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Nerris - Highly recommended carpenter!


jojol13

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I had a very simple job that needed doing: a door on my kitchen cabinet had fallen off. I tried 2 other carpenters. One has still not responded to my 3 messages & one said the job was too small so was unwilling to come out. I saw Nerris was highly recommended on the forum so gave him a call. He replied to me very quickly & came out the same evening. He fixed my cupboard in a blink of an eye & charged me a fantastic price!!

I'm chuffed to bits to have found Nerris (07875 406753) & will 100% be using him again.

  • 6 months later...
Nerris may be fine for small jobs but I am not happy with my kitchen installation that he did. The cupboards are different heights from the front to the back which he blamed on Victorian walls (other trademen I have spoken to since laughed at this excuse). I am left with a hob that is on a slant so sauces slide to the back of the saucepan and don't cook evenly! He was clearly cheap for a reason.
Nerris also left us in the lurch with replacing an external door to a roof terrace. He never finished the job and a couple of months later we have found he used an internal door and had to pay someone else to replace it. He did previously build us a very good MDF bookcase to fit an awkward spot. As above, I'd recommend for small things only.
  • 7 months later...

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    • Link to petition if anyone would like to object: Londis Off-License Petition https://chng.it/9X4DwTDRdW
    • He did mention it's share of freehold, I’d be very cautious with that. It can turn into a nightmare if relationships with neighbours break down. My brother had a share of freehold in a flat in West Hampstead, and when he needed to sell, the neighbour refused to sign the transfer of the freehold. What followed was over two years of legal battles, spiralling costs and constant stress. He lost several potential buyers, and the whole sale fell through just as he got a job offer in another city. It was a complete disaster. The neighbour was stubborn and uncooperative, doing everything they could to delay the process. It ended in legal deadlock, and there was very little anyone could do without their cooperation. At that point, the TA6 form becomes the least of your worries; it’s the TR1 form that matters. Without the other freeholder’s signature on that, you’re stuck. After seeing what my brother went through, I’d never touch a share of freehold again. When things go wrong, they can go really wrong. If you have a share of freehold, you need a respectful and reasonable relationship with the others involved; otherwise, it can be costly, stressful and exhausting. Sounds like these neighbours can’t be reasoned with. There’s really no coming back from something like this unless they genuinely apologise and replace the trees and plants they ruined. One small consolation is that people who behave like this are usually miserable behind closed doors. If they were truly happy, they’d just get on with their lives instead of trying to make other people’s lives difficult. And the irony is, they’re being incredibly short-sighted. This kind of behaviour almost always backfires.  
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