Wednesday, March 30, 2016


NOTE: For completely up-to-date and comprehensive coverage of this subject, we would strongly recommend readers to obtain a copy of the author’s new book - “A PRACTICAL GUIDE TO PERMITTED CHANGES OF USE” published by Bath Publishing in October 2015. You can order your copy by clicking on the link on the left-hand sidebar of this page.

It seems I only have to be away from my desk for a couple of days, and all sorts of major changes take place! De-CLoG has finally succeeded in getting its act together, and has completely replaced the much-amended 1995 GPDO with a consolidated order – the Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) (England) Order 2015 (SI 2015 No. 596).

Not only does this consolidate the many amendments that had previously been made to the GPDO, but it also introduces the further amendments, or at least some of them, that the government had been promising or threatening for the best part of a year now. The Order was made on 18 March, laid before parliament on 24 March and comes into force on 15 April. (Talk about ‘last-minute merchants’!).

The main changes made by the new GPDO are:

— the date for the expiry of permitted development right for larger home extensions (in Class A of Part 1) has been extended and will now expire on 30 May 2019;

BUT the time limit for the residential conversion of offices (formerly Class J, now Class O) has not been extended, and is still set to expire on 30 May 2016.

— the previous time-limit for extensions to non-domestic premises (offices, shops, industrial buildings and schools etc) have been made permanent (now Part 7 of Schedule 2);

— a number of new permitted development rights have been inserted in Part 3 (changes of use): the conversion of retail premises to restaurants / cafes (Class C); the existing permitted development to convert a shop to a deposit-taker is replaced by a wider right to convert a shop (or a betting office) to a premises providing financial and professional services (Classes D and F); the conversion of retail premises to assembly and leisure (Class J); the conversion of casinos or amusement arcades to dwellinghouses (Class N); and the conversion of premises used from storage or distribution centre uses to dwellinghouses (Class P);

— a new permitted development right for temporary use of building and land for commercial film-making has been inserted in Part 4;

— a new permitted development right has been included for the provision of click and collection facilities within the curtilage of a shop and for increasing the size of loading bays for shops and permitted development for the extension etc of buildings used for waste facilities (see Classes C, D and L of Part 7 of Schedule 2); and

— a new permitted development right for the installation of solar PV panels, with a generating capacity of up to 1 MW on the roofs of non-domestic buildings (Class J(c) of Part 14).

We are clearly going to have to get out heads round various re-numberings, and more subtle changes to the legislation that this new Order brings about, but it does represent a welcome tidying up of what had become a very messy document. Having been out of the office since Tuesday afternoon, I have only had time to give the new GPDO a very cursory examination, and will have to study it in detail in the coming days and weeks.

I was very close to completing a book on Permitted Changes of Use, and now I am going to have to do some fairly urgent revision of the text! The book won’t need a compete re-write, but clearly a lot of the references to the legislation are going to have to be changed. I had already anticipated these changes to some extent while writing the book, but there are nevertheless going to have to be a number of revisions to the text, and this is an extra task which I would frankly have preferred to avoid. Such is the lot of an author!

© MARTIN H GOODALL

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