Loch Lloyd is the standard the rest of the metro looks at. One of the most distinctive private gated communities in Kansas City, built around a championship golf experience and a 110-acre lake, and run with the kind of quiet rigor you only get when the people who live there expect it. Homeowners chose Loch Lloyd because the standard is high. The community holds it. A hardscape build inside the gates has to do the same.
Practically, that means two layers of approval before any dirt moves. The Village handles the building code and the zoning. The Country Club's Design Review Committee handles every aesthetic decision that touches the exterior of your property. Skipping either one isn't an option, and the rhythm of the project is set by the slower of the two.
What follows is what we'd tell a Loch Lloyd homeowner before they sign anything, whether you're on a fairway-frontage lot on the Watson course, on the lake side of the community, or on one of the wooded interior lots. Real review process, real Cass County setbacks for the houses just outside the gates, and what a premium build actually runs inside the community.
The Village and the Design Review Committee.
The two-layer governance is what makes Loch Lloyd Loch Lloyd. Here's how it actually breaks down:
The Village of Loch Lloyd
Loch Lloyd is a political entity of the State of Missouri. Its corporate limits run from 172nd Street on the south to the Cass County line on the north and from the state line on the west to Holmes Road on the east. The Village handles building codes and zoning within those limits. That's where the building permit pulls from for any structure with footings, including pergolas, pavilions, outdoor fireplaces, outdoor kitchens, and retaining walls. The Village address is 16610 Eden Bridge, Loch Lloyd, MO 64012.
The Design Review Committee (DRC)
The Country Club and the Loch Lloyd Community Association run the architectural side. The Design Review Committee, sometimes referred to as the Architectural Review Committee, reviews every exterior change before work begins. Per the community guidelines, the DRC reviews exterior colors (roof, stone, paver), landscape plans, hardscape footprints, fencing, structures, pool design, lighting, and any change that affects sightlines into or out of the lot. The DRC has authority to issue specific suggestions or requirements on any plan it sees. The DRC submittal is filed and approved before the Village permit pulls.
Two committees, two timelines, one project. The order matters more than the speed.
The rhythm we run on Loch Lloyd projects is: design in our office, walk the lot with the homeowner, package the DRC submittal first, secure the approval, then pull the Village building permit, then mobilize. Plan on 4 to 8 weeks from a complete DRC submittal to a Village permit in hand, depending on the DRC meeting schedule and how clean the first submittal is. The committees don't enjoy revising the same project twice, so a clean first package matters.
What the committee actually cares about.
Reading the community guidelines, the pattern of what gets flagged in DRC review is consistent enough to design for:
- Material tier. The community standard is natural stone, travertine, or top-tier manufactured pavers. Entry-level concrete pavers and stamped concrete are reviewed more skeptically and sometimes asked to come back with a different selection.
- Color continuity. Roof, stone, and paver colors are expected to harmonize with the home and with the broader streetscape. Sample boards are common at submittal.
- Sightlines. What the project looks like from the fairway, the lake, and the street is reviewed alongside what it looks like from inside the lot. A tall structure or screen wall in the wrong place can fail review on sightlines alone.
- Lighting spill. Low-voltage landscape and step lighting is encouraged. Bright up-lights, anything that throws into a neighbor's yard, and anything that washes onto the course or lake at night is flagged.
- Landscape integration. Hardscape doesn't get reviewed in isolation. The DRC wants to see the planting plan, the bed lines, the irrigation impact, and how the hardscape transitions to lawn.
- Pool design. Coping, deck material, fence (where required), equipment screening, and pool lighting all read into the DRC review.
None of this is about gatekeeping. It's about the community holding the standard that the homeowners paid for when they bought in. The DRC will tell you what the community standard is, and from the contractor side our job is to bring the design in already inside that envelope.
Building on the edge of 27 holes or 110 acres of water.
Loch Lloyd Country Club is one of the great private golf experiences in the Kansas City area. The 18-hole championship course is a Tom Watson Signature Design, opened in 2012 as a redesign and expansion of the original Donald Sechrest layout, with a separate Sechrest Nine still in play. The Village wraps around a 110-acre lake on Mill Creek. A meaningful share of the community's lots look out over championship-caliber fairways or open water, and the homes that face them tend to be the ones the rest of the community admires from the back patio.
Course-adjacent and lake-adjacent builds carry additional design weight at the DRC. The patterns we work to:
- Privacy without a wall problem. A homeowner on the fairway wants privacy from the course. The DRC also wants the back of the home to read clean from the course side. We solve that with planting structure, a low seat wall and pergola combination, and screened equipment areas instead of tall solid fences.
- Back-of-yard focal points. Course and lake lots almost always want a fire feature or outdoor kitchen oriented away from the course, toward the social heart of the patio. The lounge zone faces inward, not outward, so the fairway view stays a backdrop instead of becoming the audience.
- Lighting that disappears. Step lights, downlights from pergola or pavilion structures, soft path lights. No fixtures that wash light into the course or onto the lake. The DRC is consistent on this.
- Drainage that respects the lake. Surface water off a lake-adjacent patio cannot dump untreated into the 110-acre lake. We grade and pipe through filtration zones to a code-compliant outfall. This is good practice anywhere; on the lake it's required.
If your address sits outside the Village limits.
The Village handles building codes and zoning inside its corporate limits, so for an in-Village address the Village is the permitting authority and Cass County stays out of it. If your lot sits in unincorporated Cass County rather than inside the Village (some addresses near the community line do), the permit jurisdiction shifts to the county. The rules there are still worth knowing because the county is also the backstop reference for any Village provision that mirrors county code:
- Front setback: minimum 50 feet from the road right-of-way.
- Side setback: minimum 25 feet.
- Rear setback: minimum 50 feet.
- Detached accessory structures: at least 10 feet from the principal structure and at least 10 feet from any other structure on the same parcel.
- Accessory under 400 square feet: one-story detached accessory structures under 400 square feet are exempt from a building permit but may still require a zoning permit, with a site plan showing the location.
- Pools: any in-ground pool must be fully enclosed by fence or wall. Building without a permit is a violation prosecutable in Cass County Circuit Court.
For a Loch Lloyd address, the practical takeaway is: we verify the jurisdiction at the address-check step before we draw anything. If you're inside the Village, the path is DRC then Village. If you're in unincorporated Cass County adjacent to the community, the path is DRC (if your lot is in the Community Association) and then Cass County.
Loch Lloyd builds at the premium tier.
Pricing inside the gates runs higher than a comparable build in a non-gated suburb, and that's appropriate to the standard of the community. The DRC's material expectations push toward top-tier selections (travertine, natural stone, premium pavers), the structures tend to be larger because the lots and the homes carry the scale, and the engineering and submittal time is real. None of that gets cut. These are the ranges we've been hitting on Loch Lloyd and adjacent country club work through 2026.
The full outdoor living range is where most Loch Lloyd inquiries land. That's the patio plus a pavilion or pergola plus a fireplace plus an outdoor kitchen plus integrated lighting, designed and delivered as one space. We size and detail to clear DRC review on the first submittal whenever we can.
Building inside the gates.
A few practical realities of working a Loch Lloyd project. These are the details the community expects a serious contractor to handle without being asked, and most of the friction we see on builds inside the gates comes from teams that don't.
- Gate access for our crews and trades. The community coordinates contractor access through the gatehouse and the onsite property manager. We get our crews, sub trades, equipment, and material delivery on the approved list before mobilization week. Surprise trucks at the gate don't get in.
- Material staging is tight. Lots inside the community are not built for a contractor to use the front yard as a lay-down area. We stage on the driveway, on the side of the home where it's least visible, or off-site at our yard with daily runs. This shows up in scheduling, not in the price.
- Quiet hours and clean job sites. The community expects work to wrap to a clean state at the end of each day. No piled debris on the front, no contractor port-o-johns left visible to the street unless screened. Our PMs run a daily walk before leaving.
- Subcontractor standards mirror the community standard. Plumbing, gas, electrical, masonry, and concrete subs all have to meet the licensing, insurance, and reference level the community expects of any vendor inside the gates. We work with a small list of subs that we know clear that bar.
None of this is friction for the homeowner. It is the operating environment of the build. Our job is to make it look easy from the inside.