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kaycee
ParticipantMy Granite is Giallo Veneziano. I think that is how you spell it. I actually like the color. That is the only think I like about it.
kaycee
ParticipantMy Granite is Giallo Veneziano. I think that is how you spell it. I actually like the color. That is the only think I like about it.
kaycee
ParticipantMy Granite is Giallo Veneziano. I think that is how you spell it. I actually like the color. That is the only think I like about it.
kaycee
ParticipantMy Granite is Giallo Veneziano. I think that is how you spell it. I actually like the color. That is the only think I like about it.
kaycee
ParticipantI HATE my Granite countertops. It is cold, shows water spots, even though its sealed and when you clean it its streaky. Plus the sound it makes when you put a plate on it, well, sounds like two stones banging together. I’m always afraid the plate just cracked. I had Corian in my last two houses and I loved it. It was easy to clean, always looked great, looked clean when it was dirty, and was truly indestructable with no maintenance. I did really like the teak end grain countertop that they just put in the “This old house” house last week. That was sweet! With the double roman ogee edge. Awesome.
kaycee
ParticipantI HATE my Granite countertops. It is cold, shows water spots, even though its sealed and when you clean it its streaky. Plus the sound it makes when you put a plate on it, well, sounds like two stones banging together. I’m always afraid the plate just cracked. I had Corian in my last two houses and I loved it. It was easy to clean, always looked great, looked clean when it was dirty, and was truly indestructable with no maintenance. I did really like the teak end grain countertop that they just put in the “This old house” house last week. That was sweet! With the double roman ogee edge. Awesome.
kaycee
ParticipantI HATE my Granite countertops. It is cold, shows water spots, even though its sealed and when you clean it its streaky. Plus the sound it makes when you put a plate on it, well, sounds like two stones banging together. I’m always afraid the plate just cracked. I had Corian in my last two houses and I loved it. It was easy to clean, always looked great, looked clean when it was dirty, and was truly indestructable with no maintenance. I did really like the teak end grain countertop that they just put in the “This old house” house last week. That was sweet! With the double roman ogee edge. Awesome.
kaycee
ParticipantI HATE my Granite countertops. It is cold, shows water spots, even though its sealed and when you clean it its streaky. Plus the sound it makes when you put a plate on it, well, sounds like two stones banging together. I’m always afraid the plate just cracked. I had Corian in my last two houses and I loved it. It was easy to clean, always looked great, looked clean when it was dirty, and was truly indestructable with no maintenance. I did really like the teak end grain countertop that they just put in the “This old house” house last week. That was sweet! With the double roman ogee edge. Awesome.
kaycee
ParticipantI HATE my Granite countertops. It is cold, shows water spots, even though its sealed and when you clean it its streaky. Plus the sound it makes when you put a plate on it, well, sounds like two stones banging together. I’m always afraid the plate just cracked. I had Corian in my last two houses and I loved it. It was easy to clean, always looked great, looked clean when it was dirty, and was truly indestructable with no maintenance. I did really like the teak end grain countertop that they just put in the “This old house” house last week. That was sweet! With the double roman ogee edge. Awesome.
kaycee
ParticipantThere is an interesting article in Business Week about how some cities are now requiring the banks to repair and maintain properties that they hold the note on when they have begun foreclosure and the house is now vacant. Not only do they fine them if they find they are allowing houses to have “brown lawns or green pools” but they then put a lien on the house that allows the courts to hold up sales of ANY properties that bank owns until they bring the properties up to standards. That may change their mind on holding vacant properties off the market.
//www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22506609/kaycee
ParticipantThere is an interesting article in Business Week about how some cities are now requiring the banks to repair and maintain properties that they hold the note on when they have begun foreclosure and the house is now vacant. Not only do they fine them if they find they are allowing houses to have “brown lawns or green pools” but they then put a lien on the house that allows the courts to hold up sales of ANY properties that bank owns until they bring the properties up to standards. That may change their mind on holding vacant properties off the market.
//www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22506609/kaycee
ParticipantThere is an interesting article in Business Week about how some cities are now requiring the banks to repair and maintain properties that they hold the note on when they have begun foreclosure and the house is now vacant. Not only do they fine them if they find they are allowing houses to have “brown lawns or green pools” but they then put a lien on the house that allows the courts to hold up sales of ANY properties that bank owns until they bring the properties up to standards. That may change their mind on holding vacant properties off the market.
//www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22506609/kaycee
ParticipantThere is an interesting article in Business Week about how some cities are now requiring the banks to repair and maintain properties that they hold the note on when they have begun foreclosure and the house is now vacant. Not only do they fine them if they find they are allowing houses to have “brown lawns or green pools” but they then put a lien on the house that allows the courts to hold up sales of ANY properties that bank owns until they bring the properties up to standards. That may change their mind on holding vacant properties off the market.
//www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22506609/kaycee
ParticipantThere is an interesting article in Business Week about how some cities are now requiring the banks to repair and maintain properties that they hold the note on when they have begun foreclosure and the house is now vacant. Not only do they fine them if they find they are allowing houses to have “brown lawns or green pools” but they then put a lien on the house that allows the courts to hold up sales of ANY properties that bank owns until they bring the properties up to standards. That may change their mind on holding vacant properties off the market.
//www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22506609/ -
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