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Re: Restrictions for commercial/residential buildings.
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Home away from home
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James C. McCann, Esq.
Connell Foley, L.L.P. 2510 Harborside Plaza 5, Jersey City, NJ 07311-4029 201-521-1000 2267 Fax 201-521-0100 www.connellfoley.com jmccann@connellfoley.com Eugene T. Paolino, Esq. Schumann Hanlon, LLC 30 Montgomery Street, P.O. Box 2029 Jersey City, NJ 07302 201-434-2000 205 Fax 201-938-1503 www.shdlaw.com etpaolino@shdlaw.com
Posted on: 2010/12/9 17:02
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Re: Restrictions for commercial/residential buildings.
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Newbie
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Thank you for your advice, brewster! I was actually considering asking the closing attorney, assuming simplistically they'd know what to look for in the building's contracts.
Does anyone know of a good RE attorney they'd recommend with expertise in this area? :)
Posted on: 2010/12/9 3:36
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Re: Restrictions for commercial/residential buildings.
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Home away from home
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Given that any answer the building dept might give you they might later repudiate and leave you screwed, I would talk to a lawyer with real expertise in the subject. Beware generalists and "closing attorneys" who really don't know much about zoning or commercial RE regs. You're considering a big purchase, it will be money well spent.
Posted on: 2010/12/8 22:57
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Restrictions for commercial/residential buildings.
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Newbie
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Hi! I am considering buying a condo in downtown JC, and would appreciate your advice/directions regarding the zoning/planning codes in the city.
We found a place we really like, the only (potential) problem is that the ground floor is being sold as commercial, and the unit we like is right above it. This is a brand new condo building, with an extended ground floor protruding in the back. Our unit, on the 2nd floor, includes a terrace that takes ups roughly half of the flat roof of the ground floor's extension. All of my windows are facing in the same direction. On the 'commercial' part of the roof there are some small exhaust vents. My worry is that whoever buys the commercial space below might stick a huge compressor on his side of the roof. Even worse, if a restaurant opens downstairs they might install all their kitchen exhausts on the roof, right besides my deck and windows. I was wondering if anyone knows whether the city imposes any restrictions on commercial owners in a residential building, if it is possible to find such information for a specific building, and who to ask these questions... Any advice is highly appreciated!
Posted on: 2010/12/8 19:50
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