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Developer must be one of Ken sims homies. Building standards? Oh my no. We only have time to hassle poor people. |
I haven't seen much go on even I drove by like last week, I just see it in that tyvek wrap |
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back to the education piece when it was gloom and doom during my time, another interesting thing is i stopped at degree, a classmate went on to masters. he had trouble finding a job b/c entry level engineering jobs wouldn't hire for fear of him leaving (they waste time training him up) b/c he was over educated, but he wasn't educated / experienced enough for positions where the min. education was a masters in engineering, or didn't have his PhD when they wanted one, so it put him in a state of limbo for a while.... it was funny not funny that his masters sort of impeded his job hunt for a bit. sometimes you just can't win. |
I also noticed that they have restarted work on the 33rd Avenue property. Used to drive past it everyday and it was just sitting there rotting away. Doesn't it need to pass some type of inspection prior to resuming work? |
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Engineering is such a practical discipline that without experience, a kid fresh out of school is basically useless and would need a ton of training (maybe slightly better w/ degreed BCIT grads since at least they offer a more practical curriculum). We need that bridge from the books to the real-world. Something to facilitate connecting the dots so the theory isn't just theoretical. There's an overwhelming presence of Waterloo grads out here for almost no other reason than that they have a super strong co-op program. It's mandatory for graduation so the kids are all-in, and the school sets them up for success with the internship connections. |
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It's not uncommon to build/seal up a building in the winter/rain (personally if i was building a custom home i'd time it so that the framing and sheathing was done spring/summer for sure) As once the exterior cladding is installed, you can run heaters and dehumidifers inside the building to try the internal framing etc. out until it meets the 10 or 15% moisture requirements. However, that 33rd build sat out in the elements for at least 2 years of constant rain, snow, etc. with no progress. Knowing what we know from basic drive by's, I wouldnt buy there. I probably mentioned this before as well but air quality testing is all but useless in the PNW because we live in a rain forest. Generally, air quality testing uses the "base line" of outside air, which again, we live in a rain forest filled with mold spores, etc. So unless you're physically seeing black mold growing, it's very unlikely a air quality test would ever show any readings that indicated anything. Also, if you dig deep into how mold actually effects people, a huge portion of the population are actually uneffected by mold Obviously you dont want a baby sleeping in a room filled with black mold, but for the most part people are hyper sensitivie to shit like mold but they dont actually understand how/if it actually effects them. |
OK I remember there were some talks about how hardwood floors should be laid out and staggered in this thread before. I'm about to change to hardwood floors but also have a couple of narrow hallways (4 ft wide) like this one. Should they be staggered or all aligned like in this picture? https://www.reddit.com/r/Flooring/co...ll_in_hallway/ |
if your boards are running like they are in that picture, just stagger the joints 6 inches or whatever is recommended by the manufacturer that looks like total ass imo, having those full planks looks terrible lol |
Interesting, I'd welcome a change: https://www.bnnbloomberg.ca/real-est...nada-1.2031892 Quote:
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I don't see the reason for residential RE realtors to exist anymore in this age. The amount of work they do vs. the amount being paid to them is ridiculous. In commercial RE, it makes sense to have realtors because good CRE realtors go to events and other social gathering shit to approach potential sellers (and hence things for sale). So, as a buyer, you'd want to keep a good relationship with them because that's how good deals come along. But in residential RE... everyone is looking on MLS already, there should be just a nominal fixed fee to list there and done. Maybe there should be services that sells home prep for MLS listing... but that should be it. |
^^ but they offer bj and sex to clients like bad hobz :joy::troll: |
stupid spy balloon wouldnt let me hire .. :QQ: |
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Knowing what i know now, i would not use FSBO in major cities, its a circlejerk between realtors. Smaller or mid size city i would give it another go My favorite part of the experience was getting phone calls from dozens of realtors saying they can sell my property 100% if i relist with them. To which i replied, if your so sure you can sell it, then you should have no problem bringing a buyer, followed by crickets |
I think nobody every expected values of homes to be where they're at, so being percentage based is ridiculous when the minimum home value is $1.6M in a city, they should have max out fees at various levels like X amount of $ between $0-1M etc. Quote:
There's a lot of costs to being a realtor too, the license fee and staging and videos and drones... I went down the path of becoming one at some point but then decided to do a 180... there's a lot of competition and underhandedness as there always is in anything that's such a cash cow. Vancouver is a weird place to be involved in real estate in any way. |
Your mortgage broker and your realtor can go share a bag in the handicapped stall of Cactus after they did 5 minutes of work for 50k |
Well like when we sold our farm, our realtor pocketed something like $45-50k I can't remember... did I think he deserved $45k? No, I do not... but at the same time, he did hire someone to come out and take aerials with a drone and he did have a tonne of knowledge we didn't have about possibly buried oil tanks and how to get those scans done and legal liabilities for things on the property... and he showed up when my dad dragged his feet clearing shit out to help move stuff on the last possible day before handover. So he didn't do nothing and got his hands dirty... but to say those 2-3 weeks of on/off showings and the stuff he did do was worth a $45-50k pay day IS ridiculous to me. That's most people's entire year of slavery. |
he doesnt take home 45-50k though, remember he has to pay his brokerage usually half of that and then the rest is tax deductible. its not a great gig if you ask me. Too much dealing with people |
All realtors are not created equal which I think causes a lot of the hate of the profession My wife had a realtor when she bought her first place that actually picked her up and drove her around to showings because she didn’t have a licence, he also was proactively going through listings based on her demands and eliminating showings which probably would have paid him a pretty penny but they weren’t what she was looking for Of course a seemingly honest guy like that apparently couldn’t make it work here and ended up moving back east lol. I’ve had mixed experiences but the realtors I have used were “bigger” ones who were pretty great, very communicative, they did the showings themselves and only passed the listing onto their peons or partners once the sale had been finalized. I think the system as a whole is stupid though as at this stage of the internet, glut of photographers, stagers, etc. you don’t really need a realtor to be your project manager for a sale. For the most part people know what a house is worth with a tiny bit of research. |
So our place sold with one of the "big" chinese realtors. Shes actually pretty good. She sent her assistant to do most of the showings but even the assistant was pretty decent and ultimately got us a decent price we wanted. Throughout the process, she was pretty communicative and we relied on her connections to builders/developers as we were hoping to sell to them instead of your joe shmoe (who would then nickel and dime us on the house inspection bitching about how a 40+ year old house is 40+ year old and requiring money off here and there) I think she was worth the $ we gave her. She gave me a huge fruit basket as thanks |
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But most realtors will block this and gatekeep the industry. My friend who runs a brokerage once said why would we ever let you gets have access to everything and we lose our $300-500K+/year job :awwyeah: |
I don't know a lot about the industry, but wouldn't you just use that '1% realty' company? |
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In CRE deals, often 10M+ or even 100M+, the commission is still there. But for sellers, the agent would really go out of their ways to find the right buyers. And for buyers, their agent would invest in stuff that find them the deals they want. It's about actively going after people (landlords, people in business either struggling or succeeding) to make deals happen before there's an interest to buy/sell. They earn their commission because they have the right connection to it. It's not... "client's looking for a place in this area, let's open MLS and see what's available" Worse yet... if a buyer agent sees that it's a FSBO, some choose to skip those listings or make a negative spin out of it. That's fucked up. |
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Some people like that. It's not for me. (I mean, sometimes working evenings & weekends in my line of work happens, but it's an exception, not the norm) |
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