Town Planning

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53 Comments

  1. Anold Mhumhi says:

    Hi

    I just wanted to understand how far can we build from a river bank or a stream?

    thank you

  2. You have every right to ask the seller for the plans – you can also see if the local authority has copies (they should have). There is only one set of building regulations in SA – the National Building Regulations – although local by-laws also come into play, particularly when it comes to building lines. Your local authority should be able to give you info about by-laws.

  3. Annette van Rhyn says:

    Afternoon Jane, please advise where I can find information on building regulations for the Alberton, Johannesburg area? We are in the process of buying a property and I am not sure if the carport that is already there is within building regulations as it is about +/- 1m from the boundary wall? Do I have a right to ask the Seller for the plans for the house? Thank you

  4. If you are saying that this “green zone” does not belong to her, then you need to report what she has done to the local authority (presuming they own the land) and object to what she has done.

  5. Hi Charles, The requirements for each city/town in SA differs and the local bye-laws and zoning regulations are different for each as well. You do not say where you are so we will not be able to tell you for your area. The best is to contact your local council planning department and give them your erf number and suburb and size of your plot and they will be able to tell you.

  6. Hi Anita, Yes you can. I self-built one of my houses with a wooden floor and had the ensuite bathroom on the wooden tongue-in-groove floor. What I had to do was to re-inforce (extra upright support beams) under the sections where the shower and the bath were. The floor of the shower was a concrete slab with the normal drain plug and the bath was a victorian cast iron bath so both of these were quite heavy. Today plastic and fibreglass units are much lighter. You must seal the timber extremly well so as to protect it from getting damp or letting any wet get through.

  7. Can one build a bathroom on wood floor?

  8. Good day.

    I would like to build a grassroof lapa between 20 and 24 square metres, but dont know what all the regulations/rules are. Could you kindly furnish me with the regulations pertaining to distances, fire safety requirements, etc. Thanks in advance.

    Regards.

  9. Johan van Tonder says:

    Hi there

    My neighbour living across a green zone (natural park, until she started demolishing parts of it for purposes of expanding her own garden) has recently erected very bright external lighting on the boundary wall and in her garden, “to limit crime in our area”. These lights are so bright I can read a book in my bedroom which is at least 30 meters away without additional lights being turned on in my bedroom. They are so bright that normal curtaining fails to darken the room, resulting in constant disturbance of sleep which has detrimentally impacted my health and that of my family. It has also disturbed the little bit of natural tranquility we still enjoyed from the park at night. The lights come on at dusk and remain at full brightness till the sun rises. Is there no regulation governing this type of intrusive behaviour, since common sense and regard for another’s wellbeing is seemingly beyond some people?

  10. Roellen the regulations regarding stormwater require an engineer to ensure that it is disposed of without undermining buildings etc. And a property owner cannot simply allow the water to drain onto a neighbour’s property. As far as swimming pool water is concerned, this is governed by local authority bylaws – specifically whether the water can be drained into the road and/or council stormwater drains. He/she cannot simply drain the water into your backyard. Contact the local authority for guidance on this issue.

  11. Hi

    We moved into our new house two weeks ago, and discovered that our neighbours pool and fish pond pipes is “flushing” into my backyard. I am aware that you cannot stop storm water but for swimming pools what is the regulation for that?

  12. Ann unfortunately I am not certain about this. The location of a sewage treatment plant in an urban area will be governed by zoning by-laws. It would definitely though need to be inspected before it operates – there are stringent plumbing regulations that relate to sewage and I have no doubt there are regulations that relate to sewage treatment plants. They also would definitely not be permitted to flush untreated sewage onto (you say into? – do you mean down drains?) public roads or into open drains. That would be a health hazard.

  13. Ann Veldman says:

    Please tell me what the legal distance is between a house and a sewage treatment plant. Also, if the plant must be inspected prior to operating and if it is allowed to flush untreated sewage into public roads.
    Thankyou

  14. Leslie your local authority has bylaws that specify allowable building lines from boundaries, so you will need to check with them. They are not all the same. You can download the Tshwane town planning scheme document here, there may be some other useful information in this.
    As far as the illegal structures are concerned, as the owner of the property it is your responsibility to remove them. You could try and sue the previous owner for costs because that person did not divulge that they were illegal. But this will involve legal (and possibly court) action.

  15. Leslie August says:

    I have moved into a house that i had bought through the bank 1 year ago.
    I now decided to errect a work shop at the rear end of the house.

    What should the distance be between my wall of the errected structure and the neighbours wall be.
    if i have the option of not asking the neighbour to sighn and also if the nieghbour has to sighn .what should the distances be.

    I also had the inspectors from pretoria here and they checked and informed me that the i have a car port and a lapa build over the servitude line,and that it has to be removed .Whos responsibility should this be as i,ve bought the house with structures already built.The car port and the lapa has allways been there for many years,now why should it be my resposibility to remove it.

    What can be done.

  16. Yes Doc you do need plans for mezzanine floor. Your local authority will do the inspection. e.g. If you live in Pretoria it would be Tshwane, if you live in Cape Town it would be the City of Cape Town

  17. There is nothing in the National Building Regulations that governs this. Go to your local hardware store and buy a good sealer. Rubbol is a particularly good one!

  18. Treatment of external timber doors exposed to weather to ensure / prevent swelling of doors ?

  19. What are the regulations governing the Mezzanine floor with regards to fire rating and staircase design? Are you required to obtain plans when building a Mezz floor? Which local authorities will be required to inspect this once it is built?

  20. Hi BK, we do not have lists or recommend any one or an other supplier on this site. You will have to look in the Yellow Pages

  21. Pl . advise about siphonic drainage system for industrial buildings, suppliers/providers with their addresses.

  22. Hi Zukiswa, we do not forward any documents sorry.

  23. I would to be forwarded the copy of the National Building Regulations Glossary on my email address.Thank you.

  24. Oehl, this is what the new Energy Regulations, SANS 204 of 2011 state:
    Building orientation
    Buildings should be orientated in accordance with figures B.1 to B.6, or approximately true north. If buildings cannot be thus orientated, they shall be orientated to achieve the lowest net energy use. Orientation sectors are shown in figure 1.
    Living spaces should be arranged so that the rooms where people spend most of their hours are located on the northern side of the unit. Uninhabited rooms such as bathrooms and storerooms can be used to screen unwanted western sun or to prevent heat loss on the south facing façades. Living rooms should ideally be placed on the northern side.
    The longer axis of the dwelling should be orientated so that it runs as near east/west as possible.”
    However there are other factors that come into play including climatic zones which affect things like insulation, the types of walls to build (e.g. where cavity walls should be built). What this means is that the new regs take both heating and cooling into account.

  25. Am at a stadium to build a new house.
    Have chosen a plot already with a view.
    The builder tells me that the regulations are, that the bed rooms need to be north facing.
    With our climate change, getting warmer why should the bedroom be north facing, if you want a cooler house /bedroom without installing air condition that consume additional electricity.