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Regulation Guide · June 2026

Apartment Alteration Permit Guide —
From Balcony Extensions to Non-Bearing Wall Removals

LEA Architects · Architect Junsu Kim

"Why Do I Need a Permit for an Interior Reno?"

This is one of the most common misunderstandings we encounter during residential remodeling consultations. Even though you are modifying the inside of your own home, multi-family housing complexes share structural framework and safety profiles across multiple units. Consequently, the Multi-Family Housing Management Act enforces strict licensing and registration demands for specific remodeling activities.

The core issue is that interior contractors frequently fail to provide accurate legal guidance. Believing advice like "It's just a non-bearing wall, so you can tear it down without paperwork" has led homeowners to receive unexpected municipal remediation orders. We have aggregated the essential criteria into the structural matrix diagram below.

Renovation Type Procedure Balcony Extension Requires fire-retardant glass panels and residential evacuation areas Official Permit Non-Bearing Wall Removal Requires structural layout review and structural block consensus Permit/Notice Unit Consolidation (Wall Removal) Subject to the most rigid engineering oversight and co-owner consent Official Permit External Window Frame Replacement Verify compliance with building envelope aesthetics and community codes Check Code Finishing (Flooring, Wallpaper, Bathroom Reno) Standard cosmetics that do not modify the engineering envelope Exempt Wardrobes, Cabinetry, and Lighting Fixtures Check administrative management office policy for site noise notice Exempt

Balcony Extensions: Navigating the Administrative Path

Focusing on the highly requested balcony expansion, the typical workflow consists of: securing neighborhood block consent → generating professional structural drawings incorporating fire safety systems and emergency fallback configurations → submitting filings to the local municipality → securing the approval certificate → construction kick-off. Once architectural blueprints are validated, municipal review typically concludes within approximately one week.

The critical element is blueprint precision. If emergency safety partitions or fire-rated assemblies deviate from current regulations, supplementary correction mandates delay schedules, which instantly creates a domino effect across all downstream interior trades. Managing this delicate validation timeline was the deciding factor in our recent balcony alteration contract in Giheung-gu. View the Project Case Study →

Addressing Prior Unpermitted Modifications

If you have acquired a property with preexisting unpermitted alterations, administrative pathways remain accessible. Provided the structural state adheres to standard fire and safety safety thresholds, a post-construction verification process (architectural validation) can be deployed. However, components exhibiting critical engineering risk may require structural remediation, making an early assessment by an architect essential to minimizing potential losses.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q. Is an official permit truly required for non-bearing wall removals?

Yes. Under multi-family real estate laws, any interior wall modification demands administrative clearance. Unsanctioned demolition triggers mandatory restoration directives and financial penalties.

Q. How can I rectify a previously unpermitted balcony expansion?

If the layout meets current safety benchmarks, a post-construction architectural alignment filing can be pursued. LEA Architects handles permit verification and structural compliance mapping. Request a Consultation →