Deflexor
New member
I moved onto this property 2 years ago, 6.3 acres with a single wide near the road and the main house about 200 yards back. This would become a book if I tried to explain everything that was/is wrong with this place.
After spending the first year hauling off all the garbage and trying to fix all the problems, we decided it was taking too long and costing too much to polish a pile of junk. We decided to take a different route, go back into debt and have a new home built.
The single wide was demolished and a new home built in its place. We lived in the original home until the new one was finished.
County zoning rules for a "secondary dwelling unit" restrict the square footage. Recently the rules were changed so the SDU can be 1/2 the size of the primary home. The new home is now the primary and the old place is the SDU. Problem is the original house (SDU) is now too big.
The original house is on a slope and two level (some would call the lower level a daylight basement) and is pier and beam. The lower level has a large bedroom, bathroom/laundry, kitchen/dining room, and living room with storage under the stairs. The upper level has a single wide trailer (14 ft x 64 ft) in the center of it with an 8 ft wide hallway down the full length on one side and partitioned dining, pantry, laundry, and entry down the other side (extending out 6 ft for a total width of 28 ft). The entire upper level has a metal roof with no insulation in the "attic" except the original that is in the single wide. Only one window in the enclosed single wide from the master bedroom on one end opens to the outside, the windows from the other two bedrooms, the bathroom, and the kitchen open into the hallway on the opposite side.
The lower level is well withing the county restriction. After speaking with the county officials I have been told that I can keep the upper level as storage if I remove cooking, cleaning/bathing, and bedrooms. I was also told I could keep heat and lights in this area.
........................................................................
Article 4.3 Accessory Dwellings
Habital space shall include all enclosed areas used for living, cooking, eating, sanitation, and sleeping.
..........................................................................
I emailed the Chief Building Official asking the following.
Can plumbing be capped off or does it need to be removed, and or, disconnected from service.
Can electrical be capped off or does it need to be removed, and or, disconnected from service, ie. 220 volt outlet for kitchen range?
Do I need to remove cabinets or can I just remove faucets and sinks?
What constitutes a sleeping area?
I never received a response and believing that the squeaky wheel gets greased I have not tried again hoping to delay the inevitable to give me time to complete this before they start fining me. Most of the original house was done without permits, or to code. The plumbing is wrong and the electrical is scary. I am hoping to correct the problems as I go.
Searches on the web only tell how to increase square footage not decrease. I would like to do this with a minimum of cost and time. I am willing to tear out the floors seal off the doors lay in insulation and call it an attic if I have to. Can I just lift out the 2 toilets and cap off the closet flange? Can I lift the sinks out of the counters and leave it at that? If I take off the doors is the room no longer a bedroom? Do I need to remove the outlets for the range and dryer?
I would gladly accept any ideas and suggestions.
After spending the first year hauling off all the garbage and trying to fix all the problems, we decided it was taking too long and costing too much to polish a pile of junk. We decided to take a different route, go back into debt and have a new home built.
The single wide was demolished and a new home built in its place. We lived in the original home until the new one was finished.
County zoning rules for a "secondary dwelling unit" restrict the square footage. Recently the rules were changed so the SDU can be 1/2 the size of the primary home. The new home is now the primary and the old place is the SDU. Problem is the original house (SDU) is now too big.
The original house is on a slope and two level (some would call the lower level a daylight basement) and is pier and beam. The lower level has a large bedroom, bathroom/laundry, kitchen/dining room, and living room with storage under the stairs. The upper level has a single wide trailer (14 ft x 64 ft) in the center of it with an 8 ft wide hallway down the full length on one side and partitioned dining, pantry, laundry, and entry down the other side (extending out 6 ft for a total width of 28 ft). The entire upper level has a metal roof with no insulation in the "attic" except the original that is in the single wide. Only one window in the enclosed single wide from the master bedroom on one end opens to the outside, the windows from the other two bedrooms, the bathroom, and the kitchen open into the hallway on the opposite side.
The lower level is well withing the county restriction. After speaking with the county officials I have been told that I can keep the upper level as storage if I remove cooking, cleaning/bathing, and bedrooms. I was also told I could keep heat and lights in this area.
........................................................................
Article 4.3 Accessory Dwellings
Habital space shall include all enclosed areas used for living, cooking, eating, sanitation, and sleeping.
..........................................................................
I emailed the Chief Building Official asking the following.
Can plumbing be capped off or does it need to be removed, and or, disconnected from service.
Can electrical be capped off or does it need to be removed, and or, disconnected from service, ie. 220 volt outlet for kitchen range?
Do I need to remove cabinets or can I just remove faucets and sinks?
What constitutes a sleeping area?
I never received a response and believing that the squeaky wheel gets greased I have not tried again hoping to delay the inevitable to give me time to complete this before they start fining me. Most of the original house was done without permits, or to code. The plumbing is wrong and the electrical is scary. I am hoping to correct the problems as I go.
Searches on the web only tell how to increase square footage not decrease. I would like to do this with a minimum of cost and time. I am willing to tear out the floors seal off the doors lay in insulation and call it an attic if I have to. Can I just lift out the 2 toilets and cap off the closet flange? Can I lift the sinks out of the counters and leave it at that? If I take off the doors is the room no longer a bedroom? Do I need to remove the outlets for the range and dryer?
I would gladly accept any ideas and suggestions.