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| Fall Creek
Place Homeowners' Association Covenants & Guidelines |
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Fall Creek Place Homeowners Association members are governed by Covenants and
Design Guidelines. Both are legally-binding documents. The
Association Covenants stipulate the purposes, membership and related logistics
of operating the HOA as well as govern the ongoing performance of member
property (property maintenance, use, renting, parking, trash, etc.).
The Design Guidelines govern more specific architectural characteristics of
homes and yards. All member homes must be in compliance with both the
Covenants and the Design Guidelines.
All Homeowners' Associations have covenants, and many have related design
guidelines. Both are intended to preserve and promote property values and
protect homeowner investments by ensuring everyone that certain things cannot be
done that could have a negative impact on property values. The design
guidelines in Fall Creek Place were crafted to promote a specific character and
atmosphere reminiscent of many older neighborhoods.
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FCP Covenants & Guidelines Downloads
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Covenants
Download the Fall Creek Place HOA Articles of Incorporation & By-laws,
Covenants, and Construction Standards.
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Design Guidelines
Download the latest version of the Fall Creek Place Design Guidelines and
the Design Review Form.
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| Fall Creek Place
Covenants Primer |
The information provided below is a summary of what is included in the HOA
covenants. It is in no way a legal document nor does it cover every
component of the covenants. Also note that the Association has other
governing documents, including by-laws and design guidelines. All of these
items are available for download in their entirety in our
downloads section.
Article 2: Restrictions, Covenants, and RegulationsSection 1:
Restrictions on Use
- All lots are to be used for exclusively residential purposes. Homes are
not to exceed 2.5 stories.
- Parking is only permitted in the garage, parking pad, or driveway. No
RVs, boats, or nonfunctioning vehicles are to be parked on the lot or in the
street.
- Temporary residences, such as trailers and tents, are not permitted.
- All trash must be placed in containers that cannot be stored in open
public view. Trash is not allowed to accumulate.
- Households cannot be a nuisance, annoyance, or inconvenience to their
neighbors. This includes explicitly noise from instruments, radios,
televisions, amplifiers, machines and loud people as well as exterior
lighting directed beyond a property line.
- All construction activity must adhere to Fall Creek Place Builder’s
Guide and to the design guidelines.
- Partially completed homes are not permitted to be lived in.
- For five years from the date of the issuance of the Certificate of
Completion (when the house was finished), all property must remain owner
occupied. Rental, leasing or subleasing during this time is prohibited. Sale
of the property during this time is also prohibited without express written
consent.
- Home construction sites must be kept reasonably clean of unnecessary
trash, scrap materials and equipment.
- Farm animals are not permitted.
- No private well or septic system is permitted.
- Only alley access is permitted.
- Other restrictions may be applicable to some property, such as
easements.
- These covenants run with the land and are binding on all owners for a
period of 20 years. After this time, ten year automatic extensions continue
infinitely unless a majority of owners at the time vote to terminate them.
Section 2: Restrictions on the Development of the Lot
- Drainage, utility and sewer easements have been recorded for the
Department of Public Works
- A Design Review Committee, consisting or 3 or more persons, must be
provided for in the Association by-laws. Buildings, fences, walls, fuel
storage tanks, antennae, satellite dishes, in-ground or above-ground pools,
and other structures must be approved by the DRC. Removal of trees and
vegetation must also be approved. Galvanized fences are not permitted.
Plantings or fences that block site lines at street or alley intersections
are not permitted.
- A home must have a minimum finished square footage of 900sf, exluding
basements, open porches and garages. The footprint of the house must be at
least 600sf. Multi-level homes have a minimum finished square footage of
1,100 sf.
- All homes shall be built new of new materials, unless an existing home
is rehabilitated (subject to design guidelines and DRC approval).
- The owner must maintain the property, including mowing the yard,
removing trash, removing dead trees, keeping drainage areas clear,
maintaining the exterior of the home and garage, landscaping the lot within
60 days of the completion of a home, and keeping the lot, sidewalk and
street clean during construction.
- If the owner of a home fails to maintain the property, the HOA has the
right, but not the obligation, to repair, mow, clean or perform other
maintenance to bring the property in compliance with these covenants. The
cost and any attorney’s fees will be billed to the owner and a lien on the
property may be applied.
Section 3: Sanitary Waste
- No outdoor or portable toilets are permitted except during construction.
- All sewer lines to a home must be constructed to meet standards of the
City of Indianapolis.
Section 4: General Prohibitions
- No burning of trash is permitted, and trash cannot accumulate on a lot.
- Fuel storage tanks are not permitted. All trash receptacles must not be
visible from any street except on collection day.
- Utilities shall be installed underground to the greatest extent
possible.
- Only typical and usual households pets are permitted and shall be kept
in the lot so as not to pose a danger to neighbors. No poultry or farm
animals are permitted.
- Play structures, swing sets, pools, hot tubs and like equipment are only
permitted in the rear yard and cannot be visible from the street.
Aritcle 3: FCPHOA
Section 1: Fall Creek Place Homeowner’s Association, Inc. is a not-for-profit
corporation. Every property owner must be a member of the HOA and is subject to
all covenants and restrictions including the payment of a monthly or annual fee.
Section 2: There are two classes of voting membership. The first are the
homeowners, who are entitled to a single vote per property, regardless of the
number of owners of that property. The second class of membership has expired,
but related to votes the City of Indianapolis had until the neighborhood was
substantially complete.
Section 3: The Board of Directors manage the association and are elected by the
members.
Section 4: Any contract for a professional management company cannot exceed
three years, and can be terminated by either side without any fee with a 90 day
written notice.
Section 5: The Association is responsible for owning and maintaining designated
common areas, carry casualty insurance for the common areas and general
liability insurance, and contracting for other services it deems necessary.
Section 6: Assessments
- All owners agree to pay monthly or annual assessments as well as any
special assessments for capital improvements or operating deficits. These
assessments and any attorney’s fees and interest charged represent a
continuing lien on the property as well as a personal obligation of the
property owner who owned the property when they were charged.
- Asessments shall be used exclusively to promote the health, safety and
welfare of property owners and for the improvement and maintenance of common
areas, sidewalks, and other owned property.
- A special assessment may be made for the construction, reconstruction or
repair of any capital improvement that the HOA is required to maintain. A
special assessment must have the approval of a majority of voters who vote
in person or by proxy at a special meeting.
- Written notice for a special meeting to vote on a special assessment
must be given to homeowners at least 30 days but no more than 60 days prior
to the meeting. At least half of eligible voters must be present. If less
than this is present, a new meeting must be called within 60 days, but only
25% of eligible voters need be present at this second meeting.
- The Board of Directors must set dues at least 30 days before the end of
the calendar year. Written notice of special assessments and other
assessment notices deemed necessary, must be sent to every homeowner.
- Any charges levied by the HOA on a property, along with interest and
other charges, are a lien on the property and a personal obligation of the
property owner who owned the property when they were charged until they are
paid in full. An interest rate of 12% will be charged for overdue fees. The
Board of Directors can take legal action, including foreclosure, to collect
overdue charges. The homeowner will incur all legal expenses required for
the HOA to take action.
- The assessments create a lien on the property that is subordinate to the
lien of any first mortgage.
- The Board of Directors can suspend the voting rights of, and services
provided to, any homeowner that fails to pay any charges or fines or who
does not come into compliance with covenants, articles of incorporation,
by-laws or regulations of the association after they have been told they are
in violation of such documents.
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