Quarterly In Advance is published by Wedlake Bell’s Real Estate Team for our clients and contacts in the property world.
Please click here to read the digital flipbook of the full issue, or click the image below.
Contents
- ‘Dear Gemma‘ – Gemma Cook discusses how rising electricity costs can be managed between landlords and tenants
- ‘CGT on properties in a divorce‘ – a welcome change is on the horizon, as explained by Matthew Brunsdon-Tully
- ‘Welcome‘ – we welcome six new joiners to our real estate teams
- ‘The Building Safety Act 2022 Seminar’ – come and join us for a breakfast seminar on 12 October
- ‘A lender perspective on the new register of overseas entities‘ – Edward Hallam looks at how the Economic Crime Act will apply to lenders
- ‘The importance of environmental credentials‘ – George Cornell summarises many of the acronyms and helps us to make sense of them all
- ‘Highway to the Protest Zone‘ – the law of highways explained in the context of a recent Extinction Rebellion case by Harriet Gibby
- ‘Can a party lawfully terminate a building contract if cost inflation makes it commercially unviable‘ – Suzanne Reeves and Sarah Elliott suggest some options when a party to a building contract faces cost pressures due to inflation
- ‘Restrictive covenants, costs and other uncertainties‘ – restrictive covenants can restrict developments, but applications can be made to discharge or modify them. Gabriela Georgieva analyses a case where a developer was successful, on the most part
- ‘Electric Avenue – can we take it higher‘ – James So discusses how electric cars and their infrastructure are changing the development of properties
- ‘Split Reversions – half the lease for double the trouble‘ – what a split reversion is and the consequences that can apply explained by Schuyler Hillbery
- ‘Considerations for the acquisition or disposal of a property through an auction‘ – Barnaby Heap has some pointers for a buyer or a seller when it comes to auction deals
- ‘Spotting and responding to red flags‘ – The learnings from the KPMG and Carillion auditing scandal that could apply to the property industry by Hanah Cohen