JB740i
Well-known member
I am learning cad. I fiddled around with the numbers that you have in several posts.
I came up with this drawing. I think it is righter than wronger.
You're in BIG TROUBLE.
There lots of blame to go around. YOU and your contractor should have realized that this garage is way to big relative to the house in this district. You are wanting a commercial size garage in a residential area.
You contractor's comment that he didn't know the code is BS. Common sense should have told him that this was big for the area. You were probably showing site plans and top views of the garage. You ommitted side views.
You knew it was getting bigger. Didn't you noticed that what you wanted was huge for the neighborhood. You mentioned there was an 8 foot drop to the rear neighbor. He has to look at a almost a three story building.
Initially I had posted that you might be able to work on a compromise. You went so far beyond the boundaries of being a good neighbor and citizen that your case is not defendable.
Your campaign to make you look like the underdog persecuted by the inept government just won't cut it.
You are going to have to shorten it.
You definitely have to canvas the neighbors and see if you can get support for this size or a slightly reduced size. Right now it is so far out, my guess is that they will want it to meet the code.
BTW the county will permanently fix the problem so it never happens again. Every one will now have to submit full certified plans with all views and cross sections of buildings on the lots.
I apologize for being forceful, but, you have to realize you are not a "victim", you are a guy who wanted a big garage (WE ALL DO) and it just went horribly wrong.
But aren't you missing the fact that they had Very recently changed the code to say the accessory structure couldn't be taller than the house? I don't think it mattered the square footage just the roof height.

sloooooowwwwwllllyyyy...was just making sure

