Brontosaurus wrote: » For anyone who has managed to get PP for a log home or anything unconventional: Have you managed to get PP and meet building regs, and care to share a bit about your difficulties? Thanks. Not interested in naysayers thanks.
Metric Tensor wrote: » The most common way of complying with the building regulations is by meeting the requirements of the Technical Guidance Documents which go from Part A to Part M. So called log cabins can have particular problems with: B - Fire Safety D - Workmanship and Materials (material certification) L - Energy Conservation (A huge cost issue in all builds and by ignoring it unscrupulous sellers can appear to offer a bargain) M - Access (Ramps, Doors, Toilet Sizes, Corridors, etc) Many products on the market also fall well short of some of the other aspects of the regulations too. The cheapest way to build a compliant house is the way builders all over the country are already doing it. It's in their interests and the profit interests of developers to build compliant houses as cheap as possible.
Lumen wrote: » ........ And it cost €225k, all in.
gctest50 wrote: » The bit by bit is interesting though : "By the first day they had three-quarters of the house up,” he recalls. The house itself cost €89,000 It cost almost €100,000 less than the current price of €316,000 for an average Wicklow house, according to Daft.ie.
gctest50 wrote: » It would be a great job if you wanted to move out the country Buy an existing cottage, demolish it and put up one of those
sydthebeat wrote: » requires planing permission...
sydthebeat wrote: » and probably wouldnt be granted
Brontosaurus wrote: » Guideline price for building a residential log cabin which complies with all the latest building regulations is €140 per sq.m (based on at least 100sq.m in size)" I didn't realize there was a minimum size, but oh well. At €140 per 100sq.m it would cost 14,000 if that's an honest figure. Seems a bit low though.
gctest50 wrote: » Of course You could flatten it and use the stone to build a nice stone wall in front and down the sides of the place - be lovely No PP ? make it into a halting site for our less well off countrymen
Lumen wrote: » I've found a case study, with actual planning. Now, Wicklow CC's planning website is the most annoying, but it seems that tiled roof and napped plaster finish was required, although the promo shots show external wooden cladding rather than plaster. Which is odd, but maybe I've misread the docs. .
Lumen wrote: » That's not "a bit low", it is simply impossible.
MackDeToaster wrote: » Interestingly, a 3-bed one of those cabins has been built in Laois in the past year with full planning permission granted.
kceire wrote: » Have you got a link to the planning permission. It’s on the public website of the council.
kceire wrote: » Any update on this? Did it really happen?
Lumen wrote: » I have heard via Facebook posts that Laois is particularly relaxed about these developments, but haven't managed to coax any examples out of people, only that Wicklow one which appears to include a planning violation.
sydthebeat wrote: » i work in laois no its not
MackDeToaster wrote: » http://old.laois.ie/idocsWebDPSS/listFiles.aspx?catalog=planning&id=16378