CM16 — Rear Extension Notice
Rear Extension Party Wall Notice in CM16
Party wall notice services specifically for rear extension projects — Section 6 excavation notices and Section 1 boundary wall notices. Crown Party Wall Surveyors prepares rear extension party wall notice for homeowners in CM16, Epping, Theydon Bois, with local planning context and a clear quote-first route. Our fixed-fee proposals cover each stage from initial consultation through to construction-issue drawings, with in-house party wall dispute resolution and full building regulation coordination.
Party wall context
Typical party wall property and boundary context in CM16
Captions describe the kind of context shown — terraced and semi-detached residential settings, adjoining and boundary walls, loft and extension proximity to a party wall, schedule of condition and notice/award documentation. They do not depict specific Crown Party Wall Surveyors projects.
Fast quote route
Send the address, postcode, and project type so we can advise on your party wall obligations.
Phone support
Speak directly about party wall notices, schedules of condition, party wall awards, or adjoining owner disputes.
Project brief
Use the contact page if you already have notes, sketches, estate agent plans, or timing questions.
Quote checklist
What to send for a useful project quote
A stronger enquiry lets us advise on your party wall obligations sooner. You do not need a complete brief before contacting us, but these details help us avoid generic advice.
- Full property address or postcode so the boundary and neighbouring property context can be checked.
- Project type, such as extension, loft conversion, basement excavation, or chimney breast removal that may affect a party wall or boundary.
- Photos, plans, or any correspondence with your neighbour about the proposed works if you already have them.
- Your current stage, whether notices have been served, and the main decision you need help with.
Overview
Rear Extension Notice in CM16
Rear extensions are the most common residential project type that triggers Section 6 party wall notices due to proximity of new foundations to neighbouring buildings. This page connects rear extension party wall notice to the CM16 postcode district, Epping, Theydon Bois, Epping Forest, and the Epping Forest local authority that governs planning decisions here. Whether you need party wall notices, building regulation approval, party wall dispute resolution, or the full coordinated package from design to construction-issue drawings, Crown Party Wall Surveyors provides borough-specific expertise with fixed-fee proposals agreed before any work begins.
Local context
Local context for rear extension party wall notice in CM16
Residential properties around CM16 include a mix of terraced, semi-detached, and detached homes where shared walls, boundary structures, and neighbouring foundation proximity make party wall matters common. The correct approach for CM16 party wall matters is to assess whether proposed works are notifiable under the Party Wall etc. Act 1996, identify all affected adjoining owners, and serve the correct notices before construction begins. Understanding the local housing stock, planning authority expectations, and conservation area boundaries is essential for preparing a rear extension party wall notice application that progresses efficiently and achieves first-time approval. Crown Party Wall Surveyors maintains up-to-date knowledge of Epping Forest local authority's validation requirements, officer preferences, and emerging policy positions.
Project imagery
Relevant project and property imagery
A selection of residential project and property-context imagery relevant to this party wall service and area.
Service area
Service area — CM16
Crown Party Wall Surveyors serves CM16, Epping, Theydon Bois and surrounding areas for party wall notices, schedules of condition, and party wall awards.
Process overview
How rear extension party wall notice works in CM16
Focuses on the common scenario where a rear extension involves excavation within 3 or 6 metres of a neighbouring building's foundations, triggering a Section 6 notice. For CM16, the first step is to assess whether the proposed works are notifiable under the Party Wall etc. Act 1996, identify all affected adjoining owners, and determine which notice types are required.
- Confirm the full property address and CM16 postcode before assessing party wall requirements.
- Identify all shared walls, boundary structures, and neighbouring properties in the CM16 area.
- Determine which notice types are required: Section 1, Section 2, Section 6, or a combination.
Local context
Common party wall scenarios in CM16
Residential properties around CM16 include a mix of terraced, semi-detached, and detached homes where shared walls, boundary structures, and neighbouring foundation proximity make party wall matters common. Homeowners searching in CM16 typically need a party wall surveyor to manage notices, awards, and schedules of condition for extensions, loft conversions, basement excavations, or chimney breast removal projects.
- loft conversions — a common rear extension party wall notice scenario in the CM16 area.
- rear extensions — a common rear extension party wall notice scenario in the CM16 area.
- side extensions — a common rear extension party wall notice scenario in the CM16 area.
- basement excavations — a common rear extension party wall notice scenario in the CM16 area.
Project route
How the enquiry becomes the right party wall advice
A local or service search is only useful when it leads to the correct next step. We use the property context, boundary situation, and proposed works to determine the right party wall process before asking building owners to commit.
Route
Check the obligations first
We identify whether the proposed work triggers a party wall notice, what type of notice is required under the Act, and whether a schedule of condition is needed.
Route
Assess the boundary context
The approach is shaped by the shared boundary, the type of structure affected, the depth of excavation, and the relationship between the building owner and adjoining owner.
Route
Keep the next stage visible
Where a project needs a party wall award, ongoing monitoring, or coordination with other professionals, that is considered early rather than added as an afterthought.
What this page covers
What rear extension party wall notice in CM16 includes
- Section 6 notice for rear extension excavation near neighbours
- Assessment of foundation depth and distance from neighbouring buildings
- Management of adjoining owner responses
- Schedule of condition of adjoining properties
- Award preparation where dissent arises
Why it matters
Why rear extension party wall notice matters in CM16
- Rear extensions are the most common trigger for Section 6 notices
- Correct notice prevents injunctions that can halt your extension
- Protects both parties during foundation and construction works
Related services
Other services in CM16
Party Wall Surveyor in CM16
Professional party wall surveyor services covering notices, awards, schedules of condition, and dispute resolution under the Party Wall etc. Act 1996. This page covers party wall surveyor for Epping, Theydon Bois and CM16 homeowner searches.
Party Wall Notice in CM16
Party wall notice preparation and service under the Party Wall etc. Act 1996 — Section 1 line of junction, Section 2 party structure, and Section 6 adjacent excavation notices. This page covers party wall notice for Epping, Theydon Bois and CM16 homeowner searches.
Party Wall Agreement in CM16
Party wall agreement services managing the consent process and formal agreements between building owners and adjoining owners under the Party Wall etc. Act 1996. This page covers party wall agreement for Epping, Theydon Bois and CM16 homeowner searches.
Schedule of Condition in CM16
Detailed photographic and written schedule of condition surveys for party wall matters — recording the state of adjoining properties before notifiable building work begins. This page covers schedule of condition for Epping, Theydon Bois and CM16 homeowner searches.
Party Wall Award in CM16
Party wall award preparation by appointed surveyors — a legally binding document governing how notifiable building works proceed under the Party Wall etc. Act 1996. This page covers party wall award for Epping, Theydon Bois and CM16 homeowner searches.
Party Wall Surveyor Cost in CM16
Clear guidance on party wall surveyor costs — fee structures for notices, awards, schedules of condition, and the full surveyor process. This page covers party wall surveyor cost for Epping, Theydon Bois and CM16 homeowner searches.
Postcode hub
CM16 postcode district
CM16
Full party wall and planning context for the CM16 postcode area.
Architect
Working with an architect in CM16
Searches for an architect near CM16 cover everything from a feasibility sketch to a full planning + technical package. The Crown approach is to scope the route first — feasibility, planning strategy, party wall process, structural and building-regulation stages — so each step has a clear output and you only pay for what is needed next.
An architect or architectural designer in CM16 adds value most when they are honest about scope early. Residential properties around CM16 include a mix of terraced, semi-detached, and detached homes where shared walls, boundary structures, and neighbouring foundation proximity make party wall matters common. Residential properties around CM16 include a mix of terraced, semi-detached, and detached homes where shared walls, boundary structures, and neighbouring foundation proximity make party wall matters common. Those facts, set against Epping Forest local authority expectations, are what shape a buildable proposal — not a generic template.
Working with an architect in CM16 is usually less about a stamp on a drawing and more about the route from idea to approval. CM16 homeowners typically come to Crown Party Wall Surveyors wanting clear advice on what is achievable on their plot, what Epping Forest local authority will look for, and which drawings unlock the next step without paying for work that is not yet needed.
Architectural services
Architectural services in CM16
A clear architectural-services package in CM16 explains what is being drawn, why, and what each drawing unlocks. Homeowners searching in CM16 typically need a party wall surveyor to manage notices, awards, and schedules of condition for extensions, loft conversions, basement excavations, or chimney breast removal projects. That is what stops homeowners over-paying for drawings they cannot yet use.
Architectural services in CM16 cover the full route a homeowner needs: feasibility advice, measured information, design and planning-stage drawings, building-regulation packages, and structural coordination. Crown Party Wall Surveyors sequences them so each stage informs the next instead of being bolted on later.
Planning plans
Planning plans for CM16 projects
A strong set of planning plans in CM16 is location-aware: it shows how the proposal reads from the public realm, how it relates to neighbours, and how it sits against the correct approach for CM16 party wall matters is to assess whether proposed works are notifiable under the Party Wall etc. Act 1996, identify all affected adjoining owners, and serve the correct notices before construction begins. Generic plans tend to underperform here because Epping Forest local authority judges proposals on local context.
Planning plans in CM16 should make the route explicit. If the design is being argued as permitted development, the plans evidence that. If it is a full householder application, the plans address scale, materials, and amenity. Either way the package is the homeowner's case in drawn form.
Planning permission
Planning permission in CM16
Whether a CM16 project needs planning permission depends on the property, the scope, and any local constraints — conservation, Article 4, listed-building consent. Some changes proceed under permitted development; others need a householder or full planning application to Epping Forest local authority. Confirming the route on paper is much cheaper than discovering it mid-build.
Planning permission in CM16 is determined by Epping Forest local authority. Their validation rules, decision precedent, and local-plan policies all shape what is achievable on a given plot. Crown checks these against the property before any drawings are scoped.
Planning permission plans
Planning permission plans for CM16 homes
Crown prepares planning permission plans for CM16 projects so Epping Forest local authority can validate the application first time. That means correct scales, clear North arrows, accurate boundaries, and the supporting heritage/design statement where the property's setting requires it.
For CM16 projects, planning permission plans should anticipate the questions a planning officer is most likely to ask — overlooking, daylight to neighbours, materials, and how the change reads from the street — and answer them in the drawings rather than relying on later clarifications.
Planning consultant
Planning consultant support in CM16
A planning consultant for a CM16 project is most useful when the proposal is finely balanced: in a conservation area, near a listed neighbour, on a sensitive frontage, or where a refusal would cost serious time. The role is to advise on the route, the policy hooks, and how the application should be presented to Epping Forest local authority.
Crown's planning-consultant input for CM16 covers pre-application advice, route strategy, policy alignment with the Epping Forest local authority local plan, and review of objections or conditions where they arise. The aim is to keep the homeowner in control of the timeline rather than waiting for the council to drive it.
Planning consultant cost for CM16 projects depends on complexity. Straightforward householder schemes need a short strategy note; sensitive sites or refusals need a fuller appraisal, policy review, and sometimes pre-application engagement. Crown scopes this transparently so you only pay for the route you need.
Structural engineer
Structural engineer involvement in CM16
A structural engineer becomes part of a CM16 project the moment loads change — a wall is removed, an opening is formed, a roof is altered, or foundations are added. Resolving spans and connections early keeps the drawings, the build, and the approval routes aligned.
Crown coordinates structural-engineer input alongside the party wall surveyor services for CM16 homes so the two sides stay consistent. That is what avoids the late-stage clashes that inflate cost and slow the programme.
Costs & quotes
Costs and quotes for CM16 projects
How much do party wall surveyor services cost in CM16? Honest answer: it depends on the route, the property, and how complete the starting information is. Crown scopes each stage transparently — feasibility, party wall notices, lawful-development evidence, building-regulation, structural — so you only pay for what you actually need next.
Planning consultant cost, party wall surveyor services cost, and structural-calculation cost for CM16 homes are quoted in stages rather than as a single bundled number. That keeps the homeowner in control of how far the project goes before further fees are committed.
Quote turnaround for CM16 projects is fast when the brief is short and specific. Send the address or postcode, photos, any existing plans, and a one-line description of what you want to change. Crown can then advise on the likely route and stage fees before any drawing work begins.
Architects
Architects in CM16
Finding architects in CM16 is straightforward — choosing the right one requires understanding whether they know Epping Forest local authority's expectations, can handle the specific property type, and will stage fees so you are not paying for work you cannot yet use.
When homeowners in CM16 search for architects, they are usually looking for the right fit — someone who understands residential work, local planning, and the practical route from idea to approval. Crown Party Wall Surveyors works exclusively on residential projects in and around CM16, which means the advice is shaped by the property types and planning context you will actually encounter.
Residential architect
Residential architect services in CM16
A residential architect understands that a CM16 homeowner's priority is usually clarity: what can the property accommodate, what will the council accept, and how much will the drawing and approval stages cost. Crown's approach is to answer those questions before a full package is scoped.
A residential architect in CM16 focuses on homes — extensions, conversions, loft and garage changes, internal remodelling, and the planning and building-control routes these projects need. That focus matters because residential work in CM16 is governed by local housing stock, Epping Forest local authority policy, and neighbourhood context in ways that commercial architecture does not touch.
Architectural consultant
Architectural consultant in CM16
An architectural consultant in CM16 provides design, drawing, and planning-route advice without necessarily being RIBA-chartered. For residential projects, what matters is the quality of the drawings, the understanding of Epping Forest local authority's process, and the ability to coordinate the approval and technical stages. Crown operates as both architectural designer and structural practice, covering the full residential route.
Homeowners in CM16 searching for an architectural consultant usually want practical drawing and planning advice for a specific project — an extension, loft conversion, garage change, or internal layout. The consultant role is to assess feasibility, recommend the approval route, and produce drawings that satisfy Epping Forest local authority validation.
Planning application help
Planning application help in CM16
Many CM16 homeowners look for planning application help when they have a project in mind but are unsure whether they need permission, which drawings to submit, or how to present the proposal. Crown's approach is to confirm the route, produce the drawings, and manage the submission so the application tells a coherent story from the start.
Planning application help for CM16 homeowners covers the full process: confirming whether a planning application is needed, assembling the correct drawing set, writing any supporting statements, submitting to Epping Forest local authority, and managing conditions or amendments. Crown handles this alongside the design work so the application and drawings stay aligned.
Planning drawings
Planning drawings for CM16 homes
Planning drawings for a CM16 project are the drawn evidence that supports a planning application or lawful development certificate. They include existing and proposed floor plans, elevations, sections, a site plan, and a location plan — each produced to the scales and conventions that Epping Forest local authority requires for validation.
The purpose of party wall notices in CM16 is to make the homeowner's case in drawn form. Whether the route is permitted development, householder planning, or a full application, the drawings should anticipate the officer's assessment criteria and answer them before they are raised.
Permitted development
Permitted development in CM16
Many CM16 extensions and conversions qualify under permitted development, but the limits on depth, height, volume, and boundary proximity are precise and easy to breach by a small margin. Crown checks the specific property against the relevant class before any drawing work is committed.
The permitted-development route in CM16 is attractive because it avoids the planning application timeline and fees, but it carries its own risk: if the work exceeds the limits, enforcement can require retrospective removal. A Lawful Development Certificate or confirmation check protects the homeowner before and after the build.
Lawful Development Certificate
Lawful Development Certificate in CM16
Applying for a Lawful Development Certificate in CM16 requires measured drawings that demonstrate the proposal sits within the relevant permitted-development class. Crown prepares the LDC submission as part of the party wall process so the position is confirmed before the builder starts.
In CM16, an LDC is most valuable when the permitted-development status is finely balanced — where dimensions are close to the limit, where conservation or Article 4 designations are nearby, or where the property has been previously extended. The certificate removes ambiguity before construction begins.
FAQ
Questions homeowners often ask
How much do party wall surveyor services cost in CM16?
Architectural drawings cost in CM16 depends on the route — feasibility sketch, planning-stage drawings, lawful-development evidence, or a full technical package. Crown Party Wall Surveyors scopes each stage transparently so you only pay for what you actually need next. Send the address or postcode and a one-line brief and we can quote the realistic stages before any drawing begins.
How much do party wall notices cost in CM16?
Architectural plans cost in CM16 is staged: a planning-stage plan set is priced separately from building-regulation and structural packages, so the homeowner stays in control of how far the project goes before further fees are committed. Complexity, sensitivity (conservation/Article 4), and how complete the starting information is all influence the figure.
How much does a planning consultant cost in CM16?
A planning consultant for CM16 is typically scoped to the proposal: a short strategy note for a straightforward householder scheme; a fuller appraisal, policy review, and pre-application input where the site is sensitive or a refusal would cost time. Crown quotes this in stages rather than as a single bundled number.
Do I need planning permission in CM16?
Whether a CM16 project needs planning permission depends on the property, the scope, and any local constraints — conservation area, Article 4 direction, listed-building consent, Epping Forest local authority local plan considerations. Some changes proceed under permitted development; others need a householder or full planning application. We confirm the route on paper before drawings are scoped.
Can I use permitted development in CM16?
Permitted development can be the fastest route for modest CM16 projects — but only where dimensions, siting, and impact stay within the limits, and where no Article 4 direction has removed the right. A Lawful Development Certificate is often worth securing so the position is unambiguous for a future sale.
How long do party wall notices take?
Planning drawings for a CM16 project typically take from a couple of weeks for a straightforward householder scheme to several weeks for a sensitive or complex site. The total clock to a decision includes Epping Forest local authority's statutory consultation period. We map the realistic timeline up front so there are no surprises.
Can Crown help with schedules of condition?
Yes. Crown Party Wall Surveyors prepares building-regulation drawings and specifications for CM16 homes, coordinated with the structural and architectural packages so the technical detail aligns with what was approved. The building-regulation stage can often run in parallel with planning once the design is fixed.
Can Crown help with party wall awards?
Yes. Crown Party Wall Surveyors coordinates party wall awards for CM16 projects where openings, beams, foundations, or roof alterations are involved. We sequence the structural and architectural design together so the two sides stay consistent through to construction.
Do you cover nearby areas?
Yes — Crown regularly works across CM16 and nearby areas including CM18, CM20, CM17, IG10, CM19, RM4. The same locally-aware approach applies: real property stock, real local-plan context, and a clear route to approval before drawings are scoped.
What do I need to send for a quote?
For a useful CM16 quote, send the full address or postcode, photos inside and out, any existing plans or estate-agent floor plans, and a short description of what you want to achieve. That is enough to advise on the likely route before a full party wall process is scoped.
Do you provide rear extension party wall notice services in CM16?
Yes. Crown Party Wall Surveyors provides rear extension party wall notice services in CM16, covering the full statutory process under the Party Wall etc. Act 1996.
What makes rear extension party wall notice in CM16 different from a generic page?
This page connects rear extension party wall notice to Epping, Theydon Bois, Epping Forest, local property types, and the common party wall scenarios that arise in this area.
When do I need rear extension party wall notice in CM16?
Rear extensions are the most common residential project type that triggers Section 6 party wall notices due to proximity of new foundations to neighbouring buildings. Contact us with your property address and details of the proposed works for specific advice about your CM16 project.
What does the rear extension party wall notice process involve in CM16?
Focuses on the common scenario where a rear extension involves excavation within 3 or 6 metres of a neighbouring building's foundations, triggering a Section 6 notice. The process follows the same statutory framework across all areas, but local property types and boundary conditions in CM16 affect which notices are needed.
What information should I send for a rear extension party wall notice enquiry in CM16?
Send the full postcode, property address, description of proposed works, details of shared walls or boundaries, and any information about neighbouring properties that may be affected.
How do I contact Crown Party Wall Surveyors about rear extension party wall notice in CM16?
Use the quote form, call or text +44 7950 114633, or email info@crownpartywall.co.uk. We provide initial advice and fee guidance before any commitment.
Do you work on party wall surveyor services and planning support projects in CM16?
Yes. Crown Party Wall Surveyors supports CM16 homeowners with party wall surveyor services and planning support, drawing coordination, and clear next-step guidance for residential projects of all sizes.
Will a party wall surveyor services and planning support project in CM16 need planning permission?
It depends on the property and scope. Some work proceeds under permitted development or a Lawful Development Certificate; other changes need a full application to Epping Forest local authority. We review your specific case before any drawings are scoped.
Which council handles planning in CM16?
For most CM16 homes the planning authority is Epping Forest local authority. Their validation requirements and local policies shape how the proposal should be drawn and justified.
Is my CM16 home likely to be in a conservation area?
Parts of CM16 and nearby areas are covered by conservation designations or Article 4 directions, which can restrict permitted development. We confirm the designation early so the route and drawings reflect it.
What should I send before asking for a quote?
The full address or postcode, photos inside and out, any existing or estate-agent plans, and a short description of what you want to achieve. That is enough to advise on the likely route first.
How long does a CM16 project take?
Timelines depend on the route. Permitted-development and certificate routes can be quicker; full planning runs to the authority's statutory period. Building-regulation and structural stages can often run alongside once the design is fixed.
Do I need a structural engineer as well?
If the work removes walls, forms openings, or alters the roof, party wall awards are usually required. Crown can coordinate the structural design alongside the drawings so the two stay aligned.
What does the party wall surveyor services and planning support package include?
Typically existing and proposed plans, elevations and sections, a site and location plan, and the supporting context needed for the chosen route — with technical detail added where the project requires it.
How are fees worked out for CM16 projects?
Fees reflect route complexity, project scale, and how complete the starting information is. Stages are scoped transparently so you only pay for the route you need.
Can you help after the drawings — into building control and construction?
Yes. We can align building-regulation information, structural coordination, and construction-stage requirements so the package stays coherent from enquiry through to build.
What if my project is borderline between permitted development and full planning?
We keep both routes in view and, where useful, secure a Lawful Development Certificate so the position is unambiguous — protecting your schedule and any future sale.
How do you make sure the drawings suit CM16 specifically?
The package reflects the local property type, the correct approach for CM16 party wall matters is to assess whether proposed works are notifiable under the Party Wall etc. Act 1996, identify all affected adjoining owners, and serve the correct notices before construction begins, and Epping Forest local authority expectations, rather than a generic template that ignores planning, structure, access, or buildability.
Do you cover areas near CM16?
Yes — we regularly work across CM16 and nearby areas including CM18, CM20, CM17, IG10, CM19, RM4, applying the same locally-aware approach to each.
What types of residential projects do you support in CM16?
We regularly support extensions, loft conversions, garage conversions, internal reconfiguration, planning party wall processs, and technical drawing work for homeowners in CM16. This includes single-storey rear extensions, side-return extensions, double-storey extensions, dormer and mansard loft conversions, hip-to-gable loft conversions, rooflight loft conversions, full garage conversions, garden rooms, outbuildings, and change-of-use applications where the project involves residential alterations.
Can you advise on party wall notices before I commit to a full package in CM16?
Yes. Early discussion helps identify the most suitable route and whether the project needs party wall notices, a lawful development approach, permitted development evidence, or technical progression. We offer a free initial consultation to review your brief and advise on the likely drawing requirements before any fee commitment.
What information should I send for a CM16 quote?
Send the address or postcode, the property type, photos of the front and rear of the property, any existing plans or sketches, and a short summary of the proposed works. If you have a surveyor's report, title plan, or pre-application advice from the council, include those too. These details help us identify the likely party wall process and any planning or technical issues to consider first.
Do local planning constraints in CM16 affect the drawings?
They can. Conservation areas, Article 4 directions, neighbouring properties, roof form, boundary relationships, parking, access, and local validation requirements may all affect how a CM16 residential proposal should be drawn and explained. We check these constraints at the outset so the party wall process addresses them from the first design iteration rather than after a refusal or amendment request.
Can the work move from party wall notices into building regulation or structural coordination in CM16?
Yes. If the project needs technical drawings, building control information, party wall awards, or a clearer package for builders, the initial party wall process can be developed into the next stage. Many homeowners start with party wall notices and then progress to a full building regulation and structural package once consent is granted. We coordinate both stages so the technical drawings are consistent with the approved planning scheme.
Do you only work from one local office in CM16?
No. Crown Party Wall Surveyors provides quote-led residential party wall support across London, the South East, and surrounding commuter counties, including CM16, without claiming a separate local office on each area page. Our registered office is at 71–75 Shelton Street, London WC2H 9JQ, and we carry out measured surveys and site visits across the service area.
What does a typical planning party wall process include for a CM16 project?
A standard householder planning package for CM16 includes existing and proposed floor plans, existing and proposed elevations (front, rear, and both sides), a site location plan at 1:1250 scale, a block plan at 1:500 scale, and a completed application form with the required ownership certificates. Where conservation area or listed building constraints apply, a design and access statement or heritage statement may also be required.
How long does the planning drawing process take in CM16?
Typically 2–4 weeks from the initial measured survey to a complete planning application submission for a straightforward householder project in CM16. More complex projects — conservation area schemes, basement proposals, or projects requiring party wall dispute resolution input — may take 4–8 weeks. The statutory determination period for a householder application is 8 weeks from validation by the local authority.
What is the difference between party wall notices and schedules of condition for CM16 homes?
Planning drawings show the design intent and its relationship to the site, neighbours, and street scene — they answer the question "is this acceptable development?" Building regulation drawings are technical construction documents that show how the building will comply with the Building Regulations (structure, thermal performance, fire safety, drainage, ventilation) — they answer the question "is this safe and compliant to build?" Most CM16 projects need both.
Do I need a structural engineer for my CM16 project?
Most extensions, loft conversions, and internal structural alterations in CM16 require party wall awards by a qualified structural engineer. This includes steel beam sizing (RSJs), foundation design, load-bearing wall removal calculations, chimney breast removal support, and loft floor strengthening. Crown Party Wall Surveyors includes party wall dispute resolution as part of our integrated service — we coordinate the structural design with the party wall surveyor services so the package is consistent.
What is a Lawful Development Certificate and do I need one in CM16?
A Lawful Development Certificate (LDC) is a formal confirmation from the local authority that your proposed works fall within permitted development rights and do not require planning permission. In CM16, an LDC is strongly recommended for any project relying on permitted development — particularly rear extensions, loft conversions, and outbuildings. It provides legal certainty, satisfies mortgage lender requirements, and avoids enforcement risk. The fee is lower than a full planning application and the process is quicker.
How much do party wall surveyor services cost for a CM16 home?
Fees depend on the scope and complexity of the project. As a guide for CM16: a planning-only package for a straightforward rear extension typically starts from around £1,200–£1,800; a combined planning and building regulation package from £2,000–£3,500; and a full architectural service including party wall dispute resolution from £3,000–£6,000+. We provide fixed-fee proposals after a free consultation so there are no surprises. VAT and local authority application fees are additional.
What is permitted development and does it apply in CM16?
Permitted development (PD) rights allow certain building works to proceed without a planning application, subject to size limits, height restrictions, and material constraints set out in the Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) Order. In CM16, PD rights may be restricted or removed in conservation areas, by Article 4 directions, or where previous extensions have used up the available allowance. We check PD eligibility at the start of every project and advise on whether a full planning application or a Lawful Development Certificate is the better route.
Can you help if my planning application is refused in CM16?
Yes. If a planning application is refused by the CM16 local authority, we can review the refusal reasons, advise on whether an amended resubmission or a planning appeal is the stronger route, and prepare the revised drawings or appeal documentation. Many refusals can be resolved with a targeted design amendment that addresses the officer's specific concerns without abandoning the project intent.
Do I need party wall agreements for my CM16 project?
If your project involves work on or near a shared wall, boundary, or excavation within 3–6 metres of a neighbour's foundations, the Party Wall etc. Act 1996 applies. This is common in CM16 for terraced and semi-detached properties. We advise on party wall obligations at the design stage and can introduce experienced party wall surveyors where formal notices and agreements are required before construction begins.
What happens after planning approval in CM16?
After planning consent is granted, the next steps are typically: schedules of condition and party wall awards (if not already prepared), a building control application (either via the local authority or an approved inspector), contractor procurement, and any required party wall agreements. Planning consent is usually valid for three years, so there is time to arrange the technical stages, but starting the building regulation package promptly is advisable to avoid delays when the builder is ready to start on site.
Is Crown Party Wall Surveyors insured and registered?
Yes. Crown Party Wall Surveyors holds professional indemnity insurance and public liability insurance appropriate to the scale of residential projects we undertake. We are registered at Companies House under company number 16297850, with our registered office at 71–75 Shelton Street, London WC2H 9JQ. Our telephone number is +44 7950 114633.
Official guidance
Official guidance for house extensions
House extensions in CM16, Epping, Theydon Bois are subject to both planning rules and building regulations. If you are looking for Rear Extension Party Wall Notice, understanding the official guidance helps you plan the right route from the start. The Planning Portal explains when an extension needs planning permission and when it falls within permitted development, covering the specific limits on depth, height, and proximity to boundaries. Building regulations apply to virtually all extensions regardless of whether planning permission is needed, covering structure, insulation, drainage, and fire safety. Reviewing these requirements early ensures your drawings are prepared correctly and your project proceeds without unnecessary hold-ups.
Planning permission for extensions
Specific guidance on whether rear, side, and wraparound extensions need planning permission or fall within permitted development.
Extension permitted development
The permitted development rules that apply to single-storey and double-storey extensions, including depth and height limits.
Building regulations for extensions
Overview of building control requirements for extensions, including structural safety, insulation, drainage, and fire safety.
GOV.UK permitted development technical guidance
The government's detailed technical guidance covering measurements, conditions, and limits for householder extension projects.
Need help applying this guidance to your property?
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