KIAWAH ISLAND, S.C. — Developers planning to build homes on a sand spit south of Charleston, South Carolina are facing another setback after the state Supreme Court overturned their permits to construct a steel seawall.
The court ruled Wednesday that the state Department of Health and Environmental Control should not have issued the permits for the 2,380-foot (725-meter) steel wall between Captain Sam’s Spit and Kiawah Island.
Developers, who plan to build 50 homes on the sand spit, have said the wall would protect against erosion from the bordering Kiawah River.
The court sided with environmentalists challenging the project who argued that the wall would have devastated the ecologically sensitive area.
An attorney for Kiawah Development Partners told The Post and Courier that the builders want the court to rehear the case. The court has repeatedly sided against the developers in legal challenges to the project over the past decade.
Topics South Carolina
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
AIG’s Zaffino to Step Down as CEO as Aon’s Andersen Steps In
Relief But Questions on Agents’ Duties to Insureds After Florida Court Ruling
10 Highest Class-Action Settlements in 2025 Eclipsed $70B Total: Duane Morris
Law Firm Faces Sanctions for Failing to Vet Ugandan Claims in $6B 3M Case 

