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My next-door neighbour wants to build an extension to their house. It will cause a 2 storey brick wall to be built approx 3 metres from our kitchen window. This would block out the light to our kitchen.
An extension was built to the house before by the previous owners, this was done while we were away on holiday. When we returned, we saw that the extension had gone up, crossing 1 ft onto our land, had moved our fence and taken some of our driveway. At the time, we did not get into an argument over it. This time though, we strongly object to the application for extension, as we feel that we have suffered enough already, given that we have already lost out due to the previous extension.
The council has informed us of the proposed development, looking for our comments. Can anyone advise if they know how strong our position would be on this matter, as we are concerned that our objections may be ignored and we may suffer once again.
Any comments would be appreciated. Thanks.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I agree with all the previous entries. These are the facts:
By not objecting to the origional extension you have allowed your neighbours to squat on your land. If the extension is over 12 years old then you've lost that part of your property, it now belongs to them.
In regards to the origional extension you are poss. in luck. if you were away for the entire period of construction, i.e. you never saw any evidence of building until you arrived home and found a copmpleted structure, you may have some recourse through the council.
The right to light is an objective test, i.e. it is based on a minimum requirement. Objecting to the extension on right to light grounds would turn on what other light is coming into the room (other windows) and how much light you would get once the wall is built.
Don't go to a solicitor yet, you will be paying for stuff you can do yourself. Go to the Citizen's Advice Bureau and get info on complaining about the origional extension and immediately object to the new application for permission.
I only know very little about planning and building regs approval, but how could they get away with this? Surely it hasn't been done to planning or building regs approval. For a start, how would they get planning permission to encroach onto your property, and surely when the building control officer came to inspect the footings before concrete was poured he would have noticed the fact that they were on your land.
I second what the other posters say, take some advice, this building may have no permission to be there at all and you may have recourse for removal.
I help out a friend recently with a similar extension being built. If you look at your councils web-site regarding planning you'll find that they've got rules about what is considerred maximum permitted development. It details the maximum that they will normally agree to for a praticular type of property and rules about distances from existing windows etc.
If your neighbours are anything like my friends' they'll already know this and will have put in for basically the maximum.
The thing to bear in mind is that planning offices are very concerned about seting precidents. If nobody else in your street has a similar sized extension then you should emphasise this when you object to the planning permission. In our case there was a similar sized one but crucially the houses were seperated by a greater distane in that case. We emphasised this.
Call the planning office and talk to them, you may well get an indication of how favorably they're viewing this. If you can get your parish council on-board to object that can be very powerful.
Have they lived there long? It's not a ground for objection but if you can subtly imply that they deliberatly bought a house insufficient for them simply assuming that the council would be a push over that might well loose them sympathy.
In our case the applicants were encouraged to withdraw the planning request and to go for a single storey which they did.
Hi - I used to be a council building control officer and know a little about your situation.
The existing existing probably didn't need planning permission due to it's size etc. It would have needed building regulation permission but this does not control who's land it is built on. That would be a contactual issue and tresspass law comes into it. The 12 year rule is due to change shortly to make things simplier (suposedly).
As to the proposed extension, there is usually a 45 degree rule regarding right of light. If the proposed extension projects outside this imaginary 45 degree line then it is too big. Some planning polices say a max 3m out.
Even if they get the go ahead, you are still entitled to a party wall surveyor (paid by the building owner) to oversee works ensuring that they are built correctly as you technically now have a "party" wall. If they don't serve you with a party wall notice then you have the right to serve them with a court injunction stopping works until a party wall surveyor has been appointed and an award issued. You also have the right to appoint your own surveyor and for your neighbours to pay these costs. Look up
Hope this helps
I had a very similar situation last year. Unfortunately, if the room you believe will have it's light restricted in has more than one window, then it is unlikely that planning permission will be refused for that reason.
The one thing I would advise you to do is to
contact a surveyor. They should be able to
firstly advise you on the law regarding the first extension and whether you have any recourse for it being built on your land, and secondly the regulations regarding the second extension. A party wall act could be drawn up (and paid for by your neighbour). It cannot stop the extension being built if planning permission is granted, unless, that is, your neighbour fails to comply with any of the regulations, however it will protect you, your rights and your own property.
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