How building regulations may affect garden walls

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brick wall

Any walls that are not part of a house or extension are unlikely to be controlled by building regulations unless these provide support to the foundations of another building.

Many local councils will have restrictions on the height of walls and fences and you should check with your local Planning team before you start any work. General planning advice can be found here.

Building regulations approval is not generally required for landscaping but beware that if you are removing large amounts of earth you may need to build a retaining wall and you will need advice from a competent structural engineer.

These garden walls, when built well to the correct standards, can provide an attractive and safe environment with the aims of improvements in security and privacy; however, LABC teams across the UK do get called out to too many incidents where existing garden walls fail and present a danger to the public.

collapsed-boundary-wall

Collapsed boundary wall. Picture courtesy of structural-safety.org

If you build a retaining wall within 3.7m of a street, the Highways Act 1980 requires you to seek approval from the local authority or if the road is adopted from the relevant Highway Authority.

Whilst retaining walls and freestanding walls may not require building regulation approval there is guidance to ensure they are built to a good standard.

Retaining walls (up to a maximum height of 1.725m)

Retaining walls can be tricky to build as they need to be strong enough to resist horizontal soil pressure where there are differing ground levels.  One of the things you must get right is the thickness of the wall.  

Whilst retaining walls should be designed by a competent structural engineer, BRE has useful guidance which provides rules of thumb for thicknesses of walls up to a maximum retained height of 1.725m.

 

retaining-walls-1725m
types-of-retaining-wall

Image courtesy of BRE Good Building Guide GBG 27 – building brickwork or blockwork retaining walls, November 1996



Important points about retaining walls: 

  • You also need to consider the effect of ground water, which can create huge pressure on the wall and soak the brickwork if allowed to accumulate behind. Create a way out for the water by adding a gravel trench and pipes through the wall.
  • If not properly constructed, water can also penetrate the brickwork structure from above through the mortar joints, affecting the long-term durability of the retaining wall. So add capping/copings, which must always be F2, S2 (frost-resistant low soluble salts), with an overhang and drip groove to minimise water damage.
  • Use a high-bond damp proof course below the capping/coping and sandwich the DPC in mortar.
  • Don't forget to include movement joints in the wall. These should be continuous for the full height of the wall. For lateral stability, slip ties should be incorporated at movement joints and wherever a freestanding wall abuts a building.
  • Waterproof the retaining side of the wall and allow water to drain away from this side through weep holes/pipes.
  • Slope paving away from the wall and provide gravel drainage strips where possible.
  • Don't forget to protect waterproofing from damage while you’re building.

Free-standing walls

The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (DLUHC) has useful guidance on free-standing garden walls.

safe-heights-for-walls

 Image courtesy of gov.uk

The zone diagram/table is based on wind speed distribution across the UK, reflecting the strength of wind the further north and west the wall is being built.

The heights and widths for these walls may not apply if the wall is:

  • Adjacent to a vehicle access area
  • Adjacent to a public right of way
  • Where busy traffic areas are likely
  • Close to a medium (4 storeys) or high-rise building (nearer than a distance equal to the height of the building)
  • On the crest of a hill or where the slope of the ground is greater than 1:10
  • Near an extensive hill or mountain range
  • Intended to support a large gate or door
  • Where the sub soil is soft (soft clay or peat) or unstable (e.g. poorly compacted filled ground)
  • Where the difference in ground level between each side of the wall exceeds twice the wall thickness

Further reading


Please Note: Every care was taken to ensure the information was correct at the time of publication. Any written guidance provided does not replace the user’s professional judgement. It is the responsibility of the dutyholder or person carrying out the work to ensure compliance with relevant building regulations or applicable technical standards.

This article was reviewed and updated on 10 August 2023

Comments

(No subject)

Submitted 3 years 3 months ago

I found this article very informative about "How building regulations may affect garden walls". Looking forward for more informative articles like this.

Thanks for sharing

Submitted 2 years 9 months ago

Thanks for sharing this! All the best!

Retaining wall also a boundary

Submitted 1 year 9 months ago

Do the property owners on the side of the higher ground have a duty of care (of the wall) towards the property owners on the lower side?

LABC response

Submitted 1 year 9 months ago

Hi,

Thankyou for your enquiry, any wall that is on the boundary between 2 neighbours will need to consider the ownership of the wall and thereby the responsibility for who should maintain the wall. This involves reference to the land registry or title deeds for the properties to consider who owns the wall and the duty of care in maintaining it. There are also rights and obligations in terms of the Party Wall Act and they are likely to consider the following situations:

Party walls stand on the land of 2 or more owners and either:
• form part of a building
• don’t form part of a building, such as a garden wall (not wooden fences)
• Walls on one owner’s land used by other owners (2 or more) to separate their buildings are also party walls.

Best,
LABC team

Gradient of wall

Submitted 1 year 9 months ago

If a retaining wall has a gradient, ie slope between neighbouring properties of less than 35 degrees is it still regarded as a structure?

LABC response

Submitted 1 year 8 months ago

Hi,

Thank you for your comment.

LABC is a membership organisation, providing advice and support to its member local authorities around England and Wales. As a result, LABC cannot comment on the application and enforcement of the Building Regulations on individual cases, as this is a matter for the local council – being the enforcing authority for building regulations.

I am unaware of any definition of a ‘retaining wall’ within the Building Regulations, however clause 3.1.2.16 of BS ISO 6707-1:2020 defines a retaining wall as a “wall that provides lateral support to the ground or that resists pressure from a mass of other material”. This definition makes no reference to the angle or slope of the ground, merely the fact that the said wall provides lateral support to the ground.

Kind regards,
LABC Team

Question regarding retaining wall

Submitted 1 year 6 months ago

Hello, I was wondering if you could give me advice? What type of paperwork would you require for a court to accept that you have repaired and brought a 200year retaining wall forward by around a metre on a listed property.

LABC response

Submitted 1 year 6 months ago

Hi,

Thankyou for your comment. However, as the article clarifies retaining walls that are not part of a building and therefore the building regulations do not appear to reply to your case. We would therefore refer you to your Local Council and the Planning Department who can advise on the questions you pose in regards to Listed Buildings.

Best,
LABC team

Facade vs an Exterior wall

Submitted 1 year 5 months ago

Can a very solid perimeter / boundary wall, with strong foundations and being a permanent fixture as far as anything can be described as permanent, that is constructed separately and away from the building by several metres around its whole length, i.e. not supporting any part of the building, but where a substantial part of the wall is at the front and public facing part of that building, and only at half the height of the doors and windows on the building around the whole ground floor and thus concealing none of the other three floors at any point around the whole perimeter, be regarded as a "Façade" under the rules or guidance of HMRC VAT regs?

LABC Response

Submitted 1 year 5 months ago

Hi,

Thank you for your question. In very general building terms an exterior wall or garden wall is not part of the façade, but there may be a range of answers depending on the type of building and if it is listed or in a conservation area, we would therefore suggest that as you have a specific case in mind the question you pose should be addressed to the rules or guidance of HMRC VAT regs, this is not something that can be answered in terms of the building regulations.

Kind regards,
LABC Team

Ychwanegu sylw newydd

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