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27 January 2010 | 4 replies
Question for all of you regarding what I should do for flooring in a house I am rehabbing for a rental, and targetting the middle to upper middle class of renter.There is a hallway that connects the entrance hall, three bedrooms, the living room and kitchen, and I am having trouble trying to decide what type of flooring to put here, as I want to install something resiliant to wear and water, but will transition nicely (looks) to hardwood, carpet, and tile.Bedrooms will likely be carpet.Kitchen and bathroom will be tileliving room has hardwood that will be refinished.My first thought is that I would use tile for the hallway - the same tile as the kitchen and bathroom.Pros- will tie everything together, and I think it will look nice- will hold up to getting wet by the front door (from snow on boots etc)Cons- it will be heavy on the existing structure (it would probably be fine)- it is cold and hard to walk onThen I thought of laminatePros- quick and easy install- cheaper than tileCons- may not hold up to getting wet by the front door (snowy boots)There is carpet, but I don't think I want carpet by the front door, or in a high traffic area.Then there is vinyl flooring, which would be good for the water and traffic, but doesn't look as nice as tile or laminate (my opinion anyway)Any thoughts?
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11 August 2010 | 9 replies
But I do think there are specific times when Twitter traffic is highest.
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11 December 2011 | 8 replies
You could have brought up the increased traffic and maintenance and how some of that was going to cost you money.
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23 November 2011 | 7 replies
The more content you have, the more traffic you'll have.
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13 December 2012 | 7 replies
In the end what I have is a very effective way of tracking leads, mailing lists, site traffic, PPC, and the ability to manage my pipeline easily.
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15 April 2012 | 1 reply
[SOLICITATION REMOVED]Keep in mind, “there is never much traffic on the extra mile”
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24 April 2012 | 16 replies
It helps both sites generate more traffic and helps both websites' networking.
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21 February 2013 | 18 replies
You said getting new tenants is not a problem, so unless it is an unwanted hassle to that's probably your best option.You do away with the maintenance and upkeep of the machines, the utility expenses and if you're right about neighbors using the laundry reduce the traffic onto your property which can only be a good thing.
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23 March 2013 | 17 replies
It's a commercial high traffic area and worth 1000 buck a running foot along the street.
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3 March 2009 | 2 replies
We blog to drive traffic to our company website where we sell cash flow properties to investors across the nation.