Developers want to build on top of my flat and there’s nothing I can do to stop it | Letter
The Guardian Business ·

Your article on the National Leasehold Campaign highlighted the financial injustices of leasehold ownership, but there is another growing problem that deserves attention: rooftop development on …
Your article on the National Leasehold Campaign highlighted the financial injustices of leasehold ownership, but there is another growing problem that deserves attention: rooftop development on occupied blocks, which was highlighted also by a letter published in response to the article. I am a leaseholder in north London and planning permission has been granted for additional storeys to be built on top of our building. Like many leaseholders, I bought my flat believing that I had security in my home, only to discover that the roof above it could later be treated as a development opportunity over which I had virtually no control. What has become clear is how little protection leaseholders have once a freeholder decides to monetise the roof space. In my case, planning permission has been granted in principle, yet the council has confirmed that there is still no building regulations application, no building control approval, and no construction management plan setting out how residents would be protected during the works. That, to me, exposes a major gap in the system. Leaseholders are expected to live with the consequences – noise, dust, loss of amenities, uncertainty over property value and saleability, and concerns about safety during major works – while responsibility is fragmented between planning, building control, private approvers, the fire brigade and the Health and Safety Executive. …
Original source: The Guardian Business