Stasys-Girskis
Hi, yes there are.
Some are about the distance from the neighbors land. And up to 80 square metres if it is considered as temporary construction (you can remove it) you don't need any permit. If it is a bigger you need a permit. If there is foundation it is considered as a permanently.
Piri
Thanks. Do you know if the construction materials make a difference?
As well 5 m high.
Well I don't know what do you have in mind, but timber, aluminium, steel, glass, polycarbonate, or that plastic thingy(don't know how it is in English) are fine.
Oh in the protected areas are different rules.
Piri He doesn't really know what he has in mind either. and needs to do a lot more research.
It would be some kind of structure with the frames built of something and then plastic or glass sheeting, with vertical hanging pods inside.
That is the incredibly detailed answer I just got when I asked more about it.
Julie Brooks-Girskiene
Well it sounds like a normal greenhouse π
Julie Brooks-Girskiene He doesn't really know what he has in mind either
That is not exactly true, he just isn't very good at explaining it.
If you will start a business straight away probably it might be a different story. But people now growing fishes in the garages and are making business of it π in all cases if it is in your land and the land is not in a protected area it is not a difficult thing.
I'm just wondering exactly what the definition of permanent or movable structure is. π
Stasys-Girskis foundation? I mean you can collect it and bring to another place. You don't need a permit or a project.
Piri Ok, that sounds like something that I can work with π
What are you going to put in the greenhouse?
Egle-K Algae
Stasys-Girskis Algae
So not an answer I was guessing at.
Maybe you need a concrete floor if you are building many heavy water tanks on it, then I don't know if it makes it a permanent structure.