Tuesday 6 April 2021

Government goes ahead with new PD rights


Readers are no doubt getting used by now to the meaning of the word “Consultation”. The government announces a proposed legislative change (in this case making important changes to the GPDO). They invite comments, prompting numerous vociferous objections. Then they totally ignore these responses and go ahead with the changes anyway. That’s “Consultation”.

The opposition in this case came not merely from ‘the usual suspects’, but also from important elements in the property industry, who might perhaps have been expected to support the greater freedom to redevelop commercial property. So concerned are the professional bodies with the potential impact of these changes that even after these amendments to the GPDO were made last week, the RTPI, the RIBA, the RICS and also the CIOB [Chartered Institute of Building] wrote to the Prime Minister to express their concern that these latest PD changes could present a real risk to the country’s town centres and to small businesses in particular. However, I doubt whether the government will take any notice.

The latest changes to the GPDO came in the form of the Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development etc.) (England) (Amendment) Order 2021 [SI 2021 No. 428], which was made on 30 March and comes into force on 21 April, although (as explained below) the new PD rights do not in fact take effect until 1 August. It applies both to England and to Wales. [But is this right? What about the devolution of planning powers to Welsh Ministers? See comment below for an explanation.]

I am not going to attempt to set out the new provisions in any detail. What follows is simply a summary of some of the main points. In Part 3, Class M (the residential conversion of buildings formerly within Use Classes A1 and A2) and Class O (the residential conversion of offices formerly within Use Class B1(a)) will cease to apply after 31 July, and will be replaced by the new Class MA, which (subject to the restrictions and limitations mentioned below) will extend to all buildings falling within the current Use Class E.

This new PD right will also have the effect of replacing (and in effect reviving in a new form) the lapsed PD right that was formerly granted by Class PA. Only Class N (the residential conversion of an amusement arcade or centre, or a casino, each of which is a sui generis use) remains in its original form. Whether it was an unintentional oversight or a deliberate change, the effect of the abolition of Class M is to put an end to the PD right for the residential conversion of betting offices and pay day loan shops (with or without flats above them). This aspect of Class M has not been subsumed within the new Class MA.

There are the usual restrictions, which exclude certain buildings from this PD right. The most important of these is the requirement that the building must have been vacant for a continuous period of at least 3 months immediately prior to the date of the application for prior approval [although this would hardly seem long enough to prevent the practice on the part of unscrupulous landlords of ‘winkling out’ existing tenants].

Another essential qualification is that the use of the building must have fallen within one or more of the old ‘town centre’ and similar use classes (i.e. A1, A2, A3, B1, D1(a), D1(b), or D2(e) (other than use as an indoor swimming pool or skating rink) and/or the new Class E, for a continuous period of at least 2 years prior to the date of the application for prior approval. The cumulative floor space of the existing building changing use under Class MA may be up to a fairly generous limit of 1,500 square metres. Some of the usual exclusions apply to buildings or their curtilage will apply to Class MA (SSSI, Listed Building, Scheduled Monument, Safety Hazard Area, Military Explosives Storage Area, AONB, the Broads, National Park or World Heritage Site and also if the site is occupied under an agricultural tenancy, unless the express consent of both the landlord and the tenant has been obtained).

PD under Class MA will be subject to a prior approval application being made in respect of transport impacts of the development (particularly to ensure safe site access), contamination risks in relation to the building, flooding risks in relation to the building, impacts of noise from commercial premises on the intended occupiers of the development, the provision of adequate natural light in all habitable rooms of the dwellinghouses, the impact on intended occupiers of the development of the introduction of residential use in an area the authority considers to be important for general or heavy industry, or for waste management, storage and distribution, or a mix of such uses. Where the development involves the loss of services provided by a registered nursery, or a health centre maintained under section 2 or 3 of the National Health Service Act 2006, the impact on the local provision of the type of services lost, this will also be a matter requiring prior approval.

Although the location of the building within a conservation area is not a disqualification in the case of Class MA, the impact of that change of use on the character or sustainability of the conservation area will be a matter requiring prior approval, but only where the development involves a change of use of the whole or part of the ground floor.

An application for prior approval for development under Class MA may not be made before 1 August 2021. Development must be completed within a period of 3 years starting with the prior approval date, and any building permitted to be used as a dwellinghouse by virtue of Class MA is to remain in use as a dwellinghouse Use Class C3 and for no other purpose, except to the extent that the other purpose is ancillary to the use as a dwellinghouse.

Various changes have also been made to Parts 7, 8, 11 and 20 in Part 2 of the Second Schedule to the GPDO, which I haven’t got time to discuss here. One important transitional provision is to preserve the effect of existing Article 4 Directions in respect of PD under Class O for a further year. Until the end of 31 July 2022, a direction issued under article 4(1) of the GPDO that is in effect immediately before 1st August 2021,and which withdraws permission for all or any development, or for any particular development, granted for Class O of Part 3 of Schedule 2 to the GPDO, and which has not been cancelled in accordance with the provisions of Schedule 3 to the GPDO, will remain in effect as if a reference to any development permitted under Class O included a reference to the equivalent development under Class MA of Part 3 so far as that development would, but for the direction, be permitted under Class MA.

Finally, there is one minor amendment to the Use Classes Order. This change has the effect of excluding use as a swimming pool or skating rink from Class E, so that these two uses will now fall solely within Class F.2(d). I commented on the apparent anomaly of a swimming pool or skating rink falling alternatively within either Class E or Class F.2 on page 360 of the Revised Edition of The Essential Guide to the Use of Land and Buildings under the Planning Acts (pages 16/17 in the November 2020 Supplement). I also pointed out one or two other anomalies of a similar nature in the UCO as revised last year, and it will be interesting to see whether the government takes the opportunity to deal with those too in future amendments to the UCO.

© MARTIN H GOODALL

7 comments:

  1. What about former class A5 Martin please which is not included in the new Class 'E'? Thanks.

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    1. Former Use Class A5 (hot food take-away) is now a sui generis use and will not therefore benefit from PD under Class MA.

      I don't know whether the government will introduce a PD right for the residential conversion of hot food takeaways or of any other sui generis uses.

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  2. I am grateful to Dr Charles Mynors for pointing out to me that SI 2021/428 “extends to England and Wales” (art 1) – but the amendments made by it only “have the same application as the instruments amended”. Since the instrument amended is the 2015 GPDO, which only applies to England (2015 Order, art 1(2)), the amendments only apply to England.

    The point is that England and Wales is a single jurisdiction, so any statute or SI made by Westminster must “extend” to the whole of England and Wales (or to the whole of Great Britain, or to the UK). But it may “apply” only to part of it – for example, to London, or to national parks, or to England. Any statute or SI made by the Senedd Cymru also extends to England and Wales, but can only apply in Wales, so that does not have to be stated explicitly. If it purports to apply to England, it is ultra vires because outside the legislative competence of the Senedd (see Government of Wales Act 2006, s 108A).

    So far as anyone is aware, the Welsh Government has no plans to make an amending order similar to 2021/428 applying on the far side of Offa’s Dyke (!)

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  3. I take it that this means that, where an Article 4 direction currently applies to a change from B1(c) to C3, this will no longer apply after August 2021, and there is no right granted to a local authority to make a new Article 4 direction?

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    1. The transitional provision that preserves the effect of existing Article 4 Directions by reference to the previous use classes will expire after 31 July, but I don't rule out the possibility that the substantive amendment of the GPDO which is expected to be made in the summer, and to come into effect on 1 August, may extend the effect of such Article 4 Directions on a more permanent basis. We shall have to see what happens.

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  4. Hi Martin,

    What are your thoughts on the qualification regarding the use of the building falling in one of the prescribed uses. Is this a demonstrable lawful use or occupied for such use. ie: what if the building has been vacant for 2 years before the prior approval date but does have the correct lawful use?

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    Replies

    1. I would refer readers to my reply to another comment by SB under my more recent post on “Class MA – Some further points” (7 April 2021), which also answers the point raised here.

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