Clifftop house - BARGAIN
Author
Discussion

Soovy

Original Poster:

35,829 posts

292 months

lankybob

2,073 posts

211 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2010
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yikes

good thing no one was on the beach

''Apparently the cliff collapse was sparked when a large boulder the size of a Transit Van fell off and the whole lot went." surely that isnt the trigger of the fall, its part of the fall

Matt Evans

1,530 posts

195 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2010
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laugh You can't even say you get what you pay for. Because they didn't! Well, they did for a day.

soad

34,272 posts

197 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2010
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Good buy it wasn't...

Cock Womble

29,908 posts

251 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2010
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Impressive views though.

Biggles111

466 posts

284 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2010
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I was intrigued by this house when it came up for auction about 4 months ago - I think it went for around £120K, the buyer has then punted it on for £150K and run.

The house is set a long way back and is on slightly different material from the end of the garden which is just consolidated loose rock. The location is beautiful; a house next door, on slightly more solid ground was up for £700K. The house in this case one could see from photos was in serious trouble, a local builder had bought it and then tried to underpin it etc but ended up out of his depth, tried to get planning and was refused, so sold the lodge next door for £125K and the main house and got what he could.

I still think that with a bit of creative engineering and geotech work (the plot extends a long way in from the cliff) a house could be built there, but getting planning now would be next to impossible.

Rude-boy

22,227 posts

254 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2010
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Biggles111 said:
(the plot extends a long way in from the cliff)
Not as far as it did once though...

bazking69

8,620 posts

211 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2010
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Yes sir, we'll put the reason for refusal to insure you in writing, but have you got an alternative address we can sent it to please...

HOGEPH

5,249 posts

207 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2010
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soad said:
Good buy it wasn't...
Goodbye to the garden it was!

tangent police

3,097 posts

197 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2010
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Oddicombe used to have quite a good speed hillclimb up the bonkers hill from the beach. Difficult to drive up their sensibly wink

There isn't much surf around there, so further undercutting is unlikley.

Fort Jefferson

8,237 posts

243 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2010
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Now thats what you call a "moblie home"

chr15b

3,467 posts

211 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2010
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"new owner upset"

erm they bought an expensive house at a nock down price knowing it came with risks...

ShadownINja

79,186 posts

303 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2010
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Out of interest, say it all collapses and her entire land ends up 200ft lower, can she flatten and build on that land?

FourWheelDrift

91,623 posts

305 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2010
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ShadownINja said:
Out of interest, say it all collapses and her entire land ends up 200ft lower, can she flatten and build on that land?
No, they will put the price up for genuine beachfront real estate.

ShadownINja

79,186 posts

303 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2010
quotequote all
FourWheelDrift said:
ShadownINja said:
Out of interest, say it all collapses and her entire land ends up 200ft lower, can she flatten and build on that land?
No, they will put the price up for genuine beachfront real estate.
But she's already paid for it.

Deva Link

26,934 posts

266 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2010
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ShadownINja said:
Out of interest, say it all collapses and her entire land ends up 200ft lower, can she flatten and build on that land?
err...that would be the beach then, wouldn't it?

Wonder if she'll get the bill for clearing the rockfall? yikes

FourWheelDrift

91,623 posts

305 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2010
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ShadownINja said:
FourWheelDrift said:
ShadownINja said:
Out of interest, say it all collapses and her entire land ends up 200ft lower, can she flatten and build on that land?
No, they will put the price up for genuine beachfront real estate.
But she's already paid for it.
I mean she can sell it for a higher price if it all collapses and drops the house onto the beach. Haven't you seen how much those little wooden huts go for?

jbi

12,697 posts

225 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2010
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"property developer"? I have no sympathy

Pesty

42,655 posts

277 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2010
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looking at that picture his garden is in tact but there has been a cliff colapse past his garden in some bushes that he would never go near anyway due to the danger. Headline exagerating?

Morningside

24,143 posts

250 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2010
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Or you could try and fight to keep your house like Peter Boggis and get 'attacked' at every opportunity, oddly by the Natural England brigade and other environmental groups.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/3566388/Engineer-...
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/earthnews/6386645...
Old articles but the fight goes on and on.

Local people will know how much has gone over the last few years and still no defences are being put up. Now they face a major challenge as the sea may sneak around the edge and swamp Southwold. At this point watch all the money get pumped into a major project.




A few years back some of the other houses were offered for sale for about £30,000 and the then moaned about purchasing property that had no hope of being saved. They did try the boo-hoo approach but if only they had spoke to the locals.


The changing coastline.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/suffolk/content/articles/2005...

Edited by Morningside on Tuesday 23 February 19:56