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Hi all
I have scoured through many related threads and feel conflicted on whether my house may be experiencing subsidence. To try and expedite a long story - I purchased a property in 2019, didn't get a survey (previous house purchase had fallen through, my partner was 8 months pregnant, we were living in a flat coming to the end of its tenancy which had rising damp issues) and perhaps made a rash decision and went ahead with the purchase. I did get my brother-in-law who is a builder to check the house, the only comments he made were that some repointing needed doing. We are now very concerned we have purchased a house with subsidence/movement and are considering instructing a structural engineer to assess this. In the meantime, any expertise or advice would be greatly appreciated from this forum's community.
The house was built in 1982. It sits on clay soil. It had an extension built circa 1985, and planning permission was retrospectively granted in 1987 (can't find this on planning portal, but can find two subsequent applications for a single-story extension that were rejected in early 2000s).
When we moved in, we redecorated most of downstairs, which involved stripping wallpaper (feature walls) and there were no visible cracks in the plastering/walls. There were a few hairline cracks in the ceiling, and where the walls met the ceiling, upstairs.
1. We noticed when we moved in their was a dip in the floor, where the extension meets the original walls of the house, although this does not extend across the entire floor - it starts roughly 2 metres in. However, there is also rippling underneath the paper where the extension has been built. The coving has also cracked along the ceiling line in the area of the room that the extension has been built in.
I have attached pictures for reference (please ignore the attempts to hyperlink images):
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1FkERSVEY3df5u1Momc63AtgXaqSrP9R_?usp=sharing
a. (dip in carpet)
b. (cracking in coving in lounge, in the same area that extension has been built
c. Rippling in wallpaper where extension has been built
d/e/f. Pictures of outside wall - the bricks are a different colour, has this been repointed previously? Also, presence of some horizontal cracks mid-way up.
Upstairs, the floorboards in all rooms are loose/raised in certain areas, with some sagging in the hallway (I believe the original staircase was built into the living room, and was relocated by the original owners). There is also cracking along the ceiling-line, across stud walls and more solid walls.
g/h. Cracks extending around hallway
i. Cracks in bathroom
I'm aware that all houses experience some movement, and as one member states, houses built on clay literally dance. Any thoughts would be appreciated.
I have scoured through many related threads and feel conflicted on whether my house may be experiencing subsidence. To try and expedite a long story - I purchased a property in 2019, didn't get a survey (previous house purchase had fallen through, my partner was 8 months pregnant, we were living in a flat coming to the end of its tenancy which had rising damp issues) and perhaps made a rash decision and went ahead with the purchase. I did get my brother-in-law who is a builder to check the house, the only comments he made were that some repointing needed doing. We are now very concerned we have purchased a house with subsidence/movement and are considering instructing a structural engineer to assess this. In the meantime, any expertise or advice would be greatly appreciated from this forum's community.
The house was built in 1982. It sits on clay soil. It had an extension built circa 1985, and planning permission was retrospectively granted in 1987 (can't find this on planning portal, but can find two subsequent applications for a single-story extension that were rejected in early 2000s).
When we moved in, we redecorated most of downstairs, which involved stripping wallpaper (feature walls) and there were no visible cracks in the plastering/walls. There were a few hairline cracks in the ceiling, and where the walls met the ceiling, upstairs.
1. We noticed when we moved in their was a dip in the floor, where the extension meets the original walls of the house, although this does not extend across the entire floor - it starts roughly 2 metres in. However, there is also rippling underneath the paper where the extension has been built. The coving has also cracked along the ceiling line in the area of the room that the extension has been built in.
I have attached pictures for reference (please ignore the attempts to hyperlink images):
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1FkERSVEY3df5u1Momc63AtgXaqSrP9R_?usp=sharing
a. (dip in carpet)
b. (cracking in coving in lounge, in the same area that extension has been built
c. Rippling in wallpaper where extension has been built
d/e/f. Pictures of outside wall - the bricks are a different colour, has this been repointed previously? Also, presence of some horizontal cracks mid-way up.
Upstairs, the floorboards in all rooms are loose/raised in certain areas, with some sagging in the hallway (I believe the original staircase was built into the living room, and was relocated by the original owners). There is also cracking along the ceiling-line, across stud walls and more solid walls.
g/h. Cracks extending around hallway
i. Cracks in bathroom
I'm aware that all houses experience some movement, and as one member states, houses built on clay literally dance. Any thoughts would be appreciated.
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