Hillsborough County's Tampa Bay shoreline is estuarine, so the Florida Coastal Construction Control Line (CCCL) program under F.S. 161.053 does NOT apply countywide (only Gulf-fronting sandy-beach counties have CCCLs). Instead, coastal development in unincorporated Hillsborough is governed by Land Development Code Part 3.04.00 (Coastal High Hazard Area), the Construction Code in County Code Chapter 8, the 2023 Florida Building Code, ASCE 24, and FEMA NFIP standards, with the most restrictive prevailing. Special needs facilities (hospitals, nursing homes, ALFs) are prohibited in the CHHA under Future Land Use Policy 6.01.8, and structures in V Zones, Coastal A Zones, and SFHAs require elevation certificates and may require a sealed geotechnical report.
Hillsborough County is not among the 25 Florida counties with a state-designated Coastal Construction Control Line under F.S. 161.053; the program applies only where Gulf or Atlantic sandy beaches face open-ocean storm wave fields, and Hillsborough's shoreline is interior Tampa Bay. Coastal development is therefore regulated locally rather than by FDEP CCCL permits. Land Development Code Part 3.04.00 sets the Coastal High Hazard Area (CHHA) framework, with the CHHA defined as the area below the Category 1 SLOSH storm surge line. Future Land Use Policy 6.01.8 (Plan Hillsborough Comprehensive Plan) prohibits new hospitals, nursing homes, adult congregate living facilities, assisted living facilities, skilled nursing facilities, and long-term acute care facilities inside the CHHA, with a narrow exemption for freestanding emergency rooms. Construction in the Special Flood Hazard Area (V Zones, Coastal A Zones, AE Zones) must comply with the Hillsborough County Construction Code (County Code Chapter 8), the Land Development Code, ASCE 24 (Flood Resistant Design and Construction), the 2023 Florida Building Code, and the National Flood Insurance Program; the most restrictive standard applies. Three elevation certificates are required: at construction-drawing submittal, after foundation, and before certificate of occupancy (signed and sealed site plans or foundation surveys may substitute). V Zones, Coastal A Zones, and parcels with muck or organic soils, erosion, or scour issues may trigger a geotechnical report by a Florida Registered Professional Engineer. Below-elevation enclosed areas are limited to vehicle parking, building access, or storage, must use flood-resistant materials, and must be equipped with engineered flood vents to automatically equalize hydrostatic pressure; enclosures cannot be finished into separate, temperature-controlled rooms when 6+ feet above grade. Construction in regulatory floodways requires a no-rise impact analysis, and manufactured homes are generally prohibited in floodways. Commercial buildings may use dry floodproofing with a Floodproofing Certificate from a registered Florida engineer or architect. The 2023 FBC ultimate design wind speed (Vult) for Hillsborough is approximately 140 mph in much of the county (Wind-Borne Debris Region threshold), driving impact-rated opening protection requirements under FBC R301.2.1.2. Tampa, Plant City, and Temple Terrace administer their own coastal/flood codes within their incorporated boundaries.
Construction in the SFHA without required elevation certificates, flood vents, or compliant materials is enforced by Hillsborough County Building Services through stop-work orders, denial of certificate of occupancy, and Code Enforcement Special Magistrate proceedings under F.S. Ch. 162, with daily fines up to $250 per day for first violations and $500 per day for repeat violations. Locating a prohibited special needs facility in the CHHA is a Comprehensive Plan and zoning violation that triggers permit denial, certificate revocation, and required relocation. Federal NFIP non-compliance can also jeopardize the property owner's flood insurance and the county's Community Rating System discount.
Temple Terrace, FL
Commercial noise along Fowler Avenue and 56th Street commercial corridors must stay within zoning compatibility standards. HVAC, loading docks, and dumpster ...
Temple Terrace, FL
Construction activity in Temple Terrace is generally restricted to 7 AM to 7 PM Monday through Saturday, with Sunday and legal holidays prohibited for powere...
Temple Terrace, FL
Temple Terrace enforces nighttime quiet hours from 10 PM to 7 AM under Chapter 10 of the City Code. Unreasonable noise audible at the property line during th...
Temple Terrace, FL
Temple Terrace limits residential fences to 6 feet in rear and side yards and 4 feet in front yards. Corner lots have a 3-foot visibility triangle rule at in...
Temple Terrace, FL
Corner lots in Temple Terrace must maintain a clear sight triangle at intersections. No fence, wall, hedge, or structure over 3 feet tall is permitted within...
Temple Terrace, FL
No breed-specific restrictions are allowed in Temple Terrace. FL 767.14 preempts breed bans statewide, and Miami-Dades grandfathered pit bull ban was repeale...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Hillsborough County.
See how Temple Terrace's coastal development rules stack up against other locations.
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