Anonymous wrote:Looking at the aerial photos, the addition doesn't extend much beyond the original back of the home. To the extent there is a setback violation, it certainly wouldn't be new. How were the neighbors able to live in their home without that full 8 feet?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Crappy builder found this thread.
Doesn’t the permit say that the homeowner and the contractor are the same person?
No. Homeowner is one guy (and sometimes his wife). Other family member is crappy builder and contractor and apparently, a DCUM enthusiast.
But doesn’t the permit say that the homeowner is the contractor?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Crappy builder found this thread.
Doesn’t the permit say that the homeowner and the contractor are the same person?
No. Homeowner is one guy (and sometimes his wife). Other family member is crappy builder and contractor and apparently, a DCUM enthusiast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looking at the aerial photos, the addition doesn't extend much beyond the original back of the home. To the extent there is a setback violation, it certainly wouldn't be new. How were the neighbors able to live in their home without that full 8 feet?
The property line may not be a straight line, so while the structure might be built on a straight line, that doesn't mean that it mets the entire set back if the property line isn't straight.
Right, but the point is that the rear of the structure only seems to extend 5 feet further back than the original structure. If the new structure is crosses the 8ft line, then the original one did, too. There's no significant difference here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looking at the aerial photos, the addition doesn't extend much beyond the original back of the home. To the extent there is a setback violation, it certainly wouldn't be new. How were the neighbors able to live in their home without that full 8 feet?
The property line may not be a straight line, so while the structure might be built on a straight line, that doesn't mean that it mets the entire set back if the property line isn't straight.
Right, but the point is that the rear of the structure only seems to extend 5 feet further back than the original structure. If the new structure is crosses the 8ft line, then the original one did, too. There's no significant difference here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looking at the aerial photos, the addition doesn't extend much beyond the original back of the home. To the extent there is a setback violation, it certainly wouldn't be new. How were the neighbors able to live in their home without that full 8 feet?
The property line may not be a straight line, so while the structure might be built on a straight line, that doesn't mean that it mets the entire set back if the property line isn't straight.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Crappy builder found this thread.
Doesn’t the permit say that the homeowner and the contractor are the same person?
Anonymous wrote:Crappy builder found this thread.
Anonymous wrote:Looking at the aerial photos, the addition doesn't extend much beyond the original back of the home. To the extent there is a setback violation, it certainly wouldn't be new. How were the neighbors able to live in their home without that full 8 feet?
Anonymous wrote:Looking at the aerial photos, the addition doesn't extend much beyond the original back of the home. To the extent there is a setback violation, it certainly wouldn't be new. How were the neighbors able to live in their home without that full 8 feet?
Anonymous wrote:Agreed. The first step to this mess is resolving the setback issue. I imagine that will take a bit of time.
In the mean time so that the current structure doesn’t fall apart, I would think they would want to weatherproof the existing plywood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious how it’s doing this morning?
What do you mean?
The nasty wind and such. Just curious how the structure is holding.
If you're concerned about that, tell the county to release the stop-work-order and let them finish the sheeting. They'd still need to pass the structural inspection before doing the insulation and drywall. The problem is that political pressure caused the county to come out while they were still framing.
Um, the county can’t release the stop-work order because it appears that the building foundation was placed over the setback line. They need to complete their investigation into this deviation from the permit first.
It wouldn’t make sense to allow the building process to continue if there is a possibility that serious changes will need to be made to the structure to bring it into compliance. It wouldn’t be fair to the homeowners to allow them to spend more money which they could end up possibly losing.
It's 6 inches. They've always approved these. Even the article referenced earlier suggested this was perfuctory.