Rented bedroom with no windows?

Rented bedroom with no windows?

0:06 AM, 13th June 2023, About 11 months ago 22

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Hello, A friend of mine has been renting a room in London for £1,250 a month and he has just told me it hasn’t got any windows – which I told him is illegal.

What is the best way to handle this situation as he wants to move out before the tenancy ends?

Is there any compensation/court case to be had in this situation?

Thank you,

Sam

 


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Comments

Blodwyn

16:28 PM, 13th June 2023, About 11 months ago

Reply to the comment left by NewYorkie at 13/06/2023 - 14:31
I never meant it to be 'political' and apologise if it seems otherwise. But we cannot ignore the real world.

NewYorkie

16:55 PM, 13th June 2023, About 11 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Smartermind at 13/06/2023 - 16:37
Everyone is entitled to their own views. When you say 'right wing comments', do you really mean comments you don't agree with?

Desmond

17:37 PM, 13th June 2023, About 11 months ago

Your friend is probably a student of capitalism or some such left field set of ideas. Us better educated folk know that such freedom of exchange is abhorrent. There must be rules and government departments and council employees to stop this happening. I mean, it doesn't cost us anything, does it?

David Rose

19:35 PM, 13th June 2023, About 11 months ago

Report to local council & talk to citizens advice about getting a remt repayment order. Irrespective of whether the tenant entered in to the agreement in full knowledge or not, the landlord, the professional in this agreement, should not have offered it for let. If they have breached this law, what else have they ignored.
The landlords commenting here that the tenant is just after compo should take a long hard look at them selves and realise that comments like these are exactly what has prompted the renter's reform bill.

Reluctant Landlord

8:57 AM, 14th June 2023, About 11 months ago

the guy who's renting make a choice to rent and he has an obligation to check out the property etc first. It would have been very clear there is no window from the start.
If HE has an issue with it now then he should just give notice and leave.

At the same time it sounds like it should not have been rented out in the first place. A lack of a window suggests not just a bit of naivity here.

If the tenant is proposing to move elsewhere then he might be best not to rock the boat and just leave by giving notice so he can get a good reference (if indeed he has been a good tenant). No harm done and it could work in the tenants best interests later on.

If he goes all out with RRO etc then it will get messy and he might find it comes back to bit him in the bum.

I say again at the end of the day the tenant CHOSE to rent this accommodation, so he should have called out the LL BEFORE he entered a contract. Renters also have a responsibility too!

Paul Shears

11:20 AM, 14th June 2023, About 11 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Desmond at 13/06/2023 - 17:37
Yes it most certainly does. The elimination of judgement and it's replacement by process.

Simon F

11:50 AM, 14th June 2023, About 11 months ago

Landlords all get tarred with same brush, so we want the dodgy ones brought to book. Seems like there are various issues here: conversion done without building regulations compliance - it's not a habitable room without a window - but have issues of ventilation and fire safety been mitigated? Is this an unlicenced mandatory HMO? If there's no protected fire escape route (all fire doors to the final exit and emergency lighting), or no mechanical ventilation refreshing air in the room then involve the council immediately, it's dangerous. If it just lacking natural light and tenant has use of a proper shared lounge with window that's not right, but far less critical. I would advise take pictures (room and escape route), draw a floorplan, tell council how many people live there, try get them to commit to urgent HHSRS inspection.

Blodwyn

16:18 PM, 14th June 2023, About 11 months ago

Reply to the comment left by NewYorkie at 13/06/2023 - 14:31
It is and should remain so. I was using Boris as an illustration.

Slooky

8:50 AM, 17th June 2023, About 11 months ago

Reply to the comment left by David Rose at 13/06/2023 - 19:35
"The landlords commenting here that the tenant is just after compo should take a long hard look at them selves and realise that comments like these are exactly what has prompted the renter's reform bill."
This is a harsh comment. We had tenants once who travelled a lot and went on numerous holidays so I asked them if they ever intended taking a 3 week holiday. If so, would they be happy for us to fit a new kitchen while they were away. I offered to show them the new (top range) kitchen and the new design before they needed to answer. However their response floored me. They said they would be happy to have a new kitchen but only if I paid them compensation! Is it any wonder that our default is _"trust no one"

Paul Shears

8:53 AM, 17th June 2023, About 11 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Slooky at 17/06/2023 - 08:50I had exactly the same thing, but with a £9500 bathroom! Astounding! So it never happened and I invested the money elsewhere. I got every detail planned out including a team of installers and after a couple of months of arranging all this, they asked for a month's rent cancellation!

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