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πŸ”§ Building Safety/Green Building Code

Lancaster vs Los Angeles

How do green building code rules compare between Lancaster, CA and Los Angeles, CA?

Lancaster and Los Angeles have similar restriction levels.

Lancaster, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

LA County Code Title 31 adopts the California Green Building Standards Code (CALGreen, Title 24 Part 11) with local amendments. Mandatory measures cover construction-waste diversion, water-efficient fixtures, EV-ready parking, and indoor air quality for new buildings.

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Los Angeles, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

Los Angeles enforces California Title 24 Part 11 (CALGreen) plus the LA Reach Code in LAMC Chapter 99 (Ord. 187714), requiring all-electric construction, EV charging readiness, water-efficient fixtures, and embodied-carbon disclosure for most new buildings.

View full Los Angeles rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactLancasterLos Angeles
Code sectionLA County Title 31 (CALGreen)-
Waste diversion65% construction debrisMinimum 65 percent
Water reduction20% below baseline-
EV-readyOne space single-family-
ReviewerLACoDPW Building & Safety-
Reach code chapter-LAMC Chapter 99
Effective date-April 1, 2023
Gas appliances-Generally prohibited indoors
EV readiness-Required per parking tier

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Lancaster FAQ

Does CALGreen apply to small remodels?

Most mandatory measures apply only to new construction and additions over 1,000 sq ft. Minor kitchen and bath remodels need only the low-flow fixture replacement when fixtures are changed under CALGreen 4.303.

Has LA County adopted an electrification reach code?

Several unincorporated areas adopted reach codes requiring all-electric new construction or solar-ready provisions beyond CALGreen. Check Title 31 amendments and LACoDPW reach-code guidance for the specific community before designing gas appliances.

Los Angeles FAQ

Can I install a gas range in a new house?

No. The LA all-electric ordinance bans new natural-gas plumbing in residential and most commercial occupancies; induction cooktops and heat-pump appliances are required substitutes.

Does the rule cover renovations?

It applies to new buildings and additions creating a new dwelling unit. Like-for-like replacements and renovations under existing permits remain on prior code.

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