Allegheny County does not issue retaining wall permits β building authority rests with each of the 130 municipalities under the Pennsylvania Uniform Construction Code (Act 45 of 1999, 35 P.S. 7210.101). UCC at 34 Pa. Code Section 403.62 exempts retaining walls 4 feet or less in height (measured from the lowest grade to the top of the wall) unless the wall supports a surcharge or impounds Class I, II, or III-A liquids. Walls over 4 feet, walls supporting a driveway, building, or steep slope, and any earth disturbance over 5,000 sq ft also trigger Allegheny County Conservation District (ACCD) review under 25 Pa. Code Chapter 102.
Allegheny County itself does not issue building permits for retaining walls. The Pennsylvania Uniform Construction Code (Act 45 of 1999, codified at 35 P.S. 7210.101) and its enabling regulations at 34 Pa. Code Chapter 403 apply countywide and adopt the International Residential Code and International Building Code. Section 403.62(a)(13) exempts a retaining wall that is not over 4 feet in height measured from the lowest level of grade to the top of the wall, unless the wall is supporting a surcharge or impounding Class I, II, or III-A liquids. A surcharge means any extra load behind the wall β a driveway, patio, building, fence, swimming pool, or steep slope above the wall β and a wall under 4 feet with a surcharge usually still requires a permit. The City of Pittsburgh codifies the same threshold in its PLI Work Not Requiring a Permit list and in Title 10 Building Code; walls over 4 feet, walls with surcharges, and any wall holding back fill from a structure typically require a residential building permit, plans stamped by a Pennsylvania-licensed professional engineer, and inspection. Each suburban municipality (Mt. Lebanon, Bethel Park, Ross Township, Penn Hills, Plum, Monroeville, McKeesport, etc.) administers UCC permits through its own building department or a third-party agency. Separately, Allegheny County Conservation District (ACCD) administers Pennsylvania's Erosion and Sediment Pollution Control Program under 25 Pa. Code Chapter 102 by delegation from PA DEP. A written E&S Plan is required for any earth disturbance of 5,000 square feet or more, and an NPDES Construction Stormwater Permit is required at 1 acre or more. ACCD review can be triggered by retaining walls cut into hillsides β a common condition in the Mon Valley and the Pittsburgh hills. Slope protection provisions in some municipal SALDOs allow an engineered retaining wall to satisfy slope stability requirements where slopes exceed 25 percent. Contact ACCD at 412-241-7645.
Building a retaining wall over 4 feet, or under 4 feet with a surcharge, without a municipal UCC permit is a summary offense under 35 P.S. 7210.903 carrying fines up to $1,000 per violation per day plus court costs and stop-work orders. Earth disturbance of 5,000 sq ft or more without an approved E&S Plan can trigger ACCD enforcement and PA DEP penalties under 25 Pa. Code Chapter 102, including civil penalties up to $10,000 per day under the PA Clean Streams Law (35 P.S. 691.605). Pittsburgh PLI may red-tag noncompliant walls.
McKeesport, PA
Persistent dog barking enforceable as public nuisance under McKeesport code and PA Dog Law 3 P.S. 459. Complaints handled by police and ACHD animal services.
McKeesport, PA
Industrial and commercial noise sources subject to Allegheny County Health Department Article XXI air quality and noise provisions plus McKeesport zoning per...
McKeesport, PA
Construction noise generally restricted to daytime hours (typically 7 AM to 8 PM weekdays) under McKeesport nuisance provisions. Emergency utility and public...
McKeesport, PA
Overnight parking is permitted on most McKeesport residential streets. Snow emergency routes and posted zones prohibit overnight parking when declared or sig...
McKeesport, PA
McKeesport has no citywide EV charging mandate. Residential Level 1 and Level 2 chargers require an electrical permit under the PA UCC. Public chargers exist...
McKeesport, PA
New driveways and curb cuts require a permit from McKeesport Public Works. Driveways must not drain onto public sidewalks and must use approved apron materials.
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