gerrko
2013-05-07 19:27:56
- #1
Hello,
I spoke today at the building authority regarding a building application. I can buy a plot of land in a village where no inner and outer area is defined. There is no development plan, statute, or similar that regulates anything. The advisor told me that the plot is not located in the inner area of the village and therefore the building application or preliminary building application will be rejected. My question is now: how can something be rejected with a reasoning that is not clearly defined?
But it gets even better! The neighboring house is also in the so-called outer area. When I asked the clerk about this, the answer was: a special permit or building permit should not have been granted!?
How can I best behave now to enforce a building permit (possibly legally)? If the building application is rejected, can I appeal it because 1. the determination of the areas is very obscure or carried out at discretion? 2. the neighboring house must be counted as part of the inner area and thus my plot would also be inner area (the clerk showed me the inner area with a ruler and used two other houses as starting points)? 3. I can do nothing because the building authority can do whatever it wants?
Thank you very much for your ideas or tips.
I spoke today at the building authority regarding a building application. I can buy a plot of land in a village where no inner and outer area is defined. There is no development plan, statute, or similar that regulates anything. The advisor told me that the plot is not located in the inner area of the village and therefore the building application or preliminary building application will be rejected. My question is now: how can something be rejected with a reasoning that is not clearly defined?
But it gets even better! The neighboring house is also in the so-called outer area. When I asked the clerk about this, the answer was: a special permit or building permit should not have been granted!?
How can I best behave now to enforce a building permit (possibly legally)? If the building application is rejected, can I appeal it because 1. the determination of the areas is very obscure or carried out at discretion? 2. the neighboring house must be counted as part of the inner area and thus my plot would also be inner area (the clerk showed me the inner area with a ruler and used two other houses as starting points)? 3. I can do nothing because the building authority can do whatever it wants?
Thank you very much for your ideas or tips.