
11 May 2016 | 5 replies
I kept elevating at the title company, and finally the owner of the company stepped in and helped.

21 March 2016 | 10 replies
If you are able to get grandfathered into the status of remaining as a rental, then all the power to you- but like you are experiencing, the HOA may not want to deal with the influx of tenants and costs associated with every time someone new moves in and possibly damages the elevator, hallways, etc.

16 December 2019 | 7 replies
Troy Fullwood is a world-class businessman that has a mission to help his fellow man elevate themselves they way he did.

4 April 2016 | 14 replies
I assume that would be in the case where the unit has a lead issue, a child has elevated lead in their blood, and the landlord can't afford the remediation (right away).

26 March 2016 | 26 replies
That limited area combined with high salaries and the executives and high-level managers primary residences keeps real estate elevated.

29 March 2016 | 6 replies
If they do, the option is open to elevate the rehab to the next level and try to get a little more for the home.

4 April 2016 | 13 replies
@Bart Libsock Did you not have engineered drawings to build from, with widths, slopes, elevations,etc.?
13 May 2016 | 40 replies
Front elevation looks great and all the undeveloped space in the back would be a huge plus.

22 January 2016 | 4 replies
When completing my due diligence a few years ago about the possible condo purchase I met with a couple floor owners who also had complaints.Primarily:1They never saw the manager or any rep from his company2Calls were rarely answered and concerns/maintenance items took a while to process if not multiple calls3They were charged a building maintenance fee on top of the mgmt fee, however as alluded to, getting anyone over to service anything took a while4Janitorial charges were being charged double what they pay nowBasically they felt they were being ripped off which after I had reviewed some prior financial statements and seeing the lack of service I agreed and had I purchased a condo or two my first mission would have been to fire the mgmt companyI would believe my primary responsibilities would be to serve as the face/contact person for maintenance requests, collect rent, disperse payments to owners, collect HOA fees/disperse to the HOA and marketing.Things I do not want to be on the hook for simply for liability reasons are going to typically be on the engineering side - elevators, roof, windows, structure and utility bills.Utilities are on one meter and divided equally among each individual floor - they may have this set up now where the HOA bills for the utilities since they parted ways with the prior mgmt company - this will be something I will find out.