all part of your c.a.m fees that you pay monthly unless you lease says otherwise
2007-11-28 22:39:43
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Are you saying that there is currently no electricity in the common areas of an office building? Are you peeing in the dark here? The common areas of a building are the responsibility of the landlord, you however, pay monthly cam in your rent which goes to pay for these expenses, ie elevator, lounge, toilets etc. Fire code states that the emergency stairwells must be lit in case of fire. I find it hard to believe that your common areas don't have electricity such as lights.
I ran a property that all the common areas were located outside, we still provided outside lighting on the building, in the parking lot and along the sidewalks, in the stairwells and in the restrooms.
2007-11-29 01:10:08
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answer #2
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answered by Weimaraner Mom 7
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Do the tenants of a commercial building have the rights to ask for electricity provided in the common area?
Yes , they can ask and it should be provided by the landlord
United States: Submetering Of Electricity For Commercial Buildings
In most large multi-story commercial buildings, there is only one electric meter for both common areas and tenant-controlled areas. In this situation, tenants are not customers of the utility and do not have utility-owned meters that measure their individual electricity usage.
In order to recover their electricity costs, commercial landlords allocate these costs among tenants as part of their rent. The allocation is typically based on the relative rentable area occupied by each tenant. As a result, individual tenants have a relatively small incentive to conserve energy or improve the energy efficiency of their facilities and operations. In fact, this approach results in tenants with low usage of electricity per square foot subsidizing the electricity use of tenants that use more electricity per square foot.
2007-11-28 22:46:12
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answer #3
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answered by Godzilla Gal 4
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If you charge a cam fee in which it is considered common area expense it would fall into that category. Does your lease provide any exclusions? And if so does it relate to the not electricity. The area where there is no lights in the staircase it may lead to a libility issue, someone falling etc.
Aside from if they have "rights", it makes good business sense to provide those areas with light. It is much easier in commercial rentals to try to keep a good paying tenat then try to find a new one.
2007-11-28 22:43:20
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answer #4
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answered by D-MAN 2
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no a tenant shouldn't pay the electric powered energy for the hallways. except he's renting the entire construction. The nerve of the owner. some rip off. properly you will desire to enable the different tenant be attentive to the region and talk supplying you with a proportion for action sensor gentle that's earnings him. confident that's unfair, inspite of the shown fact which you would be able to touch your gentle company have them deliver you which ones area is using.
2016-11-13 00:13:35
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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Common areas would be the landlords responsibility and would have to conform to building regulations and safety requirements. If electricity is provided then it would depend on the terms of tenancy who would pay. If it is not directly chargeable it may be included in maintenance costs.
2007-11-28 22:40:51
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answer #6
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answered by Barbarian 5
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YES!!! Health and Safety say that you MUST provide a safe environment in public or shared areas eg Toilets or Corridoors
etc, if someone injures themselves in any part of your property,YOU ARE LIABLE UNDER LAW. Check with your local Govt Health and Safety officer. They will advise you....
2007-11-29 03:27:20
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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yes, if you can show a duty of care, which i believe you can.
2007-11-28 22:39:42
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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You can ask.
2007-11-28 22:39:35
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answer #9
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answered by Phoenix Quill 7
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