
5 May 2022 | 8 replies
It's not all roses, mistakes are possible, you can buy the wrong building, etc.Not sure of your questions?

14 April 2023 | 15 replies
An example may be roof - 20 years old = recommend replaceHVAC - 10 years old = recommend replaceInterior Walls - good condition poor paint color - recommend replaceetc.

24 October 2018 | 10 replies
Had the injuries rose to the level of death, it could result in criminal prosecutions.

16 April 2023 | 10 replies
If we want to show the unit to as many potential applicants as possible we only put it as the first page of the application, otherwise it is good to put in the ad.We cater to a low income crowd and do not charge for screening, so we keep the criteria pretty vague:Our Criteria:We do not deny housing for race, color, religion, sex, national origin, handicap, sexual orientation, marital status, or familial status.We do deny housing to individuals:when the application is not complete or accuratewhere there is not sufficient income/resources to pay rent and livewhere there is poor prior tenancy: evictions, violations, damage to rental property, poorly handled move outs, amounts are still owing to landlords or utilities.

11 October 2014 | 6 replies
We have very good perspective tenants that pass with flying colors.

6 April 2023 | 13 replies
But be sure they fit with the overall plan of your renovation.... size, color, location etc etc

21 January 2019 | 27 replies
It should be the same specie and color if possible, which is very hard to do.
6 March 2022 | 101 replies
The color scale corresponds to the values for each respective metrics and indicated the desirability (green is better, red is worse) Link to MA Cities SpreadsheetHope this helps!

10 April 2023 | 7 replies
What I'd like to see the city of Detroit do is make a handful of neighborhoods into re-hab zones.Drop those big cement barricades down the middle of the streets of a 12 square block area, with chain link fences on top 10 feet tall.A sort of theft prevention fort, with only one way in and out.Then put a temporary Police substation inside the forts on empty lots, just a trailer or two and a handful of Patrol Officers, and a Desk Sargent.Then for the structures inside the forts, give out City grants for new windows (that fit the exiting openings) New doors, new roofs, and tuck pointing matching color mortar.Also grants for new PEX water piping, and up to date electrical code wiring.Give each quasi-fort a name and a 7 year lifespan, then the fences come down.This would give added protection to the workers, and the construction material, as well as provide several oasis of re-development in the city.Just doing a random building here and there, is not going to stabilize an area or make it feel more safe (for the workers as well as the residents.)Call them things like Fort Corktown 1, Fort Bricktown 3, Fort Greektown 2,etc...Basically make the taxpayers fund a big re-hab effort for their city via grants, add $100 to each residential property tax bill to pay for these grants.https://www.biggerpockets.com/forums/44/topics/1106515-larger-apartment-building-rehabs-for-cheap-prices-in-detroitJust my 2 cents

14 August 2020 | 3 replies
@Forrest Gobble Mostly qualities that all renters appreciate: Clean, updated kitchen & bath, modern paint colors, stainless steel appliances, granite counters, etc.