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An architect from East Lothian has been fined 1,500 euros for designing a hoax that appears to have compatibility with his client’s land.
Alan Sheerin measured a dressage in the village of Belhaven before getting drawings ready for a new house on the site. The proposed hoax received a design permit and the site was sold to new owners, who liked the design and intended to build it.
But when a builder came to see the site, the owners were told it was too small for the house granted.
The plot was deficient in the plans of the site, which means that the house was much smaller in the plans than it would have been if it had been built.
The new owners now have a design permit for an L-shaped hoax, they have fewer rooms than the T-shaped hoax designed through Sheerin. It also deals with more hoaxes on the lawn and leaves fewer hoaxes to park than Sheerin’s erroneous plans.
The site’s owners told the ARB that, by Sheerin’s mistake, they had overpaid for the site and would have a lower charge than they intended to remove.
Sheerin admitted that he had erred in transposing the plans and that this constituted serious incompetence.
The ARB Ethics Committee, which held a video link hearing, noted that Sheerin is probably not the maximum to copy the error because he is now retired. The committee agreed to amend Sheerin to 1,500 euros.
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