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Results (10,000+)
Luis A. Managing risk in rehab projects
2 June 2010 | 10 replies
I saw wet ceiling in basements that seems to be a plumbing problem but turned out to be a roof problem where water penetrated the space within the wall and travel all the way down to the basement...
Keisha Barnes Hi from Union, NJ
18 July 2010 | 10 replies
Just remember you'll learn more by getting your feet wet than in any classroom.
Adrian G. Question about investing in apartment buildings.
11 June 2009 | 21 replies
Adrian, a rule of thumb you may want to go with is go no bigger than 12 uits for your first commercial multifamily (5 units+) to get your feet wet.
Rich Weese flood insurance,fire insurance or none-
4 January 2010 | 54 replies
I am the insurance company's wet dream when it comes to odds.
M Lindgren Deal #2-WooHoo
13 February 2009 | 3 replies
The only bad point is the ceiling in the dining room which has a wet spot.
Patrick Rentz Wanted to run my action plan by the experts...
29 March 2009 | 6 replies
The only way to get wet is to jump in the water.
Eddie Kilburn Hello from Canada!
20 November 2013 | 21 replies
I'm now looking to learn more, get my feet wet and see if real estate investing is a good fit for me.At the moment, I'm most interested in using a buy-and-hold strategy with the goal of partial or full retirement in the 10-15 year range.
Tom Klein Was anyone else a carpenter or tradesman before they got started??
18 November 2013 | 4 replies
I might work and do a house or two and get your feet wet.
Michael Campbell Beam And Pier Foundation Settling In Two Corners
7 July 2015 | 12 replies
If cabinets need to go in Id either be willing to sell it as is, or Id level the house first and go on the idea that a house that old has done its thing or an extraordinarily wet year caused the movement and its still probably done its thing. 2" is not likely to break windows and adjusting doors is no biggy.