Garage conversion: Tips from our building control experts
A garage conversion doesn't always need planning permission as it often falls under 'permitted development'. But it's important to check permitted development rights still apply before starting any work, even if just for your client's sake.
Converting a garage will always need a building regulations application. A Building Notice application where detailed plans aren't needed will usually do, although a Full Plans application with a fully detailed specification will give you and your customer more security about what work needs to be carried out before you commence on site.
7 key considerations for a good garage conversion job
You must ensure the foundations are strong enough to carry any additional masonry loads. A new inner skin on the external wall or filling in the garage door with brick & block and a window will all add extra weight. Check the condition and suitability of the existing foundation or floor when the door infill area is excavated. If there isn't a foundation below the existing garage door you could carry the new wall off a suitable lintel - talk to your building control surveyor.
1. Walls
Check the existing walls for stability and make sure there aren't any defects. If satisfactory, then your building control surveyor is likely to consider it suitable for structural purposes. If it's single skin with piers and the piers are being removed, the wall will be weakened and should be tied to a new inner leaf using remedial wall ties.
2. Weather
If you're dealing with a wall of single leaf construction, you must treat it to make it weatherproof. Treatment options include tanking the wall using a vapour permeable membrane linked to a damp proof course or membrane at floor level or providing a lightweight blockwork inner leaf with insulation in the new cavity. In all wall types, care must be taken to ensure the floor membrane laps with the DPC in the existing walls.
3. Insulation
You must insulate the walls, roof, floor and any new windows, rooflights and doors to habitable standards, your designer will help you choose the right insulation, but the level of insulation should provide U-Values equal to or better than:
- Roof 0.15 W/m2K
- External walls 0.18 W/m2K
- Floor 0.18 W/m2K
- Windows 1.4 W/m2K (Band B) [1.6 W/m2K (Band C) for timber frame windows until 14 June 2023]
- Doors 1.4 W/m2K (Band B) [1.8 W/m2K (Band E) for timber fire doors and, until 14 June 2023, other external timber doors]
- Rooflights 2.2 W/m2K
Remember that you may need to add or increase ventilation to roof voids. When lining the garage with an independent stud partition, the insulation should be fitted tightly between the studs - using insulated plasterboard is best to avoid cold bridging. The maximum area of glazing/openings should not exceed 25% of the floor area of the space being converted. Other options for design flexibility might be available and you should discuss these with your designer. These fabric values might change again after 2025.
4. Ventilation
Windows must have openable vents of an area equal to either 1/10th of the floor area of the room (for windows having a fully open angle of between 15degrees to 30degrees), or 1/20th of the floor area (for all other window openings/angles of more than 30degrees). If the conversion is for a new habitable room or kitchen to either a bungalow, or a house with multiple floors, the room must also have either 10,000mm2 or 8,000mm2 of trickle (background) ventilation, respectively – which might be a vent contained in the window frame. If the conversion is for a new wet-room (a kitchen/bath/shower/toilet/utility room) then there should be background ventilation of at least 5,000mm2 and an extractor fan should be provided to extract air at a rate of:
- 30l/s Kitchen with cooker hood extracting directly to outside
- 60l/s Kitchen without a cooker hood or with only a recirculation hood
- 30l/s Utility room
- 15l/s Bath and/or Shower-room
- 6l/s Toilet
If the conversion is to create a lounge, dining/TV/play room or sleeping space or similar and the room can only be accessed through another room, a window with a clear opening of 450 x 733mm at no more than 1.1m above floor level is a must for means of escape (it’s also a good idea to install a domestic smoke alarm to cover the area outside the converted room, and installed either in any connecting circulation space or access room). It is also strongly recommended that any new windows or doors be designed to be secure against possible break-in.
5. Sound
Any party wall between the garage and an adjoining property will need to be insulated to stop sound transmission. Check the existing wall construction - anything less than 200mm of dense blockwork will usually need further work, which may include additional masonry or specialist independent acoustic partitions – your building control surveyor will be able to advise you further.
6. Electricity
The requirements of Part P - Electrical safety in dwellings will apply to the new conversion, so ensure any installations are compliant and certified to BS 7671.
Your building control surveyor should be able to provide practical guidance on site.
Find your local LABC team with our free postcode search tool
Did you find this article useful?
Further details on garage conversions can be found on the LABC Front Door website.
Then read our advice and watch videos on:
Image courtesy of woodspropertysolutions.co.uk
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 updated on 18 July 2022
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Comments
Garage Conversion
Submitted 4 years 4 months ago
Reply
Submitted 4 years 4 months ago
Thank you for contacting LABC.
You will need building regulation consent to convert your garage to into a playroom. It's a quite straightforward process, which I am sure your local authority building control team would be happy to advise on. It’s unlikely you would need planning permission to convert the garage, although it is always best to check with the planning department, since sometimes “permitted development rights” are removed.
I trust you find this response of some use.
Kind regards
Richard, LABC
Extension to garage conversion?
Submitted 4 years 2 months ago
Reply
Submitted 4 years 1 month ago
Providing the extended building satisfies the Building Regulations 2010 (as amended), Schedule 2, Class 6 exemption, that is, it should be at ground level, be less than 30m2 internal floor area, contain no sleeping accommodation and be sited at least one metre from any boundary or be constructed of substantially non-combustible material (typically masonry walls and timber felt/tiled roof), you would not need building regulation consent, for the structure.
However introducing a “controlled service” into the extended building would, so for example the hot and cold water supply and electrical installations would need to comply with the relevant requirements of Schedule 1 of the Building Regulations 2010 (as amended).
You are advised to contact your local authority planning team to determine if these works require any necessary planning permissions and your local authority building control team to discuss these works in more detail, prior to the submission of an application.
I trust you find this response useful.
Kind regards
Julie, LABC
Internal wall insulation
Submitted 4 years 2 months ago
Detached garage Conversion
Submitted 4 years 1 month ago
We are thinking of converting our detached garage into a game’s room/office. We would be looking to put bi-folding doors on the side of the garage that face into our back garden. We would leave the existing garage door in place but block up and insulate. We already have power in the garage from when it was built 7 years ago. Would this kind of work need any planning regs. I’ve looked on the planning portal and think we would be exempt as there won’t be my running water. Do you know if this would be the case.
Many thanks
Changing Garage to kitchen
Submitted 4 years ago
Many thanks Antony
Reply
Submitted 4 years ago
As it's a change of use under the building regulations the room will need to meet all the relevant requirements for an integrated part of the dwelling. Including but not necessarily exclusive to; structure, fire safety, moisture control, ventilation, water supply and drainage, and thermal performance. Therefore you will need to make a building regulations application to your local building control team (you can find their details by entering your postcode into the search at the top of this page).
Kind regards
Julie, LABC
Garage conversion
Submitted 3 years 9 months ago
Access will be through a new door cut into the side of the garage wall from the garden.
There will be no access from the house -fully self contained.
I dont think I need planning permission, but what about Building Regs? If no access to house is this still needed?
Reply
Submitted 3 years 9 months ago
Yes - converting a garage or part of a garage will need a building regulations application.
Kind regards
Julie, LABC
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