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Approving houseplans after house built

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jsr
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Approving houseplans after house built

Postby jsr » May 7th, 2021, 11:32 am

Hi

Can you submit a houseplan for approval after a house is built?

thanks

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viedcht
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Re: Approving houseplans after house built

Postby viedcht » May 7th, 2021, 11:48 am

Yes but I must comply with current regulations. First issue: is the house within 25ft of the roadway? Was it built on residential land, or farmland?( Considering no prior approval it may be unapproved, but you will find our eventually)
Don't answer any questions here, it's just to give you an idea as to your expected hurdles. Visit Town & Country/Regional Corporation offices (websites etc) in your area/county and get some info. You can leave everything as-is, but if thinking about mortgaging or even selling, approved buildings are expected. Good luck

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88sins
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Re: Approving houseplans after house built

Postby 88sins » May 7th, 2021, 12:23 pm

jsr wrote:Hi

Can you submit a houseplan for approval after a house is built?

thanks

you can. but just cuz you can does not equate into you should.


viedcht wrote:Yes but I must comply with current regulations. First issue: is the house within 25ft of the roadway? Was it built on residential land, or farmland?( Considering no prior approval it may be unapproved, but you will find our eventually)
Don't answer any questions here, it's just to give you an idea as to your expected hurdles. Visit Town & Country/Regional Corporation offices (websites etc) in your area/county and get some info. You can leave everything as-is, but if thinking about mortgaging or even selling, approved buildings are expected. Good luck


not sure where you heard this, but you wrong there. you can buy, sell, mortgage or transfer a building that doesn't have approved plans, whether residential or commercial, and not having said plans would do nothing to affect price or ease of the transaction in any way. But there's a catch, in that it must be an older building.

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dogg
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Re: Approving houseplans after house built

Postby dogg » May 7th, 2021, 1:34 pm

Where can I find the current regulations?

viedcht wrote:Yes but I must comply with current regulations. First issue: is the house within 25ft of the roadway? Was it built on residential land, or farmland?( Considering no prior approval it may be unapproved, but you will find our eventually)
Don't answer any questions here, it's just to give you an idea as to your expected hurdles. Visit Town & Country/Regional Corporation offices (websites etc) in your area/county and get some info. You can leave everything as-is, but if thinking about mortgaging or even selling, approved buildings are expected. Good luck

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viedcht
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Re: Approving houseplans after house built

Postby viedcht » May 7th, 2021, 6:34 pm

Just download the town and country planning act PDF

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viedcht
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Re: Approving houseplans after house built

Postby viedcht » May 7th, 2021, 6:37 pm

A building older than 1969/1962 (can't remember what year) when changes were made? I know normally bank always saying "bring Yuh recent documents; deed, approved plans" etc...
88sins wrote:
jsr wrote:Hi

Can you submit a houseplan for approval after a house is built?

thanks

you can. but just cuz you can does not equate into you should.


viedcht wrote:Yes but I must comply with current regulations. First issue: is the house within 25ft of the roadway? Was it built on residential land, or farmland?( Considering no prior approval it may be unapproved, but you will find our eventually)
Don't answer any questions here, it's just to give you an idea as to your expected hurdles. Visit Town & Country/Regional Corporation offices (websites etc) in your area/county and get some info. You can leave everything as-is, but if thinking about mortgaging or even selling, approved buildings are expected. Good luck


not sure where you heard this, but you wrong there. you can buy, sell, mortgage or transfer a building that doesn't have approved plans, whether residential or commercial, and not having said plans would do nothing to affect price or ease of the transaction in any way. But there's a catch, in that it must be an older building.

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rebound
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Re: Approving houseplans after house built

Postby rebound » May 7th, 2021, 7:35 pm

If the building is more than 5 years old, the bank does not require approved plans.. However, the land must be Town and Country approved for any mortgage.
viedcht wrote:A building older than 1969/1962 (can't remember what year) when changes were made? I know normally bank always saying "bring Yuh recent documents; deed, approved plans" etc...
88sins wrote:
jsr wrote:Hi

Can you submit a houseplan for approval after a house is built?

thanks

you can. but just cuz you can does not equate into you should.


viedcht wrote:Yes but I must comply with current regulations. First issue: is the house within 25ft of the roadway? Was it built on residential land, or farmland?( Considering no prior approval it may be unapproved, but you will find our eventually)
Don't answer any questions here, it's just to give you an idea as to your expected hurdles. Visit Town & Country/Regional Corporation offices (websites etc) in your area/county and get some info. You can leave everything as-is, but if thinking about mortgaging or even selling, approved buildings are expected. Good luck


not sure where you heard this, but you wrong there. you can buy, sell, mortgage or transfer a building that doesn't have approved plans, whether residential or commercial, and not having said plans would do nothing to affect price or ease of the transaction in any way. But there's a catch, in that it must be an older building.

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viedcht
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Re: Approving houseplans after house built

Postby viedcht » May 7th, 2021, 10:45 pm

^Right, thanks. I know was something like that.

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