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🌍 Environmental Rules/Grading & Drainage

Grading & Drainage: Cambridge vs Wakefield

How do grading & drainage rules compare between Cambridge, MA and Wakefield, MA?

Wakefield has fewer restrictions than Cambridge.

Cambridge, MA

Middlesex County

Heavy Restrictions

Cambridge requires grading and drainage plans with building permits to ensure runoff is managed on-site and does not adversely affect neighbors or the municipal storm drain system.

View full Cambridge rules β†’

Wakefield, MA

Middlesex County

Some Restrictions

Grading work must meet local stormwater bylaws, the MA Wetlands Protection Act, and 780 CMR. Drainage cannot discharge onto neighbors or the public way.

View full Wakefield rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactCambridgeWakefield
Permit reviewISD and DPW-
RunoffManaged on-site-
Neighbor harmProhibited-
Sump pump to sewerProhibited-
DownspoutsTo infiltration preferred-
Slope away-6 in over 10 ft
No runoff to abutters-Common rule
Wetland buffer-100 ft
Code-780 CMR
Septic overlap-310 CMR 15.00

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Cambridge FAQ

Can I regrade so water flows to my neighbor?

No, creating adverse drainage onto neighboring property violates city rules and exposes you to civil liability.

Where should my sump pump discharge?

To a lawn, drywell, or approved storm system; never to the sanitary sewer in Cambridge.

Wakefield FAQ

Can I raise my yard above my neighbor?

Only if drainage does not discharge onto their property. Municipal bylaws and nuisance law limit regrading.

Do I need an engineer?

Larger projects or those near wetlands typically require a stamped drainage design.

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