Municipal Regulations
Introduction
The General Urban Planning Plan (PGOU) is a general planning instrument defined in the urban planning regulations of Spain as a basic instrument of comprehensive planning of the territory of one or several municipalities, through which the land is classified), the regime applicable to each type of land is determined, and the fundamental elements of the equipment system of the municipality in question are defined.
Urban planning skills
The General Urban Planning Plan is a municipal document that includes Spanish urban planning regulations, building regulations and future actions, among others. Currently, and after the Ruling of the Constitutional Court 61/1997, of March 20, urban planning powers are attributed exclusively to the autonomous communities, so it will be necessary to abide by the provisions of their specific regulations, regarding the scope and content of this general planning instrument.
Background
As a starting point we have the General Planning Plan of Madrid (1946) "General Planning Plan of Madrid (1946)") in whose legal text of approval appears for the first time to be a configuration of the way in which, ten years later, the characteristics of both the General Plans and the Partial Plans will be defined in the Land Law of 1956.[1] This norm, now repealed, established the following urban land classification:
Land Law
With the new State Land Law (Royal Legislative Decree 7/2015), non-developable (or rural) land once again has residual consideration, with regional regulations generally providing for the following classification: urban land (divided into consolidated and unconsolidated); developable land (in turn generally classified as delimited and undelimited, or sectorized and non-sectorized); and non-developable land, in its different protection categories (generic, infrastructure, coastal, special protection, etc.). It must be taken into account that by ruling of the Supreme Court of 1992, urban planning and territorial planning is a power conferred on the autonomous communities, which are the ones who legislate land classifications.