- Joined
- 17 Oct 2016
- Messages
- 5
- Reaction score
- 0
- Country

I’ve screwed up big time.
I left my loft conversion (semi-detached bungalow) in the hands of the experts, or so I thought. I’d done everything by the book. Had plans drawn, got planning permission, found a reputable local builder, got my neighbour to sign a party wall agreement, and then left them to get on with it.
Everything went reasonably smoothly and building regs were signed off. The builder was paid in full.
Then my next door neighbour pointed out that the dormers encroach onto her side of the roof by about 10cm. I now know that the dormer should have been stepped back slightly and that would have avoided this, but it was built straight off the party wall. It was designed that way - it’s there in the plans (well it shows it built off my half of the party wall anyway) so I don’t think this is the builder’s fault, although perhaps they should have pointed it out.
Altering the construction now would be a nightmare - the stairs landing would become too small for building regs, so the stairs would need moving, which would lower the head height so an RSJ would need raising, two doorways would need moving, bathroom retiling… there’s just no way we could afford to do all that. It would probably be easier/cheaper for my neighbour to have a conversion too and join it up to mine.
My neighbour says she’s not so much worried about the 10cm, more what will happen if she needs to sell up and move house and the buyer’s surveyor picks up on it. Luckily we’re still on fairly good terms.
Yes I screwed up, I know it’s my responsibility and that this is causing my neighbour a load of stress and worry that should have been avoided. I’m trying to sort this out as much for her as for myself and if I could afford to knock the dormer down and rebuild it correctly I would.
Is there a way we could come up with a legal agreement over this that will satisfy any future purchaser’s solicitor?
I left my loft conversion (semi-detached bungalow) in the hands of the experts, or so I thought. I’d done everything by the book. Had plans drawn, got planning permission, found a reputable local builder, got my neighbour to sign a party wall agreement, and then left them to get on with it.
Everything went reasonably smoothly and building regs were signed off. The builder was paid in full.
Then my next door neighbour pointed out that the dormers encroach onto her side of the roof by about 10cm. I now know that the dormer should have been stepped back slightly and that would have avoided this, but it was built straight off the party wall. It was designed that way - it’s there in the plans (well it shows it built off my half of the party wall anyway) so I don’t think this is the builder’s fault, although perhaps they should have pointed it out.
Altering the construction now would be a nightmare - the stairs landing would become too small for building regs, so the stairs would need moving, which would lower the head height so an RSJ would need raising, two doorways would need moving, bathroom retiling… there’s just no way we could afford to do all that. It would probably be easier/cheaper for my neighbour to have a conversion too and join it up to mine.
My neighbour says she’s not so much worried about the 10cm, more what will happen if she needs to sell up and move house and the buyer’s surveyor picks up on it. Luckily we’re still on fairly good terms.
Yes I screwed up, I know it’s my responsibility and that this is causing my neighbour a load of stress and worry that should have been avoided. I’m trying to sort this out as much for her as for myself and if I could afford to knock the dormer down and rebuild it correctly I would.
Is there a way we could come up with a legal agreement over this that will satisfy any future purchaser’s solicitor?
Last edited by a moderator: