What is a material objection?

What is a material objection?

What is a material objection?

Material Objection means a written objection to an Award that relates to the exercise of discretion of the Purchasing Agent in accepting or rejecting response as being compliant or non-compliant with a Call and which is not: Sample 1.

What are material considerations in planning applications?

What is a material planning consideration? A material planning consideration is one which is relevant to making the planning decision in question (eg whether to grant or refuse an application for planning permission).

What are not material considerations in planning?

Items which are NOT material considerations and are therefore not relevant to planning include: Personal circumstances or impact on a 3rd party, e.g. devaluation of property, private property rights including boundary and access disputes, and more.

What are material planning conditions?

Material planning considerations Loss of daylight/sunlight or overshadowing. Scale and dominance. Layout and density of buildings. Appearance and design of development and materials proposed.

Are personal circumstances a material planning consideration?

Generally speaking, personal circumstances are not a material planning consideration. The courts have held that personal circumstances may ‘tip the balance’ when other material considerations are not decisive.

What does overshadowing mean in planning?

If a new building or extension breaches a perpendicular line at an angle of 25 degrees above the horizontal taken from a point 2 metres above ground level on an existing house, it is likely that windows in the existing house will be overshadowed.

Do you need planning permission to replace a window with patio doors?

In most cases you will not need planning permissions to change a window to a door. However it is always best to check the original planning permission to be sure there were not conditions attached. Furthermore, depending on the change building regulations may need to be met.

What is the 45 rule in planning?

The 45-degree rule is assessed on both plan and elevation. An extension should not exceed a line taken at 45 degrees from the centre of the nearest ground floor window of a habitable room in an adjoining property.