Garden Rooms Limerick
What a Garden Room Can Be Used For
The structure stays the same regardless of what goes inside it — what changes is the fit-out, the glazing position, and how it's wired. The most common uses we build for in Limerick:
Home Office
A dedicated workspace away from the main house, wired for broadband, heated, double-glazed — functional twelve months a year regardless of what the weather's doing outside.
Home Gym
Insulated walls, rubber flooring, enough ceiling height for a pull-up bar — a proper training space that doesn't eat a bedroom or garage.
Studio or Creative Space
Separate from the house, quiet, with natural light positioned for how the space is actually being used. Glazing layout gets specified at design stage, not as a standard package.
Garden Room / Annexe
Larger rooms with a bathroom, kitchenette, or sleeping area for guests or family — fully insulated, connected to the main house drainage and electrics where needed.

How We Build a Garden Room in Limerick


Do You Need Planning Permission for a Garden Room in Limerick?
Many garden rooms fall under exempted development under Irish planning regulations, meaning full planning permission isn't required — but the exemption has specific conditions.
The room generally needs to stay below a certain floor area, below a certain height, and a minimum distance from the site boundary.
Get any of those wrong and the room moves out of exempted development into full planning permission territory, which changes the timeline and the cost.
We check your specific site conditions — garden size, boundary distances, existing extensions — against the exemption criteria before any work is quoted.
If the room you want falls inside exemption limits, we proceed accordingly. If it doesn't, we tell you upfront and talk through the options, including scaling the room back or going through planning.
That conversation happens at site visit stage, not after a slab has been poured.
Areas We Cover Across Limerick
Most of our work is within easy reach of Mungret — Raheen, Dooradoyle, Castletroy, Annacotty, Patrickswell and Adare are all regular jobs, along with Limerick city itself.
Further out, we cover Newcastle West, Rathkeale, Bruff and Kilmallock without it adding much to the timeline, since groundworks and garden room jobs don't need daily site visits once they're underway.
We also take on projects across the county border — Newmarket-on-Fergus and Sixmilebridge in Clare, and Nenagh and the surrounding area in Tipperary — though Limerick stays the priority when it comes to scheduling.
If you're outside these areas, get in touch anyway; it's worth a call to check rather than assuming you're too far out.

What Affects the Price of a Garden Room in Limerick
Garden rooms in Limerick are priced after a site visit because several variables change the number significantly:
Size and footprint — the single biggest cost driver. A 3m x 3m room and a 5m x 4m room with a bathroom are different projects in terms of materials, labour and time.
Ground conditions — soft ground or poor drainage needs more work on the foundation before the block base goes up. This gets checked at site visit stage.
Glazing and doors — sliding patio doors, a larger glazing area, or multiple windows all add to the cost. The opening position also affects how the frame is built.
Cladding spec — larch and cedar cost more than standard treated softwood but perform better over ten years in the Irish climate and require less maintenance.
Fit-out — insulation level, floor finish, electrics, data cabling, bathroom or kitchenette — each one adds to the total. We price what you actually want, not a stripped base model.
Garden Room FAQs
From slab to finished room, typically four to eight weeks depending on size, ground conditions, and how complex the fit-out is. We give a realistic timeline at quote stage.
Yes, if it's built to the right spec — insulated walls, roof and floor, double glazing, and a heat source (electric panel heater or underfloor heating). A room built to those standards holds heat the same as any room in the main house.
Often not — many garden rooms fall under exempted development. We check your specific site against the conditions at the initial site visit. If planning is needed, we'll tell you before anything gets started.
The exemption conditions cover floor area, height, and distance from boundaries. We assess this on-site rather than giving a generic number, because the calculation depends on whether you've used any exemption on previous extensions or outbuildings.
The type we build — concrete block base, timber stud frame — is a permanent structure. It's not a shed or a flat-pack cabin. That makes it more durable and better insulated, and in most cases it adds value to the property.
Yes — we connect to the existing house drainage and supply where the site allows it. Larger rooms with bathroom or kitchenette facilities are priced on a case-by-case basis.
Yes — we work across Limerick city and county, and take on jobs in Clare and Tipperary too.
Any Questions?
Ask Us
Get a Free Quote for a Garden Room in Limerick
A site visit costs nothing and tells you exactly what's possible on your plot — size, planning position, access, and a written quote that holds. We're currently booking garden room builds for later in the year; the diary fills as spring arrives and the ground firms up.
More Services We Offer Across Limerick
Guilfoyle Building Services offers six trades, run by people who actually do the work — not subcontracted out to whoever's free that week. Pick one service or run several as a single sequenced project; either way, here's what's covered.
Garden Rooms
Timber-frame construction on a proper concrete or piled base, depending on ground conditions — not a shed kit bolted to slabs. Insulated to handle a Limerick winter, wired by a registered electrician, glazed for actual daylight. Office, gym, studio, granny flat: the structure's the same, the fit-out changes.
General Building Work
Extensions and renovations from foundation to final coat of paint. Blockwork, structural steel where it's needed, plastering, first and second fix carried out by the same crew throughout — so nobody's waiting three weeks for the next trade to show up.
Groundworks
Excavation, hardcore compaction, drainage runs and concrete poured to the right depth for what's going on top of it. A patio needs a different sub-base than a garden room foundation, and a foundation needs a different spec again depending on whether you're on Limerick clay or something better draining. We check before we dig, not after.
Paving
Block paving, resin-bound surfaces, natural stone — laid on a compacted sub-base with proper falls for drainage and edge restraints that actually hold. A driveway that pools water at the door six months in was never installed right to begin with.
Carpentry
Staircases, decking, fitted units, structural and finish carpentry on site or built off-site and fitted. Skirting that's actually mitred, doors that actually hang straight — the difference between carpentry and someone handy with a saw.
Landscaping
Retaining walls in block or sleeper, drainage where water's pooling, turf and planting once the hard landscaping's settled. Usually the last job on a project, after groundworks and paving have already moved the ground around.
