New flat - off street parking - no dropped kerb

New flat - off street parking - no dropped kerb

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carpmaster

Original Poster:

123 posts

188 months

Monday 20th April 2015
quotequote all
Hi all. Have recently moved into a rented flat, which was advertised with off street parking. All good as I need to keep the pride and joy safely tucked away.

Anyway, moved in (in a hurry over xmas) and noticed that the kerb in front of the drive isn't actually dropped. Not really sure how I missed it when viewing, but when I did notice I didn't really think it would be a problem. There was a car parked on driveway when I viewed etc.

Fast forward a few months and it's become a bit of a sore point. People kept parking in front while my car was there (which I realise is legal but not something I'd do to someone else) so I left a few polite notes explaining that if I keep being blocked in, I'd have to park on the road taking up a space anyway, so please be considerate, and left my phone number / house number inviting them to pop in for a chat anytime etc. Most people stopped parking there after this note, but a few have carried on regardless. They seem to do it deliberately now. I did have stern words with one of them recently (15 other spaces but they chose the one spot that blocks my car in) along the lines of yes it's legal, but why not be a decent neighbour and park over there (points finger) which is 5 paces away and doesn't block a car in. Cue a blank face and comments about sometimes having to carry shopping.

Really need to get this sorted as my car has been scratched up parked "out in the wild" probably by one of these kind yet slightly dim neighbours.

Obviously I could nuke any car that parks there - or the owner - but at the end of the day it is a legal space, my cars are worth more than their heaps, and I can't be manning the sniper scope 24/7. So it seems the only mature option available is to try and get the landlord to sort the dropped kerb through the council.

So as stated, the flat was advertised with off street parking. Does this mean I'm entitled to a reduction in rent, or a dropped kerb installed so I actually have legal off street parking? Any pointers how to proceed would be most grateful. The landlady is actually quite nice - but I'm not sure she would cough up the likely £1500 costs without a better reason than future resale value & my current level of happiness.

There are 50+ other houses in the street which are the same - park on drive - no dropped kerb - but they all have the kerb directly next to the drive / car. Mine is the only corner house so my car is parked 3m away from the road. Which seems to invite temptation.

Few more things to note:

1) Neighbour next door has a dropped kerb - and struggles to get out when someone is parked in front of mine. So he's very keen to get the council involved / that kerb dropped as it would help him out
2) It's a maisonette - there are people underneath me - they also have a drive - which they don't use because they get blocked in. So they are keen to get it sorted out also. We would "share" the pavement / kerb access that has been dropped / paved.

Any advice would be great. Thanks

carpmaster

Original Poster:

123 posts

188 months

Monday 20th April 2015
quotequote all
Rovinghawk said:
As they're acting within the law & you're not, you might want to rethink the tone you use with them.
Rovinghawk said:
In keeping with my first comment, you might want to rethink your opinion of them.
Rovinghawk said:
You really won't win hearts & minds with an attitude like that.
Rovinghawk said:
A better reason is that she has to provide what she advertised. Proceed on this.
You seem to have missed the bit about several polite notes being left. Inviting them up for coffee and to say hi etc. Most people have been completely fine. I have BBQ's with some of them. All is good with this lot.

The person I had words with..... they park there repeatedly after having several polite notes, when they could choose so many other spots that are as close and don't block someone in. You'd have said nothing? They are making a conscious decision to be an arse. Legality aside - in my book it's a stty thing to do when you have an option not to. It deserved a stern word.

I do have a copy of the online advertisement for the flat. I have saved it. I'm not sure what's actually in the tenancy agreement relating to this - but from experience it will all be generic guff and not really related to this place anyway. My questions are more around whether I have a "right" to legal off street parking, or a rental reduction. I'm not sure what the situation would be if I asked for it and she refuses.

carpmaster

Original Poster:

123 posts

188 months

Tuesday 21st April 2015
quotequote all
andburg said:
To counter your point that his parking is legal...

I believe it is illegal to knowingly prevent the use of someone elses vehicle in this manner. If you are not parked there then he can block you getting on all he likes but if your car is there, clearly visible and he is blocking you it does not matter whether you are legally parked or not.

next time he does it, call the council / local non emergency plod.
This is where the confusion occurs. I've got a friend who's a policeman & he said the same thing. But it was just something he'd "heard" and couldn't be sure. From what I can find myself - most advice is that without a dropped kerb there's nothing that can be done even if you can't get out onto the highway. But nobody really knows for sure. I will try the landlord route - but I can't see it happening. I was planning a car upgrade soon (V6 biturbo Noggy Blue ) but no chance I will do this without proper accessible off street parking!!