- This topic has 10 replies, 2 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 7 months ago by cv2.
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May 16, 2008 at 4:32 PM #12760May 17, 2008 at 6:29 AM #206407jParticipant
Those condos have always been vacant. My father has joked about the new condo development downtown for years. The fire department staffs partly based on downtown population, so they have gone door to door for years. They noticed that claimed occupancy rates are very wrong (maybe because of tax implications).
I have also noticed that many units, in complexes that have been finish for years, have paper on the windows. I don’t know if the paper was never taken off, or if “investors” are trying to protect their “investment” from the sun.
May 17, 2008 at 6:29 AM #206458jParticipantThose condos have always been vacant. My father has joked about the new condo development downtown for years. The fire department staffs partly based on downtown population, so they have gone door to door for years. They noticed that claimed occupancy rates are very wrong (maybe because of tax implications).
I have also noticed that many units, in complexes that have been finish for years, have paper on the windows. I don’t know if the paper was never taken off, or if “investors” are trying to protect their “investment” from the sun.
May 17, 2008 at 6:29 AM #206490jParticipantThose condos have always been vacant. My father has joked about the new condo development downtown for years. The fire department staffs partly based on downtown population, so they have gone door to door for years. They noticed that claimed occupancy rates are very wrong (maybe because of tax implications).
I have also noticed that many units, in complexes that have been finish for years, have paper on the windows. I don’t know if the paper was never taken off, or if “investors” are trying to protect their “investment” from the sun.
May 17, 2008 at 6:29 AM #206516jParticipantThose condos have always been vacant. My father has joked about the new condo development downtown for years. The fire department staffs partly based on downtown population, so they have gone door to door for years. They noticed that claimed occupancy rates are very wrong (maybe because of tax implications).
I have also noticed that many units, in complexes that have been finish for years, have paper on the windows. I don’t know if the paper was never taken off, or if “investors” are trying to protect their “investment” from the sun.
May 17, 2008 at 6:29 AM #206543jParticipantThose condos have always been vacant. My father has joked about the new condo development downtown for years. The fire department staffs partly based on downtown population, so they have gone door to door for years. They noticed that claimed occupancy rates are very wrong (maybe because of tax implications).
I have also noticed that many units, in complexes that have been finish for years, have paper on the windows. I don’t know if the paper was never taken off, or if “investors” are trying to protect their “investment” from the sun.
May 17, 2008 at 3:49 PM #206537cv2ParticipantIn good times, like the boom times two, three years ago, everybody want their own dig. In bad times, people hunk down together by double up or move back to parent’s house. Right now we are either in a slow down or recession depend on who you talk to, vacancy will be even worse.
But you are saying that even during good times, there are lots of empty units. Is it possible that we have more home than people forever? We need either foreign investors or illegal aliens to fill them up?
May 17, 2008 at 3:49 PM #206589cv2ParticipantIn good times, like the boom times two, three years ago, everybody want their own dig. In bad times, people hunk down together by double up or move back to parent’s house. Right now we are either in a slow down or recession depend on who you talk to, vacancy will be even worse.
But you are saying that even during good times, there are lots of empty units. Is it possible that we have more home than people forever? We need either foreign investors or illegal aliens to fill them up?
May 17, 2008 at 3:49 PM #206621cv2ParticipantIn good times, like the boom times two, three years ago, everybody want their own dig. In bad times, people hunk down together by double up or move back to parent’s house. Right now we are either in a slow down or recession depend on who you talk to, vacancy will be even worse.
But you are saying that even during good times, there are lots of empty units. Is it possible that we have more home than people forever? We need either foreign investors or illegal aliens to fill them up?
May 17, 2008 at 3:49 PM #206644cv2ParticipantIn good times, like the boom times two, three years ago, everybody want their own dig. In bad times, people hunk down together by double up or move back to parent’s house. Right now we are either in a slow down or recession depend on who you talk to, vacancy will be even worse.
But you are saying that even during good times, there are lots of empty units. Is it possible that we have more home than people forever? We need either foreign investors or illegal aliens to fill them up?
May 17, 2008 at 3:49 PM #206676cv2ParticipantIn good times, like the boom times two, three years ago, everybody want their own dig. In bad times, people hunk down together by double up or move back to parent’s house. Right now we are either in a slow down or recession depend on who you talk to, vacancy will be even worse.
But you are saying that even during good times, there are lots of empty units. Is it possible that we have more home than people forever? We need either foreign investors or illegal aliens to fill them up?
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