Re: Condominium Law | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: Sharon Villines (sharon![]() |
|
Date: Thu, 29 May 2008 09:56:08 -0700 (PDT) |
Does it mean that the residents along the corridors have to replace
and maintain them? That's the issue here.
Thanks to Norman for the advice -- I haven't dug out the plans yet. The corridors do not appear on the plan of my unit that I was given when it bought it, although the balcony does.)
Sharon. On May 29, 2008, at 12:14 AM, Katie Henry wrote:
Concerning common elements: This may or may not be useful, but it's a similar building. The Eastern Village Cohousing building has two parts, the residential wing (the cohousing part) and the commercial wing (not cohousing). Our plat has the corridors that are specific to each wing as limited common elements for that wing: LCE-R or LCE-C. The areas where the two wings overlap are designated general common elements (GCE). This system makes sense to us. Seems like your corridors should be GCE. Katie Eastern Village Cohousing Silver Spring, MD _________________________________________________________________ Cohousing-L mailing list -- Unsubscribe, archives and other info at: http://www.cohousing.org/cohousing-L/
-
Condominium Law Sharon Villines, May 27 2008
- Re: Condominium Law OC611NGC, May 28 2008
-
Re: Condominium Law Katie Henry, May 28 2008
- Re: Condominium Law Sharon Villines, May 29 2008
Results generated by Tiger Technologies Web hosting using MHonArc.