What ON EARTH were they thinking. This is so insane. They would have to drag me kicking and screaming to pull this one off.
[FONT face=Tahoma size=4]After 117 years, a Vancouver house is forced to move eight inches[/FONT]
[img class=thumbnail id=story_photo style="WIDTH: 203px; HEIGHT: 140px" height=240 alt="This tiny cottage on East Georgia near Jackson, which probably dates to 1892, was found by city officials discovered to be eight inches over the property line to the east. The city made homeowners Amos Hertzman and Caitlin Pencarrick pick it up and move it back on their lot." src="vny!://a123.g.akamai.net/f/123/12465/1d/www.timescolonist.com/after+years+vancouver+house+forced+move+eight+inches/1610004/1609663.bin?size=620x400" width=419 border=0] [img class=thumbnail id=story_photo style="WIDTH: 196px; HEIGHT: 141px" height=224 alt="One-month-old Posey takes a nap in her mom, Caitlin Pencarrick's arms as two-year-old Bennett and dad, Amos Hertzman, vist their home which is still under renovation. The tiny cottage on East Georgia near Jackson, which probably dates to 1892, was found by city officials discovered to be eight inches over the property line to the east. The city made homeowners Hertzman and Pencarrick pick it up and move it back on their lot." src="vny!://a123.g.akamai.net/f/123/12465/1d/www.timescolonist.com/after+years+vancouver+house+forced+move+eight+inches/1610004/1609837.bin?size=620x400" width=399 border=0]
VANCOUVER -- Strathcona is Vancouver's oldest neighbourhood, with many houses dating to the 1880s and 1890s.
Houses from this era tend to be "non-conforming." In city-speak, this means buildings that don't conform to modern zoning, or code. Often the city relaxes modern regulations for homeowners, but every once in awhile, renovating an old house causes them fits.
This is the case with a tiny cottage on East Georgia near Jackson. In the course of restoring the house, which probably dates to 1892, city officials discovered it was eight inches over the property line to the east.
The city placed a stop-work order on the renos, and made homeowners Amos Hertzman and Caitlin Pencarrick pick it up and move it back on their lot. The cost was about $6,000, but the inconvenience was just as costly — the couple recently had a baby, and the delay means they won't be able to move back into their house for a few months.
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