Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Hi there ED - am looking at building a posh shed / studio in the garden to run my business from / quarantine the teen kids etc and have been looking at various options (log cabins, bespoke etc) and is starting to get a fairly complex. Anyone any experience of building something in the garden.


Thanks in advance

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/38606-garden-office-studio/
Share on other sites

My advice is first to check with the council to find out whether you need planning permission or, conversely, what (if anything) you would be able to do without planning permission. There would certainly be restrictions if your work space could be a living space - so having a kitchen or toilet/washing facilities might make your life harder. And there may also be restrictions on building materials so you could ask the council about that too. Presumably you are going to need electrics if you are running a business, so that would probably need to be signed off by an accredited electrician and possibly by the council too. And bear in mind your neighbours - if the eventual structure blocks their light or privacy they may have reasonable grounds for objection to a planning application if your plans don't fall within permitted developments. Knowing the constraints that the council's planning requirements might put on you might help narrow down your options.
3cows: I've been getting into this recently and after talking to my arctictect-type chap, am going for a shed/summer house affair, which I'll run water and power to from the house and create a drain outlet. I'll insulate it and have some basic heating. was gonna go brick-built etc but there's just no point given the costs and hassle. Horses for courses tho.
Do you need extra planning if you are getting water etc. I had work on the house recently and so there is water and electricity going to the end of the garden and a soil pipe coming back. Not sure if putting in a loo changes things. Do you mind me asking who you are looking at build something?

Do you mind me asking who you are looking at build something ?


If you mean me, I have used an architect for other things and was asking him in a general conversation, he hears it a lot and it was basically a binary outcome between very expensive and 'built' v wooden (temporary). Unless you;re going to live in it or use it as an annexe (my conclusion was) a timber shed was sufficient. you can insulate it etc if really needed. Bottom-line for me was, if I make dough through projects based in the 'shed' then fine I'll be able to affford to upgrade, otherwise it ain't justified.

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

    • Agreed and in the meantime its "joe public" who has to pay through higher prices. We're talking all over the shop from food to insurance and everything in between.  And to add insult to injury they "hurt " their own voters/supporters through the actions they have taken. Sadly it gets to a stage where you start thinking about leaving London and even exiting the UK for good, but where to go????? Sad times now and ahead for at least the next 4yrs, hence why Govt and Local Authorities need to cut spending on all but essential services.  An immediate saving, all managerial and executive salaries cannot exceed and frozen at £50K Do away with the Mayor of London, the GLA and all the hanging on organisations, plus do away with borough mayors and the teams that serve them. All added beauracracy that can be dispensed with and will save £££££'s  
    • The minimum wage hikes on top of the NICs increases have also caused vast swathes of unemployment.
    • Exactly - a snap election will make things even worse. Jazzer - say you get a 'new' administration tomorrow, you're still left with the same treasury, the same civil servants, the same OBR, the same think-tanks and advisors (many labour advisors are cross-party, Gauke for eg). The options are the same, no matter who's in power. Labour hasn't even changed the Tories' fiscal rules - the parties are virtually economically aligned these days.  But Reeves made a mistake in trying too hard, too early to make some seismic changes in her first budget as a big 'we're here and we're going to fix this mess, Labour to the rescue' kind of thing . They shone such a big light on the black hole that their only option was to try to fix it overnight. It was a comms clusterfuck.  They'd perhaps have done better sticking to Sunak's quiet, cautious approach, but they knew the gullible public was expecting an 24-hour turnaround miracle.  The NIC hikes are a disaster, I think they'll be reversed soon and enough and they'll keep trying till they find something that sticks.   
    • Totally agree with you.  🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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