Unfortunately,the conveyancing solicitor's arm,will have the same,slight curve in it,and will direct the OP in a giant circle...
There are loads of estates,going back to new-builds in the 90's,one right near me,where the properties are legendary,for missing insulation,due to gangs of brickies,dragging the same four pieces of full-fill,up the cavity...look like a tiger's head,on the FLIR.
New builds,in this country,are more in need of a thorough survey,than a 200 year old cottage,but various schemes,obviate that....and it's a shame ?
A quick trawl,on the internet,will show the magnitude and nature,of some of these developments...it also shows up the level of help available,and likelyhood of a satisfactory conclusion.
Having seen footings poured on tipped ground,piles a shovels depth,and whole properties with missing insulation,cavity closers and wall-ties....there is nothing left,on a brand-new,executive development,which would surprise me
Can’t argue with what you’ve seen. However, not all developments are the same. I moved into a new build last year, the forth new build house I’ve had. Never had a major problem with any of them. All minor snags were rectified promptly.
Cant comment on the local building inspector, but my conveyancing solicitor was waiting on the NHBC inspection before we exchanged on my latest new build. It was delayed, because the downstairs toilet was 10mm out of position, therefore not complying with Part M.
So you just need the right developer and trustworthy solicitor. The only dodgy characters I’ve found, are estate agents. But you don’t need them to buy a new build.
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yes, 4 years to now. The house is under 10 years build Mark Warranty, the first 2 years are from Builder, then from year 3 to 10 is with NHBC.
Go and get some legal advice. You can get a half hour consultation for less than a tank full of petrol. Then you will know where you stand.
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