Tag
grading
14 Porch Notes tagged “grading,” from counties across Colorado.
Water and land - El Paso County
El Paso County dirt work can need stormwater approval before it starts
Beyond installing the first erosion controls, dirt work waits on the construction permit and a Notice to Proceed, so plan the protective setup first.
Read note ->Water and land - Arapahoe County
A low-impact Arapahoe GESC permit is still a stormwater permit
A low-impact GESC permit in Arapahoe County is still a stormwater permit, with real erosion controls to keep disturbed soil from leaving the site.
Read note ->Water and land - Adams County
Adams County stormwater coverage can affect other permits
Missing the required stormwater permit can stall grading, right-of-way, and building permits that all wait downstream of it.
Read note ->Home and property - Douglas County
Douglas County grading can need erosion-control review
Land disturbance in unincorporated Douglas County can need a grading, erosion, and sediment-control permit before work begins.
Read note ->Home and property - Clear Creek County
Ground work in Clear Creek can trigger its own permit
Earth work, driveways, private roads, retaining walls, and floodplain changes each need their own Clear Creek site development permit before a build.
Read note ->Home and property - Jefferson County
Jeffco floodplain work needs a permit before the dirt moves
Work in Jeffco's Floodplain Overlay District needs a floodplain permit, even small jobs like fencing, fill, or grading.
Read note ->Water and land - Adams County
Some Adams County projects need stormwater review before work starts
Some construction projects need stormwater review before grading, right-of-way, or building permits can move ahead.
Read note ->Water and land - Arapahoe County
Arapahoe County soil disturbance can trigger a GESC permit
Land-disturbing work in unincorporated Arapahoe County can need a grading, erosion, and sediment control permit.
Read note ->Home and property - Arapahoe County
Driveways and grading can pull Arapahoe Engineering into a home project
Floodplain, grading, right-of-way, access, and public-improvement work can each pull a home project into Arapahoe County Engineering review.
Read note ->Water and land - Jefferson County
Jeffco land disturbance can need water-quality planning
Grading and site work in unincorporated Jeffco can trigger erosion control, stormwater detention, and water-quality drainage rules.
Read note ->Cars and driving - Elbert County
An Elbert County driveway onto a county road is a permit question
Cutting a driveway onto a county road can need a Road and Bridge access, grading, or right-of-way permit before any dirt moves.
Read note ->Home and property - Adams County
Road and drainage review can matter on Adams County home projects
On Adams County projects, a driveway, grading change, or big outbuilding can trigger a road and drainage review beyond the building wall.
Read note ->Home and property - Jefferson County
Jeffco retaining wall height changes the review
A Jeffco retaining wall's height sets the rules — under three feet is free, taller walls bring engineering, a permit, and sometimes a variance.
Read note ->Home and property - Pitkin County
Pitkin County site work can need an earthmoving permit
An earthmoving permit can apply in Pitkin County once a project disturbs enough soil or vegetation, including everyday work like trenching and grading.
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