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Philippa Evans spoke to Lara Page last week at the Homebuilding and Renovating Show - watch the video to find out how she transormed her East Sussex bungalow into a three-story home in just four months!
You’ve decided to extend your living space, so where do you begin?
Well, your first port of call should always be to check whether you need planning permission - Planning Portal offers some great basic advice on permitted works and building regulations. Keep an eye out for our feature When You Don’t Need Planning Permission, coming soon.
Converting ‘dead’ spaces like your loft, basement or garage is often the easiest way to create more space, as changing them into usable a living area doesn’t normally require planning permission, provided no additional volume is created. However, there are still building regulations to comply with.
To really open up your living space, a conservatory is still the first choice, and UPVC construction makes them fairly easy to maintain. However, because of their size, they normally require planning permission - particularly if you live in a listed building, flat or maisonette, or if the extension would take up more than 50 per cent of your garden space. This also applies if adding a conservatory would increase the volume of your original house by more than 15 per cent.
Kitchens are another favourite room to expand - their common location at the back of the house means extending into the rear garden is much easier than front and side extensions. In some cases, it also saves planning permission, as current regulations prohibit you from extending into any space that’s 20 metres or less from any public road.
Take our photo gallery tour below for inspiring extension ideas from Apropos Conservatories…
















2 Comments
Against you have spent all this, you could buy a larger, cleaner environment in which to live abroad. What I resent is the Brits and other people snapping up property not to live in, but to jack up the price. It forces people out and creates the same type of atmosphere you escaped from in the first place.
You sound a little bitter Ken. Not everyone is lucky enough to leave the UK and I feel sorry for my family and friends who are still there.