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AIBU

To be fed up of renovations on a nearby house

(117 Posts)
Greenfinch Thu 19-May-22 20:38:35

We were actually trying to be good neighbours and saw it as an act of friendship. These were neighbours who were helpful and we had no wish to fall out with them. Perhaps we were naive but monetary gain did not come into it.

Germanshepherdsmum Thu 19-May-22 19:49:34

Why would anyone just allow scaffolding to be put on their garden other than by an agreement prepared by their solicitor at the neighbour’s expense and in return for £££?

Teacheranne Thu 19-May-22 19:05:08

I had my whole bungalow repainted last October and several cracks in the plaster were filled in - caused when I had a new roof. Witching three months, more cracks had appeared which concerned me so I got a surveyor in the check for subsidence.

He said that they were not caused by subsidence but as some of the plaster is old and a bit loose, the cracks were probable caused by building work on a bungalow opposite me who were drilling foundations for an extension. So, once the work is finished, I’ll have to get the decorator in again and decide to
(a) fill and repaint
(b) replace some plaster in four rooms
(c) have lining paper put on in four rooms

I don’t want to do any of these things, it took me ages to empty each room ready to be decorated and put everything back again as I struggle with mobility.

biglouis Thu 19-May-22 17:19:30

Their scaffolding was partly in our garden and they demolished part of our wall

For a new project like an extention they have to enter into a private contract to site scaffolding etc in your garden. You should have got your solicitor draw up the contract and charged them for the legal work, hire of your land, lack of amenity for your garden, H&S concerns, etc.

A relative of mine scared the living daylights out of a "hey mate" type NDN who thought he could do it on the cheap for "a few quid" and quoted him ££££ off the top of his head, even before he had consulted his lawyer. It scared the guy so much that he completely revised the plans in order to build the extension on the other side. Unfortunately the other neighbour was equally clued up. He ended up selling the house undeveloped and moving out.

Germanshepherdsmum Thu 19-May-22 17:02:46

You need to tell the planning authority if planning conditions aren’t being adhered to vintagejazz. The police are unlikely to be interested in the parked vehicles.

boheminan Thu 19-May-22 17:01:48

I so relate to you Vintagejazz. The Victorian terrace next door has been totally gutted and the new owners, who live out of town, have had it turned into an eco house, everything's been ripped out, nothing is left of the original interior.

The builders are still coming in after 1 year 9 months, the skip and portaloo have only just gone and there's always at least three large vans, mostly parked on the pavement, down a small, narrow Victorian Street.

ginny Thu 19-May-22 16:59:08

We have had building work going on next door for the last 18 months.
The family are lovely and have kept us informed about what is going on and have done their hardest to minimise disruption for us.
Covid caused delays with lack of supplies and illness.
We will still be glad when it’s all finished.

Vintagejazz Thu 19-May-22 16:54:49

Germanshepherdsmum

If planning permission was needed you can look at it online (on planning authority’s website) and check conditions imposed as to working hours and parking of contractors’ vehicles.

To be honest, if we went out everytime the contractors parked illegally we'd spend our lives out on the pavement. They caused major inconvenience this afternoon, causing a traffic hold up on the main road because no cars could turn the corner. A police car sailed happily past in the opposite direction, ignoring the chaos

Blossoming Thu 19-May-22 16:51:58

It must be awful VintageJazz but I’m not sure if there’s much you can do about it if they have permission.

Elizabeth27 Thu 19-May-22 16:51:02

As planning laws are more relaxed now and people can only afford to extend rather than buy bigger there will be much more of this building work than previously.

It is annoying though.

Germanshepherdsmum Thu 19-May-22 16:48:43

If planning permission was needed you can look at it online (on planning authority’s website) and check conditions imposed as to working hours and parking of contractors’ vehicles.

Vintagejazz Thu 19-May-22 16:42:14

Necessary work is different. I'm talking about people who know, when they're buying, that the (perfectly fine) house is very far from what they require and will need a year or more of noisy and intrusive work to get it perfect.

Adding an extension, converting an attic or garage is fine. But practically rebuilding the house causes massive and lengthy disruption to everyone around. And then the house across the road is sold and it all starts all over again.
Many of these houses are very expensive to start with, so I'm not talking about a couple who buy the best they can afford but have to get it into better shape to make it liveable in.

GrannyGravy13 Thu 19-May-22 16:34:22

Isn’t that what we all want though Vintagejazz our dream home

We had months of necessary work on our house, both inside and outside four years ago, none of which was successful.

We are now looking at many months of exterior and interior work, it will be noisy. The alternative would be to demolish and rebuild which would be far noisier, involve more tradesmen, along with their vehicles and take as long if not longer.

Maybe have a word with your neighbour and coming to an agreement that no noisy work takes place at the weekend.

Vintagejazz Thu 19-May-22 15:43:58

I agree. If you're going to completely change a house, why buy it in the first place and make life difficult for months on end for your new neighbours.

I've just seen my next door neighbour have to get one of the workmen to move their vans so she could get onto her drive. Which of course meant other cars having to wait behind her. There was nowhere to.pull in because the workmen were in all the available spaces.

The house just around the corner was sold recently and planning permission is already in for major work. And another house a few doors down is going on the market soon so no doubt more major work. Not so long ago the house 3 doors down also took almost a year to be extended and changed around.

But hey ho as long as a couple get their dream house.

tanith Thu 19-May-22 11:39:40

It’s like as one neighbour finishes another one starts here, buy a bigger house to start with rather than turn ordinary semi’s into ‘mansions’ with 5 beds with 3 bathrooms and minuscule gardens that must cost tens of thousands.
I know it’s just progress but it’s always new buyers that seem to do this as I say buy a bigger house with all the money you are going to spend on doubling/tripling the size.

Greenfinch Thu 19-May-22 11:22:22

You have my sympathies. Our neighbours did the same thing before and after the lockdowns . The noise of the music and the constant bad language as well as the machinery was most disturbing and because we live on a corner their vehicles blocked our view when coming out of our drive. Their scaffolding was partly in our garden and they demolished part of our wall . The house they now have is huge and the extra bedrooms overlook our kitchen. Unfortunately it is very easy to get planning permission these days.

Vintagejazz Thu 19-May-22 11:05:18

They've been going on for a full year now. Trucks parked everywhere, loud machinery, a totally cracked pavement that's an absolute liability.

The house was in perfect condition when it was bought. This is basically doubling it in size and completely changing everything around.

We had expected it to last about six months, but now worried another Summer in the garden is going to be ruined.