Evicting a tenant.

2wheels

Member
Location
aberdeenshire
No, they are extremely cheaply put together, but are built in a way that suits their climatic conditions, not ours
my cousin lives in london ontario. her house and the few hundred around are two layer brick/block built. there is a 9ft deep cellar underneath and the founds obviously go a lot deeper. yes they get rain and can have over a metre of snow on the roof so must be fairly well built.
 
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Chris F

Staff Member
Media
Location
Hammerwich
I remember a tv item on a prefabricate housing company nearby so I did a bit of research and this is the 1st part of the story it goes on to say the houses are not very big and short on storage.

“. The UK is entering a new era of prefab homes with the opening of a Yorkshire factory that will build fully-fitted three-bedroom homes with a price tag as low as £65,000.

Eight houses fitted with kitchens and bathrooms will roll off the production line every day in Knaresborough, to be loaded on to lorries for delivery across the country. Experts have hailed it a revolution in British housebuilding that would slash the 40 weeks it could take to build a traditional home to just 10 days.

The factory cost of a two or three-bedroom home would be from £65,000 to £79,000, although that excludes the cost of land, on-site assembly and connecting the home to services, which could double or triple the final price.”


https://www.google.co.uk/amp/s/amp....olution-65000-prefab-homes-go-into-production

The Park home industry has been doing that for years and making very good money out of it too. Like anything you can buy cheaper or expensive versions.

Brands like Omar, Ting Dene, Pathfinder, Homeseeker - lots of options - https://www.omar.co.uk/park-homes/heritage/#
 

Yosemite Sam

Member
Location
Wiltshire
What about the soon to be 'resident' owner, and his pregnant wife, having given legal notice for her to move?

(A hessian sack stuffed down a rodding hole for the septic tank / sewer pipe on the night after she's supposed to leave would have her out in 24 hours, just saying... :whistle:)
I would think this needs doing to her new house, she’s about to move into.
 

glasshouse

Member
Location
lothians
I remember a tv item on a prefabricate housing company nearby so I did a bit of research and this is the 1st part of the story it goes on to say the houses are not very big and short on storage.

“. The UK is entering a new era of prefab homes with the opening of a Yorkshire factory that will build fully-fitted three-bedroom homes with a price tag as low as £65,000.

Eight houses fitted with kitchens and bathrooms will roll off the production line every day in Knaresborough, to be loaded on to lorries for delivery across the country. Experts have hailed it a revolution in British housebuilding that would slash the 40 weeks it could take to build a traditional home to just 10 days.

The factory cost of a two or three-bedroom home would be from £65,000 to £79,000, although that excludes the cost of land, on-site assembly and connecting the home to services, which could double or triple the final price.”


https://www.google.co.uk/amp/s/amp....olution-65000-prefab-homes-go-into-production
Thats the future
 

onthehoof

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Cambs
Half the U.K. economy is based on property so the system is skewed to keep prices artificially high. There’s enough brownfield and land already earmarked to build all the houses the country needs, the big house builders sit on the land to keep prices high, add on all the buy to let investors and second/holiday homes that stand empty 9 months of the year and the whole system is fudged.
What gets me is when they say homes are unaffordable we need to build more to make them cheaper yet when prices start falling it’s a frigging disaster.
 

glasshouse

Member
Location
lothians
Half the U.K. economy is based on property so the system is skewed to keep prices artificially high. There’s enough brownfield and land already earmarked to build all the houses the country needs, the big house builders sit on the land to keep prices high, add on all the buy to let investors and second/holiday homes that stand empty 9 months of the year and the whole system is fudged.
What gets me is when they say homes are unaffordable we need to build more to make them cheaper yet when prices start falling it’s a frigging disaster.
Inflationisthe great evil, but not when it relates to housing
A house would still be £30k if it was produced by a farmer
 

onthehoof

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Cambs
Selling off Council houses was a disaster they were built for folk who couldn’t afford their own home, the Councils would have benefited massively from the increase in prices since the 80’s allowing them to build more Council houses, 40 years later most 30 year olds can’t afford a house and most Councils are virtually bankrupt
 

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