top of page

Architectural Guidelines

Before starting any exterior project on your home or property, check with your Neighborhood Architectural Review Committee (NARC), the Kings Ridge office or the links below for the correct Architectural Control Committee (ACC) guidelines to complete your project.

Click on any underscored Guideline or Requirements to retrieve the document(s).

Architectural Guidelines

On October 28, 2021, the Wellington Board of Directors adopted the Kings Ridge Architectural Guidelines, Standards and Criteria for our neighborhood.  However, there will continue to be a separate Wellington Architectural Guidelines that contains a few remaining guidelines that are more strict or are required by Kings Ridge. These will become effective January 1, 2022.  The intent is to make the Architectural Process easier for our community.  

 

In addition, the Wellington Board of Directors introduced and adopted the Rules (guidelines) for Maintenance.  The rules were extracted verbatim from the Kings Ridge Architectural Guidelines and the intent is to provide an easy reference point for ongoing maintenance requirements.

Architectural Process

Step 1

Obtain Application

Pick up your Architectural Application from the Kings Ridge Office.  

Step 2

Submit Application

Return your completed application to the Kings Ridge Office.  The office will date stamp the application, enter it into the system, then place it is the NARC file.

Step 3

NARC Review

You may be asked for more information.  If the applications has most or all of the info requested in the guidelines, it receives first approval.  The KR office updates the system then forward the application to ACC for final review.

Step 4

ACC Review

ACC meets on the first and third Wednesdays.  If there are questions or missing docs, NARCs are asked to follow-up with resident.  If not, the applications is either denied or approved.  Applications are returned to the office.

Step 5

Final Steps

Kings Ridge staff updates information and notifies resident of decision.  No one should make improvements before approval.  If you make improvements and are not approved, or improvements are completed before aproval, you may incur additional expenses.

bottom of page