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- By Andy Smith
- Construction Manager Mag
New homes delivered through Permitted Development Rights (PDRs) will have to meet minimum space standards, housing secretary Robert Jenrick has said.
The announcement follows quality concerns raised by construction’s professional bodies, including the Chartered Institute of Building and Royal Institute of British Architects.
Jenrick said: “While homes delivered through PDRs have
little difference in quality compared to homes following a planning
application, a minority of developers have been delivering small homes without
justification. The changes announced will put an end to this.”
The measures will mean that all new homes in England
delivered through PDRs will in the future have to meet the Nationally Described
Space Standard.
The space standard begins at 37m² of floorspace for a new
one bed flat with a shower room (39m² with a bathroom), ensuring proper living
space for a single occupier.
During the summer, the government changed the regulations to
ensure that new homes delivered through PDRs provide adequate natural light.
PDRs allow existing buildings to be changed into homes without the need to go through a full planning application. More than 60,000 PDR homes have been delivered over the last four years.
Jenrick added: “While most developers deliver good homes and
do the right thing, I’m tackling the minority of developers abusing the system
by announcing that new homes delivered will have to meet space standards.
“Last month the government set out its plans to overhaul the
outdated planning system, including new measures to place beauty and design
quality at the heart of new development.
“Under the new system, communities will be engaged at the beginning
of the planning process to shape design codes that ensure new developments are
in keeping with the architectural identity and standards of their area.
“This includes the government consulting on homes delivered
through PDRs being covered by the new local design codes.”