Originally posted by MicrosoftBob
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Reply to: structural damage on hmo
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Previously on "structural damage on hmo"
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Originally posted by diseasex View Postsomebody now overbid the other guy by 5k, agent has told me, and is a cashbuyer. Hmmm
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somebody now overbid the other guy by 5k, agent has told me, and is a cashbuyer. Hmmm
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostIf tenants spot it and know their rights they will get the council in. There is some legislation which is forget which allows them to get the council involved. If it is deemed unsafe or inhabitable you will have to put them up elsewhere at your cost until the work is complete. As many other places won't allow short lets it's likely to be a hotel or something which will obviously be very expensive. I'd be walking.
AYCOTBAC?
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If tenants spot it and know their rights they will get the council in. There is some legislation which i forget which allows them to get the council involved. If it is deemed unsafe or inhabitable you will have to put them up elsewhere at your cost until the work is complete. As many other places won't allow short lets it's likely to be a hotel or something which will obviously be very expensive. I'd be walking.
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Originally posted by Support Monkey View PostI purchased a house with obvious structural damage on the outside and every room had cracks in the walls and ceilings and a tree trunk within a foot of the back wall, everyone who looked at it walked away, I negotiated with the venders to have a test hole dug where the external cracks were and employed a structural engineer to give me a report on just this damage\area (I was not paying them to tell me it needed rewiring\plumbing), engineer costs were around £80 an hour
His advise was that it would need the gable end under-pinning at a cost of 10 grand however he also advised on this that the property was still mortgable as it was minor ??, the mortgage company took his word for it and gave us a mortgage.
so with this in hand we used all the damage the underpinning and the tree trunk to negotiate the price down to what was aceptable to us to cover the costs, clearly with all the issues the vendor let it go.
2 years later after a full renovation inside and out we found no subsidence and never did any underpinning, the cracks were poor workmanship from when the property was built and the tree trunk was a tree stump someone had buried in the ground as a feature, total saving was around 50 grand on a good house in the same street, obviously the gamble paid off
your best bet is to get a structural survey done on the damaged area and go from there, if others have also avoided the house because of the damage the vendor may be aware of this issue already, your going to have to cover the cost of the engineer but this will then put you in a good negotiating position.
Because of that i will pass
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total saving was around 50 grand on a good house in the same street,
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Originally posted by diseasex View PostHi, i have a question to and i know there are many landlords here.
So I've just viewed this property - 5 bed terraced for nice entry-level price. Now there were few cracks on the on 2 walls (not very big, in the corner under ceiling). Also in one room the floor seems to be lower than the panels as if it dropped slighly, so i highly suspect structural damage. Other than that this property is nice and have 5 decent size rentable rooms
Is it automatic walk away or should I survey it and see?
thanks for tips.
His advise was that it would need the gable end under-pinning at a cost of 10 grand however he also advised on this that the property was still mortgable as it was minor ??, the mortgage company took his word for it and gave us a mortgage.
so with this in hand we used all the damage the underpinning and the tree trunk to negotiate the price down to what was aceptable to us to cover the costs, clearly with all the issues the vendor let it go.
2 years later after a full renovation inside and out we found no subsidence and never did any underpinning, the cracks were poor workmanship from when the property was built and the tree trunk was a tree stump someone had buried in the ground as a feature, total saving was around 50 grand on a good house in the same street, obviously the gamble paid off
your best bet is to get a structural survey done on the damaged area and go from there, if others have also avoided the house because of the damage the vendor may be aware of this issue already, your going to have to cover the cost of the engineer but this will then put you in a good negotiating position.
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Originally posted by diseasex View PostOK but you don't say how to go about these issues
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Unless it's very under-priced or you fell in love with it, it sounds like it's not worth the risk.
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostIs it a new build, and this could be the house 'settling'?
When you asked the owner about it, what did they say?
Does the price reflect work may need to be done, or would the vendor drop the price if this is required?
I think I'll walk away this time buy something slightly more expensive but less problematic.
Thanks all for the tips
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Originally posted by diseasex View PostHi, i have a question to and i know there are many landlords here.
So I've just viewed this property - 5 bed terraced for nice entry-level price. Now there were few cracks on the on 2 walls (not very big, in the corner under ceiling). Also in one room the floor seems to be lower than the panels as if it dropped slighly, so i highly suspect structural damage. Other than that this property is nice and have 5 decent size rentable rooms
Is it automatic walk away or should I survey it and see?
thanks for tips.
When you asked the owner about it, what did they say?
Does the price reflect work may need to be done, or would the vendor drop the price if this is required?
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Are you prepared to manage getting any requiredrepairs done? If not walk away.
Are you prepared to expend on the full survey with the probability it will call for expensive specialist reports? If not walk away
Are you able to add values by doing the structural works?
It can be there case that reduced price plus repaircosts is a worthwhile chunk below market value.
after repair wil it be insurable?
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Originally posted by Martin Scroatman View PostI'm guessing if there was subsidence, the mortgage co. wouldn't lend?
I bought a house on sandy soil. It had a crack all the way from ground level to the eaves of the gable end.
Movement isn't always obvious.
Sometimes you can only get a better idea from taking measurements over a period of time.
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Originally posted by diseasex View PostHi, i have a question to and i know there are many landlords here.
So I've just viewed this property - 5 bed terraced for nice entry-level price. Now there were few cracks on the on 2 walls (not very big, in the corner under ceiling). Also in one room the floor seems to be lower than the panels as if it dropped slighly, so i highly suspect structural damage. Other than that this property is nice and have 5 decent size rentable rooms
Is it automatic walk away or should I survey it and see?
thanks for tips.
I bought a house on sandy soil. It had a crack all the way from ground level to the eaves of the gable end.
Movement isn't always obvious.
Sometimes you can only get a better idea from taking measurements over a period of time.
Leave a comment:
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