There are some houses that never should have been built.
They cannot be leveled and another house put on that lot. Either the lot is too
small to build on --- by current standards -- or the land is not fit to hold a
house. I have seen both. They have an infinite problem.
The first kind of infinite problem is the problem of a house
that was built on a non-conforming lot. “Non-conforming” is a fancy way of
saying, “so out of code it isn’t even funny.” (Well, not really, but I had to
say it!) “Non-conforming” really means the lot does not meet the code, even if
it is by a little bit. If the house is on a grossly non-conforming lot, the
house can’t be changed much and still be allowed to be there.
Every town has its own zoning. Most have different areas
with different rules. Suppose the rules for lot size is 4000 SF minimum with 100
feet of frontage. (Frontage is the lot line that is along a street.) If the lot
has 4500 SF, but only 95 feet of frontage, it is non-conforming. In order to
add an addition -- or even a deck in some places -- an owner has to get a
variance in order to vary from zoning code. Get it?
So you see the problem when you want to modify a nasty
little house built behind another house. It is an unsolvable problem, even with
a lot of money. The same is so for a tiny house stuck on a tiny lot in a nice
neighborhood.
The other unsolvable problem is when the land is not fit for
a house, but a house is there. I see this once in a while.
One house I saw was built on land that was filled over a
lake. The back foundation was tipped inward about 5 degrees. A previous owner built
a second foundation outside the tipped one. He added deeper footings. It didn’t
work. It took years, but the house sunk again. The current owner had just put
in three-storey-deep metal pillars to support the house. My client declined to buy
this house. Why? Because the pillars were only there a year, so my client
couldn’t be sure the fix would work. Even though the seller’s engineer thought
this would work, there was another engineer who thought the new back foundation
and deeper footings would work years before. My client bought on more solid
ground.
I saw a similar problem with a house built on peat. Peat
is the soft soil that develops in bogs. It is a dumb thing to build a house on
it. One of my clients saw a house built on peat. The seller had information
about how to front foundation wall was totally rebuilt ten years before. The
floors seemed straight, everything inside seemed fine. That was until the
inspector found a big, displaced crack in the foundation. The poor house was
still sinking. My client beat feet out of there.
These are houses that even money can’t fix.
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