- The rules only apply to houses – flats and maisonettes are not included
- Only 50% of the area of land around the original house can be covered by extensions, including conservatories, and other buildings
- You mustn’t build the conservatory higher than the highest part of the original roof
- Where the wooden conservatory comes within 2 metres of the boundary, the height at the eaves can’t exceed 3 metres
- A rear wooden conservatory can’t extend beyond the rear wall of the original house by more than 4 metres if it’s a detached house, or more than 3 metres for any other type of house
- For side extensions, for example a lean-to wooden conservatory, it can’t exceed 4 metres in height and can only be up to half the width of the original house
Keswick
Keswick is an English market community and also a civil church, traditionally in Cumberland, and given that 1974 in the District of Allerdale in Cumbria. Lying within the Lake District National Park, Keswick is just north of Derwentwater and also is 4 miles (6.4 km) from Bassenthwaite Lake. It had a population of 5,243 at the 2011 census. There is evidence of primitive occupation of the area, but the very first recorded mention of the town days from the 13th century, when Edward I of England provided a charter for Keswick's market, which has kept a continuous 700-year presence. The community was an important mining location, and also from the 18th century has been referred to as a vacation centre; tourism has been its principal market for more than 150 years. Its functions include the Moot Hall; a modern theatre, the Theatre by the Lake; among Britain's earliest surviving cinemas, the Alhambra; and also the Keswick Museum and also Art Gallery in the town's largest open space, Fitz Park. Amongst the community's yearly occasions is the Keswick Convention, an Evangelical celebration bring in site visitors from several nations. Keswick ended up being widely understood for its organization with the poets Samuel Taylor Coleridge as well as Robert Southey. Together with their fellow Lake Poet William Wordsworth, based at Grasmere, 12 miles (19 km) away, they made the beautiful charm of the area commonly understood to viewers in Britain and also past. In the late 19th century and also right into the 20th, Keswick was the focus of several essential efforts by the growing preservation movement, often led by Hardwicke Rawnsley, vicar of the close-by Crosthwaite parish as well as co-founder of the National Trust, which has actually developed extensive holdings in the location.