Submitted by Needleroozer t3_11y76s3 in LifeProTips
drae- t1_jd7z2ap wrote
Reply to comment by calguy1955 in LPT: If you're buying a house still under construction, photograph everything before the sheetrock goes up. Knowing exactly where the pipes, wires, and ducts are may prove invaluable some day, and even if you never use them the next owner will appreciate it. by Needleroozer
I'm an architectural technician. I literally design and build homes for a living. One of my primary tasks is to submit and obtain approval for planning and permits.
Yes, the city absolutely has a copy of the plans on file. For over a decade I griped and complained about lack of digital submission of plan, physical was required specifically because the city retains copies and didn't have the digital infrastructure in place to store electronic copies long term. My city installed this infrastructure only in about 2018.
Further I have done a number of renovations of old buildings. Our primary focus is infill and intensifying neighbourhoods, usually brownfield sites like old mills and factories. I've gone to the city on a number of occasions for plans. They generally had everything post 1950, and has spotty coverage on stuff between 1910 and 1950.
I literally have a print of an old factory plan framed behind me, and I got said copy from the city.
So unless I'm a movie character and don't know it, you absolutely can get copies from city Hall in any municipality I've worked in.
calguy1955 t1_jd8748p wrote
I suppose it depends on the city or county. I worked doing due diligence for real estate transactions throughout California for over 20 years and the best I could ever find were simple site plans and maybe an elevation. No structural plans were ever saved. Maybe in todays digital world they are available but there’s nothing for the old buildings.
drae- t1_jd8ep67 wrote
>Maybe in todays digital world they are available but there’s nothing for the old buildings.
Again, I literally have a print from a 100 year old factory behind my desk, which I sourced from my municipalities building department.
As I mentioned, I couldn't submit digitally for years specifically because they needed a paper copy for record.
In my experience if a permit was pulled for construction and municipality is organized they have a copy and can generally find it. Bigger cities stored it on microfilm. Of course some cities are shit shows and not organized at all. In my current jurisdiction the government responsible for planning items is the county, but for building items its the Town. One of the factories I renovated the fire department had copies of plans, the factory was old enough to predate the building department but not the fire department. Barking up the correct tree is half the battle.
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