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πŸ—ΊοΈ Zoning Overlays & Bonuses/Coastal Zone Permits

Long Beach vs Norwalk

How do coastal zone permits rules compare between Long Beach, CA and Norwalk, CA?

Long Beach and Norwalk have similar restriction levels.

Long Beach, CA

Los Angeles County

Heavy Restrictions

Most development in Long Beach's Coastal Zone, including the Peninsula, Belmont Shore, Naples, Alamitos Bay, and downtown shoreline, requires a Coastal Development Permit under Title 17 of the Municipal Code, implementing the California Coastal Act through the Local Coastal Program.

View full Long Beach rules β†’

Norwalk, CA

Los Angeles County

Heavy Restrictions

Unincorporated coastal areas including Marina del Rey and Topanga lie within the California Coastal Zone, requiring Coastal Development Permits under LACO Title 22.46 and concurrent California Coastal Commission review for projects affecting public access, views, or sensitive habitat.

View full Norwalk rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactLong BeachNorwalk
AuthorityLBMC Title 17 LCP-
TriggersMost coastal-zone development-
AppealsCoastal Commission for some areas-
ProtectedWetlands access view corridors-
Code section-LACO Title 22.46
Covered areas-Marina del Rey, Topanga, others
Concurrent agency-California Coastal Commission
Appeal window-10 working days to CCC
Max penalty-$15,000 per day per violation

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Long Beach FAQ

Does a kitchen remodel need a CDP?

Interior remodels with no expansion typically qualify for exemption, but additions, exterior changes, or demolitions in the Coastal Zone usually require a permit.

Who decides Naples and Peninsula projects?

Long Beach issues most CDPs locally. Certain shoreline-adjacent or appealable projects can be appealed to the California Coastal Commission.

Norwalk FAQ

Do I need a CDP to repaint or replace a roof?

Routine maintenance and repair generally qualifies for an exemption, but additions, intensity changes, fences over three feet, or vegetation removal usually require either a CDP or a written exemption letter.

Who decides my project - the county or the Coastal Commission?

If your parcel is in a certified LCP area, the county decides with appeal rights to the Commission. In deferred-certification areas, the Coastal Commission has direct or concurrent jurisdiction.

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