Jules S
Premium Member
Registered: 24th Dec 03
User status: Offline
|
quote: Originally posted by John
I'm much more surprised they allowed anybody at all to build anything like that positioned right at the front of the garden than the fact they said no.
I would tend to agree with that.
There is a definitive building line in that street.
JR, I'm guessing your house and the one next to it are newer than the rest and were built on the adjacent houses gardens?
If so I'd place a wager there are conditions on the planning concent for you house forbiding any future development forward of the building line.
Either way, the concept of a front garage has fallen at appeal....I don't think you have any further course of action in the UK. And taking it to the EU for a single storey garage wont really stack up ££££ wise.
|
jr
Member
Registered: 20th May 02
Location: Kent
User status: Offline
|
all the houses were developed at diffrent times, out house was a bungalow and was redeveloped around 12 years ago, the house next to it was built about 17 years ago, cheers for the input on the last bit btw, what i was thinking to
[Edited on 14-04-2010 by jr]
|
SVM 286
Member
Registered: 13th Feb 05
Location: pain
User status: Offline
|
1) Have the neighbours that voiced complaints, 'dealt with'.
2) Bribe all officials in the equation (it's not just national government that's corrupt)
3) Build the damn thing anyway and hide it behind some imported shrubs etc.
|
Simon
Member
Registered: 24th Apr 03
Location: Oxfordshire
User status: Offline
|
http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/mortgages-and-homes/article.html?in_article_id=429723&in_page_id=8
|
3CorsaMeal
Member
Registered: 11th Apr 02
User status: Offline
|
could you build a simple flat roof garage shed and have a hedge in front of it about same height as all the others?
|