Does a developer hold any responsibility for a neighborhood that contains a natural spring underneath, creating community wide issues? We're learning that our entire community has groundwater issues and foundation issues.
I'm curious if the builders in our subdivision have any recourse to go after the developer? Or is this a situation where nobody could have reasonably determined there would be issues?
I've yet to have problems but I'm sitting on a time bomb. Every home across the street required french drains after they moved in drain water from their backyards out to the street thru the curb. The homes behind them are higher so the back fence is on a retaining wall.
The homes behind me all required french drains for the same reason (my side of the street is higher than the homes behind).
Essentially - if you're on the northern side of a street (door faces south), you're yard is the drain for your backdoor neighbors groundwater. My back fence sits on the top of a retaining wall. To me the fence goes down to ground level - to the home behind me it starts on a 4foot stone wall.
My my next door neighbor's pool popped up on 1 end and needed to be repaired. The home on the other side of him just started having its foundation repaired. A home at the end of the street had it foundation repaired last summer. I've read online that several others throughout the hood have already had foundations repaired. I sometimes wonder if one day my pool will fall into yard behind me when the retaining wall collapses that'd be a fun ride.
The home 2 doors down was completed only 1 month before mine, and the home at the end of the street only 1 year earlier. We built and moved in the fall of 2019. i.e. - this is a brand new neighborhood.
Fortunately the builders are covering the costs using the 10 year structural warranty. More and more my wife has been on my ass for us to move while we can still print money on the sell. She's concerned we'll either dodge the bullet until after our structural warranty runs out, our homes will eventually plummet in value due to the community wide issues, or both.
I'm curious if the builders in our subdivision have any recourse to go after the developer? Or is this a situation where nobody could have reasonably determined there would be issues?
I've yet to have problems but I'm sitting on a time bomb. Every home across the street required french drains after they moved in drain water from their backyards out to the street thru the curb. The homes behind them are higher so the back fence is on a retaining wall.
The homes behind me all required french drains for the same reason (my side of the street is higher than the homes behind).
Essentially - if you're on the northern side of a street (door faces south), you're yard is the drain for your backdoor neighbors groundwater. My back fence sits on the top of a retaining wall. To me the fence goes down to ground level - to the home behind me it starts on a 4foot stone wall.
My my next door neighbor's pool popped up on 1 end and needed to be repaired. The home on the other side of him just started having its foundation repaired. A home at the end of the street had it foundation repaired last summer. I've read online that several others throughout the hood have already had foundations repaired. I sometimes wonder if one day my pool will fall into yard behind me when the retaining wall collapses that'd be a fun ride.
The home 2 doors down was completed only 1 month before mine, and the home at the end of the street only 1 year earlier. We built and moved in the fall of 2019. i.e. - this is a brand new neighborhood.
Fortunately the builders are covering the costs using the 10 year structural warranty. More and more my wife has been on my ass for us to move while we can still print money on the sell. She's concerned we'll either dodge the bullet until after our structural warranty runs out, our homes will eventually plummet in value due to the community wide issues, or both.
Staff - take out the trash.