Camilla Waszek


Camilla advises a variety of clients, including large corporate entities, social landlords, management companies and private individuals on the full range of property litigation disputes.

Camilla regularly advises on landlord and tenant disputes, providing practical and commercial advice on both contentious and non-contentious matters, providing tailored and strategic advice.

Her expertise includes recovering rent and service charge arrears, disputes relating to the reasonableness and payability of service charges, enforcing lease terms, forfeiture (via court proceedings and peaceable re-entry), consultation, dispensation, rights of access and rights of light. She also regularly advises on complex questions of interpretation of leases and contracts.

With respect to the Building Safety Act 2022, her work includes acting and advising landlords/freeholders, management companies and groups of leaseholders on costs recovery aspects relating to fire safety works, works to remedy building safety defects and interim measures, including advice as to recoverability under the terms of the lease, compliance with the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985, applying to the First-tier Tribunal for dispensation, costs recovery from third parties, and making and responding to remediation order and remediation contribution order applications in the First-tier Tribunal. 

Camilla regularly provides advice on compliance with consultation requirements under section 20 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985 and seeking dispensation from compliance with consultation requirements. 

Camilla provides training internally and externally, including on case law updates and upcoming legislation, including speaking at seminars and conferences. She is recognised as a leading associate in the 2025 edition of the Legal 500.

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Changes to the Right to Manage

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What constitutes a self-contained part of a building for the purposes of the Right to Manage?

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Commonhold reinvigorated?

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The Building Safety Act 2022: Protecting leaseholders' lives and pockets

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When is a bad deal, a bad deal? 

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No qualifying leaseholder will be required to contribute to the cost to remediate unsafe cladding, even where it isn't a "relevant defect"

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