Kings County's Development Code does not ban specific fence materials. Instead it classifies fences by openness - Open (at least 50% see-through), Solid (51% or more closed) and Screened (90% or more closed) - and applies those categories to front-yard and visibility rules. Where screening is required, a solid fence, masonry wall or compact plant growth is specified.
Unincorporated Kings County regulates fences by how transparent they are rather than by a list of approved or prohibited materials. Article 25 of the Development Code defines an Open Fence as a structural barrier 'so constructed that not less than 50 percent of the vertical surface is open to permit the transmission of light, air and vision,' a Solid Fence as one where '51% or more of the vertical surface is closed,' and a Screened Fence as one where '90% or more of the vertical surface is closed' (a slatted chain-link or vine-covered fence can qualify as screened). These categories drive the height and placement rules: an open fence up to seven feet may stand in a front yard where a solid seven-foot fence would have to be set back ten feet, because the open fence preserves visibility. Where the Code requires screening of outdoor storage next to a residential zone, it specifies 'a solid fence or masonry wall or compact growth of natural plant materials not less than six feet in height.' Beyond these openness and screening rules, the Development Code does not prohibit common fence materials such as wood, chain link, vinyl, masonry or wrought iron. Any fence over seven feet, however, becomes a structure and must meet California Building Code structural standards through the permit process.
Material is rarely the issue; problems arise when a fence's openness or height does not fit its location - for example, a solid (less than 50% open) fence placed in a front yard that should have an open fence, or required screening that does not reach the six-foot solid standard. The Zoning Administrator may require the fence to be modified to meet the open, solid or screened standard for its location.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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Kings County implements California's SB 1383 organic-waste law through Code Chapter 13. Most homes and businesses must use the three-container (blue/green/gr...
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Artificial turf is not banned in unincorporated Kings County, and there is no County synthetic-lawn ordinance. Small ground-level installs generally need no ...
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Kings County does not mandate native plants and does not prohibit removing or replacing them on private land. For new permitted development, low-water and cl...
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Rainwater harvesting is legal in California and not prohibited by Kings County. Simple rain barrels and small landscape-irrigation catchment need no County p...
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Day-to-day outdoor watering limits in unincorporated Kings County are driven mainly by California state rules and your local water provider, not a County lan...
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Unincorporated Kings County enforces a weed-abatement ordinance (Code Ch. 10, Art. II). It is unlawful to accumulate dry grass, weeds, brush, and other flamm...
See how Kings County's material restrictions rules stack up against other locations.
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