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Yes the rear is single storey.
Ta
It seems awfully churlish of the Council to quibble over 9 inches or so. I hope they don't do that to mine
Cheers
Richard
Yes the rear is single storey.
Ta
Why?It seems awfully churlish of the Council to quibble over 9 inches or so.
Why?It seems awfully churlish of the Council to quibble over 9 inches or so.
If you apply for permission for a building that is 3m long then build it 3m long or put in an application for a building that is 3250mm if you want one that is 250mm bigger.
It always astonishes me when folk build an extension bigger or different to what is on the drawing. It is not only foolish but very risky.
I often get asked to build "just an extra half brick or so" and always refuse. It is usually the customer asking the builder to brake the rules. I cannot see what a builder would gain by building it bigger he will only lose out.
Total blarney if you ask me all these posts about homeowners getting into a pickle "cause the builder did it".
Builder my erse!
But why not apply for that size in the first place?
http://www.winstonsolicitors.co.uk/council-forces-house-demolition.html
Yes but you seem to have missed the point, would you say if it were 2 bricks over would that be OK? What about 3 bricks? What about 4 bricks or maybe 5? Then please explain why you arrive at your allowable limit by which building over should be allowed. Please explain at which point the council would go from being petty to justified.Not quite the same as going a brick's length too far out on a single storey extension through error or misjudgement, when something has been done under PD rather than PP. I still maintain the Council would have to be petty, and would be wasting council tax payers' money.
Quite. But in deciding whether to take enforcement action, a planning department has to consider whether such action is in the public interest. It's hard to see that it can be in anyone's interest to compel a structure that is substantially built, or complete, to be taken down for the sake of 9 inches.
Quite. But in deciding whether to take enforcement action, a planning department has to consider whether such action is in the public interest. It's hard to see that it can be in anyone's interest to compel a structure that is substantially built, or complete, to be taken down for the sake of 9 inches.
In the OPs case, it is not a matter of the extension being built slightly bigger - which although no longer conforming to the PD criteria, is not a big issue.
The point is that now the extension breaches a [fundamental]part of planning policy which is the 45 degree code. There is no compromise with this rule - that is why accurate measurements are essential
Yes but you seem to have missed the point, would you say if it were 2 bricks over would that be OK? What about 3 bricks? What about 4 bricks or maybe 5? Then please explain why you arrive at your allowable limit by which building over should be allowed. Please explain at which point the council would go from being petty to justified.Not quite the same as going a brick's length too far out on a single storey extension through error or misjudgement, when something has been done under PD rather than PP. I still maintain the Council would have to be petty, and would be wasting council tax payers' money.
Yes Richard I'm sure we all see what you mean, but woody and Freddy are right.
By your reckoning there is a point at which pettiness becomes justified action. The problem is saying exactly where it is and you have been asked to say where it is : can you do so ?
Laws are "arbitrary" and should be non-negotiable to save time and b uggeration ( for the authorities ) and possible legal repercussions if they consciously allow ( and document ) 100 mm over the limit and then get sued by someone who says they are only 200 mm and they let the first one exceed the limit so why can't they do the same.
As for your question about 10 mm, I'm sure nobody including the BCO/Planning would say it is worth enforcement action, but I'm also sure that it would be documented as conforming to plan and nobody would mention the excess as that would risk formally allowing a breach of the regulations.
That's the whole point though isn't it. Please explain why 9 inches should be overlooked in this case, you will not be able to answer the question. You are not in a position to be making judgment calls, your opinion is of little value to the OP just a like minded opinion that in this case the LA are being petty. The builder is responsible as is the homeowner for not getting their tape measure out earlier. Build beyond the limits and face the consequences I have zero sympathy with anyone who builds over, the rules are plain and simple and failure to heed them is just plain arrogant. Incidentally the OP has not mentioned what if any dimensions were on the drawing and their relevance.In this case 9 inches might reasonably be overlooked, if that's the only issue; or, if it results in the 45 degree rule being breached, then action could be required on that basis
That's the whole point though isn't it. Please explain why 9 inches should be overlooked in this case, you will not be able to answer the question. You are not in a position to be making judgment calls, your opinion is of little value to the OP just a like minded opinion that in this case the LA are being petty. The builder is responsible as is the homeowner for not getting their tape measure out earlier. Build beyond the limits and face the consequences I have zero sympathy with anyone who builds over, the rules are plain and simple and failure to heed them is just plain arrogant. Incidentally the OP has not mentioned what if any dimensions were on the drawing and their relevance.In this case 9 inches might reasonably be overlooked, if that's the only issue; or, if it results in the 45 degree rule being breached, then action could be required on that basis
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