Unincorporated Contra Costa County regulates outdoor lighting through Ordinance Code Title 8 zoning provisions and CEQA review, with stricter standards near Mt. Diablo and in rural residential areas. No comprehensive county-wide dark-sky ordinance, but shielded fixtures are commonly required.
Contra Costa County does not have a single comprehensive dark-sky ordinance, but outdoor lighting in unincorporated areas is regulated through several mechanisms. Ordinance Code Title 8 (Zoning) requires that lighting for commercial, industrial, and multi-family uses be shielded and directed downward to minimize glare and light trespass onto adjacent properties. California Energy Code Title 24, Part 6, regulates outdoor lighting efficiency, maximum lumens per site, and automatic shut-off controls. CEQA review for new development typically requires lighting plans demonstrating dark-sky-friendly design, especially for properties near Mt. Diablo State Park, Morgan Territory, Los Vaqueros Watershed, or other sensitive open-space areas. Residential lighting is less strictly regulated but must not create a nuisance for neighbors (Ord. Code standards on nuisance lighting). Mt. Diablo State Park and the Lindsay Wildlife Experience have advocated for reduced light pollution in surrounding unincorporated communities (Clayton, Morgan Territory, Blackhawk). Full cutoff (full-shielded) fixtures that emit no direct light above the horizontal plane are the industry best practice and are increasingly required in discretionary project approvals. Unshielded floodlights that illuminate neighboring parcels can be cited as a zoning or nuisance violation. New agricultural lighting (greenhouses) may have specific shielding and curfew requirements.
Contact your local code enforcement office for specific penalty information.
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Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Contra Costa County.
See how other cities in Contra Costa County handle dark sky rules.
See how El Cerrito's dark sky rules rules stack up against other locations.
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