Hello,
I have a question about setback distances for roof overhangs.
If the exterior wall (with a roof overhang of max. 50 cm (20 inches)) is three meters (10 feet) from the property line, and the roof is extended down over a section of about two meters (6.5 feet) at the entrance as a "door canopy," like in the following image, is the minimum setback still maintained, or does the outer edge of this partial roof extension count as the setback distance?

And how would it be if an "attached canopy" was installed in front of the entrance door?
I have a question about setback distances for roof overhangs.
If the exterior wall (with a roof overhang of max. 50 cm (20 inches)) is three meters (10 feet) from the property line, and the roof is extended down over a section of about two meters (6.5 feet) at the entrance as a "door canopy," like in the following image, is the minimum setback still maintained, or does the outer edge of this partial roof extension count as the setback distance?
And how would it be if an "attached canopy" was installed in front of the entrance door?
G
Guido198025 Jan 2020 19:07ypg schrieb:
Haha... is this going to be an endless loop?
That's exactly what it means. I just wanted to make sure I understood it correctly.
guckuck2 schrieb:
Not necessarily, quote paragraph 1 again instead of just the more convenient paragraph 2.
It’s too annoying on my phone right now, hence my laziness. Eaves and cornices must not extend more than 0.50 m (20 inches),
In my opinion, this means that the full length of the eave cannot exceed 0.50 m (20 inches). Up to 0.50 m (20 inches), the exterior wall counts, and beyond that, the outer edge of the eave counts as the reference point for measuring the minimum setback distance of 3 m (10 feet).
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