26-08-2012, 19:34 | #11 | |
Absinthe
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 1,247
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Quote:
Tread very carefully and dont assume anything as a given when dealing with either a listed building or other nightmares like on trust land etc.
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27-08-2012, 13:30 | #12 |
Spinky-Spank
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: 668. The Neighbour of the Beast
Posts: 11,226
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I remember a friend buying a partially listed building & having to repoint the back wall. Didn't realise she'd need a specialist builder who could make a100 year old mortar recipe & would charge around ten times a regular builder. Be very careful, there are many hidden legalities as as been mentioned.
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27-08-2012, 13:53 | #13 |
Absinthe
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 1,247
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A friend of mine had a building project (listed) and the planning officers ego went into overdrive once the word "listed" was mentioned. He demanded white mortar to which I replied that it didn't exist. He said "but that's what I want", so I said if you can find it we will use it. A month later my friend got a letter from said planning officer which said "reluctantly I've had to compromise on the White mortar issue".
The muppet.
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27-08-2012, 16:54 | #14 | |
Moonshine
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 3,388
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Quote:
They had to buy the bricks, call the looney officer, he'd them come have a look and a consider and then say no. They asked What bricks can we use then?, and his responce was I'm not here to tell you that, I'm just here to approve or reject. At the end, they were given half a dozen bricks of each that was available, called the nutter round and he chose the bricks that they had bought first of all and he rejected. Waste of space the lot of them.
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27-08-2012, 17:19 | #15 |
Absinthe
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 1,247
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Sadly, unless its a minor project the most relevant factor tends to be the personality of your planning officer.
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27-08-2012, 17:42 | #16 |
Absinthe
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 1,855
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There was one on grand deisgn that fell into disrepair. Asically no owner and I can only assume council didnt know. They managed to get quite a bit of planning permission as it was in such bad state, so basically they paid to renovate it. Iirc they spent loads though as they had to make sure any walls still standing stayed up.
Doesn't sound like yours is actually falling down though.
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27-08-2012, 21:55 | #17 |
Joey Tempest
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Gravesend.
Posts: 2,751
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From the views of the house I can get (without climbing the surrounding walls) it doesn't appear to be falling down, just rotting woodwork on the outside and completely overgrown garden (grass over 4ft tall, piggy and desmo would get lost in it )
If what you have described is more often that not the norm, Flibster, then I can definitely say it is not for me! The field I work in, you say you're not happy with what somebody has proposed, you have to give constructive answers as to what you actually want - I don't think I could deal with anything different..
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28-08-2012, 12:31 | #18 |
Screaming Orgasm
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Newbury
Posts: 15,194
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I'm convinced that the word 'constructive' is alien to councils - and I'm not just talking about planning officers.
And yes, some of my family have worked for councils. Not in public-facing roles, mind. |
28-08-2012, 17:36 | #19 |
Absinthe
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 1,247
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Im going through planning channels now.
Believe me when I say that unless you've been through them before, you have no idea how petty/obstructive/unhelpful/plain awkward they can be.
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