Originally posted by cannon999
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Buying a property that lacks building regs for recent work
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Give it a miss unless you can afford to "self-insure" (have enough money to spend fixing it and still think it was a good deal).Originally posted by cannon999 View PostThoughts?Comment
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How can he do that if he cant inspect the footings?Originally posted by Paralytic View PostAs them to get a structural engineer's report done proving there is no issue with the removal of the wall.Comment
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That was in reference to the removed wall - if a steel was put in, it should be ok, but an SE could do all the calcs.Originally posted by NowPermOutsideUK View PostHow can he do that if he cant inspect the footings?Comment
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If I was selling my house I would not allow a SE to make a hole and patch it up afterwards - Subsidence and movemnent can be detected but is hard to see if its newOriginally posted by Paralytic View PostThat was in reference to the removed wall - if a steel was put in, it should be ok, but an SE could do all the calcs.Comment
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What have you got to hide?Originally posted by NowPermOutsideUK View PostIf I was selling my house I would not allow a SE to make a hole and patch it up afterwardsOriginally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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I'd say that depends on how eager you are to sell it and how confident you are that the person will buy with or without the report.Originally posted by NowPermOutsideUK View PostIf I was selling my house I would not allow a SE to make a hole and patch it up afterwards - Subsidence and movemnent can be detected but is hard to see if its new
But it's also a difficult choice for the OP too - how much do they want the house and are they willing to walk away?
I'd certainly be asking for a chunk off the selling price unless i saw it as my dream home and was willing to take the risk.Comment
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Surely if the footings are undersized and it's not historical work, there's a very real possibility building control could demand you knock it down or rectify? And there's also the very real potential of structural problems in future.
Given how recent it is - I'd tell em to either get it signed off, or forget it.
I'm far from an expert on this (Though if you all recall, I had a crack at DIY building an extension the other year) but conservatory foundations tend to be tiny - little more than you'd put for a garden wall. They're often exempt so chances are a BCO or SE has never ever been near those foundations.Last edited by vwdan; 11 February 2021, 17:42.Comment
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My biggest concerned would be they have actively lied on the property information form to try and conceal this from you. What else have they lied about?Originally posted by cannon999 View PostAlso they did not disclose this in the property information form and claimed that they didn't do the work it seems (although this bit is still unclear - solicitor's heresay), however we have found evidence that they did do the work. They are now trying to peddle indemnity insurance for this however I have concerns:Comment
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