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Default Partition in student flat...

On Feb 13, 12:28 am, "Marcus Fox" please-reply-via-newsgroup...@-i-
posted-to.com wrote:
"tim....." wrote in message

...







"Marcus Fox" wrote in
m...
I am a student renting a room in a house with five other students. I have
been there for a while now, however, the problem is noise from the room
adjacent to mine. It is clear that the landlord has partitioned one of

the
rooms, half of which is now mine - with a single sheet of plasterboard
which
joins across the window. Is such a partition complying with building
regulations?


No.


It is clear that this is insufficient to stop noise transfer
from the adjoining room and has led to falling out between myself and

the

It's also not an adequate fire break.


The Building inspector will not be pleased.


What are the HMO rules in your area?


If the property needs a license for the numebr of people
in it, then this will lilely cause it to be invalid.


tim


occupant of the other room. I would much rather give the landlord a
month's
notice to leave the property, because of the noise nuisance and not

cause
further falling out between me and the other tenant, after all, I have

to
put up with living with him, however, the landlord is trying to hold me

to
the full term of the contract.


On second thoughts, it can't be a single sheet as there are sockets on it.
However, the partition is attached across a window and the noise
transmission through it is as such as it may as well not even be there.


How long is the contract? How long have you been there?
HMO's that I operate are done on a licence and not a tenancy and hence
different criteria apply. If you have signed a tenancy then
technically you are signed up for the duration. Presumably you looked
at the accomodation on offer and signed accordingly. If technically
the accommodation breaches building regs then you might be able to
barter a walk away agreement or force it to be put right.

 
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