DETACHED ADU
BUILDER —
THE BAY AREA
A detached accessory dwelling unit is a fully independent residential structure built separately from the primary home. It requires its own foundation, framing system, and utility connections. Unlike a garage conversion, it functions as a standalone residence from both a structural and permitting standpoint.
Detached ADUs demand careful site planning and coordinated submissions from the beginning. When sequencing is handled properly, construction moves predictably.
Full permit management from site plan through final inspection.
WHY CHOOSE A
DETACHED ADU
Privacy and independence. A detached unit does not share walls or systems with the primary residence. That separation increases privacy for occupants and simplifies rental arrangements. For long-term tenants, a standalone structure often carries stronger appeal than attached options. For family use, it allows independence without distance.
Property fit. Detached ADUs work well on properties with adequate rear or side yard space. Placement can preserve the interior of the main home during construction while creating clearly defined access and outdoor areas.
Long-term utility. Adding a separate structure increases functional square footage. Whether used for rental income, multigenerational housing, or flexible workspace, detached units expand how a property is used over time.
Full Separation
No shared walls, foundation, or mechanical systems with the main residence.
Rental Appeal
Standalone units command stronger rental interest and support long-term tenancy.
Property Value
A permitted independent dwelling adds a legal functional unit at resale.
Flexible Use
Guest housing, home office, multigenerational living, or future downsizing option.
SITE PLANNING
& STRUCTURAL
REQUIREMENTS
Detached ADU construction begins with zoning verification. Even under California’s ADU framework, local jurisdictions across the Peninsula and East Bay apply review standards differently. A site plan must be accurate. Minor measurement errors can trigger corrections during plan check.
Detached units require full code compliance as independent structures. That includes proper foundation design, lateral bracing for seismic stability, structural anchoring, and Title 24 energy documentation.
On hillside or irregular lots common in this region, grading, drainage, and easements can limit buildable area. Feasibility must precede design decisions.
Key Site Constraints
- Rear and side yard setbacks
- Height limits
- Lot coverage allowances
- Minimum separation distances
- Fire access requirements
- Grading and drainage on sloped lots
We verify setbacks, lot coverage, and zoning before design begins.
UTILITIES &
INFRASTRUCTURE
Infrastructure planning often determines whether a detached ADU proceeds smoothly. Electrical service upgrades are common in older homes throughout Santa Clara and San Mateo counties. Early coordination with utility providers prevents mid-project redesign.
Utility routing should be addressed before permit submission, not during excavation.
Typical Infrastructure Considerations
- Sewer lateral connection or extension
- Water service routing
- Electrical capacity review
- Subpanel installation
- Gas line extension if applicable
HOW WE BUILD
DETACHED ADUs
Detached ADUs require sequencing. We structure projects accordingly — feasibility first, then coordinated planning, permitting, and phased construction.
Feasibility
We verify setbacks, evaluate site constraints, and review infrastructure capacity before design begins.Accurate measurement prevents redesign during review.
Planning & Engineering
Architectural design is coordinated with structural requirements and utility routing from the outset.
Permitting
Submissions are organized and complete. Prompt responses to plan check comments reduce unnecessary review cycles.We manage all city communication.
Construction
Work proceeds in defined phases — foundation, framing, inspections, mechanicals, finishes — with scheduled coordination between trades.
COMMON
DETACHED ADU
MISTAKES
Most detached ADU problems are planning problems. Setbacks get assumed instead of verified. Utilities are estimated instead of inspected. Engineering gets added after design instead of integrated from the beginning.
When feasibility, engineering, and permitting are aligned early, the build phase is straightforward. Detached ADUs reward preparation.
What Goes Wrong
- Setback assumptions — incorrect placement can require redesign during permit review
- Utility oversights — panel capacity or sewer conditions are often underestimated
- Foundation underestimation — soil and slope influence design; ignoring these leads to change orders
- Documentation gaps — missing structural or energy documents trigger revision cycles
WHO DETACHED
ADUs WORK
BEST FOR
- ✓ Homeowners planning long-term rental income
- ✓ Multigenerational households needing independent space
- ✓ Property owners with underutilized backyard space
- ✓ Families wanting structural separation on the same lot
“Most detached ADU problems I see aren’t construction problems. They’re planning problems.”
— Dan Mendez, Owner
DETACHED ADU
CONSTRUCTION
ACROSS THE BAY
Each city has its own zoning interpretation, setback standards, and review process. We build detached ADUs across the Peninsula, South Bay, and East Bay with city-specific permit familiarity.
OTHER ADU
OPTIONS
Not every property suits a detached unit. We build every ADU type — evaluate which option fits your lot, zoning, and goals.
JADU
Built as an extension of the existing home. Shares at least one wall. Often a fit when rear yard space is limited.
JADU DetailsGarage Conversion
Convert an existing garage into permitted living space. Uses the existing footprint to reduce new construction scope.
Garage Conversion DetailsADU Permits & Zoning
Permit coordination, plan check responses, and city communication managed from submission through final inspection.
Permitting ProcessSCHEDULE A
DETACHED ADU
CONSULTATION
If you’re evaluating a detached ADU on your property, start with feasibility. We’ll review zoning constraints, lot layout, and infrastructure requirements before plans are developed.
Clear evaluation · Structured planning · Coordinated execution
Serving Palo Alto · Mountain View · San Mateo
Walnut Creek · Redwood City · the Bay