
Homeowner wins planning row with council over his 'rule-breaking garden decking' - after taking to Google Earth for help
Gareth Leek, 58, was left stunned when planning officials claimed his beloved garden decking was too tall and needed retrospective permission, despite it being in place for eight years.
Council busybodies argued the raised grey-and-white platform in his Pontypool, Gwent, garden stood 83cm high.
This is a whole half a metre over the limit requiring planning permission.
But Mr Leek wasn't about to let his pride-and-joy be torn up without a fight.
Instead of backing down, he went high-tech, digging out satellite images from Google Earth to prove the decking had been there for over four years, meaning he should legally be allowed to keep it.
The decksaving aerial snap, dated June 2018, showed the decking firmly in place.
His decking 4.84m wide and 3.82m long was saved in his garden in Pontypool, Gwent.
He was also backed up by a neighbour supporting him keeping the decking, saying it was in place in the garden since at least 2019.
A planning hearing heard Mr Leek had retrospectively applied for a certificate of lawful development.
Planning officer Simon Pritchard acknowledged the evidence presented by Mr Leek, which included a Google Earth aerial image from June 2018.
Mr Pritchard said the council had no evidence or reason to doubt that the decking had not been 'substantially completed for less than four years'.
Mr Pritchard's report confirmed his application to keep his smart decking is now immune from enforcement action, and he can keep it.
It's not the first time the technology has been used in evidence in planning rows.
In 2023, a homeowner was told he had to tear down his decking and extension after council officials used Google Earth to prove that he built them illegally.
Colin Thomas, 65, tried to use a loophole in planning law to keep the two structures at the front and rear of his terraced house in Portland, Dorset.
He 'solemnly and sincerely declared' that the raised decking in the front of his house and the single-storey extension at the rear existed for more than four years - making it exempt from council planner's bids to remove them.
Mr Thomas alleged that the 20ft by 16ft raised decking and rear extension had built soon after he bought the property in 2012, a claim that was backed by his builder and friends.
But Google Earth and Street View satellite photographs taken in September 2020 have revealed that the rear extension and decking were not present three years ago.
Officials have now determined he had not obtained planning permission for the works and wrongly thought they came under permitted development rights for homeowners.
Mr Thomas applied to the local council to make both structures lawful under the rule that recognises any changes to a property that have been in place for four years are exempt from enforcement action.
As a result Dorset Council refused Mr Thomas's application and he now faces the prospect of demolishing both the rear extension and the raised decking.
Planning officer Thomas Wild, who had looked up the property on Google Earth and Google Street view, concluded: 'Therefore...it does allow for a conclusion that the rear extension was constructed between September 2020 and June 2022.
'Therefore it has been present for less than four years and has not achieved immunity from enforcement action on that basis.'
With regards to the raised deck at the front of the house, Mr Wild found the structure was there in Google photos taken in 2016 and 2021.
But he found this was a different decking to the one that stands today.
He said the original decking was timber but the present structure is made from composite boards that have been topped with artificial grass.
He also worked out that the replacement decking was bigger than the original.
Mr Wild said that although it was 'accepted that by around 2016 the original timber decking had become immune from enforcement action, that immunity was lost when the decking was removed'.
He added: 'The construction of the decking are fresh breaches of planning control which do not benefit from previously accrued immunity.'
A spokesperson for Dorset Council said: 'The evidence available from Google Street View images indicates that the decking currently on the site is different from the decking constructed in 2012, which the council accepts did achieve immunity from enforcement, but which was subsequently removed.
'The new decking is larger, with a different design, incorporating a garage underneath it and is therefore considered to be a new breach of planning control.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
5 hours ago
- BBC News
Welsh group make 264 sashes for female MPs to mark women's vote
A team of Welsh seamstresses have made 264 sashes for every woman MP to mark 97 years since women were given the right to group, based in Newport, call themselves Lucy and the Sashmeisters, and the handcrafted white sashes were given to the current women MPs at Westminster Hall on sashes hope to both commemorate the difficulties faced during the suffragette movement, and the significance of the Equal Franchise Act of 1928, which gave women over the age of 21 the right to vote. Organised by Centenary Action, the project is part of the campaign for the equal number of men and women MPs, as currently there are only 40 percent of women MPs in government. Centenary action was established by Dr Helen Pankhurst, the granddaughter of Sylvia Pankhurst and great-granddaughter of Emmeline Pankhurst - two trailblazing women who founded the suffragettes and campaigned for women's right to to the act being passed, only women over the age of 30 who occupied a house, or were married to someone who did, could vote. The group have been crafting the sashes since March, and women of all age ranges and backgrounds helped out, with the youngest aged 15, and then the oldest aged 87. They are white twill sashes, with one purple ribbon down one side and green on the other side, the iconic colours of the British suffragette movement. Each sash is numbered, depending on where each MP comes in the all time list of women MPs. "There have only ever been 694 women MPs, so for all the women it connects them to the past, to the history of suffrage, it connects them to each other," said Dr Pankhurst. "It's a baton that's also being handed over to the next generation of women MPs, to know their number and find ways to support each other and transform Parliament."There are the most women MPs ever at present, which is a milestone worth recognising, said Dr Pankhurst, but she added "celebration alone isn't enough"."We need real, sustained action to ensure we reach a truly gender-equal Parliament by 2028, when we mark the centenary of equal franchise." Spearhead of the project, seamstress Lucy Harris, said: "I'm really proud to be able to do this for them, they work for us and particularly for women, we have a voice now.""Our earliest sash is for Diane Abbott," Ms Harris told BBC Radio Wales said while there aren't 50 percent women MPs yet, the process of making the sashes highlighted the increase of women going up per decade, which she described as "amazing". Nancy Astor was the first woman to sit as an MP in the House of Commons in 1919 and she sat alongside 706 men. Today, there are 386 men. Ms Harris said she was first put in touch with Dr Pankhurst in 2018, when she made 100 suffragette sashes for the march for women in London on International Women's Day. Just before Christmas last year, she said she got an email from Dr Pankhurst asking if she and those at Re:Make, a community repair and reuse space in Newport, would want to do it again. Labour MP Jessica Morden was heavily involved in the project, and helped deliver the sashes to Westminster. Ms Morden said she was "so proud" to see the sashes, and it was "quite the moment" to witness so many women MPs wearing their sashes together. "It is a testament to how far we've come since the Equal Franchise Act of 1928," she added. She described the event as a "fitting tribute" to all the suffragettes who fought and suffered to ensure that all women could have their say in how the country is run."The number 264 represents around 40 percent of the total Members of Parliament," she added. "This shows there is still much work to do to achieve a truly representative Parliament in which 50 percent of MPs are women."She thanked Centenary Action for bringing the project together and the "utterly brilliant" seamstresses at Re:Make for "working so hard to make all of the sashes from scratch".


The Guardian
15 hours ago
- The Guardian
Country diary: Our local hedgehogs seem to be thriving, but their lives are so precarious
The ball of brown, dry, crinkled leaves was breathing. In and out it went, gently expanding and contracting. As I watched, the 'leaves' resolved into prickles – it was a sleeping hedgehog, curled up under the honeysuckle. A hedgehog has been living in the garden for at least the last three years. On warm evenings when the windows are open, I hear it bumbling about, snuffling and grunting, searching for slugs, snails and insects. I think it lives under the shed in summer, and in winter it hibernates in an old compost bin filled with sticks and sections of turf. Encouragingly, the local hog population seems to have grown over the past 18 months, with neighbours noticing animals of varying sizes. The signs are clear: telltale tunnels pushed through patches of long grass reveal nocturnal hunting routes. In the morning, their perambulations are marked in the dew, showing their travels over damp lawns. Hedgehogs forage over a surprisingly wide area, roaming up to a mile every night. Distinctive droppings are another indication of their presence: glistening, deep-brown chipolatas tapering to pointed ends, left on paths and in flowerbeds. Often packed with undigested insect fragments, wing-cases and nibbles of chitin, they are darker than cat poo, shorter and less twisted than fox turds. Sadly, the hot, dry spring has been tough for hogs, with lack of water a particular problem. While the village has several shallow streams where they can drink easily, other places around here are not so well provided. On Easter Sunday I found one blundering around in the sun near the stony beach at Porlock Weir. It was thin, dehydrated and confused. I rang the local hedgehog rescue group and followed their advice to take it to a vet. He was not hopeful of its chances, and I hadn't the heart to follow up the next day and find out whether it survived. Back in the main village, there's been a more hopeful event. Hoglets – baby hedgehogs – have been spotted. A couple of householders have put homemade signs out on the pavement to warn drivers to go slowly and take care of these newest residents. Under the Changing Skies: The Best of the Guardian's Country Diary, 2018-2024 is published by Guardian Faber; order at and get a 15% discount


Daily Mail
a day ago
- Daily Mail
I can't stop my neighbour felling this glorious tree - BECAUSE it's in an area of outstanding natural beauty
The blackbird who has made his home in my garden has become something of a friend. He potters about on the grass in search of worms immediately after I've finished mowing and takes a keen interest whenever the compost heap is turned over to reveal all kinds of nutritional goodies.