CA31110 - IBA: Buildings and Structures: Meaning of structure
There is no definition of building in the IBA legislation. In
this part of the manual building means building or structure.
You should treat something as a structure if it has been
artificially erected or constructed and is distinct from the earth
surrounding it.
Land that retains its character as land is not a structure,
even if it has been cultivated or modified in some way. For
example, grass tennis courts, grass football pitches, grass bowling
greens and golf courses are not structures.
There are no tax cases about the meaning of structure but
there are several rating cases. In one of them, Inland Revenue
Commissioners v Smyth 3KB406, the point at issue was whether a road
was a structure. In that case Scrutton J said that:
In my view it is a question of fact in each
case; a gravel path though from repeated gravellings it
is harder than the surrounding soil would not
in my opinion be a structure, while the roads one is
familiar with in Switzerland, the Tyrol, and
Italy, in parts built up on mountain sides, in parts cut
out of solid rock, would I think clearly be
structures, as would the elaborate compositions of
concrete, wood blocks, and tarmac used for
heavy motor traffic at the present day. Between the
two there is every variety of degree of
solidity and permanence. Again, the modern earth banks of
a reservoir, recently erected and continually
repaired, may well be a structure, while the huge
earthworks, long ago constructed and repaired,
but now become part of the original earth and left
to weather with it such as Maiden's Castle,
Flower's Barrow and Badbury Rings in the county of
Dorset, or Grim's Dyke, Offa's Dyke and Dane's
Dyke, as they run through England, have, in my
view, long ceased to be structures, and become
natural features of the earth. I think a structure is
something artificially erected, constructed,
put together, of a certain degree of size and
permanence, which is still maintained as an
artificial erection, or which, though not so maintained,
has not become indistinguishable in bounds
from the natural earth surrounding. What degree of
size and permanence will do is a question of
fact in every
case.
