Planning Permission for Roof Terraces
- This topic has 24 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated 15 years, 3 months ago by Anonymous.
-
AuthorPosts
-
-
June 11, 2009 at 5:45 pm #710589MercerParticipant
Is planning permission required to use a flat roof as a roof terrace?
-
June 11, 2009 at 5:59 pm #807683AnonymousInactive
Yes
-
June 11, 2009 at 6:01 pm #807684AnonymousInactive
You will have to take into account issues of overlooking and how you will try and deal with them.
-
June 11, 2009 at 9:54 pm #807685AnonymousInactive
Maybe not.
-
June 12, 2009 at 9:02 am #807686AnonymousInactive
@goneill wrote:
Maybe not.
why so??
the exempted regs specifically state that a flat roof shall not be used as a roof terrace..??
-
June 12, 2009 at 9:38 am #807687AnonymousInactive
Trade secret!
-
June 13, 2009 at 1:25 pm #807688AnonymousInactive
Not to mention daft; no wonder planning gets such a bad name. Since when did ‘overlooking’ actually have anything to do with looking?! The concept implies overSHADOWING, i.e. the bulk of one building overwhelming another – apart from observing a minimum distance between buildings it’s hard to see that the concept has any meaning at all. It’s equivalent to ‘I have a right to a view’. It’s about time the planning system got a bit more real.
-
June 13, 2009 at 2:50 pm #807689AnonymousInactive
@johnglas wrote:
Not to mention daft; no wonder planning gets such a bad name. Since when did ‘overlooking’ actually have anything to do with looking?! The concept implies overSHADOWING, i.e. the bulk of one building overwhelming another – apart from observing a minimum distance between buildings it’s hard to see that the concept has any meaning at all. It’s equivalent to ‘I have a right to a view’. It’s about time the planning system got a bit more real.
I would take photos of my neighbours roof terrace, however, when someone is so in your face it’s not the most pleasant of views. (The neighbour that is) 😉
-
June 13, 2009 at 3:32 pm #807690AnonymousInactive
-
June 14, 2009 at 11:39 pm #807691AnonymousInactive
No, I’ve sold the idea of flat roof terraces a couple of times. And the last time I checked there wasn’t any absolute right to be not overlooked or overshadowed
-
June 15, 2009 at 10:01 am #807692AnonymousInactive
@goneill wrote:
No, I’ve sold the idea of flat roof terraces a couple of times. And the last time I checked there wasn’t any absolute right to be not overlooked or overshadowed
no, no absolute right…
but the question as to whether planning permission is required or not…
the answer is yes…do you have information to the contrary…??
-
June 15, 2009 at 10:49 am #807693AnonymousInactive
Cairnduff case, Waterloo Road
Supreme Court -
June 15, 2009 at 12:35 pm #807694AnonymousInactive
@goneill wrote:
Cairnduff case, Waterloo Road
Supreme Courtthat was for a replacement of an existing balcony that had been removed a ‘short time’ previously…
that case certainly does not set a precedent for roof terraces to be exempt from permission.
-
June 15, 2009 at 8:30 pm #807695AnonymousInactive
@henno wrote:
that case certainly does not set a precedent for roof terraces to be exempt from permission.
Certainly?
-
June 16, 2009 at 8:33 am #807696AnonymousInactive
@goneill wrote:
Certainly?
short of every planning eventually being subject to a supreme court case… yes!
-
June 16, 2009 at 10:59 am #807697AnonymousInactive
So, you’re sitting in your office, wondering if the phone will ever ring again, when someone calls to say that they’ve made terrace use of a flat roof at their house, and they now have a great sea view and view of the next door neighbour’s garden, and the council have served an enforcement notice. You advise them to either stop using the terrace or to seek retention permission which they do but fail. They appeal to the bord and fail there too. I think (but am not certain) that once you’ve applied for permission you surrender any claims you might have for exemption. Do you think you have advised them correctly? We know that’s what Parka would have done.
-
June 16, 2009 at 5:50 pm #807698AnonymousInactive
Titanic, deckchairs, moving? Waste of public time and money? Meanwhile, do any Irish planners have even the faintest notion of what might be meant by townscape?
-
June 17, 2009 at 9:19 am #807699AnonymousInactive
@goneill wrote:
So, you’re sitting in your office, wondering if the phone will ever ring again, when someone calls to say that they’ve made terrace use of a flat roof at their house, and they now have a great sea view and view of the next door neighbour’s garden, and the council have served an enforcement notice. You advise them to either stop using the terrace or to seek retention permission which they do but fail. They appeal to the bord and fail there too. I think (but am not certain) that once you’ve applied for permission you surrender any claims you might have for exemption. Do you think you have advised them correctly? We know that’s what Parka would have done.
do you advise them not to do anything, wait until the enforcement order is served to discontinue use, and then challenge same order all the way to the high court??? with no guarantee of success…..
that would be incredibly bad advice in my opinion…..
-
June 17, 2009 at 9:24 am #807700AnonymousInactive
No, I didn’t say I would advise them to do that. I might, depending on the circumstances, have written to the council saying that I believed the use of the roof was exempted under Section 4. And the council might then have quietly gone away.
-
June 17, 2009 at 1:36 pm #807701AnonymousInactive
@goneill wrote:
No, I didn’t say I would advise them to do that. I might, depending on the circumstances, have written to the council saying that I believed the use of the roof was exempted under Section 4. And the council might then have quietly gone away.
my experiences with councils would differ from yours….. 😉
ever hear the expression “never fight with a pig, because a pig likes getting dirty”….? 😀
-
June 17, 2009 at 2:47 pm #807702AnonymousInactive
I accept that many councils would not react as described above, and fighting with them over anything is waste of time. However, in the case of the last council to write to me saying that a roof terrace needed permission, they did indeed just go away when their attention was drawn to Section 4.
-
June 24, 2009 at 5:17 pm #807703AnonymousInactive
Henno, you never really said how you would advise the hypothetical client who came asking what do do about the enforcement notice he had received in relation to using a flat roof as a terrace. In one case I wrote to the council claiming exemption and they backed off.
-
June 29, 2009 at 4:05 pm #807704AnonymousInactive
@goneill wrote:
Henno, you never really said how you would advise the hypothetical client who came asking what do do about the enforcement notice he had received in relation to using a flat roof as a terrace. In one case I wrote to the council claiming exemption and they backed off.
prior to knowing about that court case, i would have advised retro planning, and argue the case…
now… im not so sure…..
also, you stated that you think one might lose ones right to claim exemption by making an application… have you got any more info on this… i havent heard of such…
-
June 29, 2009 at 4:35 pm #807705AnonymousInactive
Fair enough.
In addition to the the case where the council just backed off, I had another similar case where they did not, and served us with an enforcement notice. It was actually worse than that. Our client had a five storey 19th century house with a two storey return, which had a 100mm high parapet and a low pitched roof, and a window looking out onto the roof. We took off the roof and replaced it with a flat one, lowered the cill and made a roof terrace. The next door neighbour went ballistic as did the corpo who sevred an enforcement notice. we referred the matter to the Bord, citing 4(1)g of the 1963 act as allowing us to carry out the works, “being not inconsisitent with the character of the structure or of the adjoining structuresand and 4(1)h as allowing us to use the newly flattened roof as a terrace, “incidental to the use of the dwelling house as such” – both as exempted developments. The Bord agreed with us. There were no Protected Structures in those days. There is an interesting article by the late David Keane (Barrister and Architect) on the Cairnduff case. in the Irish Architect 1998 (p47), which I will post here if I can.
Non of the above urports to be professional advice, just a report of what happened to me. The Bord can and does treat every case “on its merits”
-
June 29, 2009 at 4:36 pm #807706AnonymousInactive
Sorry that should have been 1000mm
-
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.