planning permission

English

WOTD – 6 August 2019

Etymology

The term was possibly introduced by the Town and Country Planning Act 1947 (10 & 11 George VI, chapter 51) of the United Kingdom.[1]

Pronunciation

Noun

planning permission (countable and uncountable, plural planning permissions)

  1. (Britain, construction, law) Legal permission granted by a government authority to construct on one's land, or to change the use of the land. [from mid 1940s]
    • 1949, Ministry of Housing and Local Government; Central Office of Information (Great Britain), Town and Country Planning: The 1947 Act; 144 Questions and Answers, number 9, London: His Majesty’s Stationery Office, OCLC 24025700, question 15, page 8:
      If I am not sure whether what I want to do needs planning permission, how can I find out? You can write to your Local Planning Authority and ask them to give you a ruling (or, as the Act [the Town and Country Planning Act 1947] calls it, a 'determination') whether you need planning permission or not, and if you disagree with their ruling you can appeal to the Minister.
    • 1978, J[ohn] T[erence] Coppock; L[eonard] F[rank] Gebbett, “Review No. 15: The Statistics of Town and Country Planning”, in W[ynne] F[rederick] Maunder, editor, Land Use [] and Town and Country Planning [] (Reviews of United Kingdom Statistical Sources; VII), Oxford: Published for the Royal Statistical Society and the Social Science Research Council by Pergamon Press, →ISBN, section 1.4 (Survey for Plans), paragraph 1.4.1, page 113:
      The real wealth of information that could be drawn from planning permissions and refusals concerning housing, offices, industry, shops, etc., remains a largely untapped source and a number of assertions appear in the daily press and elsewhere about delays in granting planning permissions which only too often cannot be either confirmed or refuted, let alone be judged against statistics showing the wider context of the implementation of planning permissions.
    • 1997, Keith Thomas, “Legal Aspects of Development Control”, in Development Control: Principles and Practice, London; Bristol, Pa.: UCL Press, →ISBN, page 46:
      Difficulties arise when a use is abandoned and resumed. The question is whether planning permission is needed for resumption. Where a new planning permission is granted and implemented, the old use rights are lost. Planning permission runs with the land once implemented; cessation of use does not prevent resumption later on (this is particularly important in mineral working). Whereas a planning permission may be replaced by another planning permission, which is implemented, it is normally only uses that did not originally have planning permission that can be abandoned.
    • 2003, Christopher Wood, “EIA [Environmental Impact Assessment] in the UK”, in Environmental Impact Assessment: A Comparative Review, 2nd edition, Abingdon, Oxfordshire; New York, N.Y.: Routledge, published 2013, →ISBN, page 52:
      The UK has possessed a land-use planning system since 1948 which allows substantial discretion in the consideration of the environmental implications of new development. It is possible for local planning authorities (LPAs) to prepare plans in which environmental policies are emphasised and to refuse development, or to impose conditions for planning permissions, for environmental reasons.

Translations

See also

References

  1. Town and Country Planning Act 1947 (10 & 11 Geo. VI, c. 51; UK), section 119(1): “‘planning permission’ means the permission for development which is required by virtue of section twelve of this Act”. Section 12(1) states: “Subject to the provisions of this section and to the following provisions of this Act, permission shall be required under this Part of the Act in respect of any development of land which is carried out after the appointed day.”

Further reading

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