Replacing big shed/garage without planning
Replacing big shed/garage without planning
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JD

Original Poster:

3,086 posts

250 months

Saturday 24th January
quotequote all
To the side and back of my property, there is a wooden garage, it’s 3x10m but construction quality is closer to what I would call a shed (2x2 framing, plywood roof with felt)

In the next year or so I want to replace this with something with the same footprint (as it sits on a decent concrete slab).

The issue arises in that the current garage is approximately 2.8m high to the ridge from the base, and it’s only 1m from a boundary.


It’s been there at least 15 years so I’m not worried being I trouble for not seeking planning, but at what point would replacing it mean it’s a new structure and therefore would need planning?


I will reuse the existing weatherboarding once its replaced by wanted to go from a dual pitch roof to a single so will be pretty different in overall look once its complete.

If that would be considered new and therefore need planning, does the fact something over height has been there for years make my chances of success easier?


PhilboSE

5,690 posts

248 months

Saturday 24th January
quotequote all
Rather more questions than answers I’m afraid. How close to the boundary is the existing garage, because that will determine the maximum height you can do under Permitted Development.

If Planning Permission was required, and granted, before then a same-footprint building with similar max height would probably have no issues a second time around.

If it was built unapproved (ie PP needed but not sought) then the duration the current building has been there justifies it staying there, but not replacing it, although a presumed lack of objections from neighbours might be supportive of PP being granted.

So IMO the answer is kind if “it depends”, based on the history of the existing building, and location.

OutInTheShed

12,809 posts

48 months

Saturday 24th January
quotequote all
Does it make a difference if you don't completely demolish the old before erecting the new?

Repairing the walls and putting on a new roof is just 'maintenance'?

If you were forced to apply for retrospective planning, worst case they can only insist you go back to some semblence of 'how it was'?

The cladding and proximity of the boundary bring in building regs issues distinct from planning?

GasEngineer

2,060 posts

84 months

Saturday 24th January
quotequote all
PhilboSE said:
Rather more questions than answers I m afraid. How close to the boundary is the existing garage, because that will determine the maximum height you can do under Permitted Development.

If Planning Permission was required, and granted, before then a same-footprint building with similar max height would probably have no issues a second time around.

If it was built unapproved (ie PP needed but not sought) then the duration the current building has been there justifies it staying there, but not replacing it, although a presumed lack of objections from neighbours might be supportive of PP being granted.

So IMO the answer is kind if it depends , based on the history of the existing building, and location.
OP said it is 1m from the boundary.

OutInTheShed

12,809 posts

48 months

Saturday 24th January
quotequote all
GasEngineer said:
PhilboSE said:
Rather more questions than answers I m afraid. How close to the boundary is the existing garage, because that will determine the maximum height you can do under Permitted Development.

If Planning Permission was required, and granted, before then a same-footprint building with similar max height would probably have no issues a second time around.

If it was built unapproved (ie PP needed but not sought) then the duration the current building has been there justifies it staying there, but not replacing it, although a presumed lack of objections from neighbours might be supportive of PP being granted.

So IMO the answer is kind if it depends , based on the history of the existing building, and location.
OP said it is 1m from the boundary.
Also there's a time limit?
If it's been there many years without planning and no objections or action, then it can stay. And be repaired. And possibly upgraded.

Also, the PD rules may have changed over the years, more when places are in AONB or conservation areas or whatever.

When does 'refurbishing' a shed become 'replacing' it?
Around here sheds can be like Trigger's broom.
The roof and cladding often need replacing in 10 or 20 years.

Has anyone ever suffered from planning enforcement when Google Earth etc shows there's 'always' been a building there of that footprint?

JD

Original Poster:

3,086 posts

250 months

Saturday 24th January
quotequote all
PhilboSE said:
Rather more questions than answers I m afraid. How close to the boundary is the existing garage, because that will determine the maximum height you can do under Permitted Development.

If Planning Permission was required, and granted, before then a same-footprint building with similar max height would probably have no issues a second time around.

If it was built unapproved (ie PP needed but not sought) then the duration the current building has been there justifies it staying there, but not replacing it, although a presumed lack of objections from neighbours might be supportive of PP being granted.

So IMO the answer is kind if it depends , based on the history of the existing building, and location.
Yes I was suspicious it isn’t a directly answerable single question.

I’m not afraid of planning as we have just built a large extension (and feel an idiot for not putting the garage on it!) but it feels like £500 and lots of admin time I’d rather not spend.

I guess the second response is what I am asking, at what point is replacing a rotten frame on the existing with a new one and using the same weatherboarding considered maintenance and what point is it a new building!

If I was keeping the same roofline I think I would truly just risk it, but moving to the single pitch feels like risky ground.

The easier option would be to move to the single pitch and have the roof lower but I’d rather the extra headroom



OutInTheShed

12,809 posts

48 months

Saturday 24th January
quotequote all
My guess is you can take some liberties with the interpretation of the rules, provided it doesn't annoy anyone.

smokey mow

1,323 posts

222 months

Saturday 24th January
quotequote all
Put simply, if you demolish something and then rebuild it, it’s new works and the normal rule of planning apply.

When applying for planning the existing building would help your application though.

PhilboSE

5,690 posts

248 months

Saturday 24th January
quotequote all
The existing structure is timed out for enforced removal even if it needed PP originally but wasn’t sought.

As an existing structure you’re perfectly entitled to maintain it, so as long as it’s not changing footprint you could argue that you replaced rotten structural bits piecemeal (legal) and then replaced/maintained the roof (legal, if the key datum points like apex height don’t substantially change).

It’s ever so slightly debatable (but like the ship of Theseus) but if you’re reusing some of the existing materials I’d say crack on. Even if you had a particularly antsy neighbour who dobbed you in, I can’t see how an enforcement officer would regard it as a new building in that situation. I suppose if he caught you with nothing but a slab and a pile of timber then it’s a bit more debatable but even then it would be a harsh reaction to treat it as new if it was essentially the same and reused old materials.

Steve H

6,733 posts

217 months

Saturday 24th January
quotequote all
"Fix" a part at a time so it always continues to be there as it has been.

It’s a non-issue unless someone complains but if they do it’s just maintenance.

JD

Original Poster:

3,086 posts

250 months

Sunday 25th January
quotequote all
Thanks guys, the idea of doing it bit by bit is stumped by the possible replacement being a big SIP kit!

I think I’ll likely just risk it and make sure to not make it any taller.

Hugo Stiglitz

40,464 posts

233 months

Sunday 25th January
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Ive got the same. Id like to do it myself but I don't know where to start.

caziques

2,800 posts

190 months

Sunday 25th January
quotequote all
JD said:
Thanks guys, the idea of doing it bit by bit is stumped by the possible replacement being a big SIP kit!

I think I ll likely just risk it and make sure to not make it any taller.
Many years ago - been there done that. Had a 1940's wooden shed, about 160 sqm. Demolished and replaced with concrete base and breeze block walls. Council tried to do something a couple of years later, so a solicitor suggested I may have done it bit by bit rather than demolish it all in one go.

As council couldn't show the building hadn't existed for a few days, there was nothing they could do.

RacingStripes

709 posts

52 months

Monday 26th January
quotequote all
Having just gone through extending my garage id definitely go for forgiveness rather than permission next time.