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Siting a Shed - Building Regs
I want to put a shed in the garden. Just a small one, probably about
6' by 8'. As far as I can make out such a structure would be exempt from building control under schedule 2 - Exempt building and work. It would appear to come under class VI - small detached buildings. The relevant section stating: CLASS VI Small detached buildings 1. A detached single story building, having a floor area which does not exceed 30m2, which contains no sleeping accommodation and is a building- (a) no point of which is less than one metre from the boundary of its curtilage; or (b) which is constructed substantially of non-combustible material. 2. A detached building designed and intended to shelter people from the effects of nuclear, chemical or conventional weapons, and not used for any other purpose, if- (a) its floor area does not exceed 30m2; and (b) the excavation for the building is no closer to any exposed part of another building or structure than a distance equal to the depth of the excavation plus one metre. 3. A detached building, having a floor area which does not exceed 15m2, which contains no sleeping accommodation A 6' x 8' shed would therefore come under subsection 3, being a detached building with a floor area of less than 15m^2. If it comes under subsection 3 then there is no restriction on location. Of course it also matches the description of subsection 1, a detached building with a floor area of less than 30m^2. If it comes under subsection 1 then it must be at least 1m from a boundary unless it is constructed of non-combustible material. The person that I spoke to in the local building control office thought that this was the case but couldn't say what, if anything, then came under subsection 3. If that is the case then as far as I can see subsection 3 is irrelevant. The guidance notes from the ODPM are no more helpful. Has anyone on this newsgroup come across this before or can anyone shed [sic] any light on it? I would really prefer to place it near the boundary, my neighbour has no objection, and would prefer not to have to go for a metal storage solution. Many Thanks, Andrew Oh, and before anyone asks it is most definitely not intended to shelter people from the effects of a nuclear attack, just store a lawnmower and bikes. |
#2
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Has anyone on this newsgroup come across this before or can anyone shed
[sic] any light on it? I would really prefer to place it near the boundary, my neighbour has no objection, and would prefer not to have to go for a metal storage solution. Yes, you can put a wooden garden shed next to the fence, just like the approximately 15 million or so similarly located such buildings. Christian. |
#3
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#4
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Phil L wrote:
wrote: :: I want to put a shed in the garden. Just a small one, probably :: about 6' by 8'. As far as I can make out such a structure would be :: exempt from building control under schedule 2 - Exempt building :: and work. It would appear to come under class VI - small detached :: buildings. The relevant section stating: :: :: CLASS VI :: :: Small detached buildings :: :: 1. A detached single story building, having a floor area which :: does not exceed 30m2, which contains no sleeping accommodation and :: is a building- :: (a) no point of which is less than one metre from the boundary of :: its curtilage; or :: (b) which is constructed substantially of non-combustible material. :: If it's a timber shed, then you can put it where you like, if it's a brick built single skinned shed, then it has to go at least 1 metre from your boundary fence. That seems to be exactly the opposite of what section 1 above states. However, as has already been said, there are many millions of wooden sheds sited in such a way. Chris -- Chris J Dixon Nottingham UK Have dancing shoes, will ceilidh. |
#7
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Janet Baraclough wrote:
This was in Scotland, YMMV. It's only a phone call to find out. Actually that was where I started before posing here but the woman that I spoke to seemed to think that section 1 applied to everything and couldn't explain the reason for section 3. So, disillusioned with the staff at the building control office I thought I would try here instead. Andrew |
#8
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Class IV discusses exemptions for 'temporary buildings' and that is
defined as any building which is not intended to remain where erected for more than 28 days. I hope my shed will last al little longer than that :-) Andrew |
#9
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On Thu, 02 Jun 2005 21:45:02 GMT, "Phil L"
wrote: :: a wooden shed requires no building regulations, plans or anything else. Not according to my local planners and building control department. If it's big enough to exceed the planning/building control limits then it needs planning permission/to conform to building regs. Cheers, John |
#10
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On Thu, 02 Jun 2005 20:57:01 GMT, "Phil L"
wrote: If it's a timber shed, then you can put it where you like, if it's a brick built single skinned shed, then it has to go at least 1 metre from your boundary fence. Nope. If it's a shed of any material smaller than 10 cubic metres in external volume (i.e. about 6' x 8') then (barring weird covenants) you can put it where you like as long as it's not closer to the road than your house If it's higher than 4 metres (with a pitched roof or 3 metres without) or covers more than 50% of the garden (in conjunction with all other sheds etc.) or is bigger than 10 cubic metres and is within 5 metres of the house the you need planning permission (see here : http://www.opsi.gov.uk/si/si1995/Uks...4.htm#IDARND3D Class E) and, as stated higher up the thread if it's really big (greater than 15 square metres floor area) building regs kick in. Building regulations don't cover temporary structures like sheds, greenhouses or wendy houses, this is why they are called *building* regs, anything else can be taken down and shifted. Nice theory but wrong. Building regs and planning regs do cover sheds and wendy houses over certain limits (which most sheds and wendy houses don't exceed) Cheers, John |
#11
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#12
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"John Anderton" wrote in message ... Nope. If it's a shed of any material smaller than 10 cubic metres in external volume (i.e. about 6' x 8') then (barring weird covenants ... or living in a conservation area or National park ... you can put it where you like as long as it's not closer to the road than your house |
#13
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On Fri, 3 Jun 2005 20:40:53 +0100, "Mike" wrote:
"John Anderton" wrote in message .. . Nope. If it's a shed of any material smaller than 10 cubic metres in external volume (i.e. about 6' x 8') then (barring weird covenants ... or living in a conservation area or National park ... you can put it where you like as long as it's not closer to the road than your house I don't know about National parks but certainly in the conservation area I live in anything under 10 cubic metres is still OK, Cheers, John |
#14
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Christian McArdle wrote:
Of course it also matches the description of subsection 1, a detached building with a floor area of less than 30m^2. P.S. There's no "of course" about it. The proposed building is not described under subsection 1, as subsection 1 defines a building of less than 30m2 that is either far from the boundary or non-combustible. As it is combustible and within 1m of the boundary, it fails to meet the description and subsection 1 is not applicable. There is some confusion about all this. Particularly about the relationship between planning permission and building regulations. The crossover seems to vary between councils. Pop along to http://www.grantham-online.co.uk/planning/need.asp and click on "Buildings or Enclosures". That suggests you can cover half the garden in sheds if you want. There is no mention of the 1m rule. But then if you telephone the planners (not the building inspectors) at the same council, you get a different answer. AFAIK around here /any/ combustible building, temporary or otherwise, has to be at least a metre from the boundary. But you don't get that in writing, oh dear me no. |
#15
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On 4 Jun 2005 09:31:00 -0700, wrote:
There is some confusion about all this. Particularly about the relationship between planning permission and building regulations. The crossover seems to vary between councils. Pop along to http://www.grantham-online.co.uk/planning/need.asp and click on "Buildings or Enclosures". That suggests you can cover half the garden in sheds if you want. There is no mention of the 1m rule. But then if you telephone the planners (not the building inspectors) at the same council, you get a different answer. AFAIK around here /any/ combustible building, temporary or otherwise, has to be at least a metre from the boundary. But you don't get that in writing, oh dear me no. It sounds suspiciously like your planners have difficulty reading legal documents. It's not uncommon, I've met at least one who didn't seem able to comprehend a simple sentence in an HMSO document. OTOH I've also met several very knowledgable and helpful planners, you win some, you lose some, Cheers, John |
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