
22 January 2020 | 14 replies
One was partially renovated, but the renovations looked sketchy (20-inch wide shower, rippling siding, exposed lam beam in the living room hanging down about 10 inches, etc.).

28 January 2020 | 7 replies
So much so the kitchen floor towards the back of the house sank in about 6 or so inches.

23 January 2020 | 8 replies
The big hole abt 32 inches deep is the sump pump which may have caused the cracking to the foundation outside.

23 January 2020 | 6 replies
I've been a licensed Realtor in "rainy" Oregon since 2004. 41 inches annual rainfall here.

14 May 2021 | 21 replies
thats pretty cool impliment for small trees.. or not very tall ones..

13 April 2020 | 10 replies
I would also put in that if these jobs are the tenant's responsibility, and they don't clear snow from the sidewalk or keep the grass below 6 inches in height, you will take over that responsibility and start billing them monthly.

17 May 2020 | 4 replies
It is a 3 inch clean out that connects to a 6 inch pipe.

23 February 2020 | 4 replies
The second lots storage buildings are from 2 inches to 12 inches on the first lot and the 2 sheds are 12 to 20 inches on the first lot.Both lots were sold to another person who did not have the skills to manage the apartments.

25 February 2020 | 3 replies
If the cracks are superficial i would just put up some 1 inch strapping on the walls and sheetrock over it but if they are bigger cracks i would that could potentially create more problems i would fix them for sure.

29 February 2020 | 0 replies
My ultimate plan is to sell my lot to a developer who will likely construct a multi-unit- the lot is approximately 10k square feet and zoned for multi-units.The benefit is that they are paying the cost to build a new wall between the two properties, as there is no wall there currently.However, my concerns are (1) will this affect the future value of my lot- as the v-ditch encroaches onto my property approximately 12 inches, effectively reducing the useable square-footage of the property?