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  • The drainage search has shown there is a public sewer within the boundary of the property. Our solicitors are a bit shit.

    Does anyone know of a way to find out where on the property it is located? - ie at the front or rear or the property, etc.

    The big thing would be weather it would prevent an extention at the rear.

    Also as the place we're looking at is ex local authority there is a restrictive covenant which looks to require council consent for any alterations. Has anyone heard of this before and how strictly it enforced.

    My land law is a very rusty but I'm assuming getting a LA to agree to remove a 40yo covenant won't be easy.

  • Does anyone know of a way to find out where on the property it is located? - ie at the front or rear or the property, etc.

    Can you not ascertain it's route via manhole covers? The one that runs across the front and side of ours can easily be traced via the manhole cover out front and the two in next door's garden.

  • Our place is ex-council and it had extensive work done before we bought it. Planning permission approved work but the council/housing association consent never took place until they sold it to us - 5 years after the work was complete. Apparently it was a box ticking exercise but IANAL & YMMV, etc....

  • We had this on our last house...

    First thing we discovered is that plans are useless for exactly pinpointing where the pipes are. The only way we found where they were precisely was to pay dyno-rod to put a camera down there and then map it out, cost a few hundred quid.

    Our pipe was actually a metre away from the house, exactly where we wanted to build an extension. We went through the process of getting permission from the water company to build over, essentially this involved giving them a lump of money, they then did a check on the condition of the pipe, thankfully it was OK, so they gave us permission to build over the top of it. For building regs sign off we then had to dig the footings of the extension below the pipe, which was 2m down and bridge over the pipe, which was a pain, but only cost us a bit more in labour and concrete.

    Probably got all the docs somewhere if you want to see them, this wasn't in London but sure the approach would be the same.

    Basically even if a pipe is in the way, you can still build over it, just a few more hoops to jump through.

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