Changing Addresses and Staying Compliant
When you change your registered office, file the change promptly so the public record stays accurate. If you’re switching providers, line up the new service first and obtain your service agreement or welcome letter—this doubles as evidence if questioned. For directors and PSCs, update service and residential addresses as soon as they change to avoid conflicts with bank records or AML checks. Consistency across Companies House, your bank, HMRC, and your accountant’s onboarding forms makes everything smoother.
What Companies House Actually Wants (And What It Doesn’t)
“Proof of address” gets thrown around a lot when people talk about forming a company in the UK, but Companies House’s role is a bit narrower than many expect. At incorporation, you must supply a registered office address (in the UK jurisdiction where you register) and service addresses for each director and any people with significant control (PSCs). Historically, Companies House hasn’t asked every filer to upload bills or statements to prove those addresses. Instead, it records the addresses you provide and makes the registered office and service addresses public.
Timing, Logistics, and Where You Can Put Them
One of the biggest wins for factory-built housing is speed. Production timelines tend to be more predictable, and site work can happen in parallel: while your foundation is being prepared, the house is being built. When the pieces arrive, set and finish work is typically much faster than a ground-up site build. That said, permitting, utilities, and inspections still take time and coordination, and weather can affect site prep and setting.
Energy Efficiency, Maintenance, and Living With It
Energy performance comes down to code requirements and the options you select. Modular homes must meet local energy codes, which can be stringent. Many factories offer upgraded insulation, high-performance windows, and heat pump systems that push efficiency even higher. Manufactured homes follow HUD standards; there are also packages for better insulation, windows, and duct sealing. Ask for the specs in writing and request blower-door or duct leakage test results if available.
Spotting red flags (and green lights) in a hurry
When you’re hungry, you don’t want to scroll forever. Quick scan for red flags: repeated notes about cold food, sticky tables, or long unexplained waits. Complaints happen, but patterns matter. If three different people across different days mention “burnt bacon” or “waffle undercooked,” that’s not a fluke. A no-refill drought is another tell—coffee should be easy. On the flip side, green lights are obvious when you know where to look: “food came out in five minutes,” “manager on the floor checking tables,” “cook wiped the grill between orders,” and “bathrooms were clean” are all high-signal details.
The Premise, Minus Spoilers
The setup is elegant: a rundown family estate, hastily wired with explosives, a small group that cannot agree on anything, and a set of conditions that forces them to stay. The why of it is where the movie has fun. It frames the house like a truth machine; to keep the pressure valves from popping, everyone must confront the secrets that drove them apart. The constraints are physical and moral. Doors you cannot open, topics you can no longer ignore. The film understands how people talk in circles when they are scared, and it weaponizes that behavior into plot. Rather than relying on surprise visitors or random twists, it escalates by making the characters choose between two bad options, again and again. There is a clock, yes, but the more interesting countdown is internal: how long can you keep the lies straight when the walls are literally wired to punish you for them?