How to go through legal procedures to build a two-story bungalow in Fengnan rural area of Tangshan? Will the government restrict it? . .

Is it in the countryside? This should be divided into several situations:

1. If you come from the countryside and your land in Gai Lou is your original homestead, you don't have to worry at all. As long as you have enough funds, you can build whatever you want, because the land in rural and suburban areas is collective property. If your home is in the countryside, especially that land has been handed down from generation to generation, then you have the right to use this land, and the government will not interfere with you. Of course, if you are in a city, it will be different, because all the land in the city belongs to the state, not collective property, and it will involve many complicated legal relations if you want to Gai Lou. But it's much simpler in the countryside.

Another possibility is that if you are a villager and have a homestead in the village, but you don't want to build a house on your homestead, or you just sell your homestead and build a house on another vacant lot, then you may have to pay a certain fee to the village Committee or something, depending on your local specific situation. According to national regulations, the only situation where people don't have to pay money is that if residents encounter natural disasters such as mudslides and earthquakes, then the village Committee should allocate a piece of land to them free of charge, and residents don't have to pay fees. In addition, building a house on the open space outside their homestead requires paying fees to the relevant units.

The third situation is that if you don't belong to your village, this land is not your original homestead. At this time, if you want to build a house, the procedure is more complicated. Because rural land belongs to collective property, it can't be bought or sold casually. Only collective members (that is, villagers) are eligible to enjoy it. If we must build commercial housing in rural areas, we must first nationalize the land, that is, turn collective property into state-owned property. On this basis, it is necessary to pay the land transfer fee according to the national land and carry out planning permission before building a house. However, this is only theoretical. In some places, the legal consciousness is not strong, the consciousness is not high, or the village Committee simply makes its own decisions. Generally, no one reports it, so it will go away. Of course, if you get serious, it is obviously not in compliance with the regulations.

The fourth situation is that you belong to our village, but this land may be your own cultivated land. You should also be careful at this time, because the state generally protects cultivated land and is not allowed to use cultivated land to build houses at will. Of course, this is still theoretical. I see that many places in the countryside are building houses on their own cultivated land. Generally, no one wants to take care of people who have nothing to do with you, but if you really want to take care of them, it is obviously a hardware injury.

5. In the fifth case, you are from the village, and this land is also your ancestral homestead, but the house you built does not conform to the overall planning, such as what engineering or industrial projects you have there, or what roads you want to build. If you build a house casually in the expressway planning area, even if you build a house, someone will definitely tear it down. Or the location and facilities of the house you built affect the basic needs of others, which is troublesome enough.