Can you post a photograph of the house in question and we'll all offer our opinion FoC. Sorted.
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Building survey
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I have always gone for a full detailed Survey. The last one cost me £1200. Roughly 50-60 pages and very thorough.
Quick exit...I was an IPSE Consultative Council Member, until the BoD abolished it. I am not an IPSE Member, since they have no longer have any relevance to me, as an IT Contractor. Read my lips...I recommend QDOS for ALL your Insurance requirements (Contact me for a referral code).Comment
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Originally posted by VillageContractor View PostI think it's a 1930s house. I expect to find issues but considering its the biggest purchase I'm going to make I'd like to know everything before purchasingHis heart is in the right place - shame we can't say the same about his brain...Comment
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Originally posted by Halo Jones View PostI may be biased but I would always go with a Chartered Surveyor becauseA) they have to prove they know what they are talking about, B) if there is a problem you have some recourse to a "higher level".
Not always the cheapest but as a house is likely to be your largest expenditure, is now the time to skimp?
Here is the link to search for a local Surveyor
Originally posted by Mordac View PostAnd you thought you'd ask us for advice? Congratulations, your problems have only just begun...
Best thing I ever did, though! My advice to the OP is get comfortable with DIY - when we completed on that house I'd never ever put up a shelf*. Last week I poured the foundations for the extension I'm DIY building....
Originally posted by Benny View PostLook out for corroded wall ties
*Though I do admit I wasn't exactly completely useless, as I was a car/bike guy and had turned a lot of spanners. But never any house/building stuff.Last edited by vwdan; 30 May 2019, 17:14.Comment
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Originally posted by Mordac View PostAnd you thought you'd ask us for advice? Congratulations, your problems have only just begun...
Whatever the question there's bound to be someone here who knows the answer (or an answer), and some of us claim to be experts on practically everything!Work in the public sector? Read the IR35 FAQ hereComment
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Originally posted by vwdan View PostCavity walls? Luxury!…Maybe we ain’t that young anymoreComment
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Also worth checking on the previous use.
Saw a really nice at a good price, found out it was used as an illegal bed-sit/hostel. The extra bathrooms had been removed so it could be sold. But when we checked under the floor boards every joist had been butchered to install pipes. Some pipes were still there just capped-off.
A lot of time and money to fix, or you could play Russian roulette every time you filled the bath.Fiscal nomad it's legal.Comment
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If buying an older property also worth checking/getting insurance for chancel repair. If at any time the property was owned by the church you could be liable for repairs to the local parish church under chancel law ( I think its called). When I bought my current house I took out chancel insurance as I knew it had been previously owned by the local parish church, clue was in the house name "Glebe Farm". Glebe meaning a piece of land serving as part of a clergyman's benefice and providing income. Chancel insurance isn't expensive and is a one off payment for life time cover.
Chancel repair liabilities in England and Wales - The National ArchivesComment
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I'm umming and ahing about whether or not to get a homebuyers report or full structural.
I'm assuming that major defects like subsidence etc will be picked up by both and that's all I'm really interested in. The full structural will come back reading like a copy of War and Peace with loads of minor issues and things that need further investigation which will involve hiring more specialists . I've been there before with a previous property & the vendor got so pissed he put it back on the market. Don't want a repeat of that...Last edited by Big Blue Plymouth; 6 June 2019, 08:28.Comment
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The last place I bought only had a homebuyers report. I wonder, but am not sure, if a full structural survey would have picked up removal of the wall that originally separated the kitchen and dining room. I had no idea that had been removed until I pulled the kitchen floor up some years later. It wasn't a supporting wall so I wasn't concerned.
The people buying my house very quickly found out about it (maybe due to their surveyor) and I had to pay for some indemnity insurance in order for the sale to go through because no planning permission/building controls check had been sought. It was only a couple of hundred quid but I was livid at having to pay for a previous owner's actions.Comment
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