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21 February 2016 | 16 replies
I'm dealing with that now having to buy wood floors that will withstand heavy tenant use as well as carpet that will be easily cleaned when needed.
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21 February 2016 | 49 replies
We have tried various wood laminates from 10-12MM with not the best results.
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19 February 2016 | 2 replies
She is in need a contractor referral to install a wood floor product throughout the home.
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22 February 2016 | 22 replies
Originally posted by @Mike Wood:@Scott SzurekPretty sure everything under 250k is going to be a 6% commission (3% buyer side, 3% sellers side, but that split varies by area).
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22 February 2016 | 5 replies
Maybe if you do everything yourself, but even that would be a stretch for just the materials (assuming decent wood cabinets and stone tops).
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27 April 2016 | 2 replies
Sent you an email about a potential deal in your neck of the woods, or prarie as it is in this case.
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2 September 2016 | 3 replies
::Knock on wood:: that that will be above-average.Thank you, Benjamin, for bringing this up.
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1 March 2016 | 9 replies
It's very durable, waterproof to a reasonable degree, can be replaced piecemeal in case of damage, and looks convincingly like wood, tile or any other material you want.
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12 March 2016 | 6 replies
But there's limitless probabilities that surrounds it, example, the price drop is dependent on the condition of the materials, a gut rehab is different when you are doing a 2000 built vs 1910 built, there is more chance that wood is rotten and not salvageable.In LA, adding square footage of the house creates the profit, if someone has 1000sf at 300/sf, then he adds 1200 sf, that could sell at 300, it means that his new value is 660k and he bought it for 300k and spent 100k on rehab, that puts him 260k less other expenses.
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1 March 2016 | 17 replies
Strategies that work in my neck of the woods may not work for you and visa versa.