
19 July 2016 | 10 replies
You may have two very different chores: one, fix the elevated moisture, THEN two, refinish or replace the finish flooring.

1 September 2016 | 9 replies
I'm very experienced with rentals in general and rental complexes with many units and have a good understanding of investment numbers in general but I have zero experience with high rise, elevator buildings.

26 July 2016 | 10 replies
Was a fancy place in its time, had a lobby and an elevator which was state of the art for a 1910 building.

21 July 2016 | 0 replies
Elevator building Off Lexington Ave Message me if you are a SERIOUS Buyer.

5 August 2016 | 22 replies
I feel they have really elevated my confidence level in learning the processes and the lingo when speaking with contractors.

6 April 2017 | 48 replies
There is another meetup that is wrapping up on the same floor it turns out and they have taken over the elevator space.

21 May 2017 | 15 replies
I'm curious what you have in mind for the exterior, especially the front elevation, beyond removal of the brick in favor of vinyl siding.

26 November 2016 | 3 replies
Numbers - These numbers are rounded but close to actualPurchase and purchase closing - 167,500soft costs architect - 800 (this is very low, not average at all, I just found someone who does it on the side)surveyor - 1,800 (this was for a survey, site plan, HPR document [specific to nashville], height and width elevations of the build, topography documents)tree removal - 2,500 demo of existing house - 7,200 (brick is more expensive than frame.

14 January 2017 | 18 replies
@Rich Baer Nailed it.If you take the elevated view, asking a title company to insure something that happened outside of their control (a property tax auction, typically with some form of redemption).

30 November 2016 | 7 replies
Hi Dan,It's not a bad looking house, but that enclosed porch totally destroys the front elevation.