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16 February 2017 | 2 replies
From the surface does this look like a deal to look into & what other questions/info should I be asking the broker for?
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10 March 2017 | 7 replies
If so you can install acoustimat or other similar products under hard floor surfaces.
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27 February 2017 | 20 replies
Sometimes it is nothing more than mildew but other times a landlord is wrong they could shell out huge bucks in liability for being cheap.There is surface mold and then airborne mold which are two different tests.
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28 February 2017 | 4 replies
A little work upfront saves a lot of time and headaches down the road.5) Tenant proof when you do upgrades - an example is use hard surfaces for flooring versus carpet.
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28 February 2017 | 12 replies
If it can't surface drain, and can't subsurface drain, you have to pump it somewhere or make provisions for it to evaporate on its own.
3 March 2017 | 5 replies
Rather than replacing the flue to reduce clearance requirements, the combustible surface has to be protected instead.
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20 January 2017 | 4 replies
Base model has tiled kitchens and bathrooms, solid surface countertops, carpeted living and bed rooms.
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26 January 2017 | 14 replies
Its not necessary forever but if you buy a struggling facility, you will want to ramp up as quickly as possible and that inevitably involves dinner time calls.I just scratched the surface here and I know the questions I asked arent the easy ones to answer but you dont want to be one of those people who gets a couple years into investing to realize that your ladder was against the wrong wall (I speak from experience).Hope that helps.Mike
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19 January 2017 | 5 replies
As long as it is a solid surface you would be able to park a vehicle or camper, trailer, on the slab if you wanted to.That size slab wasn't cheep to put in, ugly it still has value.I'd just plain not think about it and leave it as is until you decide to change it over into a car port, shed, or put a fence around it.
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22 January 2017 | 9 replies
There are no signs that the tank has any issues (no visible oil in the soil at the surface and no smell of residual oil in the area), and I'm worried that a soil test is only going to cause unnecessary costs.