Colorado Springs does not currently have a formal heritage tree or landmark tree ordinance that protects individual trees based on age, size, or species on private property. The city's urban forestry program focuses on managing public trees in parks and rights-of-way. Some trees in historic districts may receive indirect protection through historic preservation review. The semi-arid climate and elevation (6,035 feet) limit the natural tree canopy, making urban forestry primarily focused on planting and maintaining trees rather than preserving large old-growth specimens.
Colorado Springs may designate certain trees as heritage, landmark, or specimen trees based on criteria including trunk diameter (typically 24+ inches), species rarity, historical significance, or ecological value. Heritage trees receive enhanced protection beyond standard tree ordinances. Removal requires special council or commission approval and is rarely granted except for safety. Construction projects must protect heritage trees with root zone barriers. Damage during construction triggers fines and remediation. Residents can nominate trees for heritage status.
Unauthorized removal of heritage tree: $2,000 to $25,000. Damage during construction: $1,000 to $10,000 plus remediation costs.
Colorado Springs, CO
Continuously barking or howling dogs that create unreasonable disturbances are prohibited under Colorado Springs City Code Β§9.9.302 and the general noise ord...
Colorado Springs, CO
Construction noise in Colorado Springs is subject to the general noise ordinance (Β§9.8.101). Construction activities that exceed permissible decibel limits o...
Colorado Springs, CO
Colorado Springs prohibits excessive noise under City Code Title 9, Chapter 9.8. Residential decibel limits are more restrictive between 7 PM and 7 AM, with ...
Colorado Springs, CO
Colorado Springs bans RVs from parking on any public street citywide except for brief loading/unloading. On private property, RVs must be stored in side/rear...
Colorado Springs, CO
Commercial vehicles with a GVWR of 10,001 lbs or more cannot be stored on private property in residential zoning districts. Trucks cannot park on residential...
Colorado Springs, CO
Colorado follows the Good Neighbor Fence Law (C.R.S. Β§35-46-112), which does not prescribe statewide height limits but requires shared fence costs if both ne...
See how Colorado Springs's heritage & protected trees rules stack up against other locations.
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