Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good fences make good neighbors. Nichols has no right to be upset about neighbors planting trees and shrubs and the Linehans shouldn't have expected their view outside their kitchen window to be anything special when it's only 2 feet from the property line. If Nichols wanted to maintain open visual space, he should have built those three houses as townhouses and had the grounds owned by the association. These people are all ridiculous.
Don't disagree with any of this.
I am a PP and still think it was unethical of the Architect to influence city regulations - changing of setback from 8 feet to 1 foot- when he clearly had a plan in mind to build near a neighbor. Now he doesn't have to ask for a waiver and permission from that neighbor.
Still, I live 6 feet from my neighbor and if they decide to put a large building within a foot of my property, I know I will have to live with it. That's life with a small yard.
Anonymous wrote:What a jerk! Makes my Round-up happy neighbor look good in comparison.
Anonymous wrote:Good fences make good neighbors. Nichols has no right to be upset about neighbors planting trees and shrubs and the Linehans shouldn't have expected their view outside their kitchen window to be anything special when it's only 2 feet from the property line. If Nichols wanted to maintain open visual space, he should have built those three houses as townhouses and had the grounds owned by the association. These people are all ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:I can't access the article. Can anyone post the content?
Anonymous wrote:I can't access the article. Can anyone post the content?
Anonymous wrote:Wow. I'm even more thankful for my neighbors after reading this. This guy is building a garage two feet from his neighbors' kitchen windows, apparently out of spite.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/virginia-politics/in-friendly-del-ray-a-decidely-unneighborly-dispute/2016/09/08/d84e5bd2-705c-11e6-9705-23e51a2f424d_story.html?hpid=hp_local-news_delraydispute-610am%3Ahomepage%2Fstory