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🌍 Environmental Rules/Grading & Drainage

Lakewood vs Los Angeles

How do grading & drainage rules compare between Lakewood, CA and Los Angeles, CA?

Lakewood and Los Angeles have similar restriction levels.

Lakewood, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

Lakewood requires grading permits for significant earth-moving work. Drainage must not redirect water onto neighboring properties. Proper grading prevents erosion and flooding.

View full Lakewood rules β†’

Los Angeles, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

Grading permits are required from LADBS for earthwork exceeding certain thresholds. The city conditions grading permits on stormwater pollution control compliance per LAMC 91.106.4.1. Hillside areas have enhanced grading standards under the Baseline Hillside Ordinance. Drainage must not direct water onto neighboring properties. A geotechnical report is typically required for hillside grading.

View full Los Angeles rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactLakewoodLos Angeles
Permit Threshold50 to 100 cubic yards-
Neighbor DrainageCannot redirect water-
Retaining WallsPermit if over 4 feet-
TopicGrading Drainage-
Permit-LADBS grading permit required
Stormwater-BMP compliance required (LAMC 91.106.4.1)
Hillside-Enhanced standards under BHO
Drainage-Must not direct water to neighbors
Geotech Report-Typically required for hillside

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Lakewood FAQ

Do I need a grading permit?

Generally required for earth-moving over 50 to 100 cubic yards or changes to existing drainage patterns. Small landscaping projects are usually exempt.

My neighbor changed their grading and water flows onto my property. What can I do?

Contact Lakewood code enforcement. Redirecting drainage onto neighboring properties violates most municipal codes. The neighbor may be required to restore proper drainage.

Los Angeles FAQ

Do I need a grading permit?

Generally required for earth-moving over 50 to 100 cubic yards or changes to existing drainage patterns. Small landscaping projects are usually exempt.

My neighbor changed their grading and water flows onto my property. What can I do?

Contact Los Angeles code enforcement. Redirecting drainage onto neighboring properties violates most municipal codes. The neighbor may be required to restore proper drainage.

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