Report #SAMPLE-001 · 2026-04-28
Prepared by SitePrior, LLC

Property Screening Report

~14 Town Mountain Rd, Asheville, NC 28804
35.6188, -82.5363 · APN representative · 0.6 ac
Engineer's plain-English summary

This is a buildable mountain lot, but expect to spend money on the slope. Average grade is 22%, soils are a Group C residual loam over weathered rock, and you're outside any FEMA flood zone. The biggest cost drivers will be retaining walls or a cantilevered foundation, perched groundwater above the rock interface, and stormwater runoff control on the downhill side. No wetlands flagged; nearest stream is 380 ft away. A geotech and a residential structural engineer should be on your team before you commit.

Verdict: Buildable with engineering — budget +$25–60k vs. a flat lot
LayerFindingWhat it means
FEMA flood zoneZone X (unshaded)Outside the 500-yr floodplain. Flood insurance not federally required.
Wetlands (NWI)None on parcelNo NWI-mapped wetlands within 200 ft.
Soil (SSURGO)Evard-Cowee complex, 15–30% slopesHydrologic group C/B. Drainage class: well drained. Moderate erosion potential.
Slope22% averageSampled across the parcel from USGS 3DEP. Triggers most NC steep-slope ordinances.
Elevation2,310 ftMid-slope terrain typical of Town Mountain area.
Streams (NHD)Nearest 380 ft (intermittent)Outside typical NC riparian buffer (50 ft). Confirm at survey.
Land coverDeciduous forest (NLCD 41)~3% impervious. Substantial tree clearing likely required for building envelope.
Design rainfall100-yr / 24-hr: 6.8 inHigh-intensity events common in WNC. Driveway and roof drainage need real capacity.

Slope & foundation

Average slope across parcel
22%
Maximum sampled slope
31%
Aspect (downhill direction)
SSE
Elevation range on parcel
2,275 – 2,348 ft

Implications: NC building code triggers stricter foundation, drainage, and grading review above 25% slope, and many local mountain-county ordinances tighten further at 20%. Expect engineered footings (pier/grade-beam or stem-wall), site-cast or modular retaining walls, and a stormwater plan even for a single-family home. Driveway grade will need careful design — 12% maximum is the practical limit for winter passability.

Soil profile

SSURGO map unit
Evard-Cowee complex, 15–30% slopes, stony
Hydrologic soil group
B/C (dual)
Drainage class
Well drained
Depth to bedrock
40–60 in (typical)
Available water capacity
0.10 in/in
K factor (erodibility)
0.20

Implications: Common WNC residual mountain soil. Reasonable infiltration, but expect perched water above the rock interface in wet seasons — design foundation drains accordingly. Septic suitability is marginal at this slope; verify with Buncombe Co. Environmental Health if no public sewer is available.

Design rainfall (NOAA Atlas 14)

Duration2-yr10-yr25-yr100-yr
15-min0.71"1.09"1.32"1.66"
1-hr1.27"1.99"2.43"3.09"
24-hr2.84"4.41"5.39"6.83"

Implications: Roof gutters and downspouts should handle the 10-yr / 5-min intensity (~5.5 in/hr). The 100-yr / 24-hr depth of 6.83" is what stormwater BMPs must store and release. WNC sees Helene-class events that exceed Atlas 14 routinely — for high-value structures, consider designing one storm size larger than code minimum.

Sources: FEMA NFHL (effective panel 3700156400J · 2010-04-03), USDA SSURGO (NC003 Buncombe County, 2024 update), USGS 3DEP 1-meter DEM, USFWS NWI 2023, USGS NHD HR 2024, NOAA Atlas 14 v3, MRLC NLCD 2021.
Disclaimer. This report is a screening compilation of publicly available federal datasets. It is not a Phase I ESA, wetland delineation, geotechnical investigation, surveyed elevation certificate, or a substitute for permit-grade engineering work. For permit submittals or property transactions, retain a state-licensed professional in your jurisdiction. © 2026 SitePrior, LLC. See full disclaimer.