Our house is on a corner plot. At the rear of the back garden we have a garage, and a double width driveway onto the road at the side of our house.
Am I allowed to build a carport over the driveway? The govt portal implies I can, but the car port would reach the boundary of the garden/pavement,
but also be beyond the building line of the front of the house behind ours.(which is where it may be an issue?)
Anybody know?
quote:
Originally posted by cliftyhanger
Our house is on a corner plot.
... the car port would reach the boundary of the garden/pavement, but also be beyond the building line of the front of the house behind ours.
When I did similar I just wrote to the council planning officer, provided a simple drawing and they said fine - no need fur anything else so got on with it.
I have a similar issue and went to the planning dept locally with a sketch and photographs. The car port would be at the side of our garage which is
infront of our house and we needed planning approval. We later built an extension at the side of our house where there was a boundary to the road
where there was a 10 ft high hedge. Through old age some had fallen down and I had replaced it with 3 6' fence panels. I took plans and photos
and this time the extension did not need planning approval but did need building reg approval - hoorah! BUT - I would need retrospective planning
approval for the 3 fence panels! I actually asked for planning approval to replace the entire hedge with fence panels and eventually got it which gave
me 6' of extra garden when the hedge was removed. The only downside is that I now have 18 fence panels to paint every 2 years or so
I would visit your local planning dept for advice
Cheers chaps.
Brighton planning is a mess. They no longer speak to you unless it is a paid appt, last I heard several months wait and that was before covid.
I will draw some simple plans and see what they say. Or possibly just do it, outlay won't be huge. Biggest obstacle will be getting the Mrs to
speak to her friend who lives in the house behind us, but as it is a steep hill, the structure may not be seen by them.
If you build it with a modular approach you could take a couple of sections out if it was considered to near the boundary
I would talk with neighbour and proceed.
People near me have extended garages down the drive using brick and felt roof
quote:
Originally posted by snapper
If you build it with a modular approach you could take a couple of sections out if it was considered to near the boundary
quote:
Originally posted by Sam_68
Thing is, and this is the important bit outbuildings come under a separate section, Class E. The wording of that is different and does not prohibit outbuildings that extend beyond a wall which fronts a highway and forms a side elevation of the original dwellinghouse, though there are more complex rules that apply in some circumstances (for example if the house is listed, or sited in an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, etc.).
The actual statutory instrument is here, if you want to read the rule for yourself (it's Schedule 2 that's the important bit):
https://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2015/596/contents/made
I suppose that the other thing I should point out is that if your garage is non-PD compliant (eg. in terms of overall height), and you attach the carport to it, then you will need Planning Permission even if the design of the carport meets Permitted Development rules: on outbuildings it is the building overall that is assessed, not the 'extension' to it.
I built a car port on the side of my garage. The rules were if it was under 30m square and open at 2 sides I did not need planning permission at all. Off course I built it 5m x 6m which was more than enough for 2 cars.
quote:
Originally posted by Mr Whippy
I built a car port on the side of my garage. The rules were if it was under 30m square and open at 2 sides I did not need planning permission at all. Off course I built it 5m x 6m which was more than enough for 2 cars.
quote:
Originally posted by Sam_68
I suppose that the other thing I should point out is that if your garage is non-PD compliant (eg. in terms of overall height), and you attach the carport to it, then you will need Planning Permission even if the design of the carport meets Permitted Development rules: on outbuildings it is the building overall that is assessed, not the 'extension' to it.
quote:
Originally posted by cliftyhanger
ago. Nobody has ever said a word about it! I wish I had made it a tad wider and longer, but sods law means somebody would have complained.
Just trying to find a design that is easy on the eye, so many look either cheap and nasty, or look like small oak barns. I may even use steels for the roof part to keep teh height low and the roof thin. If I can find some tables to give me required dimensions. I guess snow is the thing to worry about. Haven't had any for years, but I guess a metre of snow gets mighty heavy.