It really depends where you build it I suspect, however if you were to build it in the UK in a place that people would notice it (i.e. not in your underground lair) then i think the following guide-lines apply;
You can extend your house without the planning permission (excluding flats and maisonettes) up to: *fifty cubic metres if you live in a terraced house, or any house within a Conservation Area, or *seventy cubic metres if you live in a detached or semi-detached house providing that: *there have been no other extensions to your house, *the extension is not more than four metres high if it is within two metres of any boundary, *the extension does not face a highway (including if there is a highway to the rear or side of your property), and/or *the extension does not cover more than half the garden.
Whether lego as a building material could endure the structural stresses of being made into a 70m3 building or not, I'm not sure.
Lego Houses
Date: 2006-04-11 02:46 am (UTC)You can extend your house without the planning permission (excluding flats and maisonettes) up to:
*fifty cubic metres if you live in a terraced house, or any house within a Conservation Area, or
*seventy cubic metres if you live in a detached or semi-detached house
providing that:
*there have been no other extensions to your house,
*the extension is not more than four metres high if it is within two metres of any boundary,
*the extension does not face a highway (including if there is a highway to the rear or side of your property), and/or
*the extension does not cover more than half the garden.
Whether lego as a building material could endure the structural stresses of being made into a 70m3 building or not, I'm not sure.
Re: Lego Houses
Date: 2006-04-12 07:16 am (UTC)Re: Lego Houses
Date: 2006-04-12 07:24 am (UTC)