
Growing Up: How Strata Title Bodies Might Learn to Behave
Condition: SECONDHAND
NB: This is a secondhand book in very good condition. See our FAQs for more information. Please note that the jacket image is indicative only. A description of our secondhand books is not always available. Please contact us if you have a question about this title.
Author: Michael Teys
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 240
Apartments are the new houses for a growing number of Australians. Housing affordability, aging, environmental issues, immigration and shrinking household formation patterns are driving this shift. Apartments are now the dominant form of new housing in many of our capital cities. In a little under 20 years over half of Sydney's population will live in apartments. In other cities the trend will be the same. The legal concept of strata title was invented just over 50 years ago as a means of conveniently financing separately-owned flats with common property and facilities, the strata concept has come a long way. Since then increasingly complex laws have been developed to accommodate increasingly complex buildings, many of which now incorporate a mix of uses. Despite these trends towards more complex housing forms and the many and varied laws that apply to them, our owners corporations and bodies corporate are compulsory not-for-profit organisations, run by volunteers from within the strata community concerned. Strata expert and author Michael Teys has written this book to help strata communities and the owners corporations that run them think about the issues they face now and into the future. Growing Up is a thought-provoking book on an important subject as more and more Australians adopt higher-density living and learn to live in closer proximity with their neighbours.
Author: Michael Teys
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 240
Apartments are the new houses for a growing number of Australians. Housing affordability, aging, environmental issues, immigration and shrinking household formation patterns are driving this shift. Apartments are now the dominant form of new housing in many of our capital cities. In a little under 20 years over half of Sydney's population will live in apartments. In other cities the trend will be the same. The legal concept of strata title was invented just over 50 years ago as a means of conveniently financing separately-owned flats with common property and facilities, the strata concept has come a long way. Since then increasingly complex laws have been developed to accommodate increasingly complex buildings, many of which now incorporate a mix of uses. Despite these trends towards more complex housing forms and the many and varied laws that apply to them, our owners corporations and bodies corporate are compulsory not-for-profit organisations, run by volunteers from within the strata community concerned. Strata expert and author Michael Teys has written this book to help strata communities and the owners corporations that run them think about the issues they face now and into the future. Growing Up is a thought-provoking book on an important subject as more and more Australians adopt higher-density living and learn to live in closer proximity with their neighbours.
Description
NB: This is a secondhand book in very good condition. See our FAQs for more information. Please note that the jacket image is indicative only. A description of our secondhand books is not always available. Please contact us if you have a question about this title.
Author: Michael Teys
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 240
Apartments are the new houses for a growing number of Australians. Housing affordability, aging, environmental issues, immigration and shrinking household formation patterns are driving this shift. Apartments are now the dominant form of new housing in many of our capital cities. In a little under 20 years over half of Sydney's population will live in apartments. In other cities the trend will be the same. The legal concept of strata title was invented just over 50 years ago as a means of conveniently financing separately-owned flats with common property and facilities, the strata concept has come a long way. Since then increasingly complex laws have been developed to accommodate increasingly complex buildings, many of which now incorporate a mix of uses. Despite these trends towards more complex housing forms and the many and varied laws that apply to them, our owners corporations and bodies corporate are compulsory not-for-profit organisations, run by volunteers from within the strata community concerned. Strata expert and author Michael Teys has written this book to help strata communities and the owners corporations that run them think about the issues they face now and into the future. Growing Up is a thought-provoking book on an important subject as more and more Australians adopt higher-density living and learn to live in closer proximity with their neighbours.
Author: Michael Teys
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 240
Apartments are the new houses for a growing number of Australians. Housing affordability, aging, environmental issues, immigration and shrinking household formation patterns are driving this shift. Apartments are now the dominant form of new housing in many of our capital cities. In a little under 20 years over half of Sydney's population will live in apartments. In other cities the trend will be the same. The legal concept of strata title was invented just over 50 years ago as a means of conveniently financing separately-owned flats with common property and facilities, the strata concept has come a long way. Since then increasingly complex laws have been developed to accommodate increasingly complex buildings, many of which now incorporate a mix of uses. Despite these trends towards more complex housing forms and the many and varied laws that apply to them, our owners corporations and bodies corporate are compulsory not-for-profit organisations, run by volunteers from within the strata community concerned. Strata expert and author Michael Teys has written this book to help strata communities and the owners corporations that run them think about the issues they face now and into the future. Growing Up is a thought-provoking book on an important subject as more and more Australians adopt higher-density living and learn to live in closer proximity with their neighbours.

Growing Up: How Strata Title Bodies Might Learn to Behave