds
    that the design creates no detriments to the
    zone plan and zoning ordinance.
    . . . .
    13. The site plan fulfills the Master Plan
    goals of encouraging large[-]scale executive
    office development, reduc[ing] impervious
    coverage, and maintain[ing] a large lot
    size.
    14.     The    project   has  no   substantial
    detriment   to   the   public  good   and   no
    substantial impairment to the intent and
    purpose of the zone plan.        The proposed
    number of square feet are significantly less
    tha[n] that permitted as of right, therefore
    there is no increased intensity of use
    proposed.
    The Board then concluded that
    [LG] has sustained [its] burden of showing
    special reasons warranting the grant of the
    requested height variances as well as a
    variance to permit a parking structure as an
    accessory use in the B[-]2 zone. The Board
    f[inds] that the height of the building
    11                         A-0007-13T1
    permit[s] [LG] to advance the purposes and
    objectives of the Master Plan, by enhancing
    landscaping    and     buffers,     preserving
    environmentally sensitive areas such as
    wetlands and woodlands.     Additionally [LG]
    also encouraged high[-]quality development
    without substantial detriment to public good
    and   to   the  Master    Plan's   goals   and
    objectives.
    20.    The Board concludes that [LG] has
    sustained the burden of proof for the
    various bulk variances required for the
    project both by proving hardship under
    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(c)(1) and by proving that
    the proposal is a better zoning alternative
    under N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(c)(2) by enabling
    increased    green   space   and   LEED  Gold
    architecture.    The provision of the parking
    garage will eliminate the existing condition
    of an asphalt parking lot covering most of
    the lot not covered by the building.      The
    proposal will provide a 125[-]foot green
    setback   at   the   Southern   edge  of  the
    property.
    21.    The Board also finds that [LG] has
    demonstrated that the required relief can be
    granted without substantial detriment to the
    public    good  and   without   substantially
    impairing the intent and purpose of the Zone
    Plan and Zoning Ordinance.     The buildings
    will be of an attractive and tasteful design
    whose appearance will substantially enhance
    the surrounding area.    The increased green
    space on the property will be a benefit for
    the neighborhood.      The unrefuted expert
    testimony of [LG]'s traffic engineer was
    that there would be a negligible impact upon
    traffic from the project.
    In granting the height variance, the Board required LG to lower
    the   north   garage   by   ten   feet   eight   inches,   and   provide
    structural capacity for an additional level to be added in the
    12                            A-0007-13T1
    future.
    Jacoby       and   Davis    filed    separate      complaints    in    lieu    of
    prerogative writs, challenging the Board's site plan approval
    and variance grants.            The judge consolidated the complaints and
    conducted     oral      argument.          The       judge   then    granted        the
    intervenors' motion allowing their participation, entered the
    order under review, and issued a written decision.
    On      appeal,        plaintiffs         separately     present        similar
    challenges.5       Generally, plaintiffs argue the Board's grant of
    height and bulk variances must be reversed because the Board
    misapplied the applicable law and the judge erred in his legal
    conclusions.        Specifically,        plaintiffs     maintain     LG    failed    to
    satisfy     its    burden       to   prove     the     proposed     structure       was
    "consistent with the surrounding neighborhood" as LG did not
    address the impact of the development on the Palisades Cliffs
    and region.        Plaintiffs ask us to reverse the August 9, 2013
    order and set aside the variances.
    5
    On September 22, 2015, intervenors' counsel, in preparation
    for oral argument before us, indicated that LG and intervenors
    entered into an agreement as to the height variance.    Although
    LG apparently will now seek Board approval to construct a
    building lower than 143.8 feet tall, the agreed-upon reduction
    in height for a new building still exceeds the 35-foot height
    restriction.   Jacoby and Davis are not part of the agreement
    between LG and intervenors.    Consequently, we focus solely on
    the substantially interrelated contentions raised by the parties
    on appeal because resolution of the height dispute remains
    incomplete.
    13                                 A-0007-13T1
    II.
    We begin by recognizing the general standards that inform
    our analysis.       When reviewing a trial court's decision regarding
    the validity of a local board's determination, "we are bound by
    the same standards as was the trial court."                          Fallone Props.,
    L.L.C. v. Bethlehem Twp. Planning Bd., 
    369 N.J. Super. 552
    , 562
    (App. Div. 2004).          We give deference to the actions and factual
    findings      of   local   boards     and    may    not    disturb     such    findings
    unless they were arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable.                        
    Id. at 560.
        In    other   words,     a   board's        actions    must    be    based   on
    substantial evidence.          Cell S. of N.J., Inc. v. Zoning Bd. of
    Adjustment, 
    172 N.J. 75
    , 89 (2002).                    However, a local board's
    "legal   determinations       are     not     entitled     to   a    presumption      of
    validity and are subject to de novo review."                         Wilson v. Brick
    Twp. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment, 
    405 N.J. Super. 189
    , 197 (App.
    Div. 2009).
    III.
    As to the height variance, plaintiffs argue that the Board
    (1)    misapplied      N.J.S.A.       40:55D-70(d)(6)          and     the    standards
    expressed in Grasso; and (2) erroneously rejected the contention
    that the height variance constituted impermissible rezoning of
    the    property.       We    need     not        address   whether      the    variance
    constituted an illegal rezoning of the property because we agree
    14                                 A-0007-13T1
    with plaintiffs that the Board did not properly apply (d)(6) and
    Grasso.
    In 1991, the Legislature placed height variances within the
    enhanced standards of N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(d).   
    Grasso, supra
    , 375
    N.J. Super. at 50.   The Legislature believed that a (d) variance
    had a "greater potential for disrupting a municipality's zone
    plan" because "the resulting structure arguably could be seen as
    something out of character with the structures permitted in the
    zone . . . ."   
    Id. at 51
    (quoting Engleside at W. Condo. Ass'n
    v. Land Use Bd., 
    301 N.J. Super. 628
    , 639 (Law Div. 1997)).
    LG's height variance application pertaining to its proposed
    eight-story, 143.8-foot, main building is therefore governed by
    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(d)(6), which states in pertinent part that
    [i]n particular cases for special reasons,
    [a board may] grant a variance to allow
    departure from regulations . . . to permit:
    (1) a use or principal structure in a
    district restricted against such use or
    principal structure . . . or (6) a height of
    a principal structure which exceeds by 10
    feet or 10% the maximum height permitted in
    the district for a principal structure.
    In Grasso, we explained generally that an applicant seeking a
    (d)(6) variance must show (1) "special reasons," or the so-
    called positive requirement; and (2) that the variance can be
    granted "without substantial detriment to the public good and
    will not substantially impair the intent and the purpose of the
    15                        A-0007-13T1
    zone   plan       and     zoning   ordinance,"     or   the   so-called      negative
    requirement.            
    Grasso, supra
    , 375 N.J. Super. at 48-49 (quoting
    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(d)[(6)]).
    (i).
    As   to      the     positive     requirement     necessary     to     justify
    granting      a    height     variance    under     (d)(6),     LG   may    establish
    "special reasons" by showing undue hardship or establishing that
    the 143.8-foot main building did not offend any purposes of the
    height restriction and "would nonetheless be consistent with the
    surrounding neighborhood."              
    Id. at 50-53.
    To demonstrate undue hardship, and applying the enhanced
    standards         for    (d)(6)    variance      applications    imposed     by    the
    Legislature, LG must show that
    the property for which the variance is
    sought   cannot   reasonably   accommodate   a
    structure that conforms to, or only slightly
    exceeds,   the   height   permitted   by   the
    ordinance.       Stated    differently,    the
    applicant for a (d)(6) variance on grounds
    of hardship must show that the height
    restriction in effect prohibits utilization
    of the property for a conforming structure.
    [
    Id. at 51
    .]
    LG's architect conceded at the hearings that LG did not consider
    alternatives to the project configuration.                      The Board did not
    address     or      find    that    a   conforming      building,    or     one   that
    "slightly exceeds" the thirty-five-foot height limitation, could
    16                                A-0007-13T1
    not be constructed on the site.             The Board could not make such a
    finding because a conforming structure existed on the site when
    LG had applied for the height variance.                    Thus, LG failed to
    establish undue hardship.
    As to whether the main building would be "consistent with
    the surrounding neighborhood[,]" we have previously indicated
    that the "special reasons" necessary to establishing a height
    variance "must be tailored to the purpose for imposing height
    restrictions in the zoning ordinance."              
    Id. at 52-53.
             In all
    likelihood, the thirty-five-foot height restriction is designed
    to preserve views of the skyline and trees, avoid the appearance
    of   overcrowding    that   could     result    from   tall    buildings,       and
    maintain the existing character of the Palisades Cliffs.                     As we
    acknowledged   in    Grasso,    "an    excessively     tall     structure       can
    aesthetically impair a municipality."               
    Id. at 53.
          Here, the
    eight-story, 143.8-foot building far exceeds the existing 35-
    foot   limitation;    indeed,   it     is    over   four    times   the    height
    limitation.    Such a large-scale deviation will undoubtedly have
    a visual effect on the area, especially because of the placement
    of the building in close proximity to the Palisades Cliffs, a
    historic, renowned natural and dramatic geological feature on
    the west side of the Hudson River.
    17                                 A-0007-13T1
    We   have    long    recognized      that    a     zoning   board's   duty   to
    consider the "surrounding neighborhood" encompasses more than
    just consideration of the municipality itself or the immediate
    vicinity of the structure.             See Urban Farms, Inc. v. Franklin
    Lakes, 
    179 N.J. Super. 203
    , 213 (App. Div.) (explaining that
    "[t]he insularity and parochialism of the Chinese wall theory of
    municipal   zoning      has    long   since     been    discredited"),    certif.
    denied, 
    87 N.J. 428
    (1981).            Indeed, it is the intended purpose
    of the MLUL "[t]o ensure that the development of individual
    municipalities    does        not   conflict     with     the   development      and
    general welfare of neighboring municipalities, the county and
    the State as a whole."              N.J.S.A. 40:55D-2(d).         The MLUL also
    seeks
    [t]o provide sufficient space in appropriate
    locations for a variety of agricultural,
    residential, recreational, commercial and
    industrial uses and open space, both public
    and private, according to their respective
    environmental requirements in order to meet
    the needs of all New Jersey citizens[.]
    [N.J.S.A. 40:55D-2(g).]
    Even prior to the formal adoption of the MLUL, New Jersey
    case law established these fundamental principles.                   As early as
    1949, our Supreme Court recognized that
    the most appropriate use of any particular
    property depends not only on all the
    conditions, physical, economic  and social,
    prevailing within the municipality and its
    18                                A-0007-13T1
    needs, present and reasonably prospective,
    but also on the nature of the entire region
    in which the municipality is located and the
    use to which the land in that region has
    been or may be put most advantageously.
    [Duffcon Concrete Prods., Inc. v. Cresskill,
    
    1 N.J. 509
    , 513 (1949) (emphasis added).]
    In Quinton v. Edison Park Development Corp., 
    59 N.J. 571
    (1971),
    a town granted permission to a company to build at the edge of
    town without a "buffer strip," as required by municipal law,
    reasoning that the buffer strip was designed to protect its own
    residents, not the other town's residents.                   
    Id. at 573-74.
           The
    Court   rejected    this    argument      and    explained     that   New    Jersey
    "cases have long recognized the duty of municipal officials to
    look beyond municipal lines in the discharge of their zoning
    responsibilities."         
    Id. at 578.
          The Court concluded that the
    adjoining town's residents were entitled to the same protection
    via the buffer strip as were the town's own residents.                       
    Id. at 579-80.
      See also Cresskill v. Dumont, 
    15 N.J. 238
    , 247 (1954)
    (rejecting   the     argument       "that        the    responsibility        of     a
    municipality for zoning halts at the municipal boundary lines
    without   regard    to     the   effect     of    its   zoning    ordinances       on
    adjoining and nearby land outside the municipality").                  "Clearly,
    it is a virtual truism of the modern land-use canon that zoning
    ordinances   must   be     regionally     oriented      in    their   provisions,
    19                                   A-0007-13T1
    prohibitions and concerns."              Urban 
    Farms, supra
    , 179 N.J. Super.
    at 213.
    Finally, although not binding on us, we find persuasive
    that    in   Knight      v.    Bodkin,     
    344 N.Y.S.2d 170
    ,    172   (App.     Div.
    1973), a New York court struck down a zoning board's decision,
    in part, because of the effect on surrounding historical and
    scenic areas.         The court reasoned that allowing a manufacturing
    plant     to       operate      in   the       "historic       Hudson     Valley"       was
    impermissible because
    Tallman   Mountain   State   Park,   one  of
    [sixteen] parks in the chain which makes up
    the magnificent Palisades Interstate Park,
    is visited annually by several millions of
    persons and, as heretofore mentioned, is
    opposite the proposed factory and accessible
    from Route 9-W.    A chain factory in this
    area would surely be incongruous and would,
    without   question,    sharply   alter   the
    character of the area.
    [Id. at 176.]
    Thus, the MLUL and case law make clear that a zoning board
    must consider more than just the effect of the decision on its
    own municipality, it must take into account "the entire region."
    Here,    the    Board     is    obliged       to    consider    the     effect    of    the
    proposed       height     variance       on      the   surrounding      municipalities
    affected by the decision.                In accordance with the reasoning of
    Knight,      and    in   furtherance          of   the   zoning       board's    duty    to
    consider more than just the municipality itself or the immediate
    20                                 A-0007-13T1
    vicinity    of   the        structure,       we     conclude        that   the      Board
    insufficiently    considered         the     main      building's     effect      on   the
    general landscape, as this case involves a well-known, heavily
    visited, and treasured area.
    There is ample evidence in the record of the visual impact
    that the proposed structure will have on the Palisades Cliffs
    and Park.    The Director of the PIPC testified at a November 14,
    2011   hearing   that       the    height    of     the    building    would      have    a
    "visual impact on the [P]ark, the scenic corridor, the scenic
    by-way   corridor      of    the    parkway,      as      well   as   it[s]    national
    register listing."          A member of the public testified regarding
    the park's rich history and the commitment by both local and
    national politicians to preserve the cliffs, which led to the
    creation    of   the    PIPC.        Amici       have     also   expressed        concern
    regarding the park's history and the efforts by citizens of both
    New York and New Jersey to maintain the cliffs in the late
    1800s, and the resulting commitment by both New York and New
    Jersey to preserve the cliffs, leading to a compact between the
    two states to maintain the land.                       The testimony, therefore,
    reflected    compelling       reasons       for     the     Board     to   more     fully
    consider the effect that the height variance would have on the
    preservation of this historical landmark in the context of a
    21                                   A-0007-13T1
    clear policy to maintain and preserve the cliffs, and maintain
    them as a scenic resource.
    In     finding       "special          reasons,"        the     Board      did        not
    sufficiently determine that the excessive height of the main
    building      would            be     compatible          with       the      "surrounding
    neighborhood."            It    did   not    adequately          consider     whether       the
    proposed height variance was tailored to the purpose for which
    the height restriction was imposed.                       It omitted any meaningful
    reference to the height of the buildings in the "surrounding
    neighborhood."         Although        the    Board      referenced        buildings       near
    Saint Peter's College, it did not identify the distance from the
    college to the site.                The Board also failed to fully address
    whether     the    main    building,        which       was   four    times    the    height
    limitation imposed by ordinance, would be out of character with
    other buildings in the B-2 zone.
    Rather, the Board found that advancing the purposes of the
    Borough's master plan, by enhancing the landscaping, buffers,
    and environmentally sensitive areas, as well as by encouraging
    high-quality development, constituted sufficient special reasons
    for   the   height     variance.            Such    a   finding,      however,       did    not
    satisfy the enhanced positive requirement of (d)(6), as further
    explained     in    Grasso.           Therefore,        the   Board    misapplied          LG's
    obligation to show "special reasons."
    22                                     A-0007-13T1
    (ii).
    As to the negative criteria, LG must show, pursuant to
    (d)(6), that the variance can be granted "without substantial
    detriment to the public good and will not substantially impair
    the   intent    and   the    purpose     of     the   zone   plan    and    zoning
    ordinance."      That is so because a substantial height variance,
    like here, has the potential to disrupt the municipal zone plan.
    N. Bergen Action Grp. v. N. Bergen Twp. Planning Bd., 
    122 N.J. 567
    , 576 (1991).
    The Board noted that the buffer zone on the southerly end
    of the property, the elimination of surface parking, and the
    increased      greenery     on   the    site,    mitigate    any     substantial
    detriment to the public good as a result of the height of the
    building.      The Board's findings solely relating to the aesthetic
    benefits of the project do not constitute a full consideration
    of LG's application on the zoning scheme.                In other words, the
    Board failed to adequately consider the negative criteria for a
    height variance exceeding four times the permitted height in the
    B-2 zone.
    The Board made no meaningful findings as to the intent and
    purpose of the zone plan and zoning ordinance as required by
    Grasso,   interpreting       N.J.S.A.     40:55D-70(d).        The    Board      was
    obliged to consider the reason for the thirty-five-foot height
    23                                 A-0007-13T1
    limitation and make specific findings as to how the proposed
    variance conforms to the intent and purpose of the zoning plan.
    See Coventry Square, Inc. v. Westwood Zoning Bd. of Adjustment,
    
    138 N.J. 285
    , 299 (1994) (explaining that the second prong of
    the negative criteria requires the Board "be satisfied that the
    grant of the conditional-use variance for the specific project
    at the designated site is reconcilable with the municipality's
    legislative determination that the condition should be imposed
    on all conditional uses in that zoning district").
    Our Supreme Court, in Medici v. BPR Co., 
    107 N.J. 1
    , 22
    (1987), explained that the negative criteria are designed to act
    as a safeguard against improper use of variance power.         To that
    end, mere conclusory recitations of statutory language will be
    vulnerable to attack for failing to meet the negative criteria.
    
    Id. at 23.
      Instead, a board resolution
    should contain sufficient findings, based on
    the proofs submitted, to satisfy a reviewing
    court that the board has analyzed the master
    plan and zoning ordinance, and determined
    that the governing body's prohibition of the
    proposed use is not incompatible with a
    grant of the variance.
    [Ibid.]
    This     inquiry   is   especially   important   here   because   LG
    proposed that the project be constructed hundreds of feet from
    an area abundant with the historic natural resources of the
    24                          A-0007-13T1
    Palisades Cliffs.        The Board's resolution does not reference the
    Palisades Cliffs or Park or the impact that the main building
    would have on them or the zone plan.
    The Board heard testimony reflecting serious concerns about
    the overall effect LG's project and main building would have on
    the sweeping views of the Palisades Cliffs and Park.                     The record
    reflects that the main building could be seen above the tree
    line from the George Washington Bridge, points in the Park, and
    from points in New York.           We conclude that by failing to address
    the historic and scenic importance of the unique location of the
    proposed project, the Board did not properly determine whether
    the    main   building     could   be    constructed       "without    substantial
    detriment to the public good and will not substantially impair
    the    intent   and   the    purpose         of    the   zone   plan   and    zoning
    ordinance."     N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(d)(6).
    IV.
    As to the bulk variance, intervenors contend that the Board
    incorrectly applied the MLUL.            The intervenors argue that LG was
    improperly granted a bulk variance for the number of parking
    spaces    because     LG    failed      to    establish     that   the       physical
    condition of the property prevented them from conforming to the
    bulk    requirements.        According        to   the   intervenors,     the    bulk
    variance sought was the result of LG's choice of design, and did
    25                                  A-0007-13T1
    not advance the purposes of the MLUL sufficiently to outweigh
    the detriment to the surrounding area.
    They   further     argue    that   LG   was    not   entitled   to     a   bulk
    variance for the parking spaces under N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(c)(1)
    because LG created the hardship necessitating the variance.                      We
    conclude   that   LG   was     entitled     to    the    bulk   variance       under
    N.J.S.A.   40:55D-70(c)(2)       because     the    variance     advanced       the
    purposes of the MLUL and did not act as a detriment to the zone
    plan or ordinance.
    Regarding bulk variances, N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(c) states that
    the zoning board has the power:
    (1) Where:     (a) by reason of exceptional
    narrowness,   shallowness   or   shape  of   a
    specific piece of property, or (b) by reason
    of exceptional topographic conditions or
    physical   features   uniquely   affecting   a
    specific piece of property, or (c) by reason
    of   an    extraordinary    and    exceptional
    situation uniquely affecting a specific
    piece of property or the structures lawfully
    existing thereon, the strict application of
    any regulation . . . would result in
    peculiar     and     exceptional     practical
    difficulties to, or exceptional and undue
    hardship   upon,   the   developer   of   such
    property, grant . . . a variance from such
    strict application of such regulation so as
    to relieve such difficulties or hardship;
    (2) where in an application or appeal
    relating to a specific piece of property the
    purposes          of         this          act
    . . . would be advanced by a deviation from
    the zoning ordinance requirements and the
    benefits     of     the    deviation     would
    substantially outweigh any detriment, grant
    26                                A-0007-13T1
    a variance to allow departure from [such]
    regulations . . . .
    A (c)(1) variance requires a showing of hardship related to
    the   physical        characteristics          of   the     land    or     the   existing
    structure.       Lang v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment, 
    160 N.J. 41
    , 52
    (1999).     Hardship personal to the applicant, such as financial
    hardship, is not sufficient; the hardship must arise out of the
    specific condition of the property.                   
    Id. at 53-54.
            The focus of
    the inquiry should be on whether the unique property condition
    relied on by the applicant constitutes the primary reason why
    the proposed structure does not conform to the ordinance.                                
    Id. at 56.
    Where the hardship has been created by the applicant, a
    (c)(1) variance will normally be denied.                     Jock v. Zoning Bd. of
    Adjustment, 
    184 N.J. 562
    , 591 (2005).                      A (c)(1) variance is not
    available       to    provide      relief      from    a    self-created         hardship.
    Chirichello      v.     Zoning      Bd.   of    Adjustment,        
    78 N.J. 544
    ,    553
    (1979).      Here,      the      hardship   was     self-created.           LG   chose    to
    reduce    the    number       of    parking     spaces;     the    condition       of    the
    property did not demand it.                    Therefore, we conclude that the
    Board erred by finding that LG met the requirements of a (c)(1)
    variance.
    A (c)(2) variance contemplates that even absent proof of
    hardship,    a       bulk   or     dimensional      variance       that    advances      the
    27                                    A-0007-13T1
    purposes of the MLUL may be granted if the benefits of the
    deviation outweigh any detriment.            
    Lang, supra
    , 160 N.J. at 57.
    A (c)(2) variance should not be granted when merely the purposes
    of    the   applicant   will    be    advanced;   rather,   the    grant   must
    actually benefit the community in that it represents a better
    zoning alternative for the property.              Kaufmann v. Planning Bd.,
    
    110 N.J. 551
    , 563 (1988).            This "broadened" (c) variance affects
    "a very narrow band of cases in which the standard would fall
    somewhere between the traditional standards of 'hardship,' on
    the one hand, and 'special reasons,' on the other."               
    Id. at 560-
    61.
    To establish a (c)(2) variance, the applicant must show
    that the purposes of the MLUL would be advanced, the variance
    can be granted without substantial detriment to the public good,
    the benefits of the variance will outweigh any detriment, and
    that the variance will not substantially impair the intent and
    purpose of the zoning plan and ordinance.              Wilson v. Brick Twp.
    Zoning Bd. of Adjustment, 
    405 N.J. Super. 189
    , 198 (App. Div.
    2009).      It is the applicant's burden to produce this evidence.
    Trinity Baptist Church v. Louis Scott Holding Co., 219 N.J.
    Super. 490, 500 (App. Div. 1987).
    Here,   reduction   in    the     number   of   parking    spaces   will
    promote a desirable visual environment, N.J.S.A. 40:55D-2(i), by
    28                            A-0007-13T1
    eliminating          surface       asphalt        parking,     and     will      prevent       a
    degradation          of    the      environment,        N.J.S.A.       40:55D-2(j),          by
    eliminating          the        stormwater          runoff     to     the        residential
    neighborhood to the south through the planting of an added tree
    buffer in place of the asphalt parking.                             Thus, replacing the
    surface      parking        with        parking     decks     and    trees       creates     an
    opportunity for improved zoning and planning that will benefit
    the community.            
    Kaufmann, supra
    , 110 N.J. at 563.
    The negative criteria of a (c)(2) variance focus on the
    surrounding properties.                  
    Id. at 565.
             A (c)(2) variance will
    stand     if,    after          adequate     proofs     are    presented,         the    Board
    concludes that the "harms, if any, are substantially outweighed
    by the benefits."               
    Ibid. The Board's grant
    of the bulk variance
    is   based      on    substantial          evidence.          Elimination        of     surface
    parking will improve the site's drainage, aid in creating a
    larger     buffer          to     the      south,     and     provide       an     aesthetic
    improvement.          There is no evidence that the reduction in the
    number of parking spaces will increase the amount of off-site
    parking because many employees will be working off site and
    because there is public transportation available.                            Therefore, LG
    satisfied the negative criteria.
    In light of our conclusions, we need not reach plaintiffs'
    remaining contentions, that the court erred by using an improper
    29                                     A-0007-13T1
    standard of review and the Board provided an incorrect address
    as to where the initial hearing would occur.
    Reversed   in   part   and   affirmed   in   part.   We   remand   for
    further proceedings on the height variance consistent with this
    opinion and applicable law.       If LG's agreement with intervenors
    means that LG will now abandon on remand any further efforts to
    obtain a height variance for the 143.8-foot main building, then
    LG may seek another height variance if it plans to construct a
    different building which exceeds the 35-foot height restriction.
    We do not retain jurisdiction.
    30                            A-0007-13T1