Detached Backyard ADUs Built on Calabasas Lots — Grading Reviewed Before Design Starts
Drainage easements, utility trench paths, and slope conditions documented at the site assessment.
Detached Backyard ADU Construction in Calabasas — What the Site Determines First
A detached ADU built in a Calabasas backyard begins with the land, not the floor plan.
A detached ADU is a freestanding accessory dwelling unit — a new structure built separate from the primary home on the same parcel, with its own entrance, its own systems, and its own foundation. California state law governs the baseline rules. In Calabasas, the land sets the actual limits.
Most Calabasas backyards look larger than they are. The lot may be generous, but the effective buildable area — the zone where a detached ADU can legally and physically sit — is what remains after subtracting the state-mandated 4-foot rear and side setbacks under AB 2221, any recorded drainage easements, any existing utility trench paths, and the slope gradient of the ground itself.
On a flat inland lot, those subtractions are predictable. On a hillside parcel north of the 101, or along the Las Virgenes corridor where rear grades drop sharply, they often produce a smaller usable area than the homeowner expected. That's the reason a site assessment comes before a design.
Licensed by the CSLB under CSLB 757470 — a Class B General Building Contractor license, active & publicly verifiable at cslb.ca.gov.
Building New Structures on Calabasas and Malibu-Area Parcels Since 1998
Pure Builders has been permitted on Calabasas terrain since before the current ADU legislative wave reshaped the rules. Our office is on Craftsman Road — a few minutes from the hillside lots north of Mulholland Highway and the valley-floor parcels along Las Virgenes Road. The terrain types we assess most often are the ones directly adjacent to our dispatch location.
Since 1998 we've built new detached structures on parcels with rear slopes, parcels crossed by drainage swales, and parcels where a utility trench to the street runs a longer path than the homeowner anticipated. We hold CSLB License 757470, and every detached ADU project we take on is a permitted, ground-up new structure build — not a converted structure, not an unpermitted addition.
What most homeowners don't know: the LA County Grading Ordinance (Chapter 70) can trigger a separate grading permit before a building permit is issued, depending on how much cut and fill is required to create a level building pad. On a sloped lot, the answer often isn't zero — and knowing whether a grading permit is required before the architect starts drawing saves weeks and design rework.
What the Review Finds Before Your Design Is Commissioned
"I've walked a lot of Calabasas backyards over the past 25 years. Homeowners have a spot in mind — usually the flattest area or the corner with the most sun. Sometimes it works. Sometimes a drainage easement runs directly through it."
Drainage easements
A recorded right-of-way across the parcel designated for stormwater flow. Structures can't be built within one. If the design is commissioned before the easement is located on the as-built survey, the architect draws a footprint plan check will reject — so we find it first.
Slope & foundation
The review documents slope percentage at the proposed ADU location, which determines foundation type. A grade steeper than roughly 5–8% usually rules out a simple slab-on-grade — the site may need a stepped slab, raised wood floor, or pier-and-grade-beam, per the soils engineer.
Utility trench routing
The underground path water, sewer, gas, and electrical must follow from the main dwelling or street to the ADU. Cost is driven by distance and soil — a run across a sloped yard, a concrete driveway, or landscaping costs more than a straight line across flat lawn. Identified before design is finalized.
— Eli Kaspi, Founder & CEO, Pure Builders Inc
We Share the Site Findings With You Before Design Fees Are Committed
Transparency at the site assessment stage protects your design budget. Some homeowners arrive at the site visit with a design already in hand — a sketch, a floor plan from an online service, or a preliminary drawing from an architect. That design may need to change once the site conditions are documented.
We share the assessment findings in plain terms: buildable footprint dimensions, easement locations, foundation-type implications from the slope, utility trench routing, and grading-permit triggers under LA County Chapter 70. You understand what the parcel will support before committing design fees to a layout that may not survive plan check.
If the findings affect the design direction — a footprint that needs to shift, a foundation type that changes the structural engineering scope, a grading permit that adds a pre-construction phase — you know that before the architect's clock starts. That information is yours at the site assessment stage.
Site Assessment, Grading Review & Utility Trench Planning
A documented baseline set at the site level before any project moves to design. All findings are documented in writing, not delivered as a verbal summary.
The Backyard ADU Construction Sequence
Site Assessment & Grading Review
Produces the buildable footprint, drainage and easement documentation, utility trench routing, and grading-permit trigger determination. If a Chapter 70 grading permit is required, it's filed with LA County Public Works before the building-permit application.
Design Coordination
The architect draws a floor plan reflecting actual parcel conditions; the structural engineer selects the foundation from the slope data and soils report; the Title 24 consultant prepares the energy report. These three form the core of the permit plan set.
Permit Submission
The complete set is submitted to LA County via EPIC-LA. Under AB 2221, ministerial approval requires the county to act within 60 days of a complete, compliant submission. A triggered grading permit runs a concurrent track through LA County Public Works.
Construction & Inspections
Foundation, framing, MEP rough-in (with utility trench connections), and insulation inspections — each passed in order. The final inspection triggers the Certificate of Occupancy, which makes the ADU a permitted, legally habitable, rentable dwelling.
Backyard ADU Projects in Calabasas, Malibu Canyon & Las Virgenes Communities
Parcels along Malibu Canyon Road, hillside lots north of Mulholland Highway, valley-floor properties in the Las Virgenes school district area, and Malibu-adjacent parcels where site conditions shift from valley clay to coastal hillside terrain. Site visits are scheduled directly from the Craftsman Road office.
Backyard ADU Construction in Calabasas — FAQ
Why does the site assessment come before the design?
Because the buildable area is what's left after setbacks, recorded easements, utility paths, and slope are subtracted — often smaller than the lot appears. Commissioning a design before those are documented risks an architect drawing a footprint that plan check will reject.
Will my backyard ADU need a grading permit?
It depends on how much cut and fill is required to create a level pad. Under the LA County Grading Ordinance (Chapter 70), a sloped lot often triggers a separate grading permit filed with LA County Public Works before the building permit. We determine that at the assessment.
Can I build over a drainage easement?
No — structures can't be built within a recorded drainage easement. We locate easements on the as-built survey during the assessment so the footprint is placed where it's actually buildable, not where plan check would reject it.
How does slope affect the foundation?
Slope percentage at the ADU location drives foundation type. Grades steeper than roughly 5–8% usually rule out a simple slab-on-grade, calling instead for a stepped slab, raised wood floor, or pier-and-grade-beam — confirmed by the soils engineer.
How long does approval take?
Under AB 2221, ministerial approval requires LA County to act within 60 days of a complete, compliant submission through EPIC-LA. A well-prepared plan set that addresses commonly flagged correction items moves through that window more cleanly.
What do I need to schedule a site visit?
Just your property address and a description of what you're planning — no drawings, budget number, or permit history required. We document what your backyard will actually support and share the findings before any design work begins.
Find Out What Your Backyard Will Actually Support — Start With a Site Visit
The first step is a site assessment, not a phone estimate. Call 888-240-5955 or email info@purebuildersinc.com to schedule. You don't need drawings, a budget number, or a permit history to get started — bring your property address and a description of what you're planning. We'll document what your backyard will actually support and share those findings with you before any design work begins.