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skyline20 wrote:The land in his name and people say it can't subdivide.
Call Melvin Sammy at 783-7363 He can advise you with what you wish to do.skyline20 wrote:Is it true that to change agricultural private land into Residential and get approval, you have to build a house on it and then after a certain number of years, it can be approved as Residential land? For instance only one house allowed on front lot and the rest 3 lots have to remain vacant or plant stuff? Have no idea, please enlighten me fellow tuners..
Damian Balkaran wrote:Call Melvin Sammy at 783-7363 He can advise you with what you wish to do.skyline20 wrote:Is it true that to change agricultural private land into Residential and get approval, you have to build a house on it and then after a certain number of years, it can be approved as Residential land? For instance only one house allowed on front lot and the rest 3 lots have to remain vacant or plant stuff? Have no idea, please enlighten me fellow tuners..
Xecutive wrote:The only way building will be permitted is if there is town and country approval or if the deed allows for a dwelling house to be constructed. Check within the clause of the title document to determine whether it states this.
For it to be converted to residential then an application for change of use must be submitted to the Town and Country Planning Division. If it is denied, then it could be appealed/challenged based on the emerging trend surrounding the 'development'. As someone mentioned earlier, if you had to seek assistance from a financial institution , they would request various documents evidencing that approval was obtained (that is, town and country, regional corporation, land and building tax receipts, WASA clearance, etc.).
Usually, agricultural parcels cannot be subdivided if the acreage is less than 2 acres. Similarly, residential plots cannot be subdivided into anything smaller than 5000 sq. ft. or 1 lot. Hope this helps. Read through your deed/title to see what the clauses state.
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