Off Topic
Are you a QOTWer? Do you want to start a thread that isn't a direct answer to the current QOTW? Then this place, gentle poster, is your friend.
( , Sun 1 Apr 2001, 1:00)
Are you a QOTWer? Do you want to start a thread that isn't a direct answer to the current QOTW? Then this place, gentle poster, is your friend.
( , Sun 1 Apr 2001, 1:00)
« Go Back | See The Full Thread
Soft furnishings make a room along with the other "little touches" otherwise it looks stark and unlived in
Alt: all meats are excellent and have a place at my table
( , Tue 3 Apr 2012, 14:03, 1 reply, 13 years ago)
Alt: all meats are excellent and have a place at my table
( , Tue 3 Apr 2012, 14:03, 1 reply, 13 years ago)
That's more of a major feature rather than finishing touch
i will also accept other hard or softwoods
( , Tue 3 Apr 2012, 14:13, Reply)
i will also accept other hard or softwoods
( , Tue 3 Apr 2012, 14:13, Reply)
there's just been a big case on that - a guy was allowed to keep his £100,000 oak flooring
because of a technicality in the licence provision that waived the requirement for carpets in the flats in the lease.
tru fax.
( , Tue 3 Apr 2012, 14:38, Reply)
because of a technicality in the licence provision that waived the requirement for carpets in the flats in the lease.
tru fax.
( , Tue 3 Apr 2012, 14:38, Reply)
I'm confused
This is someone renting a property who is now allowed to take out all the oak flooring and put it somewhere else?
( , Tue 3 Apr 2012, 14:40, Reply)
This is someone renting a property who is now allowed to take out all the oak flooring and put it somewhere else?
( , Tue 3 Apr 2012, 14:40, Reply)
no
guy bought a long lease (like 99 or 125 years long which is almost always what people mean when they say "bought a flat") and then installed the flooring. owner/tenant of flat underneath complained about the noise and went for an injunction requiring him to remove it and lay carpets. failed.
( , Tue 3 Apr 2012, 14:43, Reply)
guy bought a long lease (like 99 or 125 years long which is almost always what people mean when they say "bought a flat") and then installed the flooring. owner/tenant of flat underneath complained about the noise and went for an injunction requiring him to remove it and lay carpets. failed.
( , Tue 3 Apr 2012, 14:43, Reply)
Can building control not do something on the grounds of acoustic buffering between flats?
( , Tue 3 Apr 2012, 14:45, Reply)
( , Tue 3 Apr 2012, 14:45, Reply)
i'd have thought it was a landlord's issue mostly
would have to be seriously bad otherwise
( , Tue 3 Apr 2012, 14:45, Reply)
would have to be seriously bad otherwise
( , Tue 3 Apr 2012, 14:45, Reply)
« Go Back | See The Full Thread