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Board upholds prohibition on occupancy at 410 Aurora Lane over flood-elevation code violations

5502120 · June 18, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

The Daytona Beach Building Board denied an appeal and upheld a notice of prohibited occupancy for 410 Aurora Lane after staff said the renovated structure does not meet the city's flood-elevation requirements; the owners were told they must resolve elevation or demolition before occupancy.

The Daytona Beach Building Board denied an appeal by the current owners of 410 Aurora Lane and upheld a notice of prohibited occupancy after city staff said the renovated structure fails to meet the city—s flood-elevation standard.

City project manager Kim Flaherty explained the basis for the order: “Our land development code requires that when you renovate a structure, exceeding 50% of the value, you have to meet all code requirements. Our code requires that the structure be elevated to a minimum 12 inches above the base flood,” and told the board staff determined the property—s base flood elevation for the site is 8 feet while the house—s finished-floor elevation measures about 6.35 feet on staff—s elevation certificates.

Why it matters: staff said allowing…

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