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MarkII,
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Question
MarkII
Neighbours house built in the 1970's, the attached garage is within a couple of metres of the tree, which would have been over 100 years old when the house was built. Built on clay sloping away from the tree and with 6ft retaining walls other side of the property and another large Beech tree on that side.
No damage or subsidence occurred until suffering cracking during last 6 months of 2022. (ABI has identified 2022 as the worst subsidence claims issue UK wide since 2006 - due to drought)
My neighbours claims management company appointed structural engineers and an arborist to assess the situation.
The cracking in the house appears to be in the middle of the house which is away from my tree and from the movement assessment, the main movement seems to be at the opposite end of the property with next to no movement right next to the tree.
The first course of action is to insist on the tree's removal with an aggressive couple of letters.
The engineer reports suggest that the tree 'contributes' to the issue, not suggesting it is the main cause however the arborist states the tree as the main cause. Also mentioned by the engineer is that the house has insufficient foundations and once the tree removed, will require further monitoring and probably underpinning anyway.
Does anyone experienced any similar situations and can offer any advice/guidance i.e. how fast do Beech's grow? Are there any alternatives to removing/can it be chopped back bit to reduce water consumption without losing it's stature? If it is removed, is it likely to cause more issues as it's 160 year old root base declines? (I am estimating it's age based on Mitchells rule with a girth of 330cm)
We're in an AONB, conservation areas and the tree has a TPO on it, in addition to being widely loved by the community (applied to have it dead-wooded and the parish council turned up at my door!) and is visible throughout the valley when in leaf.
Just feels like the insurer is trying to offload the liability onto my insurance and remove this grand old copper Beech to try to avoid paying for fixing the insufficient foundations, any advice or guidance would be gratefully received!
Pics show the tree in question, the attached double garage of the neighbours on the right
Many thanks
Mark
Edited by MarkII
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Mark Bolam
It’s not the tree. It’s the fuckwits who built the garage near a 100 year old tree.
peds
What a beauty, lucky to have a tree like that in your garden. I can't offer any specific advice on the tree situation, but keep in mind that if you wee on a plate or a baking tray then fre
peds
Ah jeez, I think the fella can distinguish between some serious professional advice and some good-natured commiserations over the behaviour of what is clearly a Grade A bell-end neighbour, especially
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