Purchase building plot, blind spot

  • Erstellt am 2020-11-24 18:16:30

VanessaJa

2020-11-24 18:16:30
  • #1
Hello dear builders,

we have been looking for a plot for a long time, and now a building gap in the neighborhood is for sale. We have some questions, maybe someone can help us here.. it’s about this double plot: it does not need to be newly divided but has to be remeasured due to the garage.. we would like to have the boundary stones moved as follows (gray area). This creates a small “blind spot” behind the garage which is no problem for the seller, but is there any problem with this? Does anyone know? Since the corner will no longer be accessible (no access to it). It will be allocated to the seller.. I would be very happy about an answer. What do you think about the plot? Width 18 meters, length about 30, roughly 610 sqm.
 

Mycraft

2020-11-24 18:21:34
  • #2
Don't see any problems there now.
 

11ant

2020-11-24 19:49:19
  • #3
Do I understand correctly: the seller (owns both parcels, wants to leave his garage that stands on both) sells you 154/55 and wants to reduce it so much that it now ends "straight" in line with the back of the garages? - why do you think it does not have to be divided?
 

VanessaJa

2020-11-24 19:58:06
  • #4

I probably lack the expertise for that, we were told that the properties are already divided... it may be that I am mistaken with the terminology... exactly, we would buy 154/55 and the property would have to be remeasured because of the garage. Or that is what the seller wants. At the top, this alignment creates a blind spot.
 

11ant

2020-11-24 20:08:17
  • #5
Oh, I see. He had left the parcels uncombined, so from that perspective they wouldn’t have to be divided. But he wants to keep the garage standing and adjust the boundary line accordingly. What you’re talking about is the tiny corner between the fence and the rear left corner of the garage in the direction of travel? Not much leaves will blow there. For painting the garage at this corner (as well as on its backside), he will come over to you (it’s called hammer strike and ladder rights, he says he will notify you two weeks in advance, he mustn’t leave his scaffolding lying around lazily and has to leave everything clean afterwards). That’s completely normal neighbor law, which the legislature already thought of back in the Kaiser era or even earlier. I don’t see anything there that should cause anyone any worries.
 

VanessaJa

2020-11-24 20:13:10
  • #6
Exactly the rear left corner in the direction of travel, okay I understand. But what happens now if I basically build my garage against his and there is no path anymore?
 

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