All depends on what type of equipment you are going to operate in the garage. I would suggest you call an electrician. You can connect to your existing 100 amp circuit if there is an empty spot for a breaker.
Short answer is Yes. If a garage conversion is carried out you no longer own a link detached house but a semi-detached, indeed if the next house did the same thing you would then live in a terriced house not a link detached
A house that is attached to another by a garage is not considered a detached house. Detached houses are defined as standalone structures that do not share any walls with neighboring properties. In contrast, when two houses are connected by a garage, they are typically classified as semi-detached or linked homes, as they share a common structural element.
A link detached house is a house that is only joined to another by a garage or just ground flor rom :(((((
A semi detached house has one side of the house that will be attached to another house. A detached house has no shared walls. Most semi detached houses have the garage wall as the shared wall so there is less noise heard from either house.
No. Any connections to the detached garage have to be after the main disconnect of your house panel. You have two options here. You can replace meter with a meter disconnect combo and have the main feed your house and add a breaker to feed the garage or You could install a 400 ap service and place two disconnects at the meter. one for the house and one for the garage. unless you are going to have a serious electrial load in the garage you sould just feed off the panel in the house for cost effectiveness.
Adjacent detached properties which do not have a party wall, but which are linked by the garage(s) and so forming a single frontage.
A link-detached house is a type of residential property that shares a common wall with another house but is not physically connected to it. This means each house has its own separate entrance and does not have rooms directly connecting with the neighboring property.
Question Needs Clarification!! If you are building a houseand you want the meter mounted on your detached garage to feed the house that is a question that your local utility or electrical inspector would hav to answer as it varies . If you want a meter on your garage that to would have to be answered by your utility as they have requirements about running service wires on residential property. they will probanly allow this as they usually charge more for having the service to a "commercial" building. The bse rate in my locality is twice that of a residential service. And even though it is your personal garage they consider it commercial in most places.
Adjacent detached properties which do not have a party wall, but which are linked by the garage(s) and so forming a single frontage.
A single house is otherwise known as a detached house. A double house is a semi-detached house. Semi detached houses have one shared built wall whereas a detached has space all around it..
Yes you do. The detached garage will either be fed with a single circuit or a sub panel. The wire feeding the garage will need to be protected and that is the purpose of the breaker (disconnect). The breaker size will be determined by the size of the wire that is used on this circuit.
No. It can be mentioned in the ad as "detached ?? sq ft garage" and you can include "?? sq ft of land" but not mislead the buyers into thinking the actual house has so much square footage when it is not.