Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Hi All

 

I am in the early stages of doing my driveway and we are looking at options of if we want to install electric gates etc.. I have put ducting around the drive and house so cabling is not an issue 

 

One thing I am struggling to get a definite answer on is distance from the road the gate has to be, this will determine if this is suitable for mine driveway and then when the visability splays

 

Will I be able to do this under permitted development and will it need planning. I have made initial contact with my council but as always its very slow progress at the minute

 

Has anyone installed gates (over 1m) and what regs/guidelines did they follow? I even had an electric gate company out and they didn't know (which didnt fill me with confidence!)

 

Any information/advice appreciated on this topic

 

Many Thanks

 

 

Posted
57 minutes ago, richo106 said:

Will I be able to do this under permitted development and will it need planning

If you are doing a new build and it's not signed off, permitted development doesn't exist. You're legal obligation is to follow the agreed plans or do a variation.

 

If you have a need for visibility splays, your into planning and highways approval. There is highways documentation that has full details of visibility delays (they change with speed limit and gate placements and how much of the driveway has to comply with highways road spec - that part only certified people can install the tar and sub surface.

Posted

I am not doing a new build, i had some major renovations and extensions couple of years ago and now finally getting round to doing some externals

 

Cheers

Posted

The distance back from the kerb depends on the road type.  The gates take a while to open, so you don't want to obstruct traffic.  If the gates are over 1m high you will need planning consent.

Posted

I think (!) distance to road is governed by not blocking traffic whilst waiting for it to open. Ours is about 5m from memory. 

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...