The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Fire risk fears for homeowners on Kinross estate

Lathro Farm houses may not be properly fire-proofed

- SEAN O’NEILL

Homeowners at a controvers­ial Kinross developmen­t have been warned their houses may not be properly fire-proofed.

Lathro Farm resident Neil Duncan lambasted the crisis-hit estate’s developers Persimmon Homes following the latest in a slew of ongoing problems.

Owners received a letter this week saying timber cavity barriers in the roof may not have been properly installed, presenting a potential fire risk.

Mr Duncan called the letter “the icing on the cake” after enduring a sewage smell in his home and multiple call-outs to fix his faulty doors.

He said: “It’s been brutal. If you didn’t laugh you’d cry.

“The whole site is disgracefu­l and the customer care is just non-existent.”

A spokespers­on for Persimmon said: “(We) recently became aware that some timber frame properties at Lathro Meadows have not had cavity barriers correctly installed.

“As a responsibl­e company Persimmon Homes is undertakin­g precaution­ary action to extend its inspection­s.”

A homeowner at a crisis-hit Kinross estate has lambasted developers after residents were told their homes might not be properly fireproofe­d.

Neil Duncan bought his house at the Lathro Farm site from Persimmon Homes on August 30 last year and says he has had to put up with a litany of problems including the smell of raw sewage and inadequate insulation.

On Wednesday he received a letter from developers informing him that timber cavity barriers in his roof may not have been properly installed and that this presented a potential fire risk.

Mr Duncan said it felt like the last straw.

“It’s been brutal. If you didn’t laugh you’d cry,” he said.

“You’re lying there in your bed with your wife and your son in the house and they’re telling you not to worry.”

The maintenanc­e engineer said workers had been sent out repeatedly to fix a faulty back door, there was nowhere on the nearby streets for people to park and the sewage smell in the house was so strong he has stopped his grandchild­ren visiting on occasions.

“Our en suite smells of sewage and this letter yesterday was the icing on the cake,” he said.

“The whole site is disgracefu­l and the customer care is non-existent.”

The letter from Persimmon Homes told residents the firm had recently become aware that some cavity barriers had not been correctly installed and that it would be carrying out checks as a “precaution­ary measure”.

Earlier this month the company was fined £1,000 by Perth and Kinross Council over a breach of condition relating to tree protection on the site.

In June, the local authority fenced off streets at the estate, where homes start at £150,000, because they had been built without proper consent.

Days later the council warned owners the properties had been unlawfully occupied because the required documentat­ion was not in place.

A spokespers­on for Persimmon Homes said: “(We) recently became aware that some timber frame properties at Lathro Meadows have not had cavity barriers correctly installed.

“As a responsibl­e company Persimmon Homes is undertakin­g precaution­ary action to extend its inspection­s.”

The spokespers­on added that the developers were “completing works to the onsite drainage network to ensure that it conforms to Scottish Water standards for adoption” and that this should deal with the sewage smell.

Persimmon won consent for its 300home masterplan for the site four years ago and work is well under way on the first wave of houses.

The firm lodged fresh plans for nearly 200 homes in July, more than 80 more than it had originally envisaged for phase two of constructi­on.

Our en suite smells of sewage and this letter yesterday was the icing on the cake. The whole site is disgracefu­l and the customer care is nonexisten­t. NEIL DUNCAN

 ?? Picture: Kenny Smith. ?? Neil Duncan, who bought his house at the Lathro Farm site last year, received a letter from the developer earlier this week.
Picture: Kenny Smith. Neil Duncan, who bought his house at the Lathro Farm site last year, received a letter from the developer earlier this week.

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