Baton Rouge has no specific City-Parish ordinance regulating residential inflatable holiday displays. Restrictions come from HOA and subdivision covenants under La. Civ. Code arts. 775-783, the City-Parish noise ordinance for blower and music sound, Historic Preservation Commission review in local historic districts for permanent installations, and practical tropical-weather considerations during Atlantic hurricane season.
There is no provision in the East Baton Rouge Code of Ordinances specifically addressing residential inflatable holiday displays. Size, motor noise, lighting hours, and time-of-year limits are not part of the City-Parish code. Practical limits: (1) Electrical β inflatable blowers must be plugged into GFCI-protected outdoor outlets under the NEC as adopted by the Louisiana State Uniform Construction Code; (2) Noise β the blower motor and any synchronized music must respect the City-Parish noise ordinance with its 10 PM residential nighttime cutoff; modern blowers typically operate at 45-55 dB(A) at 3 feet and usually fall below ambient limits at the property line, but persistent overnight motor noise can draw complaints; (3) Property maintenance β damaged or persistently deflated inflatables left in disrepair could draw a nuisance citation under City-Parish Code; (4) HOA/Condo covenants β La. Civ. Code arts. 775-783 (building restrictions) allow associations to regulate exterior decorations, and many Baton Rouge subdivisions (Country Club of Louisiana, University Club, Highland Plantation, Santa Maria) have explicit rules. Historic district overlay (Beauregard Town, Spanish Town, Roseland Terrace-Drehr Place, Garden District): temporary inflatables are not typically subject to HPC review; permanent or large-scale displays visible from public ways may need review. Tropical-weather caution: Baton Rouge is north of the Gulf evacuation contraflow zone but still receives tropical storm and hurricane-force winds (Hurricane Gustav 2008 was a Cat 2 at landfall and significantly damaged Baton Rouge). Inflatables should be deflated and stored during tropical storm and hurricane watches/warnings. Commercial inflatables for ticketed gatherings may require a special event permit through the City-Parish.
City: rare. Damaged or abandoned inflatables can draw a nuisance citation. Excessive blower or audio noise after 10 PM: noise citation under City-Parish ordinance. Unsecured inflatables during hurricane warnings: possible nuisance enforcement if they become projectiles or hazards. HOA: private fines per declaration under La. Civ. Code arts. 775-783, including injunctive relief.
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