Cheesus Posted Saturday at 08:54 Posted Saturday at 08:54 Hi all, new poster here - hope somebody can offer some opinions please on this situation. We have a fairly long garden and have agreed in principle to purchase a section of our next door neighbours garden with a view to combining them both into one plot for a self build house / bungalow to live in. Access to the gardens is via a single track, unadopted road that ends at what is currently my neighbours garden (but will be part of the plot). We have asked a planning consultant to review the site and he has advised that the main issue is likely to be access for a fire engine as the track is around 80m long and there is no room for turning and the wheelie bin collection. They have suggested we put in for a pre-planning consultation with our council for their feedback. My question is, does anybody have any experience with finding alternative solutions to mitigate the lack of access for the fire engine in the form of either sprinklers or fire hydrants - my consultant used to work for the planning office and he thinks he has approved one previously but can't recall the details. Information online seems fairly vauge but approved document B suggests we 'should' have a turning circle of 19m - but it doesn't seem difinitive and our local fire service don't offer any information. We are also confused as to who's decision the fire engine access actually is, is it the planning office or building control? Is there any chance that if somehow we actually get planning permission, build what is approved but then the building inspector won't pass it? The plot itself is 33m x 17m so not big enough for an actual turning circle, but potentially big enough for the appliance to pull up the side and reverse back infront - unlikely this would be suffucient but once we have the initial feedback from the planning consultaiton we will look at appointing a highways consultant to do a full report. If by chance we jump the fire engine hurdle then it's on to the bin wagon!
BotusBuild Posted Saturday at 09:15 Posted Saturday at 09:15 I know of a house being built close by (8 miles up the road in Cornwall is close by 🙂 ) where the access is narrow and a fire engine would never get in. They have a sprinkler system fitted. So it can be mitigated against. 1
Cheesus Posted Saturday at 09:19 Author Posted Saturday at 09:19 2 minutes ago, BotusBuild said: I know of a house being built close by (8 miles up the road in Cornwall is close by 🙂 ) where the access is narrow and a fire engine would never get in. They have a sprinkler system fitted. So it can be mitigated against. Thanks for the reply, I know it will vary from region to region but this is what we were hoping to hear! Obviously there will be cost to this but if this is the case for us as well it gives us some hope!
ProDave Posted Saturday at 14:11 Posted Saturday at 14:11 Re the bins. There are thousands of remote houses here with long driveways and the owners just wheel the bin down and leave it at the street on bin day then wheel it back. Don't tell me that common sense solution is no longer accepted? The other issue is do you have a legal right to pass and re pass on foot and in vehicles to the potential plot? 2
saveasteading Posted Saturday at 14:56 Posted Saturday at 14:56 5 hours ago, Cheesus said: the lack of access for the fire engine If close to the road then maybe a couple of hose lengths would suffice. otherwise you need access, turning space and lots of water. They will not agree to reversing a long way, and it becomes a risk for you if the tanker runs dry. Bin lorries won't come in. You either wheel yours all the way out, or keep them near the road. An enclosure keeps it tidy. Your surveyor appears to be guessing. Any new nearby property where you could check their planning conditions? 1
Cheesus Posted yesterday at 07:22 Author Posted yesterday at 07:22 16 hours ago, saveasteading said: If close to the road then maybe a couple of hose lengths would suffice. otherwise you need access, turning space and lots of water. They will not agree to reversing a long way, and it becomes a risk for you if the tanker runs dry. Bin lorries won't come in. You either wheel yours all the way out, or keep them near the road. An enclosure keeps it tidy. Your surveyor appears to be guessing. Any new nearby property where you could check their planning conditions? Thanks for the reply, the single track unadopted road is around 80m long and we would be right at the end of it - there are 2 other properties built in the same fashion but slightly closer to the end of the unadopted road but still probably 50-60m from the main road. The other properties have been built 30+ years so presumably were built under previous, less strict planning laws and there is limited information on the planning portal in relation to them. We haven't ever noticed what the current residents do with their bins but we will make a note on this weeks bin day. I would agree that the planning consultant is guessing at this stage, until the applicaiton goes in we won't know for sure what the planning offices concerns are, we're just trying to manage expectations with regards to the likelyhood of being able to build 'our' house.
saveasteading Posted yesterday at 07:36 Posted yesterday at 07:36 I think 80m isn't that far, so they might be OK. We found that the bco was relaxed and that prevailed over planning, oddly. 1
Cheesus Posted yesterday at 07:41 Author Posted yesterday at 07:41 17 hours ago, ProDave said: Re the bins. There are thousands of remote houses here with long driveways and the owners just wheel the bin down and leave it at the street on bin day then wheel it back. Don't tell me that common sense solution is no longer accepted? The other issue is do you have a legal right to pass and re pass on foot and in vehicles to the potential plot? Thanks for the reply Dave, with regards to the bins - it's just been flagged up by the planning consultant as a potential issue prior to the planning consultation and then the applicaton proper in time. We will take not on bin day this week what others do. My next door neighbour appears to have access, the point of access being within the potential plot. Thanks.
Cheesus Posted yesterday at 07:47 Author Posted yesterday at 07:47 7 minutes ago, saveasteading said: I think 80m isn't that far, so they might be OK. We found that the bco was relaxed and that prevailed over planning, oddly. Thanks, so there may be some hope? Time will tell I suppose.
Oz07 Posted yesterday at 08:08 Posted yesterday at 08:08 I was looking at a plot with this problem a year or so ago. Ended up leaving it. The vendor couldn't convince me that I wouldn't end up in a situation whereby the house would be built (at worst) or plot purchased and the BCO would refuse to sign off on the design because of this. You can use alternatives such as sprinklers or mist systems but when I looked into this it is still only up to a max distance from the highway. I think the ideal route would have been to take the plans (or in your case some indicative sketches) and have a meeting with Building Control and potentially the local fire service and see if you can get some agreement before purchasing. In my case it was falling on deaf ears with the vendor, their plot is still for sale today, surprise surprise. 1
Cheesus Posted yesterday at 13:40 Author Posted yesterday at 13:40 5 hours ago, Oz07 said: I was looking at a plot with this problem a year or so ago. Ended up leaving it. The vendor couldn't convince me that I wouldn't end up in a situation whereby the house would be built (at worst) or plot purchased and the BCO would refuse to sign off on the design because of this. You can use alternatives such as sprinklers or mist systems but when I looked into this it is still only up to a max distance from the highway. I think the ideal route would have been to take the plans (or in your case some indicative sketches) and have a meeting with Building Control and potentially the local fire service and see if you can get some agreement before purchasing. In my case it was falling on deaf ears with the vendor, their plot is still for sale today, surprise surprise. Thankyou for the reply, we think it's worth a speculative punt - given it's 50% our land already and the puchase of next door would only be subject to obtaining planning. See what comes back from the planning officer and then approach BCO and/or fire service for their comments.
Mr Punter Posted yesterday at 15:47 Posted yesterday at 15:47 On 06/09/2025 at 09:54, Cheesus said: We are also confused as to who's decision the fire engine access actually is, is it the planning office or building control? It is the fire service who will say what they require. They should be consulted by the planners but you can approach them directly for guidance. 2
Oz07 Posted yesterday at 17:00 Posted yesterday at 17:00 When I looked into it BCO was the most important one. Planners just seem to use guidance and plans can look like they comply (as in the case I was interested in) but even if you have correct width and gradient access along with turning circle, the distance from a hydrant point can still kill it. So planners will pass without ever speaking to fire service. It is up to BCO to be happy it complies before they sign the place or design off. I forget what section it's in but think its specifically mentioned in the building regs doc. I had a look at the thread I posted but it wasn't quoted in there. 1
Cheesus Posted yesterday at 17:33 Author Posted yesterday at 17:33 33 minutes ago, Oz07 said: When I looked into it BCO was the most important one. Planners just seem to use guidance and plans can look like they comply (as in the case I was interested in) but even if you have correct width and gradient access along with turning circle, the distance from a hydrant point can still kill it. So planners will pass without ever speaking to fire service. It is up to BCO to be happy it complies before they sign the place or design off. I forget what section it's in but think its specifically mentioned in the building regs doc. I had a look at the thread I posted but it wasn't quoted in there. Thanks, it's refered to in Approved Document B.
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