China Naming Network - Solar terms knowledge - Does the law stipulate geomantic omen?

Does the law stipulate geomantic omen?

There is nothing feng shui. Only when the neighbor's housing construction causes substantial damage to your home, such as affecting the lighting, drainage, transportation and ventilation of your home, can you resort to the law. This is called "neighboring right" in law.

The General Principles of the Civil Law of People's Republic of China (PRC) and Article 83 of the Civil Law of People's Republic of China (PRC) stipulate that the neighboring parties of real estate should correctly handle the neighboring relations in terms of water interception, drainage, transportation, ventilation and lighting in the spirit of being conducive to production, convenient life, solidarity and mutual assistance, and fairness and rationality. If an obstacle or loss is caused to an adjacent party, the infringement shall be stopped, the obstacle removed and the loss compensated. The right to light is an adjacent right related to property ownership. It is not an unconditional absolute right, but a conditional relative right. In the process of urban construction and development, it is an inevitable result that new buildings block existing houses. The reasonable range of lighting changes brought by new buildings to existing houses should be based on relevant laws and regulations and the administrative license of planning and fire department. The new building should be a legal building that has gone through the relevant procedures of administrative examination and approval of planning, fire protection and other buildings, and the building spacing should meet the requirements. This legal new building is the legal protection of the existing buildings around. Under normal circumstances, the administrative examination and approval of planning fire protection fully considers the statutory requirements such as spacing, shielding and fire protection, and meets the sunshine time stipulated by the Ministry of Construction. Such a new house does not constitute an infringement of existing houses.

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