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extreme Litigation Risk — 100.0% Pre-1990 Building Stock

Shopping Center ADA Compliance in Brentwood

36 shopping centers across 6 commercial corridors. With 100.0% of buildings constructed before 1990 and an average build year of 1980, Brentwood shopping centers face significant ADA compliance challenges.

36
Shopping Center Properties
100.0%
Built Before 1990
extreme
Litigation Risk
$10K–$500K
Typical Settlement
CASp #991Built Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical CenterMS Structural EngineeringTutor Perini Veteran$1M Insured

City Intelligence Brief

Brentwood has 36 shopping centers, 100% built before 1990 (avg. year 1980), concentrated along San Vicente Boulevard (Barrington Avenue to 26th Street). Shopping Center ADA litigation risk is extreme in Brentwood, with settlements reaching $500K — non-compliant parking spaces is the leading trigger. Brentwood's 10.8% disability rate and 13.4% senior population create above-average demand for accessible shopping centers. Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety (LADBS) oversees ADA compliance for Brentwood's shopping centers, with 3 local programs supporting accessibility upgrades.

Building Stock Analysis

Shopping Center Building Stock in Brentwood

Brentwood's San Vicente Boulevard (Barrington Avenue to 26th Street) corridor has 100% pre-1990 shopping centers with an average build year of 1980, making non-compliant parking spaces especially common.

An analysis of shopping center properties in Brentwood, including building age, square footage, and key commercial corridors.

36

Shopping Center Properties

797,749

Total Sq Ft

100%

Built Before 1990

1980

Avg Year Built

Typical Era: 1948-1985

Key Corridors

San Vicente Boulevard — 26th Street / Brentwood Country Mart

Southeastern terminus of San Vicente centered on the 1948 Brentwood Country Mart at 225 26th Street. One of the oldest commercial clusters in Brentwood with barn-style architecture and open-air courtyard layout presenting unique ADA challenges. SurveyLA-identified San Vicente Boulevard Commercial Historic District (1920s-1930s Spanish Colonial Revival storefronts) in this segment.

Brentwood Gardens Plaza / San Vicente-Barrington Intersection

Commercial heart of Brentwood at the intersection of San Vicente Blvd and Barrington Ave (28,875 vehicles/day on San Vicente, 18,919 on Barrington). Brentwood Gardens Plaza is a three-story retail center with tenants including Sweetgreen, Barry's Bootcamp, Club Pilates, and City National Bank. Highest pedestrian activity in Brentwood.

Showing corridors most relevant to Shopping Centers. 6 total corridors in Brentwood.

Litigation Intelligence

ADA Litigation Risk for Shopping Center in Brentwood

With a extreme litigation risk and settlements reaching $500K, shopping centers in Brentwood face significant ADA exposure — Shopping centers—malls, strip malls, retail plazas, and outlet centers—represent one of the highest-risk property catego….

Litigation Risk Level

extreme

Shopping centers—malls, strip malls, retail plazas, and outlet centers—represent one of the highest-risk property categories for ADA litigation in California. Retail centers with public-facing tenants are "most at risk for ADA-related lawsuits". The multi-tenant structure of shopping centers creates compounded exposure: compliance must be coordinated across landlord-controlled common areas (parking, walkways, restrooms, directories) and individual tenant spaces simultaneously. When any single tenant triggers a remodel, the 20% path-of-travel upgrade rule can cascade obligations across the property. The landlord bears primary liability for common areas under *Botosan v. Paul McNally Realty* (9th Cir. 2000), yet both landlord and tenant are jointly and severally liable under 28 C.F.R. § 36.201—meaning a plaintiff can name the property owner, management company, and every tenant in one suit.

Typical Settlement Range

$10,000 – $500,000

Most Targeted Property Types

RestaurantRetail StoreMedical OfficeGas StationFitness Center

Plaintiff Firms Targeting Shopping Centers

FirmFocusVolume
Manning Law, APC1,775
Law Office of Hakimi & Shahriari802
Law Office of Morse Mehrban418
So Cal Equal Access Group2,598 (federal)
Potter Handy LLP / Center for Disability AccessThousands historically
Seabock Price APC299
The Reddy Law Firm279

ADA Violations & Risk Profile for Shopping Centers

1

Non-Compliant Parking Spaces

ADA Standards §502; CBC §11B-502

Multi-tenant parking lots frequently have excessive slopes/cross-slopes, improper dimensions, faded striping, and insufficient accessible spaces for the total lot capacity. Properties must calculate required accessible spaces based on each parking structure separately.

$500–$2,0001,755 reports (15.96% of all violations)—#1 overall
2

Inaccessible Exterior Path of Travel

ADA Standards §206.2, §402; CBC §11B-206.2, §11B-402

Routes from parking to building entrances across large shopping center sites with uneven surfaces, excessive slope/cross-slope, missing detectable warnings, and paths unprotected from vehicular traffic. The ADA requires at least one accessible route from site arrival points to every accessible building entrance.

Regulatory Context

When a tenant makes alterations to a primary function area, both the ADA and California Building Code require that up to 20% of the adjusted construction cost be allocated to improving the accessible path of travel to that area—including the route from the public right-of-way, parking, and restrooms serving the altered space. For projects under the California valuation threshold of $186,172, the city requires the additional 20% allocation automatically. For example, a $100,000 tenant buildout in a shopping center could trigger $20,000 in path-of-travel upgrades to common area elements the landlord controls.

$5,000–$25,0001,197 reports (10.89%)—#2 overall
3

Missing or Non-Compliant Parking Signage

ADA Standards §502.6; CBC §11B-502.6

Parking identification signs lacking the International Symbol of Accessibility, missing "van accessible" designations, signs mounted below the required 60-inch minimum height, and missing directional signage to accessible spaces.

$100–$3001,074 reports (9.77%)—#3 overall
4

Non-Compliant Counter/Table Heights

ADA Standards §904; CBC §11B-904

Checkout counters, service desks, food court tables, and customer service kiosks exceeding the 36-inch maximum height requirement. At least one checkout counter must be no higher than 36 inches and at least 36 inches long.

$500–$5,0001,035 reports (9.41%)—#4 overall
5

Non-Compliant Ramps and Stairs

ADA Standards §405, §504; CBC §11B-405

Curb ramps and entrance ramps with slopes exceeding 1:12 maximum, missing handrails, non-compliant landings, and absent wheel guards. Shopping centers with level changes between parking and entrances are particularly vulnerable.

$1,000–$10,000894 reports (8.13%)—#5 overall
6

Interior Path Obstructions

ADA Standards §307; CBC §11B-307

Merchandise racks, product displays, boxes, and seasonal displays projecting into accessible circulation paths within tenant spaces and common corridors. Aisles must maintain at least 36 inches clear width.

$0–$500644 reports (5.86%)—#6 overall
7

Van-Accessible and Loading Zones

ADA Standards §502.2, §503; CBC §11B-502.2

Missing van-accessible spaces (required at 1 per every 6 accessible spaces), insufficient access aisle widths (8-foot minimum for van spaces), and non-existent passenger loading zones. Properties must provide van-accessible spaces at a one-in-six ratio.

$500–$3,000498 reports (4.53%)—#7 overall
8

Inaccessible Restroom Doors/Routes

ADA Standards §404, §603; CBC §11B-404

Common area and tenant restroom entry doors with non-compliant thresholds, knob-style hardware (instead of levers), insufficient maneuvering clearance, and doors requiring more than 5 pounds of force. CCDA noted a strong upward trend in restroom violations, with 4 of positions 11–15 in the restroom category.

$5,000–$15,000394 reports (3.58%)—#9 overall, rising trend
Regulatory

Common Area Maintenance and Accessible Routes

Shopping centers classified under the ADA as having 5 or more sales/rental establishments must provide accessible routes connecting all stories—no exceptions for the small-building elevator exemption. At least one accessible route must connect every site arrival point (parking, transit, sidewalks) to every accessible building entrance. Multiple buildings on the same site must also be connected by accessible routes.

Regulatory

Parking Lot Requirements for Multi-Tenant Properties

Accessible parking must be calculated separately for each parking structure (lot or garage), not based on total site parking. The ADA requires a minimum of 1 accessible space per 25 total spaces, scaling upward, with at least 1 van-accessible space per 6 accessible spaces. The DOJ has settled cases specifically against shopping centers for failing to locate accessible spaces on the shortest accessible route to building entrances, install proper access aisles, add compliant signage, and provide ramps that do not intrude into parking spaces.

Regulatory

Directory and Wayfinding Signage

Shopping center directories and directional signage must meet ADA visual requirements: high-contrast characters, appropriate font sizing, and placement at least 40 inches above ground. Room and space identification signs (permanent designations) require raised characters and Grade 2 Braille, mounted at specific heights along the path of travel. The International Symbol of Accessibility (ISA) must label accessible entrances, restrooms, parking spaces, checkout aisles, and elevators (unless all are accessible).

Regulatory

Food Court Accessibility

Food courts require accessible routes to all dining areas, food service lines, condiment bars, and seating areas. At least 5% of seating must be wheelchair-accessible, dispersed throughout the dining area rather than clustered. Accessible tables must have top heights of 28–34 inches with adequate knee clearance.

Regulatory

Restroom Requirements

Common area restrooms controlled by the landlord remain the landlord's responsibility, while tenant-specific restrooms may be allocated by lease. Both must comply with ADA Standards for grab bars, door hardware, maneuvering clearance, lavatory height, and mirror placement. Under the path-of-travel rule, restrooms "serving the area of alteration" are included in the scope of required upgrades when any tenant remodels.

Regulatory

Landlord vs. Tenant Responsibility Allocation

Under Title III, both landlord and tenant are "jointly and severally liable" to disabled plaintiffs. The ADA allows the parties to allocate compliance responsibility via lease, but this allocation governs only the indemnification relationship between them—it does not eliminate either party's liability to plaintiffs. Northern California federal courts have ruled that landlords must be proactive in monitoring tenant compliance, even when leases assign ADA responsibility to tenants.

Regulatory

CAM Charge Allocation for ADA Remediation

Common area ADA improvements—parking lot restriping, ramp construction, path-of-travel upgrades, signage replacement, and common restroom renovations—are typically funded through Common Area Maintenance (CAM) charges. CAM costs are allocated to tenants based on pro-rata share (tenant square footage ÷ gross leasable area), meaning larger tenants pay proportionally more. Some leases define CAM charges broadly to include "compliance with governmental regulations," which can encompass ADA remediation costs.

3,252 cases (37.5% of national total)

Federal ADA Title III filings in California (2025)

8,667 cases

National ADA Title III federal filings (2025)

2,598 lawsuits — highest volume of any single firm in the nation

So Cal Equal Access Group federal filings (2024)

41.1% of all complaints and prelitigation letters (1,775 of 4,319)

Manning Law APC statewide CCDA share (2024)

$10,000–$25,000 (restaurants), $8,000–$20,000 (retail)

Typical single-visit settlement demand range

88% of accessibility complaints filed in state court

State vs. federal filing split (2024)

A CASp inspection completed before any lawsuit confers Qualified Defendant status under Cal. Civ. Code §55.51, providing three critical protections: a mandatory 90-day stay of court proceedings (halting attorney fee accumulation), a mandatory early evaluation conference facilitating rapid settlement, and a 75% reduction in statutory damages from $4,000 to $1,000 per offense for violations corrected within 60 days. Despite these powerful protections, CCDA data shows that 99% of defendants in 2024 did not utilize them — making proactive CASp inspection one of the most cost-effective risk mitigation strategies available to Brentwood property owners. Properties with CASp reports also receive expedited plan review at LADBS for correction of identified violations under California Civil Code §55.53.

Accessibility Demand

Who Needs Accessible Shopping Centers in Brentwood

Brentwood's 10.8% disability rate and 13.4% senior population create high demand for accessible shopping centers.

10.8%

Residents with Disabilities

13.4%

Residents 65+

73,065

Veterans

These populations rely on accessible commercial properties in their community.

Permit Requirements

Building Department & Permit Requirements

Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety (LADBS) in Brentwood oversees ADA compliance for 36 shopping centers — 2025 California Building Code (CBC with LA amendments), including Chapter 11B Accessibility.

Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety (LADBS)

City of Los Angeles jurisdiction — Brentwood is a neighborhood within the City of LA, not a separate municipality. LADBS handles all building permits; LA City Planning handles zoning; LA Public Works handles right-of-way.

Current building code2025 California Building Code (CBC with LA amendments), including Chapter 11B Accessibility
Path-of-travel triggerCBC Section 11B-202.4 — alterations, structural repairs, or additions to existing buildings require accessible path of travel to the area of work
See full details →

Local Resources

Local Programs & Resources

3 local programs

Safe Sidewalks LA — Access Request Program (Willits Settlement)

A 30-year, $1.4 billion citywide program launched December 2016 under the Willits v. City of Los Angeles settlement. Persons with mobility disabilities can request sidewalk repairs, curb ramp installations, and removal of other barriers in the pedestrian right-of-way through LA 311 or online at sidewalks.lacity.gov. Property owners can submit access requests for sidewalks adjacent to their buildings, benefiting both their customers and reducing ADA litigation exposure.

Brentwood Village Property and Business Improvement District (PBID)

Established by City Council Ordinance No. 182231 in 2012 (originally formed 2002, renewed 2007 and 2012 for 10 years). Managed by the Brentwood Village Business Association at 140 S. Barrington Ave. Annual budget approximately $302,000, primarily funding streetscape cleaning, litter pickup, landscape upkeep, and holiday lighting. Does not directly fund ADA improvements. The City-funded Brentwood Walkability Enhancements Project ($2.56 million) on San Vicente Boulevard is installing new curb bump-outs, upgraded curb ramps, and crosswalk improvements along Brentwood's primary commercial corridor.

View all programs for Brentwood
CASp

License #991

State-Certified Accessibility Specialist

MS

Built Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center

MS Structural Engineering · Tutor Perini

QD

Qualified Defendant Status

Reduces statutory damages 75% with 90-day litigation stay

What a CASp Inspector Evaluates: Shopping Center

Key CBC 11B and ADA Standards requirements checked during a CASp inspection

ADA Compliance Costs: Shopping Center in Brentwood

Understanding remediation investment and litigation risk

Remediation Investment

Minor Barriers$10,000
Typical Property$45,000
Extensive Barriers$150,000

Cost of Inaction

CASp Inspection

6–10 hours on-site

$3,500–$8,000
Typical Settlement

Based on Brentwood data

$10K–$500K
Protection Value1:10

Factors That Affect Your Remediation Cost

  • Total leasable square footage
  • Number of tenant spaces
  • Common area extent (food court, restrooms)
  • Parking structure size and levels
  • Age and renovation history

Estimates based on industry data and typical remediation projects in California. Actual costs vary based on property condition, scope of barriers identified, and local contractor rates. A CASp inspection report will identify specific barriers and prioritize remediation.

Brentwood Shopping Center Compliance Landscape

Local enforcement data combined with shopping center ADA requirements

Brentwood shopping center properties face a extreme litigation risk environment, with 22.0 ADA filings per 1,000 commercial properties. Typical settlements for shopping center violations in this market range from $10K to $500K. Of the 36 shopping center properties in Brentwood, 100.0% were built before 1990 and are subject to heightened compliance scrutiny. Shopping centers—malls, strip malls, retail plazas, and outlet centers—represent one of the highest-risk property categories for ADA litigation in California. Retail centers with public-facing tenants are "most at risk for ADA-related lawsuits". The multi-tenant structure of shopping centers creates compounded exposure: compliance must be coordinated across landlord-controlled common areas (parking, walkways, restrooms, directories) and individual tenant spaces simultaneously. When any single tenant triggers a remodel, the 20% path-of-travel upgrade rule can cascade obligations across the property. The landlord bears primary liability for common areas under *Botosan v. Paul McNally Realty* (9th Cir. 2000), yet both landlord and tenant are jointly and severally liable under 28 C.F.R. § 36.201—meaning a plaintiff can name the property owner, management company, and every tenant in one suit.

JR

Jose Rubio

Certified Access Specialist

CASp #991
Built Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical CenterMS Structural EngineeringTutor Perini veteran$1M+ insured

Jose Rubio brings over 15 years of structural engineering and construction experience to every CASp inspection. He built Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center with Tutor Perini and holds an MS in Structural Engineering.

View full credentials →
The information on this site is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney for advice specific to your situation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Protect Your Brentwood Shopping Center

Schedule a CASp inspection and activate Qualified Defendant status under California Civil Code §55.56.