California city profile
Pittsburg
Pittsburg is an incorporated city in
Contra Costa County.
Projects here follow Pittsburg's own zoning and building rules on top of the county-level environmental rules that apply across Contra Costa County.
The county rules most likely to catch a project applicant off guard are listed below.
9
local environmental rules that apply here
126
projects filed for environmental review in Pittsburg
75% routine · 13% mitigated · 5% full review
City of Pittsburg
most frequent lead agency
35 filings as lead
Local ordinances that apply in Pittsburg
Pittsburg has 4 of its own municipal ordinances,
applied on top of Contra Costa County's environmental rules.
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Grading & Excavation
City of Pittsburg
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Habitat Plan Participation
City of Pittsburg
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Noise
City of Pittsburg
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Tree Preservation
City of Pittsburg
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Delta Protection
Contra Costa County
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Fire Hazard / Defensible Space
Contra Costa County
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Hillside Management
Contra Costa County
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Scenic Corridors & Highways
Contra Costa County
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Stormwater / LID
Contra Costa County
What catches people off guard in Contra Costa County
These Contra Costa County rules apply to projects in Pittsburg, on top of any city-specific Pittsburg requirements.
Voter-locked Urban Limit Line
A county-wide boundary defines where urban development can and can't occur; land outside the line can't be rezoned for residential or commercial use without a public vote — no amount of planning commission support can substitute for a ballot measure.
Delta development freeze
Portions of the county near the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta sit under a state commission that restricts new development to agricultural and open-space uses — buyers of Delta parcels sometimes discover that standard residential or commercial plans can't clear this hurdle.
Broad native tree protection
The county protects a wide list of native tree species starting at a relatively small trunk diameter — the list includes trees that homeowners don't usually think of as regulated, and removal may require a permit even for trees that look unremarkable.
Weekday-only grading
Grading and earthwork near residences or commercial buildings is restricted to weekday hours only, and the allowed window closes earlier in the afternoon than most other counties — contractors who plan weekend site work will need to revise.
East county conservation fee
Projects in the eastern part of the county that fall within the regional habitat conservation plan area pay a mitigation fee to the county conservancy even for modest sites — budget for it early rather than discovering it at permit issuance.
Hillside density overlay
Parcels with significant average slope are subject to a density-reduction overlay that can sharply limit the number of allowable units as slope increases — a lot that looks generously sized on paper may legally support far fewer homes than expected.
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Source: Headlands Environmental —
environmental site screening for California. Rules summarized from publicly
available county codes and planning documents; project review counts
indexed from the State Clearinghouse. For authoritative requirements,
consult the Pittsburg planning department or
Contra Costa County directly.