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The Jewish Chronicle

Haringey’s Orthodox community consulted over new loft extensions

May 27, 2009 10:37

By

James Martin

1 min read

Haringey’s strictly Orthodox community is being consulted over new guidelines clarifying the council’s position on loft extensions.

At a meeting with 30 members of the South Tottenham kehillah, Haringey’s chief planning officer Marc Dorfman said the aim was to produce design plans showing what constituted “an acceptable extension”.

The council wants to avoid legal battles such as the recent court case with local businessman David Kahn over a loft extension built in contravention of planning permission. Mr Kahn was ordered to pay £2,500 costs, but could have received an unlimited fine or been ordered to restore the property to its original format.

Mr Dorfman was asked by Mark Gross — who acts as a liaison between the community and the council — to look sympathetically on the space requirements of “ 600 very large Jewish families”. He replied that rear extensions were “generally okay” but questioned the permissibility of loft extensions, “particularly square roofs”.