Overhangs are a civil matter. The window and penetrations are actual code violations. Not sure how that slid by.
All-the-pizza on

-turnip_the_beet- on
Always nice to see home on the front page. Makes the internet feel small.
This, however, is a perfect example of developers not giving a shit and trying to put houses together as close as they can.
FormerStuff on
Don’t forget when you go to pronounce “Louisville” that the correct way is to throw a bunch of marbles in your mouth and completely disregard half the vowels and consonants.
FCguyATL on
I’ve got $10 that there was some sort of surveying error or a planning error that slipped by plan’s reviewers.
djt246 on

The general contractor
oakgrove on
This breaks rule 4 as the image is clearly photoshopped. The (lack of) shadow on the house on the right doesn’t add up.
CeramicBean on
They’re just touching tips, nothing wrong with that.
Kawaboss on
So, if they get a survey crew to come and zone their land, which would have to cut off the corner of their house. And how much would they get from sueing the builders?
Jay105 on
The fact they put a barbecue there is hilarious, I mean in a burn down to houses kind of hilarious
honorspren000 on
Is this just not a detached garage? The mulch is crossing property lines too
DeliG on
I imagine it would be difficult to sell either of these houses.
17 Comments
Subzero lot line home.
Its pronounced Louisville. Not Louisville

“You might want to get a survey”
Fire breaks? Naw, we don’t need those.
Overhangs are a civil matter. The window and penetrations are actual code violations. Not sure how that slid by.

Always nice to see home on the front page. Makes the internet feel small.
This, however, is a perfect example of developers not giving a shit and trying to put houses together as close as they can.
Don’t forget when you go to pronounce “Louisville” that the correct way is to throw a bunch of marbles in your mouth and completely disregard half the vowels and consonants.
I’ve got $10 that there was some sort of surveying error or a planning error that slipped by plan’s reviewers.

The general contractor
This breaks rule 4 as the image is clearly photoshopped. The (lack of) shadow on the house on the right doesn’t add up.
They’re just touching tips, nothing wrong with that.
So, if they get a survey crew to come and zone their land, which would have to cut off the corner of their house. And how much would they get from sueing the builders?
The fact they put a barbecue there is hilarious, I mean in a burn down to houses kind of hilarious
Is this just not a detached garage? The mulch is crossing property lines too
I imagine it would be difficult to sell either of these houses.