flyingfolly
Registered User
- Messages
- 156
I don't know what other way to put this but if the property is rented then the rules for rented accommodation apply rather than those for garden rooms.
As long as the council has no knowledge that the space is rented its hands are tied.
I'm not sure why you keep latching onto this particular point. I know that if the council is aware the space is rented then this changes the outcome. As the tenant is on a sofa bed in the garden room, its packed up every morning so if the council came they would just see a sofa in the kitchen which apparently is fine.
However, this is not something I'm asking here. My only question is "What makes a garden room habitable?" That's literally the only thing I've been asking here.
I was always under the assumption that a toilet makes a garden room habitable and thus you could not build a garden room that has a toilet without first applying for planning (this is what I was told when I looked into it years ago). Now, it appears that all of that is wrong and you can build anything you want as long as the room is under the size limits and doesn't have a bed. I was just asking if anyone had any information opposed to this regarding what makes a room habitable according to the council.