Joe, I did make the point that many buyers can't see their houses being built. Many others wouldn't know what they were looking at if they did.Super Joe wrote:the buyers were watching it too. so when they saw this they got an engineer in to produce a survey and refused to pay the next staged payment. right ?offset foundations (I was watching the places going up)![]()
if their floors really are sinking (as someone said earlier), ie: the infill slab dropping then they'll have a concrete () case
if actual foundations are sinking (columns dropping) they'll know about it from major cracks in the house, same same re: lawyer.
back home we have a structural survey carried out, here i dont know one
buyer who has. if just one buyer on each project had, it could be published on places like here and everyone would know the actual standard of that development. it would force developers rankinglow to up their standards.
alternatively buyers could just post a million and one complaints on here (i'm sure Lev doesn't mind)
let's see how that goes, and give it time it's only been going on for 3 years so far![]()
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I also made the point that people should employ professionals to look after their interests, just as they would at home.
I'm not entirely sure why you're being so defensive. This thread is about one developer. I'm not aware of hundreds of other similar threads over the last few months or years. What posts there have been about buying land, substandard developments, getting your own place built, materials, insulation, etc. etc. have taught me quite a bit about what to look for and what to avoid.
You may be quite right about legal action, and with the benefit of constructive (
