Westchester, Permits & Code, Project Planning Brandon Cavanagh Westchester, Permits & Code, Project Planning Brandon Cavanagh

Permit Speed Across Northern Westchester: How Long Each Town Actually Takes

Same scope, same architect, same contractor, different town: residential permit timelines across northern Westchester's six biggest towns vary by weeks, with Yorktown and Somers running the fastest and Bedford and Pound Ridge running the longest. This guide compares standard alteration timing across all six and explains why submission quality is a bigger lever than which town you're in.

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Westchester, Permits & Code, Cost & Budget Brandon Cavanagh Westchester, Permits & Code, Cost & Budget Brandon Cavanagh

Septic Capacity in Northern Westchester: When Adding a Bedroom Triggers a System Upgrade

New York State sizes residential septic systems by bedroom count — 150 gallons per bedroom per day — which means most northern Westchester additions that add a bedroom trigger Westchester County Department of Health review of the existing system's capacity. This guide walks through how the bedroom-count rule actually works, what an upgrade costs across gravity and engineered system options, and how to design the project to either avoid the trigger or sequence the upgrade strategically.

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Westchester, Permits & Code, Cost & Budget Brandon Cavanagh Westchester, Permits & Code, Cost & Budget Brandon Cavanagh

Sprinkler Requirements in Northern Westchester Renovations: When NFPA 13D Triggers and What It Costs

NFPA 13D is the national standard for residential sprinkler systems, and whether it applies to your northern Westchester project depends on a stack of state code, town amendments, and scope-specific triggers that homeowners typically discover too late. This guide walks through when 13D actually triggers, what the system includes, what it costs to install, and how to plan for it before architecture is locked.

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Westchester, Permits & Code Brandon Cavanagh Westchester, Permits & Code Brandon Cavanagh

New Castle Environmental Review Permits: Wetlands, Slopes, and Trees

New Castle's Conservation Board sits between the homeowner and the building permit, reviewing three distinct permit categories — wetlands and watercourse buffers, steep-slope disturbance, and protected-tree removal. This guide walks through how each permit works, what the application requires, and how to design around all three layers from day one rather than retrofitting compliance late.

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Westchester, Permits & Code Brandon Cavanagh Westchester, Permits & Code Brandon Cavanagh

Renovating in Mount Kisco: Village-Only Building Department, Historic District, and Downtown Density

Mount Kisco is the only village in Westchester that merged with its surrounding town — meaning a single consolidated building department covers every renovation in the municipality, with no village-vs-town jurisdiction split. This guide walks through how the East Main Street historic district, downtown density, and mixed-use building considerations still shape what your renovation actually requires.

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Westchester, Permits & Code Brandon Cavanagh Westchester, Permits & Code Brandon Cavanagh

Renovating in Armonk (North Castle): Wetlands, Lot Coverage, and the Long Permit Timeline

Armonk's large lots don't simplify renovation — they multiply the regulatory layers, with active wetlands review, strict lot coverage and floor-area-ratio limits, and county-level septic review compounding the timeline. This guide breaks down North Castle's stacked review process and how to compress 12-month pre-construction calendars into 6 to 9 months by running the approvals in parallel.

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Westchester, Permits & Code Brandon Cavanagh Westchester, Permits & Code Brandon Cavanagh

Renovating in Briarcliff Manor: Architectural Review, Hillside Terrain, and Conservation Considerations

Briarcliff Manor renovations stack three review layers: an active Architectural Review Board on exterior changes, steep-slope review on hillside parcels (more common than homeowners expect), and conservation rules on trees, wetlands, and watercourses. This guide walks through how each layer applies, what it adds to the timeline, and how to design around the constraints from day one.

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Westchester, Permits & Code Brandon Cavanagh Westchester, Permits & Code Brandon Cavanagh

Renovating in Mount Pleasant: A Practical Guide to the Town's Permit Process

The Town of Mount Pleasant Building Department handles renovations across unincorporated Hawthorne, Thornwood, and Valhalla — but not the villages of Pleasantville or Sleepy Hollow. Here's the practical four-step permit pathway, what plan review actually checks, and when planning board or ZBA involvement adds two to four months to your timeline.

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Permits & Code, Westchester Brandon Cavanagh Permits & Code, Westchester Brandon Cavanagh

Renovating in Pleasantville: Village Permits, Historic Review, and What's Different from Mount Pleasant

Pleasantville is one address with two governments — the Village of Pleasantville handles some renovations, the Town of Mount Pleasant handles others. Here's how the permit timelines, design review, and fee structures differ between them — and how to confirm which jurisdiction your address actually falls under.

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