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Resource · Hillside Construction

Building on a Hillside Lot in Lafayette: What Contractors Assess Before Design Starts

Slope grade, soil type, drainage pattern, and fire access — reviewed before a floor plan is ever drawn. The right starting point is the site, not the layout.
RBy Shay Zilber, CEO · Rhino Builders · CSLB #580756 · Lafayette, CA

What a Hillside Site Assessment Actually Covers

A hillside lot in Lafayette is buildable. What it will support depends on conditions you can’t see from a survey. Slope grade — the ratio of vertical rise to horizontal distance, expressed as a percentage — determines almost everything that follows: the foundation type, whether a geotechnical report is mandatory before the county accepts a permit application, how much grading is needed to create a building pad, and whether that grading volume triggers a separate permit.
Soil type adds another layer. Drainage adds another. Fire access adds a fourth. None of these are design questions — they’re site conditions, and every one has to be documented before a floor plan is worth drawing. Committing to a floor plan before the site assessment is done commits design fees, engineering time, and sometimes months of back-and-forth to a plan that may not survive the first site review. Our approach is the reverse: the site assessment comes first, design follows.

Why Hillside Construction Requires Site-First Thinking

Rhino Builders operates out of Lafayette, at the base of the hillside terrain that defines most of the city’s residential geography. We’ve worked sloped parcels off Deer Hill Road, along the upper sections of Mt. Diablo Boulevard, and in the ridgeline neighborhoods north of downtown — every condition described here has been encountered on actual projects. Contra Costa County requires a geotechnical report (a soil-engineering assessment of bearing capacity, expansive-clay content, slope stability, and groundwater) before a permit package is accepted on lots above defined slope thresholds. That report comes from a licensed geotechnical engineer — but it has to be scoped by someone who knows what the site needs.
Lafayette’s geology is dominated by two soil types: sedimentary rock on the ridgelines and expansive clay in the valleys and mid-slopes. Because expansive clay swells when wet and contracts when dry, it exerts measurable pressure on foundations and retaining structures over time — pressure that shows up as cracking, settlement, or wall deflection if it wasn’t accounted for in the original design. This soil behavior is the defining engineering constraint on Lafayette hillside projects, and other pages on this site link back here for the full explanation.

The Site Conditions That Determine Your Project's Path

1Slope Grade & the Grading Permit>15% geotech · >25% stability

The county requires a grading permit when cut or fill exceeds defined volumes — and on a sloped lot, nearly every project needs some grading to create a level pad. Pad position matters as much as size: setbacks, drainage, and grading limits constrain where it can sit, so a plan drawn before pad position is confirmed may require full relocation. Slopes above ~15% typically require a geotechnical report before submission; above 25% may trigger stability analysis and retaining-wall engineering.

2Expansive Clay & FoundationEngineered foundation

A significant share of mid-slope parcels — particularly the Deer Hill Road corridor and neighborhoods above Happy Valley — sit on expansive clay, which requires engineered foundations. A geotechnical report is not optional even if slope alone wouldn't require one; it specifies minimum bearing depth, reinforcement, and drainage standards. A standard foundation submitted over expansive clay comes back with required modifications, which change the structural drawings and reset plan check — a gap that commonly runs eight to twelve weeks on hillside projects.

3Drainage EngineeringStructural, not cosmetic

Water moving across a hillside carries soil; water behind a retaining wall saturates backfill and raises lateral pressure; water toward a foundation undermines bearing over time. Hillside lots also have neighbors below them, and the county specifically evaluates whether drainage plans protect adjacent parcels. The drainage system's outlet, capacity, and interaction with the retaining walls all affect where structures can be placed — so it's designed before the building pad is finalized.

4Retaining Walls & the Permit TriggerSeparate permit

A retaining wall is required on most Lafayette hillside builds, and walls above a defined height require engineering drawings and a separate permit that runs on its own review timeline. Submitting the retaining-wall permit alongside the main package keeps both clocks running in parallel. We identify wall requirements in the site assessment and scope the drawings into the pre-design package — not after the building permit is already under review.

5Fire Access RequirementsDriveway grade & width

Many hillside neighborhoods fall within the fire hazard severity zone, where access-route width and grade standards apply to new ADUs, additions, and replacement structures. An existing driveway that works for the primary home may not meet the access grade or width for a new ADU at the rear of the lot — resolved through a driveway upgrade or by repositioning the structure. That's a siting decision, made before a floor plan is designed, not after.

Three Scenarios That Show Why Sequence Matters

Repositioned
ADU moved 30 ft pre-design

A 1,000 sq ft ADU planned against the back fence sat within a drainage-easement setback, and the slope there needed a retaining wall that cost 2 ft of interior width. Moving the unit 30 ft forward dropped the wall height — and it permitted without revision.

Foundation Reworked
Geotech reshaped a ridgeline home

Slope alone triggered the report near Acalanes; it found expansive clay across the envelope. Slab-on-grade became a post-tension slab with deeper perimeter footings — changed at the design phase, not during excavation. Cost impact contained to engineering.

Fire-Access Apron
Garage-conversion ADU flagged early

A straightforward interior conversion, but fire-access review flagged the driveway apron at the street as two feet under the emergency-access standard for a secondary unit. A twelve-foot apron extension resolved it — priced into the project from day one.

A Direct Assessment From Shay Zilber

Thirty-seven years on Contra Costa County hillside lots teaches you to read a site before you draw on it. The mistakes are almost always made in the sequencing.

Shay Zilber · CEO, Rhino Builders (CSLB 580756)

The pattern I see most often: a homeowner researches everything — the county grading guidelines, what neighbors built, the setbacks — but no one with field experience has physically walked the lot before the designer starts drawing. By the time a contractor sees the site, the floor plan reflects assumptions about slope, soil, and drainage the actual parcel doesn’t support, and the layout that took months to develop has to move. We put eyes on the site first: document the slope, walk the drainage path, identify the soil type from existing project history in that neighborhood, and confirm fire access. Then we tell the homeowner what the lot can support and where structures can go. Design comes after. That’s not a preference — it’s how you build on a hillside without rebuilding it.

When to Bring a Contractor Into the Hillside Conversation

A designer needs to know what the site can support before layout decisions are made, and a contractor with genuine hillside field experience can provide that input. Bring a contractor to your Lafayette hillside lot when:
  • You're evaluating a parcel for purchase and want to know what it will support before you close
  • You have a lot and a project idea but haven't confirmed the slope, soil, or drainage will allow it where you want it
  • You received a permit correction letter that referenced grading, soils, or drainage
  • A designer has drawn a plan and you want a site review before submitting
Our 37-year operational history in Lafayette’s specific terrain — expansive clay, variable slope grades, and fire-access requirements — is the foundation for every pre-design assessment on large-scale hillside projects. The site engineering and grading-permit coordination hillside lots require is a standard part of how we manage large Bay Area builds, not a reactive step added after problems surface.

Related reading: how state law applies to these parcels in our California ADU laws resource, and the county filing process in our Lafayette building permits guide.

Areas We Serve

Rhino Builders builds on hillside lots throughout the San Francisco Bay Area from our Lafayette office at 3685 Mount Diablo Blvd #161 — active hillside experience in Lafayette, Orinda, Moraga, Walnut Creek, Pleasant Hill, Oakland, and surrounding Contra Costa County. If your lot is sloped and your project is large-scale, we can assess it.
LafayetteOrindaMoragaWalnut CreekPleasant HillOaklandDeer Hill RoadHappy ValleyContra Costa County

Start With the Site, Not the Floor Plan

If you’re planning an ADU, an addition, or a custom home on a Lafayette hillside lot, bring your parcel address and your project idea before design work begins. We’ll start with the site — slope, soil, drainage, and fire access — and tell you what it can support.