Johns Creek combines a local zoning enclosure mandate (Sec. 19.3.12) with the 2024 International Swimming Pool and Spa Code, Georgia Amendments. Pools must be fully enclosed, gates self-latching and locked when unattended, and a 5-foot unclimbable buffer maintained. Construction must comply with Fulton County Health Department regulations.
Private pool safety in Johns Creek is governed by two layers. The Zoning Ordinance, Sec. 19.3.12.B, requires every pool to be completely surrounded by a fence, wall, or building at least 5 feet high "to prevent access to the pool by unsupervised children and/or animals," with self-closing, positive-latching gates, an entrance that is locked when the pool is not in use, and a 5-foot unclimbable separation between the enclosure and surrounding objects or structures. The enclosure must exist before the pool is completed. At the building-permit stage, the city enforces the 2024 ISPSC with Georgia Amendments; under the Georgia ISPSC, pedestrian access gates must open outward away from the pool, be self-closing, and have a self-latching device, and outdoor pools and spas must be surrounded by a complying barrier. The ISPSC also addresses related life-safety features such as suction-entrapment-resistant drains. Pool materials and construction must additionally comply with regulations administered by the Fulton County Health Department. Johns Creek does not publish its own swimmer-conduct rules for private backyard pools; the enforceable safety requirements are the enclosure, gate, locking, and barrier standards above. Drowning-prevention layers like alarms and covers are encouraged and may be required by the ISPSC depending on barrier configuration.
Failure to maintain a locked, compliant enclosure and self-latching gates is a zoning/code violation subject to correction notices; entrapment-protection and barrier deficiencies found at inspection prevent final approval.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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No Johns Creek ordinance prohibiting backyard composting was found, and Georgia exempts backyard composting from state solid-waste regulation. Compost piles ...
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No Johns Creek ordinance was found that specifically prohibits or regulates artificial turf in residential yards. Installations are common in the city. Any p...
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Johns Creek does not mandate native plants for private yards, and there is no rule forcing homeowners to replace lawns with natives. The city's tree guidelin...
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Johns Creek has no ordinance restricting rainwater collection, and Georgia broadly permits it. Captured stormwater and rainwater are expressly exempt from th...
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Johns Creek follows Georgia's statewide Water Stewardship Act. Outdoor landscape watering with publicly supplied water is allowed only between 4 p.m. and 10 ...
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Johns Creek prohibits weeds or plant growth in excess of 10 inches and bans all noxious weeds. "Weeds" are defined as grasses, annual plants, and vegetation ...
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