ChatterBank1 min ago
downstairs toilets
Somebody I know is trying to do up a very small house (1-2 bedrooms). His wife has told me that Building Regs have said they need to have a downstairs loo so if anyone was disabled they would have access to it. Is this right? It is not something I have heard of before and as the house is going to be tiny there isn't really room for one
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I wonder on what basis any of the above persons are making their assertions? Do they not realise that the Building Control Officer's job is to know the regulations, so if he says a disabled loo is required, it is very likely to be true.
They could check the Building Regulations documents to check before scribbling an answer. Did they do that? - apparently not.
Part M of Building Control Regulations is about disabled access. What it says is that the requirement will be satisfied if a WC is provided in the entrance storey of a dwelling which contains a habitable room; or (where the dwelling is such that there are no habitable rooms in the entrance storey) if a WC is provided in either the entrance storey or the principal storey.
In short, it means one HAS to have a downstairs loo in a new 2 storey conventional dwelling. This regulations has been around since 2004.
Now you say this person is 'doing up' an older house. If the house is already a domestic dwelling and already has planning consent to be used as a dwelling, there should be no problem - you do not now need to add a new loo downstairs if there isn't one there already. But if the 'doing up' involves splitting an existing house into flats, or a change of use where (say) it was a retail shop before and it is being converted to a dwelling house, then yes it does.
They could check the Building Regulations documents to check before scribbling an answer. Did they do that? - apparently not.
Part M of Building Control Regulations is about disabled access. What it says is that the requirement will be satisfied if a WC is provided in the entrance storey of a dwelling which contains a habitable room; or (where the dwelling is such that there are no habitable rooms in the entrance storey) if a WC is provided in either the entrance storey or the principal storey.
In short, it means one HAS to have a downstairs loo in a new 2 storey conventional dwelling. This regulations has been around since 2004.
Now you say this person is 'doing up' an older house. If the house is already a domestic dwelling and already has planning consent to be used as a dwelling, there should be no problem - you do not now need to add a new loo downstairs if there isn't one there already. But if the 'doing up' involves splitting an existing house into flats, or a change of use where (say) it was a retail shop before and it is being converted to a dwelling house, then yes it does.
thanks for the answers. The 'house' at the moment is apparently like a big shed and needs complete conversion so I am guessing that it will need a downstairs loo then? They are only planning to have it as a very small 1-2 bedroom house so this will probably make things even more difficult. I am involved with this because my hubby is supposed to be the bricklayer they are taking on to do alot of the work!! I didn't know if they were making excuses to delay it or not especially with the current housing market.