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26 August 2014 | 12 replies
The majority member wants me to take the land for $1, and assume the environmental and back property taxes of $52,000.
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22 February 2008 | 6 replies
Structural issues or environmental problems might be a bit hard to predict.
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3 January 2018 | 10 replies
The best commercial property I ever bought had a Phase II environmental study presented with it disclosing the underground storage tanks and after researching it I found it was able to be registered for superfund payouts and the epa authority involved would be very unlikely to require cleanup in this instance.
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5 October 2020 | 17 replies
Note: current politics and environmental factors (COVID, unemployment), make the gamble more risky today than last year.
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27 January 2019 | 28 replies
(Too bad you can't expand that and reduce footprint of the tub.)If there's $, a wall mounted towel warmer could be a nice upgrade.
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26 February 2019 | 34 replies
@Nik Moushon in our area here in the north west you have two major issues.You have commercial timber lands ( huge HUGE areas designated as such as big as many states on the east coast) these lands are protected for timber production. in Oregon you need 160 acres minimum lot size for a single home in many of these timber reserve loans.then you have prime low land farm land.. and those are even tougher to try to develop.. no matter that they are not near as valuable as farm land.. but its the farm bureaus protecting their turf.Then you get to CA and you need to do full blown EIR's ( environmental impact reports) these can cost 200k to 1 mil up front with no assurance your project will be approved..its a tough game out here in the west.
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13 July 2015 | 13 replies
I failed to mention that the cabinets are already purchased.I have planned this kitchen for 3 years.and I went with the smaller appliances despite the fact that they are more expensivebecause they look better in the spaceI chose operational effectiveness over operational Efficiency you would have to see the space to understand. but trust me saving 1,500 dollars on appliances by going with larger ones was certainly vetted and I ultimately decided to go with the more expensive option of the smaller appliances because it leaves a smaller visual foot print. because it just fits the space much better.
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8 September 2012 | 60 replies
Review and approval of the documentation concerning the property; Completion of satisfactory physical and environmental inspections of the Property; including suite inspections.Completion of satisfactory due diligence search and examinations;Satisfactory review of the title of the Property;Satisfactory first mortgage financing being arranged for the purchase of the Property;Satisfactory second mortgage being provided by the Vendor for the purchase of the Property;7.
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21 March 2014 | 17 replies
Proper due diligence includes an Asbestos Survey, Lead (paint and ceramic tile) Survey, Property Condition Assessment (ASTM E2018 - I helped write it), and for many properties, a Phase I Environmental Site Assessment.
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3 August 2015 | 14 replies
Or you hire an environmental firm to do the job - they will seal the area while working and check air samples afterward, and they handle all disposal too.