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Condominium with no HOA or dues

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Dude, cut down on the hooch. I was just making a personal statement and asking a question. You bashed the statement and didn't answer the question. Maybe we could try for the 2000th time? :rof:

I am a little old to be a "Dude". But, if you had been on as many forums as I have and answered the same damned question as many times as I have over the past 12+ years and at least 6 different forums, you might just see it my way. And, for the record, I don't drink hooch, smoke happy weed, or need any of the other props some of you young un's need these days. Just breathing God's good air and knowing every day that I avoid a tombstone is a milestone is good enough for me.

You can do what you want and believe what you want in regards to condominiums or anything else. But, my knowledge of what a condominium is and is not goes back at least to the mid 1970's when I worked with a developer and was involved in the planning, building, and marketing of the first condominium commercial office building in this part of Virginia. At that time most people knew little to nothing about condominiums......but wait....in some cases that is still true today:laugh:

Oh, and for the record, a TOWNHOUSE is an archetectural style, not a form of ownership.
 
So who the hell cuts the grass?
 
Oh, and for the record, a TOWNHOUSE is an archetectural style, not a form of ownership.

Yes, I know that, Don. But, if there isn't an association, it has been resolved, how does the form of ownership not change?
 
Yes, I know that, Don. But, if there isn't an association, it has been resolved, how does the form of ownership not change?


Why would just 2 owners need an association? Can you not see that there would likely be a mutual agreemnet between the parties to care for their own property plus what may be common to both? Don't people do that for things like a shared driveway or a road, or a shared well in a rural area, or a shared septic system?
 
Who cuts the grass when they own a townhouse?
Grass??
In Philadelphia the answer might be more like:
(a) What grass? That's cement, painted green.
- or-
(b) Grass? What is grass?
 
Yes, I know that, Don. But, if there isn't an association, it has been resolved, how does the form of ownership not change?

The form of ownership is not dependent on the existence of a formal HOA.
 
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