Leesider32
Registered User
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- 192
It is under the size required for planning
Bought a house with a building at the end of the back garden which is plumbed, wired etc and was used as a beauty salon by the previous owners.
It is under the size required for planning but we bought it with it specified that it can only be used for ancillary use, so storage etc. but not residential or commercial.
You will almost certainly be refused permission for Air BnB style letting or residential use though. Very difficult to get that through.
It's absolutely amazing to me that we keep hearing this but it's ok to put an entire family into a box in a hotel. For years !
It may have been specified in your contract that it can only be used for storage. But that's just because the sellers were not able to provide you planning permission so that clause is to get around that. It doesn't change the fact it was used commercially. And that 'use' can not be stopped now by the council if enough time has lapsed.
When I sell a house I own, which has a converted garage at the side, I'll be selling as a house with a garage rather than a house with a flat. To give you a more concrete example. I'll also have no issue confirming in writing that it's been a flat for the last 20 years. For some of that time the council was paying me rent on my 'illegal' flat.
could the council ask for it to be taken down? Take out current features that make it habitable?
If I don't go for the planning is there a certain time period after the build date (2013 in this case) that the council can't ask me to pull it down even if it is being used for residential purposes and my neighbour complains to the council?
No, such usage over time of a sub-standard structure never becomes OK. Any space to be let must meet the minimum standards.
The period of time after which the council cannot take enforcement action is 7 years - but this is 7 years from when it commenced use for residential purposes, not from when it was built.
Can anyone reconcile these two statements or show if either one is incorrect ?
There are time limits meaning the council can't make you take it down.Can anyone reconcile these two statements or show if either one is incorrect ?
I'm not 100% sure, but the fact that the OP has bought this structure with it specified under the contract as non-habitable space likely reset the enforcement clock.
What experience have you of councils making people take down converted garages and sheds.
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