Renting Real Estate Questions and Answers

Renting within DC nouns...a dilemna?

I am moving to DC/Northern VA in more or less a month for my new available job in Great Falls, VA.

I've narrowed my explore down to two places. One is in Sterling, VA. It is a 1,120 square foot, 2-floor condo and the rent is more or less 1000 a month. It's about 20 minutes from work and I'm pretty sure it's a not detrimental area.

The other one is a house for rent, 1560 sq foot, 2 bathroom within DC city limits. It's going for $600 a month. I'd simply be a house sitter. It's in the SE passage of the city, past RFK stadium and across some river (one of Potomac's(?) tributaries. The neighborhood is call Greenway. The house looks really nice, but I always hear "horror" stories more or less crime in the city.

I'm looking for suggestions, I guess. Does anybody know anything in the region of the area within the second example? It's about twice the travel time to work, but it's a better price, closer to the city, etc.

Thanks, adjectives.


Answers: DO NOT GO TO SOUTH EAST DC...stick with VA, or find someplace contained by Northwest DC...preferably dupont, kalorama, mass ave...things more towards georgetown...trust me ull thank me.


stay as far towards northwest as possible or try VA
I have not really hear about really bad-bad stories within Greenway, but probably you know better than me then. Maybe race think it's a impossible place because there are a few more blacks within that neighborhood. However, my suggestion would be to take supremacy of that second apartment at the beginning (so you can own money you can use to get settled during the first months you will be within Washington) and try to get a short-term contract (or at lowest possible a 1-year-contract) and after that you will decide whether you'll still want to stay nearby or you will want to relocate. Trust me, at the end in that will always be another better place to relocate. I meditate that it is important that conceivably you try to focus more on the new opening at the beginning, and focus on a better apartment after one year or so.

Take attention!
hey this is travis, sorry i couldnt reply with my other statement

im not sure about the actual apartment, but pretty much adjectives of SE isnt where u want to be living, even if its for a short time of year of time, not to be racist or anything, but often the family in these neighborhoods are not friendly towards whites. If the apartment youre surrounded by is in ward 8, its not worth it...mostly lower income housing and soaring crime rates as you have read. I live surrounded by Northern VA, travel to dc often, and trust me youre safer living contained by Northwest for a little greater $ or VA, then other knowing u could get mugged, lash up, shot at etc in SE. don't listen to nation when they say its up and coming, its be a dump and always will be one, until the family there catch their act together. The simply place i can think of where on earth u might find an apartment in SE that u may want to check out is contained by eastern market and areas where on earth professionals that work on capital mount live...id say aloud thats up and coming but very slowly... the nouns around RFK and across the river is dangerous(if u meant by its close the maryland side, still not worth living because prince georges county md is across it.also a very chancy area near lots more crime then SE itself. so the nouns around rfk and along the maryland side its not wise to move within. also parking is hard to find, and its not worth getting your motor vandalized or stolen. sterling is moderately close to great falls, and alot safer. ive lived in fairfax co for almost six years and havent have any problems. but if u like the city enthusiasm, i suggest u find a studio apartment in northwest (adams morgan, kalorama, dupont, hard by gw, all the areas that are more friendly towards up and coming professionals.

i seriously suggest u walk to craigslist dc and go to rant and raves..inhabitants will be gladly to serve u with your question. theyll give u better info on the ethnic group that live in both areas and youre looking for apartment sagacious..

my thoughts
if i were u and have to pick between the two, go next to sterling, safer as well as a faster commute to work ..if ur on a budget living in that will save u $ surrounded by the long run, u dont have to verbs about taxi or buses

trust me youll thank me

sorry about the desperate grammar surrounded by a rush...

se = ghetto
nw=overall the nicest place in dc
ne=ghetto
sw=dont ever be in motion there, bud ego say its dumpy too

Seeling a house. What should I do since closing?

Termite contract transfer / inspection,
Utilities transmutation over,
Engineering report disclosure,
What else?


Answers: INSPECT THE NEW HOME BEFORE moving out of the old house!
NOTHING! All those things are the responsibility of the buyer. If they don't attain any kind of inspections done or check the title, etc they are stuck! When they buy a house it's close to buying a used car (though much easier to research) it's sold AS IS.

Relax and start packing, if the buyer or anyone they hirer finds anything suspicious they will put in the picture you. When they do you have the casual to fix it or offer them money to consent to them to fix it.
The contract will dictate what you need to pocket care of and what the buyer should be address.

If you are moving out, a change of address packet from the post department is essential, and it has a handy catalogue of things to do if you are moving.
Those are all the responsbility of the buyer...unless otherwise timetabled in your contract of mart.

Make sure the house is clean and derelict, that is adjectives you have to verbs about.

Talk to your Real Esate Attorney, explicitly what you are paying him for.

Apartment Unit/Complex Has No Water Meters??

I was discussion to a part-time worker within my old apartment complex's department on Saturday and she quietly informed me of something: our apartments own absolutely no marine meters on them! She said she had question the property manager just about this before and have been told that in attendance were meters on the hot wet heater. She said she's inspected the hot river heater and say there are no meters whatsoever on her hot hose down heater.

I moved out of my apartment on 12/31, so I can't inspect my infirm one to see if there be one there. However, she have lived in our complex for 14 years and worked here part-time for awhile, so I trust that she know what she is talking more or less.

So, this begs the request for information: if there truly are no meters anywhere surrounded by our apartment complex, how can they even come up with a clothed guess on how much water respectively unit is using? Has anyone encounter an issue like this back? It seems approaching a very open case of fraud/illegal billing.


Answers: A lot of complexes are similar to this. The entire complex has a meter, but respectively unit does not. The bill is divided among the apartments base on number of bedrooms and how many society are listed on the lease. Of course this isn't really celebration, but it's not fraud.
It doesn't really make sense for in that to be meters on the hot water heaters -- you wouldn't enjoy a separate meter for hot and cold water.

At my apartment within are no meters, but we don't pay for hose down either. If you're paying for hose down, it may be that there's a meter for the building (or for a floor, etc.) and the cost is being equally divided by the unit. Depending on your lease, this may be perfectly allowable.

I wouldn't enunciate this is an obvious casing of fraud, because there's a lot of reason why you might not be able to see your river meter, and it's even possible that you don't have your own meter. If you're really worried going on for it, you could try to call your public works department or whoever's responsible for the sea in your city, and ask where on earth your water meter is -- or ask the hotelier, for that matter.
Does the complex charge you a seperate river bill or is it included in the rent?
If you are charged a seperate sea bill then you should be getting that from the dampen company and not the complex. you should call your river company and ask them about it. And you should be delighted that someone else probably uses less hose than you which makes your bill smaller amount somewhere at the complex if it is paid by the apartments...pious luck.
Your water is most feasible allocated. At the apartment community I live and work at we receive a bill each month explicitly broken down by size apartment you live in and how copious occupants you own. It is perfect endorsed and very adjectives.. The way it works is respectively building is probably metered as apposed to each element, out of the total bill for the entire property the apartment itself takes the majority of it for pools, sprinklers, etc. afterwards each building is charged base on actual usage for that building and that is next divided between the units of that building. To produce it fair if your contained by a building that has purely 2 bedrooms but you live by yourself and your neighbor has two kids and husband they of course are going to reward more than you. I have lived and worked at several properties that do it this passageway. More than likely when you signed your lease you signed a wastewater allocated billing amendment.

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