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Lorries on pavement
Lorries on pavement - they've just demolished a house in my road.
Massive lorries were driven onto the site for the rubble. To avoid dust, the contractors sprayed the rubble with water (all weekend!), but this no doubt added to the weight. The pavement is now massively chewed up, and I saw the lorries doing this. The contractors have now left this with an old wooden door over the hole. I can contact my council to report the damage, so they will repair it (eventually), but really the demolition contractors ought to pay for it, surely? What is their responsibility, and how should I deal with this? |
Lorries on pavement
On Wed, 21 Oct 2015 17:44:01 +0100, GB wrote:
Lorries on pavement - they've just demolished a house in my road. Massive lorries were driven onto the site for the rubble. To avoid dust, the contractors sprayed the rubble with water (all weekend!), but this no doubt added to the weight. Not significantly. A big pile of bricks is going to weigh about the same whether they're damp or dry. The pavement is now massively chewed up, and I saw the lorries doing this. And Building Control will have noted it, too. The contractors have now left this with an old wooden door over the hole. So it is currently temporarily made safe? I can contact my council to report the damage, so they will repair it (eventually), but really the demolition contractors ought to pay for it, surely? What is their responsibility, and how should I deal with this? Yes, they should. Or, rather, the council will fix it and send the contractors the bill. Which is what is almost certainly going to happen anyway, just... in council time. |
Lorries on pavement
On 21/10/2015 17:57, Adrian wrote:
On Wed, 21 Oct 2015 17:44:01 +0100, GB wrote: Lorries on pavement - they've just demolished a house in my road. Massive lorries were driven onto the site for the rubble. To avoid dust, the contractors sprayed the rubble with water (all weekend!), but this no doubt added to the weight. Not significantly. A big pile of bricks is going to weigh about the same whether they're damp or dry. The pavement is now massively chewed up, and I saw the lorries doing this. And Building Control will have noted it, too. Hope so. The contractors have now left this with an old wooden door over the hole. So it is currently temporarily made safe? Not really. The door is panelled, and they've driven a truck over it, so it's now bent in the middle. I can contact my council to report the damage, so they will repair it (eventually), but really the demolition contractors ought to pay for it, surely? What is their responsibility, and how should I deal with this? Yes, they should. Or, rather, the council will fix it and send the contractors the bill. Which is what is almost certainly going to happen anyway, just... in council time. Council time. :) I'll stick it on FixMyStreet and hope the council bill the contractors. |
Lorries on pavement
"GB" wrote in message
... Lorries on pavement - they've just demolished a house in my road. Massive lorries were driven onto the site for the rubble. To avoid dust, the contractors sprayed the rubble with water (all weekend!), but this no doubt added to the weight. The pavement is now massively chewed up, and I saw the lorries doing this. The contractors have now left this with an old wooden door over the hole. I can contact my council to report the damage, so they will repair it (eventually), but really the demolition contractors ought to pay for it, surely? What is their responsibility, and how should I deal with this? I would try asking your local council;-) -- Adam |
Lorries on pavement
"GB" wrote in message ... Lorries on pavement - they've just demolished a house in my road. Massive lorries were driven onto the site for the rubble. To avoid dust, the contractors sprayed the rubble with water (all weekend!), but this no doubt added to the weight. The pavement is now massively chewed up, and I saw the lorries doing this. The contractors have now left this with an old wooden door over the hole. I can contact my council to report the damage, so they will repair it (eventually), but really the demolition contractors ought to pay for it, surely? What is their responsibility, and how should I deal with this? Who does the pavement belong to? - if it's the council, then it's up to them to seek reimbursement from whoever damaged the pavement, but the chances are they won't bother, they'll just replace/repair the damage and add it to the CT bills next year. |
Lorries on pavement
On Wednesday, 21 October 2015 17:44:11 UTC+1, GB wrote:
Lorries on pavement - they've just demolished a house in my road. Massive lorries were driven onto the site for the rubble. To avoid dust, the contractors sprayed the rubble with water (all weekend!), but this no doubt added to the weight. The pavement is now massively chewed up, and I saw the lorries doing this. The contractors have now left this with an old wooden door over the hole. I can contact my council to report the damage, so they will repair it (eventually), but really the demolition contractors ought to pay for it, surely? What is their responsibility, and how should I deal with this? Not only that, they break up drains etc below ground. |
Lorries on pavement
On Thursday, October 22, 2015 at 7:12:37 AM UTC+1, charles wrote:
In article , harry wrote: On Wednesday, 21 October 2015 17:44:11 UTC+1, GB wrote: Lorries on pavement - they've just demolished a house in my road. Massive lorries were driven onto the site for the rubble. To avoid dust, the contractors sprayed the rubble with water (all weekend!), but this no doubt added to the weight. The pavement is now massively chewed up, and I saw the lorries doing this. The contractors have now left this with an old wooden door over the hole. I can contact my council to report the damage, so they will repair it (eventually), but really the demolition contractors ought to pay for it, surely? What is their responsibility, and how should I deal with this? Not only that, they break up drains etc below ground. and telephone cables, etc. -- Please note new email address: Go out and trip on it. Sustain an imaginary back injury. Sue all round you. THey'll fix it p.d.q. |
Lorries on pavement
I think you need to talk to highways at the council and give them the name
and address of the contractor, if you have it. Normally they would have needed permission to do the demolition from the planning dept, so they should know ho to have a word with. They may ask the company to repair their damage, but its been my experience that this can take years to actually happen. EDF put in a new connection a site some three years ago, and the temporary repair is now subsiding and nothing has been done. The problem is as always, money and staffing levels for this chasing up of companies. Brian -- From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is active Remember, if you don't like where I post or what I say, you don't have to read my posts! :-) "GB" wrote in message ... Lorries on pavement - they've just demolished a house in my road. Massive lorries were driven onto the site for the rubble. To avoid dust, the contractors sprayed the rubble with water (all weekend!), but this no doubt added to the weight. The pavement is now massively chewed up, and I saw the lorries doing this. The contractors have now left this with an old wooden door over the hole. I can contact my council to report the damage, so they will repair it (eventually), but really the demolition contractors ought to pay for it, surely? What is their responsibility, and how should I deal with this? |
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