ChatterBank1 min ago
Planning
Hi, I wonder whether anyone could give me a pointer in the right direction please?
I'm in the UK and my neighbour has decided to build a second house on his land which will sit about 2m from our mutual boundary. It's a two-storey building but not massive. It will however completely cut off the view from my bedroom and kitchen. So my question is - do I have any right to complain and under current planning rules, am I likely to be able to stop him? We are not in a conservation area...
Thanks
Lomax
I'm in the UK and my neighbour has decided to build a second house on his land which will sit about 2m from our mutual boundary. It's a two-storey building but not massive. It will however completely cut off the view from my bedroom and kitchen. So my question is - do I have any right to complain and under current planning rules, am I likely to be able to stop him? We are not in a conservation area...
Thanks
Lomax
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Lomax. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Has your property been there for 20+ years? If so, it will have acquired a 'legal right to light'. Depending on the potential impact on the light to your rooms, you may have a case against the neighbour which could result in modification to the new structure, compensation or even demolition of the new building. Even if the local authority pass the building plans, this does not override any legal right to light. Suggest you take advice from a right to light surveyor.
-- answer removed --
You must have a strangely oriented house. It is usual for habitable rooms to face either the garden or the front roadside of a plot.
If say you have a chalet bungalow with the gables facing front and back, then the main bedrooms in the chalet workspace could easily face to the sides.
You have no right to a view however you do have certain rights when it comes to principle windows of the new dwelling not pointing directly into your Windows or garden.
As the above says, you can object on the above grounds.
If say you have a chalet bungalow with the gables facing front and back, then the main bedrooms in the chalet workspace could easily face to the sides.
You have no right to a view however you do have certain rights when it comes to principle windows of the new dwelling not pointing directly into your Windows or garden.
As the above says, you can object on the above grounds.
Thank you, that's very interesting. My house has certainly been there for more than 20 years but they're building 2m back from the boundary so it's more sky that I'll miss though I guess there will be naturally a reduction in light. Does the right to light currently exist in the UK? It looks like something that's being planned:
http:// lawcomm ission. justice .gov.uk /areas/ rights- to-ligh t.htm
http://
My house is semi-detached and my neighbour who is trying to build is about 50m away of which about 5m is mine. My lounge looks sideways into my 5m garden and it's a room which only has 2 windows so it will end up looking at the side of his house rather a hedge and the sky. It's a similar situation with the main bedroom upstairs which also looks out the side and the rear.
Thanks
Thanks
I've found a 45 degree rule - would that apply?
http:// www.pla nning-a pplicat ions.co .uk/rig httolig ht.htm
http://
Buildersmate. OK I'll come clean. We were in the same position as Lomax. Our local authority passed similar plans in respect of our neighbour's proposed extension, despite our objections. We took the case to the Local Government Ombudsman on the grounds that the LA had not followed their own guidelines. The Ombudsman, though sympathetic, ruled that the LA had acted properly. So I researched right to light with the help of my son and eventually the neighbour backed down and the extension was never built.
OK, going the LA route may well prove the right course. I hope it does for Zlomax's sake. But, if our experience is anything to go by, the LA cannot necessarily be relied upon. There's no harm in making enquiries about right to light as a back up. I can tell you that we had 5 years of hell while all this was going and goodness knows what effect it would have had if the extension had been built.
OK, going the LA route may well prove the right course. I hope it does for Zlomax's sake. But, if our experience is anything to go by, the LA cannot necessarily be relied upon. There's no harm in making enquiries about right to light as a back up. I can tell you that we had 5 years of hell while all this was going and goodness knows what effect it would have had if the extension had been built.