Where can I reissue the demolition agreement if I lose it?

Legal analysis: 1. Reissue the demolition compensation agreement. The demolition compensation agreement is usually made in quadruplicate, one for the demolition person, the demolished person, the demolition company and the local demolition management department (i.e. the demolition office). If the signed demolition compensation agreement is unfortunately lost, you can bring the party's household registration certificate and the ID card of the police station.

2. When going to the demolition department to reissue the demolition and resettlement agreement, you need to provide the following information: 1, and reissue the application certificate; 2. Newspaper statement and written statement; 3. The unit provides a business license.

3. The contents of the demolition compensation and resettlement agreement generally include: 1, the object of the agreement; 2. The location and nature of the house to be demolished.

Legal basis: Regulations on Expropriation and Compensation of Houses on State-owned Land Article 8 In order to safeguard national security, promote national economic and social development and other public interests, if it is really necessary to expropriate houses under any of the following circumstances, the municipal or county people's government shall make a decision on house expropriation:

(a) the needs of national defense and diplomacy;

(two) the needs of the government organization and implementation of energy, transportation, water conservancy and other infrastructure construction;

(three) the needs of public utilities such as science and technology, education, culture, health, sports, environmental and resource protection, disaster prevention and mitigation, cultural relics protection, social welfare, and municipal utilities organized and implemented by the government;

(four) the needs of the construction of affordable housing projects organized and implemented by the government;

(five) the needs of the old city reconstruction organized and implemented by the government according to the relevant provisions of the Urban and Rural Planning Law;

(six) the needs of other public interests as prescribed by laws and administrative regulations.