Billy the Fish
Technocrat
Maybe snobbery but does affect house prices in a negative way
Maybe snobbery but does affect house prices in a negative way
Caravans in a residential street are an eyesore and give a bad impression of the road so i suspect the developer didn’t want any parked there if he was hoping for middle class buyers. Difficult to enforce if the builder is no longer around - you might be able to take it to the councils planning dept and complain that this is not permitted on the deeds. I wouldn’t be pleased as it certainly won’t help with house prices in your road
There's something a bit wrong about these types of rules.
No commercial vehicles please, we don't want those awful tradesmen on our street. Modern day snobbery
Maybe snobbery but does affect house prices in a negative way
I read a story about a heating engineer that wanted to buy a house on a new development , he found out he wouldn't be allowed to park his van on the drive of the new property.
He decided not to buy there as his van would have been well away from the new house.
He said it's strange how the tradesmen that built the homes are not encouraged to buy on the development, or not wanted.
I wouldn't want to leave a van full of expensive tools parked overnight, well away from my house, when I have got a driveway.
There's something a bit wrong about these types of rules.
No commercial vehicles please, we don't want those awful tradesmen on our street. Modern day snobbery
I’m pretty sure house sellers are legally required to declare compliance with covenants so might be some leverage there. Either that or sorry to hear your fence, van, chicken run etc got damaged but probably not worth pursuing as shouldn’t have been there anyway...
Indeed. When I moved last, there was a 50yr old covenant saying no wooden structures in gardens and that the front must be kept 75% grass. Not one property in the road had complied over time, but I was still forced to buy an indemnity insurance policy for £104 to ensure that the sale went ahead, although the solicitor himself admitted that the likelihood of a claim being made or that the covenant was enforceable were both zero!
Indeed. When I moved last, there was a 50yr old covenant saying no wooden structures in gardens and that the front must be kept 75% grass. Not one property in the road had complied over time, but I was still forced to buy an indemnity insurance policy for £104 to ensure that the sale went ahead, although the solicitor himself admitted that the likelihood of a claim being made or that the covenant was enforceable were both zero!