Jump to content

Recommended Posts

you shouldn't need planning permission unless your property is listed or in a conservation area.

maybe you mean building control approval?

did you use a FENSA approved installer? they should have provided you with a certificate confirming that the windows comply with current building regulations, thus avoiding the need to seek agreement with building control at the council.

I'm confused. If you're not selling then why is it a problem? Why would you lose a purchase?

If it's a property you're buying then what's to stop you buying it without PP? Is it something a mortgage company has insisted on?

And you haven't confirmed whether the property is in a Conservation Area or not. If it is then PD won't apply anyway.

And you don't need PP if the windows were replaced 'like for like'. How do you know if there has been a material change or not?

There's also a timeframe when retrospective PP cannot be enforced by an authority.

Planning and PD both take around 8 weeks from submission of application.

Here's some links, personally I think you'll be better off speaking to planning directly...


http://www.planningportal.gov.uk/permission/commonprojects/doorswindows/


http://www.southwark.gov.uk/info/485/planning_applications/609/advice_and_help_with_planning_applications


http://www.hip-consultant.co.uk/blog/planning-permission-not-obtained-123/

We had this problem..... I think the rules changed, basically velux windows didn't previously need BRC but do now - they had been installed more than 4 years previous and all was sorted by indemnity insurance.


Retrospective BRC wasn't the issue, the time it takes to gain is!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Another stinker, thank goodness for the international break. Week 3 points...   Week 3 table...  
    • Hospices are coming under increasing pressure at the moment. Not only have their costs been forced up by the increase in employers NI and possibly the minimum wage for some workers, but the recent assisted dying legislation, which forces doctors faced with patients likely to die to offer suicide as a way out means that numbers of hospice doctors will withdraw as they don't ethically hold with the legislation. Additionally we might anticipate a reduction in research on end-of-life care and pain alleviation where the government is supporting an alternative (and one far cheaper than proper end-of-life care). This all brings pressure on the hospice movement as the assisted dying philosophy runs counter to it. It is hardly surprising then that they are looking to gain as much benefit as they can from higher prices.
    • There are plenty of charity shops around, even on Lordship Lane. For SCH one, would be interested to see how much of the donations goes to rent and overheads, rather than the actual intended cause.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...