Crosswords4 mins ago
Building an extension without planning permission...
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A house in the street was sold recently. The new owners have demolished the old kitchen and have started to build an extension about 3 times the size of what they've demolished. They haven't applied for planning permission. Should I report them?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I am being serious. It's not nice reporting people. However, a reputable builder will always find out if there is planning permission before doing the job as their reputation is on the line. Planning permission also means that building regulations have to be followed and checks are made at various stages. Personally I would make discrete enquiries rather than report.
If it's likely to have an adverse effect on the price of other properties, or it's an eyesore which badly affects the appearance of the street, or if it doesn't comply with building regulations then I'd be tempted to report it if I were certain that permission hadn't been given. As you say, why should you have had to apply and pay for permission when others simply ignore therequirement
Sandy, check this out to put your mind at rest .............. what can be done under "permitted development"
http://www.planningpo...s/hhg/houseguide.html
http://www.planningpo...s/hhg/houseguide.html
For 'a few years back' read October 2010 and then again in March 2010.
Don't know where modeller gets this magic 12% from - no such simple number exists. What you can do under permitted development depends on the scale and position of what you wish to do - not some magic number.
And just to re-affirm what nosha correctly says, planning consent and building regulations approval are two ENTIRELY different things.
Don't know where modeller gets this magic 12% from - no such simple number exists. What you can do under permitted development depends on the scale and position of what you wish to do - not some magic number.
And just to re-affirm what nosha correctly says, planning consent and building regulations approval are two ENTIRELY different things.
We have just completed an extension on our house and were told that as long as the new work did not extend further than 3mtrs from the exisiting rear wall, we could procede without planning permission. Work started a year ago this week and within a month we were up to 1st floor gutter height, when we received a letter from planning saying we needed permission after all, because we were infilling the 'L' shaped bit of our house(its a standard Edwardian shape with galley kitchen) as well as going out 3mtrs from the back and planning wanted the measurement taken from the furthest point back (6mtrs). Panic! The planning officer said "dont worry, lots of people make that mistake - but you still need permission!" Cheers! So we had a 4month shutdown. Moral here is dont rely on the internet, builder, architect or a phone call to the council, always go to the planners!
Malagabob -- 70 cubic metres is the old rules.
As The Builder has pointed out, the Planning Portal website is the place to check out what the current allowances are. Its surprising just how big an extension you can build without planning permission these days.
landscaper2 - you certainly can rely on the internet if you use the planning portal website. Anyone calling the Council where I work asking whether or not something is permitted development is directed straight to that website.
As The Builder has pointed out, the Planning Portal website is the place to check out what the current allowances are. Its surprising just how big an extension you can build without planning permission these days.
landscaper2 - you certainly can rely on the internet if you use the planning portal website. Anyone calling the Council where I work asking whether or not something is permitted development is directed straight to that website.