How bad is this?

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Two semi detached Edwardian villas in Liverpool turned in to flats decades ago. Pictures are of roof at my house with wooden capping board sitting along edge of slates. This is a design common to houses of this region and period. Second picture shows neighbours roof after replacement of wooden fascias, barge boards, etc for plastic. Capping boards have not been replaced and existing slates seperated so that they sat flush on the edge. Is this the workmanship of cowboy builders and what could be the consequences of leaving it like this? I'm worried because our Freeholder is intent on having the same work done to our property.[GALLERY=media, 104019]9 Greenbank by Leaseholder9 posted 22 Feb 2020 at 4:19 AM[/GALLERY][GALLERY=media, 104018]11 Greenbank by Leaseholder9 posted 22 Feb 2020 at 4:16 AM[/GALLERY]
 
I'll say you have better roofing knowledge than the cb's!
Don't do it cause it will cause leaks and drafts.
 
I'm worried because our Freeholder is intent on having the same work done to our property.
If you will contribute to works via a service charge (ie you have a typical lease) then as part of the s20 consultation you should be given the opportunity to nominate your own contractors for quotes.
 
If you will contribute to works via a service charge (ie you have a typical lease) then as part of the s20 consultation you should be given the opportunity to nominate your own contractors for quotes.

Thanks. I know the process but unfortunately no reputable roofers we've spoken to are willing to give a quote without first performing an inspection from scaffolding....because much of the woodwork visible from ground level (including some large pieces that have fallen off over the past year) is rotten and they need to establish the extent of the rot.
 
both are rubbish. yours has the timber hiding the fact the slates are short of the verge (common or not its poor detailing and the timber wont out last a slate verge) the other pulled the slates to try and make the verge both not great and needless.
 
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