Fairfax County encourages green building through its Green Building Policy for county-funded projects targeting LEED Silver, but imposes no mandatory green-code requirements on private development beyond the Virginia USBC energy provisions.
Fairfax County's Green Building Policy applies to new and substantially renovated county-funded buildings, requiring LEED Silver certification or equivalent for projects over 10,000 square feet. Private development is subject to the Virginia Uniform Statewide Building Code energy chapter, which references the International Energy Conservation Code, but the county cannot impose stricter green-code mandates due to Virginia Dillon's Rule. The county encourages voluntary participation through expedited permit review for LEED-registered projects and incentives for solar, EV charging, and stormwater best practices. The Climate Adaptation and Resilience Plan guides voluntary developer engagement.
No private penalty for non-green construction; county-funded projects failing LEED targets face contract remediation or design-team penalties.
Fairfax County, VA
Solar photovoltaic systems in Fairfax County require building and electrical permits under the Virginia Uniform Statewide Building Code, obtained through Lan...
Fairfax County, VA
Fairfax County enforces the Virginia Uniform Statewide Building Code (USBC) through Land Development Services (LDS). Building permits are required for most c...
See how Fairfax County's green building code rules stack up against other locations.
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