We are a new company in the Atlanta area and new to hook up with a commercial real estate agent to drive our business. Or find the source for the leases being signed and use that to cold call from!
A good source for office brokers woiuld be SIOR.com. This organization has a membership of high volume producers with high ethical standards.
Good Luck
Ralph Benzakein
www.whitman-realty.com
I have an remote office space that I rarely visit. Can anyone recommend a cost effective method for monitoring that area that can be accessed through a web site from another location?
Go1984 – webcam based motion detecting surveilance software. Provides web interface..
I had a commercial lease for the first five years of renting office space but the landlord neglected to renew the lease. Ive been renting for an additional five years without a lease.(ten years total) I gave a thirty day notice to move to another office space in the same building with the same landlord. I requested a return of my initial security deposit. How long should i wait for that returned security deposit? He is requesting a new security deposit for the new office space. Is that legal?
The space I am moving to is half the size of my last rental. The rent is 250.00 instead of $550. The new deposit is $250 on the smaller unit. The old deposit on the larger unit was $500. I have not received the old deposit back. I do not need the larger space because business is slow. The landlord agreed to the move. Thats no problem but has not returned my initial deposit.
Why would you get your initial security back? That makes no sense. Especially if you are still in the building with the same landlord.
If you are moving to a bigger space, the security on that unit is going to be more, and that is why he is probably asking for a new deposit. Even IF you are downsizing, in 10 years rent has gone up and your initial deposit probably would not cover what he charges at the unit you want to rent now.
You will not get your security deposit(s) back until you completely vacate the building.
I need some office space, hopefully not too expensive.
As a matter of fact, yes I do!
Check out http://www.goodwin-properties.com/lease.html
Hope that is helpful!
i have crews ready to travel we specialize in all aspects of floor covering.only interested in commercial retail space,or profesional office space.have men to provide your labor needs for your projects.
Place an ad in your local CraigsList.Org.
Go to that site and find you city then place and ad in the services offered category or anywhere else you would like.
This site gets so much traffic right now that it isn’t even funny. You should get more work than you can handle of you keep up on your ads!
Good luck!
I’m looking for free office space for my non profit women’s organization we are in our infancy stage. If you know someone who has a space please help.
No, even non-profits pay rent. The property owner is not non-profit, still has to pay taxes, insurance and a mortgage.
I was wondering if anyone knows about this. I work for a non-profit in New York City. Today we had the city contract people in our office, just making sure our records on clients are good. They also look at things like fire estinguishers, etc. We have some flood lights above our Fire Exit signs and the city person tested them and they were blown out. We asked the building manager about it and he says that it is our responsibility to make sure they work. It turns out that they needed a certain battery. We had to get someone to go out and buy six batteries and the total was over $140.00. Also the person had to stay late to put them in each exit light. The city person is coming back tomorrow and they must all work. Our commercial lease does not say that we are responsible for maintaining these exit lights and having to buy light bulbs and batteries. We also rent space at another site and that building landlord replaces those items for us (a different address and a different landlord). Does anyone know who would be responsible for such things? Thank you.
Unfortunately, this would be determined by the type of lease you have and the language in your lease.
If you have a full service lease, this might be the landlord’s responsibility. (If your landlord replaces light bulbs and cleans your office and inspects your fire extinguishers without billing you extra, you probably have a full service lease.)
The lease language would not necessarily reference the emergency lighting in particular; however, the lease might say that the tenant is responsible for all interior maintenance of the leased premises. They could say that such language would make the emergency lights your problem.
FYI, in almost all of my buildings the tenant maintains any thing that is outside of base building standard. If our standard emergency lights are fluorescent tube fixtures with battery back-ups, a tenant that decided to install a cheaper wall mounted "fish eye" light with battery would be required to maintain that non-standard light.
I am looking for office space and I am confused about the different terminology
A lease in which the lessee pays rent to the lessor, as well as all taxes, insurance, and maintenance expenses that arise from the use of the property.
It is hard to tell from your question but I am assuming the nnn is in addition to your $5 square foot rental payment which is usually calculated on an annual basis. For instance, if you are renting a 2000 sq. ft. office, the rent would be $10,000 for the year or divided by 12, $833 a month and since it was nnn, you would have to come up with the additional taxes and insurance and maintenance like cleaning or cutting the grass, washing the windows, etc. It shouldn’t require major repairs but you better get that clarified!
When bundling CAT5E (or CAT6) cables together in a commercial (plenum) office space (and these cables will be used to link standard office desktop PCs running on a typical 10/100 Mbps network), is there a standard (568B?) that states the maximum number of cables that should be bundled together that is run any distance (say greater than 10 feet)?
You can bundle as many as you require. At the MDF where they are terminated, they all come together in any case. By the way, the ethernet standard 568A is the primary choice, but this has nothing to do with your question regarding the total number individual drops bundled together. Plenum and feet do not come into play in this either. However, if the ceiling is plenum you will need to use plenum cable instead of the standard Cat5 or 6. A plenum ceiling is one where the entire ceiling is the air return. and it requires special (and expensive) fireproof cable.
I am looking for a temporary office space rental or to find a meeting room for rent in Seattle. Coworking spaces, meeting spaces, temporary meeting rooms, etc. will work. I just need something that I can rent by the hour. Thank you!
I would check out eVenues.com. The site is like a hotels.com for temporary meeting space (exactly what you are looking for). It’s pretty easy to use and you can rent any type of meeting room or temporary space by the day or hour.
Hope that helps
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