Jump to content

Southwark Council Leaseholders - do you tell the council about all your renovations?


Recommended Posts

Hi,


I bought a flat a good while ago where Southwark Council own the leasehold. I would like to do some work, now, to the flat but looking at the webiste, we have to ask for all sorts of permission and submit plans to get the work approved. And of course, this comes with a fee. It seems I can't even change a kitchen cupboard without permission. Have any of you any expereince in renovating your homes - and did you always ask permission first?


Cheers,


Thursday

Leaseholders having to seek the permission of their freeholders to conform to the specifics of your lease is pretty standard property practice - whether private freeholders or council freeholders.

Check your lease and if you need the freeholder to approve I would encourage you to do so. If you get stuck or find council officials not responding I would encourage you to engage one of your local councillors.

Unless it's structural or likely to have a significant impact on your neighbours I would not bother. Southwark will just end up charging you for a licence for alterations. This will take time and you never know what petty points they will raise.


Some on here are likely to say this is risky because it's in breach of the terms of the lease and could have an impact when you sell etc. etc.


Technically they are right. However, having sat on the management board of a company that owned the freehold of a large block in Southwark I can tell you that we did not have the slightest interest in investigating people who may have had work done without permission unless it was going to impact the rest of the block - an example being one person who installed a mezzanine floor in their flat which was installed into a load bearing wall. I would be surprised if Southwark adopted a different approach in practice - althought they would never admit to it.

A work colleague was buying an ex council property and had trouble securing a mortgage as the heating system had not been approved of by the council and they ended up waiting months for the council surveyor to check out the property. The BS surveyor had to recheck for the mortgage but they had to do some changes. I think it was something to do with the flue pipe for gas central heating was not sited where the council would have wanted it to be.
I pulled out of a sale of an ex council property (a while ago) when it became clear that none of the improvements made by the owner had been reported or approved by the Council. Nothing major but Southwark made it very clear they wouldn't necessarily retrospectively approve anything and wanted a big fee to do so in a timely fashion. Made the sale unviable for me.
I think you would find it quite difficult to find anyone at the council to deal with this. You can call their call centre and they will log your details on 'the system' (which no one looks at) and then nothing will happen. I would crack on and make your changes - as long as it is nothing structural!!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Dear families,   My name is Eleanor. I’ve worked in NHS Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services for the past eight years, and I’m about to begin an Infant Observation course in preparation for psychotherapy training. I’m looking for a baby to observe as part of this training.   The observation involves me visiting a baby and their parent for one hour a week over two years, with the aim of deepening my understanding of early emotional and developmental processes. Taking part is a generous contribution to the training of future child psychotherapists — ultimately supporting the mental health of children and families.   Both of my own children were observed as babies, which I found to be a really positive experience. Having an observer gently witness my babies’ development helped me notice their weekly changes in a new way, and I came to appreciate the calm, consistent presence of a trained observer. I was sad when the observations ended!   If you — or someone you know — is expecting a baby due before the end of February*, I would love to hear from you. You can contact me at +44 7977 910018 or [email protected].   Best wishes, Eleanor
    • I rarely iron, so my massive ironing board is just taking up unnecessary space. Does anyone have one of those little ones that you can use on an ordinary table?
    • It's happened twice today, I've never had this happen before! Here's the second one. All I did was try to agree with a post in the lounge!
    • Now I'm having my hand slapped by some forum bot 😮 All I did was try to add a laughing emoji to ianr's post. This is obviously a message from the universe to tell me to get off my phone and get back to working my way through my very lengthy to do list 🤣 ETA: And it's just happened again when I tried to agree with a post in the lounge. OK universe, I give in. Back to the hideous task list.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...