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A party wall you say? In Berlin? What could possibly go wrong with that arrangement?
It’s in Hove, actually
A party wall you say? In Berlin? What could possibly go wrong with that arrangement?
Don't sign anything unless the neighbour pays for a surveyor who deals with Party Wall issues.
In fact, you'd be crazy just to sign the agreement without one.
Is it OK that it would be their surveyor, or should people appoint their own independent surveyor?
A neighbour has just approached me with details of a small extension he plans to build and a party wall legal document he wants me to sign, as the extension involves the shared wall. What am I supposed to do here? Get a structural engineer to look at the plans, a lawyer for the legal document?
From my lay perspective it all looks fine; am I over dramatizing things as it’s only a party wall.
Its your choice (as the affected neighbour). You can definitely have your own, or you can agree that they use yours too, or even vice versa, if you are relatively relaxed that its a modest job. Its all paid for by the party wanting to do the works.
Any Party Wall Act surveyor should be RICS qualified and therefore have PI insurance and be bound by the rules of the RICS on impartiality/professionalism. You can therefore sue, and report them to the RICS, if a mistake is made.
If it was a reasonably small job, and I was the affected neighbour, I wouldn't blink at letting the party wanting to do the works use my surveyor, as it will cut down on the cost to the other party.
Some people, perhaps bitter about having lost the planning permission battle or as a chance for payback for an earlier neighbour dispute, might seek to be difficult on this issue by insisting they have their own surveyor to ramp up costs, even on a small Party Wall matter. Each to their own.
Firstly, why are you refusing consent? i.e. what is your dispute? I assume they have supplied you with details of the works (some/most of this will be on your council planning portal)? Bear in mind this is NOT planning permission, that has already, presumably, been done.
Regardless, once you reject (has to be rejected within 2 weeks) there are two options:
1. agree between you a surveyor (paid by neighbour)
2. if you can't agree a surveyor, then YOU pay for YOUR surveyor.
Ultimately, if all plans were done properly, and award is most likely given anyway. Once awarded, you even have to allow access should their builders need it. In fact they have a legal right to do so under the act.
Also, consider neighbour relations, unless you have good reason to reject/dispute, you may risk creating ill feeling (bear in mind YOU may want to do building works in future) as all you've done it cost them more money and pushed the can down the road.
more info:
https://www.gov.uk/party-walls-building-works/reaching-agreement-with-neighbours
A neighbour has just approached me with details of a small extension he plans to build and a party wall legal document he wants me to sign, as the extension involves the shared wall. What am I supposed to do here? Get a structural engineer to look at the plans, a lawyer for the legal document?
From my lay perspective it all looks fine; am I over dramatizing things as it’s only a party wall.
Thanks everyone, much appreciated. From the comments I’ll do two things.
1) Write to the neighbour and tell him I have no issue in principle.
2) Talk to a surveyor.
Philip Hall in Hove does a lot of the Party Wall stuff I work on.
He's very helpful. http://www.philiphallassociates.com/
Thanks everyone, much appreciated. From the comments I’ll do two things.
1) Write to the neighbour and tell him I have no issue in principle.
2) Talk to a surveyor.
Apologies if I have come late to this and telling you something you already know but we recently built an orangery one of whose walls is PW with next door pub.
Our architect found us a specialist PW surveyor. His (not your neighbour's) job is to draft the agreement , take photos as schedule of condition on both sides, and to act for both parties if you agree. It is up to your neighbour to appoint a PW surveyor and to pay the costs for both of you (ours cost £750+VAT). You should do nothing except advise your neighbour of this and get at least a verbal undertaking that one will be appointed that he pays for. I fancy the neighbour is trying to do this on the cheap. Certainly don't pay anything yourself.
Our experience was awful - far more complicated than Planning permission and listed building consent, that we thought would be the problem. The brewery landlords were very on high horse, unhelpful almost to the point of being obstructive. We eventually got there but it took nearly 4 months, far longer than it should have.
Apologies if I have come late to this and telling you something you already know but we recently built an orangery one of whose walls is PW with next door pub.
Our architect found us a specialist PW surveyor. His (not your neighbour's) job is to draft the agreement , take photos as schedule of condition on both sides, and to act for both parties if you agree. It is up to your neighbour to appoint a PW surveyor and to pay the costs for both of you (ours cost £750+VAT). You should do nothing except advise your neighbour of this and get at least a verbal undertaking that one will be appointed that he pays for. I fancy the neighbour is trying to do this on the cheap. Certainly don't pay anything yourself.
Our experience was awful - far more complicated than Planning permission and listed building consent, that we thought would be the problem. The brewery landlords were very on high horse, unhelpful almost to the point of being obstructive. We eventually got there but it took nearly 4 months, far longer than it should have.
Don't fall for it.Neighbour (who I have never met) was nice as pie in all previous communications about his building work. Now he’s complaining I’m delaying things. He also mentioned that due to the lock-down the surveyors will not be able to do their work and this further delays his whole project for months.
Don't fall for it.
It needs to be done properly with a surveyor involved.