
I'm being forced to tear down my loft conversion – my neighbours call it a ‘monstrosity' but I'm going to fight back
WRECKING BAWL I'm being forced to tear down my loft conversion – my neighbours call it a 'monstrosity' but I'm going to fight back
A WOMAN who spent thousands renovating her Victorian home has been ordered to tear down her loft conversion after it was branded a "monstrosity".
Rozia Hussian, 43, built a large extension on top of her 125-year-old terraced property in Worcester.
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Neighbours have called Rozia Hussian's loft conversion a 'monstrosity'
Credit: SWNS
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Retrospective plans for the Worcester build have been rejected
Credit: SWNS
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Hussain spent thousands renovating the Victorian home
Credit: SWNS
Records show the mid-terraced house was bought for £100,000 in 2003 and pictures show the outside was in a shabby condition with peeling paint and chipped brick work.
Over the last four years, the three-bedroom house on Wyld's Lane, has undergone a complete makeover and according to Rightmove it is now worth up to £320,000.
A wall and intercom system has been installed at the front of the house while a large dormer was built on top of the two-storey house.
Mrs Hussain now faces having to demolish the dormer after Worcester City Council rejected her retrospective planning application.
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The council stated: "By virtue of its size, design and position, the addition of the large box dormer to the front of the property results in detrimental impact and creates significant harm to the character and appearance of the existing property and wider street scene in which it sits.
"The dormer at Wylds Lane is much more visually intrusive than the approved, well-designed, more subtle addition."
Mrs Hussain, who owns a newsagents in the city, said: "I don't know anything about the planning application being rejected.
"I don't think it looks too big."
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Her neighbours have been mixed in their reaction to the council decision.
One said: "I think the house looks much better now.
Our pretty town has become a ghetto plagued by machete-wielding yobs
"It was in a terrible state a few years ago but it now looks modern and clean.
"The dormer doesn't really bother me but I think some people are concerned because it looks right onto their properties."
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Another resident, who lives nearby in a similar property, said: "A few years ago I applied to have a dormer on my house but it was refused.
"The reason the council gave was because it would not be in keeping with the area or sympathetic to the age and heritage of the property.
"In my view I just think that it would be grossly unfair if this woman was allowed to have a large dormer on her property when I was not.
"I mean the extension is very big. It looks like an executive box you get at Premier League football grounds.
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"When my friend visited he asked what the monstrosity was on one of the houses so it's clearly noticeable to people."
Mrs Hussain has three months to tear down the dormer or face enforcement action.
A city spokesperson said: "An enforcement notice was served on 17 June that comes into effect on 17 July.
"This requires the applicant to remove the dormer and restore the roof or adapt the current dormer so that it complies with the planning permission given.
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"They have three months to carry out the works.
"They have until 17 July to appeal against the notice."
What to do if you're in a property row with the council
Know your rights
Review your tenancy agreement, lease, or ownership documents to understand your rights and the council's responsibilities.
Submit concerns in writing
Raise any issues formally via email or letter. A written record will help if the matter needs to be escalated later.
Use the council's complaints process
All councils are required to have a formal complaints procedure. Details are typically available on the council's website.
Seek independent advice
Organisations such as Citizens Advice and Shelter offer free guidance on housing disputes and may be able to assist with legal next steps.
Contact the Housing Ombudsman
If the council fails to resolve the issue, complaints can be escalated to the Housing Ombudsman Service, which is free, impartial, and able to investigate unresolved housing matters.
Keep detailed records
Maintain copies of all correspondence, photographs of any issues (such as repairs), and notes from phone calls to support your case.

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Daily Mirror
3 days ago
- Daily Mirror
Men paid to dig out holes full of poo in grim and smelly job
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Nght soil workers, or gong farmers carted away the city's filth from 200,000 festering cesspits and outdoor privies, to be used as fertiliser. 'There was no integrated sewerage network system, so all the dung heaps had to be dug out by gong men,' explains Dr Dave Musgrove, content director of BBC History Magazine and the HistoryExtra podcast. 'It was an unpleasant job but reasonably well-paid, because the excrement was valuable. If you weren't rich, you had your pit, you dug it out, and it was taken away in carts and used for manuring fields.' The 17th century diarist Samuel Pepys wrote extensively about his chamber pot and whether it had been emptied into the cesspit beneath the house by his servant. 'He also used to relieve himself in the fireplace,' says Dr Musgrove. 'But he tells a story where he goes down into his basement and is very disappointed to step into a great heap of turds, because his neighbour hasn't emptied his pit and it's leaked into his.' A 19th century population explosion meant the night soil men couldn't keep up with the volume of fecal matter, and piles of untreated human waste either leaked or were dumped on the shores of the Thames, turning it into an open sewer. Along with human corpses and rotting vegetation in the waterways, this was a toxic disaster waiting to happen. 'By the early 19th century, more people were wanting to use this up-and-coming toilet flushing technology. But it meant the city had lots more liquid matter,' explains the historian. 'So they start digging sewers, digging underground or even just overground ones, and it's going into rivers and the water system is becoming contaminated.' Before 1875, people had no idea that dirty water caused the deadly cholera epidemics that raged in the country's crowded cities. Dr Dave Musgrove, who also hosts HistoryExtra Toilets Through Time podcast series, says: 'Throughout this period we get a slew of public health legislation, where people start to recognise that it is an issue.' Frightened city dwellers blamed the thousands of deaths on the foul miasma that hung heavy over London and other cities. In 1853 outbreaks of cholera in London, Gateshead and Newcastle killed over 10,000 people. The following year another epidemic hit South London After one particularly virulent outbreak on August 31, 1854, when 127 people living around Broad Street in Soho died, a local anaesthetist, John Snow, suspected contaminated water was to blame, but nobody believed him. He traced it to a water pump on Broad Street, where a child had been taken ill with cholera and its nappies had been cleaned in a cesspool of water close to the Broad Street well. The local parish agreed to remove the pump handle as an experiment – and the spread of cholera was stalled. 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After the Romans leave things go downhill. 'In the early medieval period British society sort of fractures, but excavations in Coppergate in York in the 1980s found evidence of Viking toilets – and the famous Jorvik turd.' The Vikings lived in tightly packed areas, and had yards where people just dug holes and did their business, with little wicker dividing walls. Dr Musgrove adds: 'You can see the mineralised coprolite Viking 9th century poo at the museum, where they've recreated those toilets with Bogar who's been sitting on this loo for 40 years.' The Jorvik turd also tells us a lot about the Viking diet. 'It's quite a big poo – 5cm wide by 20cm long,' chuckles Dr Musgrove. 'Whoever produced it enjoyed a diet rich in bread and meat but not many vegetables.' In the Middle Ages toilets were holes in the ground in communal spaces over a river or a stream. 'They were basically doing their business into the water,' says the historian. 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'If there was something you disagreed with, you might offer that to people to wipe their bottom.' Before that, the early Romans loved a communal khazi and it's thought they also shared a communal sponge. But Dr Musgrove admits: 'We don't actually know whether the sponge on a stick was used for wiping Roman bottoms – or for cleaning the toilets.' Moss was very popular in the Middle Ages for bum wiping. 'There was a thriving trade in bringing moss into medieval towns because it was a valuable product – nice and soft on your backside. Archaeologists have also found evidence of rags in toilet soil.' But the hardcore Tudors used 'oyster and mussel shells – more for scraping than wiping,' according to Dr Musgrove. Alarmingly, holly has also been found in some cesspits. 'That would have made the user quite anxious,' the historian says.


Scottish Sun
4 days ago
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Hero off-duty firefighter rushed to save kids when school trip bus overturned leaving 2 dead & 21 injured
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BBC News
4 days ago
- BBC News
Victorian drinking fountain restored on Croydon's Surrey Street
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