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Soils Reports & Hillside Rebuilds: What the Grading Division Requires in Pacific Palisades — Pacific Palisades Remodeling
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Soils Reports & Hillside Rebuilds: What the Grading Division Requires in Pacific Palisades

Rebuilds in geologically sensitive areas require geology and soils reports submitted to the LADBS grading section. Hillside lots in the Palisades — especially in the Highlands — almost always qualify. Here's what to expect and how long it takes.

7 min read
March 5, 2026
Grading Division
Hillside grading and foundation work on a Pacific Palisades fire rebuild lot
Hillside grading and foundation work in the Palisades — soils reports are required before any foundation design can be finalized or permitted.

Pacific Palisades is almost entirely hillside terrain. The geology shifts by neighborhood — and the January 2025 fires changed the condition of that geology in ways that make post-fire soils assessments not just a bureaucratic requirement, but a genuine safety necessity.

Who this applies to
Most hillside lots in Pacific Palisades trigger a grading permit and soils report requirement — including many that wouldn't have before the fires

The fire burned vegetation that was previously stabilizing hillside soil. Burn scars dramatically change drainage patterns, erosion rates, and slope stability — even on lots that had no geotechnical issues before the fire. This means that even properties whose pre-fire geology was straightforward may now require a more intensive soils assessment.

What Triggers a Grading Permit and Soils Report

In Pacific Palisades, a grading permit and accompanying geology/soils report is required when any of the following apply:

  • The lot has a slope of 10% or greater — which includes most of the Palisades outside of flat street-level lots in the central village area

  • The project involves grading, cut, or fill exceeding thresholds set by the LA County Grading Division — typically 50 cubic yards or more

  • The property is in a Hillside Area or Geological Hazard Zone as designated in the LA Municipal Code — the Highlands, upper Rustic Canyon, and much of the Riviera fall into this category

  • The foundation design requires site-specific geotechnical data — which is almost always the case for new construction on hillside lots where the previous foundation was destroyed

  • LADBS requires it as a condition of plan check — even where none of the above explicitly apply, a plan checker can require a soils report if site conditions warrant it

The post-fire reality

"The 2025 fires burned the vegetation that was holding slopes in place across the Palisades. Every hillside lot in the burn area should be assessed by a licensed geotechnical engineer before any foundation design begins — not as a regulatory formality, but as a genuine engineering necessity."

What a Soils and Geology Report Includes

A soils and geology report for a Palisades fire rebuild is prepared by a licensed California Geotechnical Engineer (PE) or Engineering Geologist (CEG). It typically includes:

  • Site reconnaissance and mapping — physical inspection of the lot, identification of existing slope conditions, burn scar areas, drainage patterns, and any visible signs of instability

  • Subsurface exploration — typically 2–5 borings or test pits dug at strategic locations to sample and characterize soil and rock conditions at depth

  • Laboratory testing — soil samples analyzed for shear strength, consolidation characteristics, expansion potential, and bearing capacity

  • Slope stability analysis — calculation of safety factors for existing slopes and any proposed cuts or fills, with identification of potential failure modes

  • Foundation recommendations — specific guidance on allowable foundation types (slab, caisson, grade beam, etc.), bearing pressures, depth requirements, and lateral design values

  • Drainage and erosion control recommendations — particularly important for post-fire lots where natural drainage patterns may have changed

  • Grading recommendations — specific requirements for any cut or fill areas, compaction standards, and slope gradient limits

Timeline and Cost

PhaseDurationWho does itTypical cost
Geotechnical engineer engagement1–2 weeksContractor coordinatesIncluded in report fee
Site investigation (borings/pits)1–3 days on siteLicensed geotechnical engineerIncluded in report fee
Lab testing and analysis2–3 weeksGeotechnical labIncluded in report fee
Report preparation1–2 weeksLicensed engineerIncluded in report fee
LADBS grading division review3–8 weeksLADBS Grading SectionFee waived under EO No. 7
Total from engagement to approval8–16 weeks$4,000–$14,000 total

Report costs vary based on lot complexity, slope, number of borings required, and the extent of post-fire damage assessment needed. Complex hillside lots in the Highlands can exceed the high end of this range.

The Critical Timing Point: Start the Report Immediately

The most common mistake Palisades homeowners make regarding the soils report is treating it as something to commission after their architectural plans are complete. This adds 8–16 weeks to the overall timeline unnecessarily.

The soils report informs the foundation design — not the other way around. Until you have the report, your structural engineer cannot finalize the foundation type, depth, and lateral design values. Starting the soils report on day one means:

  • The report arrives before or simultaneously with the completed architectural plans

  • The structural engineer can design the foundation correctly the first time

  • LADBS plan check and grading division review can proceed simultaneously

  • You don't discover foundation surprises after the permit is issued

Post-fire slope conditions may differ significantly from what your previous home was built on
The January 2025 fires destroyed root systems that were stabilizing slopes. Subsequent rain events have accelerated erosion in burn areas. Your previous home's foundation may have been adequate for pre-fire conditions — those conditions no longer exist on the same lot. A post-fire soils assessment is not redundant with historical data for your property.

Neighborhood-by-Neighborhood Differences

Not all Palisades neighborhoods have the same geotechnical conditions. Here is a general characterization — though site-specific conditions always override general neighborhood patterns:

NeighborhoodTypical geologySoils report likelihoodCommon foundation type
The HighlandsSteep slopes, decomposed granite, landslide history in areasVery high — almost certainCaissons or grade beams
Rustic CanyonCanyon bottom + slopes, alluvial soils, high moistureHighDeepened footings or caissons
The RivieraHillside, variable — some areas stable, some with fillHighVariable — site specific
CastellammareCoastal bluff, marine terrace deposits, bluff stability concernsVery high — bluff setbacks add complexityDeep foundations, setback compliance
Alphabet StreetsGentler slopes, more stable — but variableModerate — depends on specific lotStandard slab or conventional footings on many lots
Marquez KnollsHillside, moderate slopesHigh — most lots require assessmentVariable — often conventional with upgrades

These are general characterizations only. Individual lot conditions within each neighborhood can vary significantly. A site-specific investigation is the only reliable way to establish actual foundation requirements.

Hillside rebuild specialists
We coordinate soils reports, grading permits, and foundation engineering on every hillside Palisades rebuild

We engage geotechnical engineers on day one and run soils investigations in parallel with architectural design — so you don't lose weeks waiting. Free consultation. CSLB License #982386.

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