![]() ![]() Development which is to be carried out by a local authority, national park authority or statutory undertaker that has been authorised by a relevant government department.local grants of planning permission through Local or Neighbourhood Development Orders or Community Right to Build Orders.national grants of permission by the General Permitted Development Order which allows certain building works and changes of use to be carried out without having to make a planning application.local authority grants of planning permission.However, there are different types of planning permission, such as: Section 57 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 directs that all operations or work falling within the statutory definition of ‘development’ require planning permission. Revision date: 06 03 2014 Does all development require planning permission? a change in the primary use of land or buildings, where the before and after use falls within the same use class.The term ‘materially affect’ has no statutory definition, but is linked to the significance of the change which is made to a building’s external appearance. building operations which do not materially affect the external appearance of a building.interior alterations (except mezzanine floors which increase the floorspace of retail premises by more than 200 square metres).These include, but are not limited to the following: The categories of work that do not amount to ‘development’ are set out in section 55(2) of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990. subdivision of a building (including any part it) used as a dwellinghouse for use as 2 or more separate dwelling houses.other operations normally undertaken by a person carrying on a business as a builder.engineering operations (eg groundworks). ![]()
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