Luxury Condominiums for Rent
Condominiums
A condominium, or condo for short, is a form
of housing tenure. It is the legal term used in the United States
and in most provinces of Canada for a type of joint ownership of
real property in which portions of the property are commonly owned
and other portions are individually owned. In Australia and the
Canadian province of British Columbia, the legal term for this is
known as strata title. In Québec, it is known as syndicates of
co-ownership. Colloquially, the term "condo" is often used to refer
to the apartment unit itself in place of the term "apartment". This
clearly signifies ownership of the property.
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Often, a condominium consists of units in a multi-unit dwelling (i.e.,
an apartment or a development) where each unit is individually owned
and the common areas like hallways and recreational facilities are
jointly owned by all the unit owners in the building. It is possible,
however, for condominiums to consist of single family dwellings:
so-called "detached condominiums" where homeowners do not maintain the
exteriors of the dwellings, yards, etc. or "site condominiums" where
the owner has more control over the exterior appearance. These structures
are preferred by some planned neighborhoods and gated communities.
A homeowners association, consisting of all the members, manages the
common areas usually through a board of directors elected by the members.
The same concept exists under different names depending on the jurisdiction,
such as "unit title", "sectional title", "commonhold," "strata council,"
or "tenant-owner's association", "body corporate" or "condominium
association." Another variation of this concept is the "time share".
Condominiums may be found in both civil law and common law legal systems
as it is purely a creation of statute.
The rules for condominium government or management are established in a
document commonly called a declaration of condominium. The owners and
occupiers of condominiums are subject to rules in the declaration of
condominium or created by the condominium association, such as paying
required monthly fees for maintaining the property's common areas.
Condominiums are commonly owned in fee simple title, but can be owned in
ways other real estate can be owned, such as title held in trust. Owners
can typically rent their condominiums to other people to occupy as tenants,
similar to renting out other real estate.
Excerpt of "Condominium." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
17 Oct 2006, 22:27 UTC. Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. 24 Oct 2006
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Condominium&oldid=82087788 Renting
Renting is an agreement where a payment is made for the temporary use of a good or
property owned by another person or company. The owner of the property may be referred to as the
lessor and the party paying to use the property as the lessee or renter. There is typically an implied,
explicit, or written rental agreement or contract involved to specify the terms of the rental.
Examples include:
- Renting real estate for the purpose of Housing tenure (where the lessee rents a residence to
live in), parking a vehicle(s), storage, business, agricultural, institutional, or government
use, or other reasons. When renting real estate, the person(s) or party who lives in or occupies
the real estate is often called a tenant, paying rent to the owner of the property, often called a
landlord. The real estate rented may be all or part of almost any real estate, such as an apartment,
house, building, business office(s) or suite, land, farm, or merely an inside or outside space to
park a vehicle, or store things. The rental agreement for real estate is often called a lease.
Luxury Condominiums
Luxury real estate (American English) or luxury
property (British English) describes a niche in the real estate
market dealing with the highest socio-economic group of property
buyers. Since real estate buyers in this group tend to own many homes,
the terms vacation property and second home are inaccurate.
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Differences from ordinary real estate
In addition to simply defining and classifying a property,
Luxury real estate also carries with it a much weightier
responsibility for those who serve the luxury real estate
buyer or seller and that is due to the buyer or seller's ability
to pay for added services and their expectation for performance
of service. For example, a luxury seller expects a real estate
agent selling their home to advertise nationally and sometimes
internationally in luxury print media whereas a non luxury seller
is usually satisfied with very localized advertising and exposure
in the local Multiple Listing Service. Many luxury buyers expects
a real estate agent to understand how to work with attorneys,
trusts and anonymity. They expect a luxury agent to have resources
at their disposal when needed that non luxury buyers wouldn't
expect. Frequently a luxury home buyer will take a home through
multiple inspections (perhaps 10 to 15 if the property is truly an
estate), whereas a non-luxury home will typically go through one
inspection.
Excerpt from "Luxury real estate." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
13 Oct 2006, 18:21 UTC. Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. 29 Oct 2006
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Luxury_real_estate&oldid=81252028
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