Anonymous wrote:This whole thing is shady AF
I need to go read the 300 comment thread on the neighborhood page, but what I am piecing together:
The parents are likely the actual owners
They are the parents of the schizophrenic man who attacked connolly’s office in 2023.
The person interviewed may or may not be the son/owner?
With the schizophrenic son in a facility, the parents and this guy and his family are likely living in the existing cape cod structure. That would be a tight squeeze and I can understand wanting to expand some
The information for this structure seems to show 6 bedrooms and 6 bathrooms, which is not an addition, it’s an apartment building
A normal person would bump back rather than build this way
I 100% do not trust any of what this man has said
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How long til the county makes a decision on the variance? And what happened to the argument that bc he poured a new foundation that the setback changed so he would still be out of compliance
There was a news clip last night saying he had a meeting last night with the county, and has to get a new survey of the property. Depending on the results he can either proceed or apply for a variance. Applying for a variance can take several months and it sounds like the immediate neighbors can choose whether or not to sign it.
https://wjla.com/news/local/fairfax-county-marble-lane-construction-three-story-media-county-leaders-survey-propery-zoning-land-development-impact-herrity-neighborhood-greenbriar-chantilly-culture-parents-restrictions
So if he gets a laser survey and metal property point makers plus ground paint stakes strings...Who's doing the survey?
Google maps has historical imagery. The addition appears to be wider than the 1 car garage converted to a room. It also extends into the driveway so that could be a front yard setback issue.
How did this get so far with a new foundation, framing, plywood on a 3 story addition with no stop from the county? Knew of FX County situation where someone 's contractor digging foundation - visual too close-county came , measured, stop work.
Found a great house zoned for Rocky Run /Chantilly- similar to the original of this. Added front dormers and a uitlity room behind garage with master suite above garage- great rooflines and lovely home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How long til the county makes a decision on the variance? And what happened to the argument that bc he poured a new foundation that the setback changed so he would still be out of compliance
There was a news clip last night saying he had a meeting last night with the county, and has to get a new survey of the property. Depending on the results he can either proceed or apply for a variance. Applying for a variance can take several months and it sounds like the immediate neighbors can choose whether or not to sign it.
https://wjla.com/news/local/fairfax-county-marble-lane-construction-three-story-media-county-leaders-survey-propery-zoning-land-development-impact-herrity-neighborhood-greenbriar-chantilly-culture-parents-restrictions
If the grandparents are the actual on record owner of the property, how can the adult son keep claiming he is the owner and how can he pull permits? Wouldn't the sign off have to be from the actual owners?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How long til the county makes a decision on the variance? And what happened to the argument that bc he poured a new foundation that the setback changed so he would still be out of compliance
There was a news clip last night saying he had a meeting last night with the county, and has to get a new survey of the property. Depending on the results he can either proceed or apply for a variance. Applying for a variance can take several months and it sounds like the immediate neighbors can choose whether or not to sign it.
https://wjla.com/news/local/fairfax-county-marble-lane-construction-three-story-media-county-leaders-survey-propery-zoning-land-development-impact-herrity-neighborhood-greenbriar-chantilly-culture-parents-restrictions
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How long til the county makes a decision on the variance? And what happened to the argument that bc he poured a new foundation that the setback changed so he would still be out of compliance
There was a news clip last night saying he had a meeting last night with the county, and has to get a new survey of the property. Depending on the results he can either proceed or apply for a variance. Applying for a variance can take several months and it sounds like the immediate neighbors can choose whether or not to sign it.
https://wjla.com/news/local/fairfax-county-marble-lane-construction-three-story-media-county-leaders-survey-propery-zoning-land-development-impact-herrity-neighborhood-greenbriar-chantilly-culture-parents-restrictions
Anonymous wrote:How long til the county makes a decision on the variance? And what happened to the argument that bc he poured a new foundation that the setback changed so he would still be out of compliance
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what you get when you have "No HOA!!"
Most neighborhoods don't have an HOA.
??? Where? In northern Virginia, many many neighborhoods have HOAs, especially the further west you go into the suburbs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is another house in the same Greenbriar subdivision which was rebuilt as a massive three floor house. I don't think that received this much attention. Perhaps that guy was not Asian?
Link link link or at least a street so we can google view and opine.
New poster, but I believe they are talking about this house: https://www.redfin.com/VA/Fairfax/13228-Memory-Ln-22033/home/9502436
The difference is that it looks like a house vs a giant wall/motel.
This is better, but on the architecture grading scale it’s a D vs the other house’s addition which is an F.
How do people create such ugly additions and say yes I’ll spend $2, 3, 400k on that? Are they doing the design on their own instead of hiring a real professional architect/builder?
I suspect this guy went this route because it was the most space for the lowest price. All he hared about was space not how it looked. he said it would cost $200k which is pretty cheap for that much space.