Jump to content

Anyone with experience of creating a loft storage space? Planning/building regs question.


Recommended Posts

Hi


We are buying a 1930s terraced house in forest hill/Sydenham borders and just want some thoughts from anyone who knows about loft extensions. The vendors extended into the loft to create a storage space, it has been boarded up and plastered and has a proper floor, to all intents and purposes it is another room with two velux style windows and an open tread staircase between the 1st and 2nd floors. It's obviously not officially a bedroom due to fire regs and lack of documentation. My question is whether there would have been any need to seek planning approval or building regs approval? It was done approx 10 years ago. It is in the borough of lewisham and I have emailed their planning portal but it seemed worth asking on here as I'm sure it's the sort of thing others may have done. I guess my thoughts are regarding safety of electrical fittings and insulation materials etc, plus putting in a staircase seems a surly significant structural alteration so surely would require someone coming to take a look and confirm you won't break your neck.


Any advice greatly appreciated!


Thanks

Others will know better but I would think planning permission would not have been required as there is no overall increase in the volume of the original house and no change of use. Building Reg's possibly but I wouldn't have thought so. Boarding a loft, plasterboarding the roof timbers and putting in a couple of velux's is a perfectly reasonable thing to do if you're going to use the space for storage. Any electrical works should have been carried out by a qualified electrician according the regs at the time and nowadays I think Building Reg's may be required for even relatively small electrical work but I don't think that was the case 10 years ago.

hi

unless the house is in a conservation area or is listed, it's very unlikely that planning consent would have been required, though a 'certificate of lawful development' would have given you as purchaser confidence that it was legal.?


building regs consent would surely have been required at the time. the fact that it wasn't isn't a good sign and suggests that the conversion was done on the cheap so the property shouldn't be commanding a premium for this space.?


for example, you say it has a 'proper floor'. the surface you walk on may appear fine but it was probably laid onto the old ceiling joists which were never sized adequately to take the load of a habitable room up there so may well be unsafe.?


to conclude, if you intend to use it as a living space or bedroom, you really should assume a budget allowance of doing a conversion properly. this way you are able to live there in the knowledge that the house is safe and you benefit from the added value when you come to sell.?

bemusED Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> you say it has a 'proper floor'. the

> surface you walk on may appear fine but it was

> probably laid onto the old ceiling joists which

> were never sized adequately to take the load of a

> habitable room up there so may well be unsafe.?


This was also my thoughts. It may be suitable for light use, but probably not any substantial furniture, etc.


I agree that planning permission wouldn't have been necessary. If there's no building regs certificate, perhaps you could ask for an inspection to be done? Then you could even ask the vendor to cover the costs of any work needed.

Thanks! We aren't planning on using it as a bedroom for the time being but will prob do the proper conversion in future for which we are happy to pay all the costs. It's not being sold as a bedroom so they aren't pretending its something it isn't...just that they did it without anyone checking it over. If that is legally fine then I'm not concerned but if we are buying somewhere that hasn't got the necessary paperwork then obviously far from ideal!


Thanks!

I doubt an open tread staircase between 1st and 2nd floors would pass building regs as it would be a fire risk. You may have to have that replaced for a more standard 'boxed in' design when you do the full conversion.

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

    • I'm not in a bubble - if you read my post it says supportive of food bank info and community group info etc on the ED station board, where broad mix pass by when using train/bus/on foot. You're judging me but I can assure you I probably do FAR more for the local community than someone like you who simply posts something unhelpful in response to a conversation piece, asking for more opinions. Of course I know not everyone is middle class, I am working class worked up to middle class etc etc. I support various local groups, raise money for charity, give money to charity, give to foodbanks... the whole shebang. All I am saying is that there are ALSO other people who are interested in looking at the noticeboard for small business info around the area. Small businesses definitely need support and often make low profits and rely on advertising in places like these noticeboards. I'm entitled to an opinion and I am very honest, unlike some who want to say the right thing but if you question yourself what do YOU actually do for the good of others? Yes you may be Mother Teresa but my guess is... you aren't 😉 It is now fixed... 
    • I think there is possibly a “broken windows syndrome” to these kind of boards: you know the idea that a broken window left untouched will give the impression that nobody cares, so encourages more vandalism? If boards are not maintained and the notices are way out of date it gives off that vibe. North Cross Road is a Southwark council licensed market, so does it not have a council employee in charge of it? Someone who arranges pitches and payments etc. If so, surely they would be the person to take responsibility? It only needs somebody to keep it clean and charge the posters regularly. Perhaps this can be suggested to the Goose Green councillors; it’s not my ward.
    • Exactly. I complained about them being broken for around 2 YEARS and they were repaired autumn (?) last year but only today when I emailed the councillor did he say he had "just received keys". I have no objection to a mix of community groups etc using the board but surely it should be open to all? Including local businesses, many of whom rely on word of mouth or boards like this - they don't often make much profit so it's great to support local business owners. It's not really my own interest as I am not a business owner... I am just reflecting what I would like to see - that I admit - as per my original post. p.s. the noticeboards I am talking about are empty - not used by anyone as the councillor has the key! Watch my words. They will be updated yearly if that and the info will go out of date. Last time the Northcross Rd one ended up with local councillor contact details, community centre contacts (useful I agree) and random flyers. Someone broke the glass and that was it for several years until I constantly emailed and James Barber - wonderful former councillor for the area - proactively supported, and we now have it fixed and a new one near ED station...
    • Voluntary organisations are probably not making use of the boards any more because of the state they are in. To the best of my knowledge a small number of people had keys originally, but I have no idea who has them now. I imagine it is going to take a fair amount of time to get all this properly up and running again, and then properly maintained.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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