by LCL »
Sat May 17, 2008 5:22 pm
JM60
The planning issue first, unless you are in an area of planning control, ie conservation, article 4 directive, the wall at the front of the dwelling can be no higher than 1.0m.
The foundation for your proposed new wall does not need to be entirely on your land. You have rights under the Party Wall etc Act 1996 to construction a wall wholey on your land and place projecting (non-reinforced) foundations onto your adjoining owners land. You will need to serve a S1 notice for this (building on the line of junction) You are well within your rights to serve this notice yourself, but if your neighbours dissent to the works, you are not legally able to represent yourself and will be liable for both your neighbours and your own party wall surveyors fees.
ALDA refers to trees and hedges not causing damage to adjoining owners dwellings. This comes under the laws of tresspass and nuisance. farbeyond any advice i can give as a surveyor.
Going back to your question, if the adjoining owners face of your wall is the boundary line, this will effectively be a boundary wall, not a party fence wall.
With regards to the neighbours garage wall. You can only enclose upon this wall (ie build a roof onto it) if it is a party fence / party wall and by definition has the boundary running through it. Again you would need to serve notices onto your adjoining owner indicating your proposals. If the wall is wholey on your adjoining owners land, you have no rights to ude this wall at all.
Hope this helps.
LCL