Building Numbers Act 2025
§1 Purpose
An Act to permit His Majesty’s Government to reform building numbers on roads to introduce consistency and enforce standards in a manner that minimises disruption and long-term confusion.
§2 Definitions
- ”Building” is defined as any property located beside one or more roads that is said to belong to one road as judged by its street address.
- ”Street address” refers to a unique identifier for a building assigned by a local Council or His Majesty’s Government that is denoted by a house number or name, a street, a city, and a country.
- ”Road” and “street” is defined as a flat strip of concrete or other standardised building material that is optionally painted with markings to denote lanes.
- ”City” is defined as a metropolitan area recognised by His Majesty’s government with defined borders.
- ”Pavement” refers to a strip of concrete or other standardised building material placed parallel to and touching a road for the purposes of allowing pedestrians to walk on it.
- ”Mailbox” refers to an upwards-facing barrel placed on top of a singular fence and with a sign denoting the street address placed on the side of the barrel.
- This Act uses all Defininitions of the Definitions Act 2025.
§3 Buildings and Streets
- Each road within the bounds of a city SHOULD be named an arbitrary name followed by either “street”, “road”, “lane”, or “avenue”.
- Every road classed as a single carriageway MUST contain a pavement on at least one side of the road for at least a third of of its total length.
- Every building SHOULD have a standardised mailbox within reach of a pavement and MUST NOT obstruct the pavement in any manner.
- A building MAY omit a mailbox entirely if they receive permission from the local Council or His Majesty’s Government.
- An individual who omits a mailbox without prior consultation in one or more of their properties shall be guilty of an offence which carries a fine between £100 and £500.
- If a court in coordination with the local Council decides that the omission is unlawful, a Mailbox Placement Order MUST be written, mandating the installation of a mailbox within 28 days.
- The local Countil SHOULD offer to pay for the cost of purchasing and installing the mailbox.
- An entity who fails to install a mailbox after the Mailbox Placement Order expires is guilty of an offence which carries a fine between £5,000 and £15,000.
- An entity who fails to install a mailbox after the Mailbox Placement Order expires is guilty of an offence which carries a fine between £5,000 and £15,000.
- If a court in coordination with the local Council instead decides that the omission is lawful, the fine MAY be written off, in which case the payment is returned to the accused.
- A lawful omission as found in §3.2.3 MUST NOT be kept in record of any nature by any government department, including but not limited to courts or police departments.
- If the local Council believes that a mailbox is in an invalid location and cannot be reasonably relocated, the local Council SHOULD write a Mailbox Removal Order.
- If a court in coordination with the local Council finds the Council’s Mailbox Removal Order to be in error, the council must pay damages totaling £500.
- If the Council or any other entity removed the mailbox prior to this finding, the Council MUST reinstall the mailbox and pay said installation.
- If an entity fails to remove the mailbox after the Mailbox Removal Order expires, the local Council MAY forcefully remove the mailbox.
- If a court in coordination with the local Council finds the Council’s Mailbox Removal Order to be in error, the council must pay damages totaling £500.
- If the local Council finds that a mailbox is in an invalid location but can be easily moved to a valid one without significant cost, the Council MUST write a Mailbox Movement Order.
- The Council SHOULD offer to pay for the costs of moving the mailbox.
- The Mailbox Placement Order, the Mailbox Movement Order, and the Mailbox Removal Order MUST expire no less than 28 days after the Order is sent.
- Any Council who fails to provide sufficient expiry for a Mailbox Placement Order MUST immediately install the mailbox and pay for installation.
- Any Council who fails to provide sufficient expiry for a Mailbox Removal Order MUST immediately either:
- Send another Mailbox Removal order with sufficient expiry, or;
- Reinstall the mailbox and pay for installation.
- The sign on a mailbox MUST be perpendicular to the pavement the mailbox is within reach of.
- The headquarters of the Londinium Times MUST be permitted to have an uncomplaint mailbox for historical purposes, and MAY choose to use a complaint mailbox alongside said uncomplaint mailbox.
§4 Building Numbers
- Every building on a street SHOULD be numbered based on the legal numbering convention (§4.1).
- A Council that fails to number a building(s) on a street(s) according to the convention (§4.1) without sufficient cause MUST pass a Street Renumbering Ordnance (§5).
§4.1 Convention
- The buildings at the logical beginning of the road MUST receive the starting numbers (#1 and #2).
- Starting from the logical beginning, left-hand houses MUST receive an odd number and right-hand houses MUST receive an even number.
- For blank spots, house numbers MUST be skipped irregardless of whether the affected land can, should, or will be used as a building.
§5 Renumbering
- A local Council is permitted to pass a Street Renumberning Ordnance, which is a document that MUST include the following information:
- The affected street(s);
- The date(s) the renumbering will take place;
- The reason(s) for the renumbering.
- A time period of at least one week between the Street Renumbering Ordnance and the date of the renumbring MUST be given.
- A local Council MUST NOT pass a Street Renumbering Ordnance without sufficienct cause and consideration for potential confusion and disruption to postal services, citizens, and businesses.
- The Street Renumbering Ordnance MUST be delivered to the following locations:
- Every mailbox in the affected street(s);
- The Ordnances section of the KUJ government website.
§6 Logging
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Each building number changed as a result of a Street Renumbering Ordnance MUST be logged in a dedicated document recorded by the government indefinitely.
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The document must be formatted as follows:
- The first page MUST be a title page containing the text “Street Renumbering Ordnance Log: ” followed by the Ordnance number.
- Each subsequent page MUST contain ONE log entry, with the following information included:
- Building name and street;
- Previous house number;
- New house number.
- An individual log entry MAY spill across multiple pages.
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If an entity owning a property on (one of) the affected street(s) of the Ordnance request a copy of the Log, the local Council MUST comply and provide a copy.
- The copy MUST NOT be protected against further distribution, copying, or sharing.