Showing ordinances that apply to Loudoun Valley Estates, VA
Loudoun Valley Estates is an unincorporated community (population 11,436) in Loudoun County, Virginia. Because Loudoun Valley Estates is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal code. Instead, Loudoun County ordinances apply directly to properties here. The heritage & protected trees rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Loudoun County does not have a formal Heritage or Landmark Tree program. Protection for significant trees comes through the Chesapeake Bay Preservation Area overlay (Ord. Ch. 1220), subdivision preservation plans, and historic district regulations (Goose Creek, Waterford, Middleburg, Aldie). The Loudoun County Tree Commission promotes tree stewardship. Virginia Department of Forestry maintains the Virginia Champion Tree Registry โ trees listed are recognized but not legally protected by the state. Historic properties and scenic byways (Route 50, Snickersville Turnpike) have informal protections via conservation easements.
Virginia does not have a statewide heritage tree protection law. The Virginia Department of Forestry maintains the Virginia Big Tree Program (VT-based Champion Tree Registry), which records state-record trees by species; registration is recognition, not legal protection. Loudoun County Board of Supervisors has discussed but not enacted a formal Heritage Tree ordinance. Protection pathways instead: (1) Chesapeake Bay Preservation Area RPA buffers (Ord. Ch. 1220) automatically protect mature trees in 100-ft stream buffers. (2) Historic district overlays โ Loudoun has multiple historic districts (Goose Creek Historic District, Waterford National Historic Landmark, Aldie Historic District, Middleburg Historic District, Lincoln, Hamilton), governed by Chapter 1500 of Loudoun Codified Ordinances and reviewed by the Historic District Review Committee (HDRC) โ tree removal on contributing historic properties typically requires Certificate of Appropriateness. (3) Conservation easements via Land Trust of Virginia, Piedmont Environmental Council, and Loudoun's purchase of development rights program preserve significant trees on rural land. (4) Scenic byways and scenic rivers (Goose Creek, Catoctin Creek) designated under VA Code ยง33.2-405 enjoy informal preservation. The Loudoun County Tree Commission, established 2017, promotes awareness but has advisory role only. Taylorstown's 300+ year old oak and the Waterford Village trees are locally celebrated examples.
No heritage tree ordinance penalties. Violations where overlays apply: Chesapeake Bay RPA $32,500/day; Historic District unpermitted removal $1,000-$10,000 per tree + restoration; scenic easement violation enforced by easement holder.
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