Hi
I have had plans for a two storey side extension accepted which was great until i saw two conditions appear. The conditions are:
Condition 4 - No development shall take place unless and until details of the full detailed drainage and sustainable urban drainage design including all relevant documents to limit the proposed peak discharge rate of storm water from the development to meet the requirements of the Councils Level 2 Hybrid Strategic Flood Risk Assessment (SFRA) have been submitted and approved in writing by the Local Planning Authority. The development shall not be brought into use until such works, as approved, are implemented in full and they shall be retained and maintained to a standard capable of limiting the peak discharge rate as set out in the SFRA and FRA thereafter.
Condition 5 - No development shall take place until details of flood resilient measures are to be submitted to and approved in writing by the Local Planning Authority. The development shall then be constructed in accordance with the appproved details and retained thereafter.
I feel like i am going around in circles with this as I don't know exactly what the council are expecting. I have spoken to and emailed the planning officer but he says it's not his area of expertise! I have spoken with the guy who drew the basic house plans and he said "google companies that do it"; which i did.
I have had varying responses from, that seems excessive for a small extension to £1650 + vat to draw plans not including any site visits, tests, requests for info. £1650 + vat for someone to draw something to say the water from your new roof goes here or there!
I get that i need to show the extension will not increase storm water into the mains drains and will need to show if i can use a soak away (doing infiltration test next week) or if i need rain water harvesting but how "detailed" do these drawings need to be to satisfy the conditions?
Has anyone experienced these conditions and what exactly is required? Is it detailed like CAD drawings or a simple diagram? Should the guy doing the building regs do this? Basically what will satisfy the conditions?
Cheers, Chris.
I have had plans for a two storey side extension accepted which was great until i saw two conditions appear. The conditions are:
Condition 4 - No development shall take place unless and until details of the full detailed drainage and sustainable urban drainage design including all relevant documents to limit the proposed peak discharge rate of storm water from the development to meet the requirements of the Councils Level 2 Hybrid Strategic Flood Risk Assessment (SFRA) have been submitted and approved in writing by the Local Planning Authority. The development shall not be brought into use until such works, as approved, are implemented in full and they shall be retained and maintained to a standard capable of limiting the peak discharge rate as set out in the SFRA and FRA thereafter.
Condition 5 - No development shall take place until details of flood resilient measures are to be submitted to and approved in writing by the Local Planning Authority. The development shall then be constructed in accordance with the appproved details and retained thereafter.
I feel like i am going around in circles with this as I don't know exactly what the council are expecting. I have spoken to and emailed the planning officer but he says it's not his area of expertise! I have spoken with the guy who drew the basic house plans and he said "google companies that do it"; which i did.
I have had varying responses from, that seems excessive for a small extension to £1650 + vat to draw plans not including any site visits, tests, requests for info. £1650 + vat for someone to draw something to say the water from your new roof goes here or there!
I get that i need to show the extension will not increase storm water into the mains drains and will need to show if i can use a soak away (doing infiltration test next week) or if i need rain water harvesting but how "detailed" do these drawings need to be to satisfy the conditions?
Has anyone experienced these conditions and what exactly is required? Is it detailed like CAD drawings or a simple diagram? Should the guy doing the building regs do this? Basically what will satisfy the conditions?
Cheers, Chris.