Arapahoe County is landlocked—no coastal rules apply. However, Cherry Creek Reservoir, Cherry Creek, Plum Creek, Sand Creek, and the Highline Canal receive riparian and floodplain protections. Buffer setbacks 50-100 ft from waterways. FEMA floodplain rules and Cherry Creek Watershed Regulation 72 govern development near water.
Colorado is a landlocked state with no coastal development regulations, but Arapahoe County applies riparian and waterway protections analogous to coastal rules. Significant water features include Cherry Creek Reservoir (4-square-mile reservoir and state park), Cherry Creek itself (running north-south through the county to the South Platte), Plum Creek, Sand Creek, Toll Gate Creek, and the historic Highline Canal (71-mile agricultural canal now used recreationally). Arapahoe County Land Development Code §4-5 and city zoning codes typically require 50-100 foot riparian buffer setbacks from designated waterways measured from the ordinary high water mark. Wetland fill or alteration requires a Section 404 permit from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers under the Clean Water Act. Floodplain development within FEMA-designated Special Flood Hazard Areas (100-year floodplain, Zone A/AE) requires elevation certificates and compliance with the community's floodplain ordinance—Arapahoe County participates in NFIP. The Cherry Creek Reservoir Watershed Protection Zone (5 CCR 1002-72) imposes strict phosphorus controls on development throughout the 225-square-mile watershed. Streambank stabilization requires permits. Aurora Reservoir and Quincy Reservoir have additional city-specific protections.
Building in riparian buffer without permit: stop-work and fines $500 to $5,000 under county code. Wetland fill violations: federal Clean Water Act penalties up to $64,618 per day per 33 U.S.C. §1319. Cherry Creek watershed violations: state penalties under 5 CCR 1002-72.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Littleton, CO
Littleton regulates construction noise through Title 7, Chapter 3 and Colorado state law CRS Section 25-12-103. Construction projects are subject to industri...
Littleton, CO
Littleton City Code Title 7, Chapter 3 (Noise Control, Sections 7-3-1 through 7-3-13) regulates sound levels citywide. Residential district limits are 55 dB ...
Littleton, CO
Littleton regulates barking dogs under Title 6, Chapter 2 (Dogs and Cats) and the general noise ordinance (Title 7, Ch. 3). Persistent barking that disturbs ...
Littleton, CO
Littleton's ULUC and building code regulate driveway construction and use. Vehicles may park on improved (paved) driveways. Colorado state law prohibits park...
Littleton, CO
Littleton regulates RV and boat storage through its ULUC (Title 10) and parking ordinances. Recreational vehicles parked on public streets are subject to the...
Littleton, CO
Littleton's ULUC (Title 10) restricts commercial vehicle parking in residential areas. Large commercial vehicles, heavy equipment, and vehicles over specifie...
See how Littleton's coastal development rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.