Outdoor kitchens in McKinney require separate trade permits from Building Inspections: building permit for structural elements, mechanical permit for gas lines, plumbing permit for water/sinks, and electrical permit for outdoor outlets. McKinney enforces the International Codes with Texas amendments. Zoning setbacks apply to permanent structures, and HPO properties require a Certificate of Appropriateness.
McKinney administers the building, mechanical, plumbing, and electrical codes (current International Codes with Texas amendments) through Building Inspections. Built-in outdoor kitchens require: (1) Building permit for any structural slab over threshold size, masonry counter walls, foundation, or roofed pergola/pavilion under the IRC/IBC; (2) Mechanical permit for any new natural-gas line extension to a built-in grill under the International Fuel Gas Code (IFGC), including pressure test and final inspection β Atmos Energy typically supplies natural gas in McKinney; (3) Plumbing permit for outdoor sinks, ice-maker lines, or hose bibbs under the IPC, including backflow prevention; (4) Electrical permit for any new outdoor circuits, GFCI-protected outlets, lighting, or refrigerator/freezer circuits under the NEC β outdoor outlets must be in 'wet location' rated enclosures with weatherproof in-use covers. The McKinney Zoning Ordinance requires permanent accessory structures to comply with side and rear yard setback requirements for the relevant zoning district β typically 5-10 ft side and 10-20 ft rear in RS districts. Roofed pavilion structures count toward lot-coverage and impervious-surface limits. Tornado-prone wind loading: ASCE 7 Risk Category II with appropriate wind-uplift connections is required for roofed structures. A licensed plumber must extend any new gas line under Texas Occupations Code Ch. 1301 and a licensed electrician must do new circuit work under Texas Occupations Code Ch. 1305. Properties in the Historic Preservation Overlay require a Certificate of Appropriateness from the Historic Preservation Advisory Board in addition to the standard trade permits.
Unpermitted gas/electrical/plumbing work: Building Inspections stop-work order, double permit fees on after-the-fact applications, mandatory exposure of concealed work. Unpermitted gas lines: Atmos Energy may disconnect service. Fines up to $2,000 per day for building code violations under Texas LGC Β§54.001. HPO violations may require restoration to prior condition.
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