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Revised condo inspection ordinance now addresses
habitable stories |
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Article Courtesy of The Anna Maria Island Sun
By Leslie Lake and Joe Hendricks
Published March 29, 2026
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BRADENTON BEACH – The second reading of the city’s
condominium-related milestone inspection ordinance has been adopted with
an added clarification that effectively excludes all condominium and
cooperatively-owned buildings in Bradenton Beach from the state’s
milestone inspection requirements.
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When presented to the city commission for
first reading on March 5, City Ordinance 25-566 did not
reference “habitable stories” and it included the following
language: “A condominium association and a cooperative
association must have a milestone inspection performed for
each building that is three stories or more in height by
Dec. 31 of the year in which the building reaches 30 years
of age, or 25 years if the building is located within three
miles of the coastline, and every 10 years thereafter.”
The state’s milestone condominium inspection and reporting
laws were first enacted in 2024 and then amended in 2025.
The city ordinance presented on March 5 included language
based on the 2024 version of the state law that referenced
buildings three stories or more in height and did not
reference habitable stories. This created some confusion as
to whether the city ordinance pertained to condo and co-op
buildings with two habitable stories located above a
ground-level parking area.
The state law was amended in 2025 and the milestone
inspection and reporting requirements currently set forth in
Florida Statute 553.889 apply to “a building that is three
habitable stories or more in height as determined by the
Florida Building Code.”
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The Summer Sands condo buildings feature two
habitable stories located above a ground-level parking area.
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The Florida Building Code does not consider a
ground-level parking area to be a habitable story.
The language contained in the revised city ordinance presented on March
19 is based on the current version of the state law. It now includes the
word “habitable” and references milestone inspections performed for
“each building that is three habitable stories or more in height.”
During the March 19 meeting, City Attorney Erica Augello said the
adoption of House Bill 913 in 2025 clarified that the state’s milestone
inspection laws that now pertain to condo and co-op buildings with three
or more habitable stories.
Regarding the revised city ordinance, Augello said, “The only difference
between the first reading and this reading is to clarify it, adding the
word ‘habitable.’”
NO LOCAL IMPACT
Bradenton Beach’s city charter and land use regulations do not allow
building heights that exceed the equivalent of three stories.
According to Police Chief and Public Works Director John Cosby, there
aren’t any condo buildings in Bradenton Beach with three or more
habitable floors, so the state-mandated inspection and reporting
requirements referenced in the city ordinance don’t apply to any condo
or co-op building in the city.
During the March 19 meeting, Building Official Rob Perry confirmed that
condo buildings in Bradenton Beach are not impacted by the state’s
milestone inspection program.
“The ordinance and the statute clarified the language and we won’t
require any reporting in the future. The clarification was habitable
stories and it was the confusion of the parking garage being a story,”
Perry said.
The state law also requires each municipality’s building and planning
department to provide the local enforcement of the state’s milestone
inspection and reporting laws. Establishing those local enforcement
responsibilities was the primary purpose of the city ordinance.
The Florida Legislature and Gov. Ron DeSantis adopted the milestone
inspection and reporting laws in 2024 in response to the collapse of the
Champlain Towers South condominium building in Sunrise, Florida, in 2021
that killed 98 people.
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