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An apartment is a rented residential unit that is part of one (or several) residential buildings. There is typically one owner or management company for all the units who does all the maintenance and upkeep.
TYPES OF APARTMENT
1. Studio Apartment:
A studio apartment is a small space (typically about 600 square feet) that is one open room except for the bathroom and perhaps a closet. Some studio apartments have a small area that extends from the main living area and provides a little extra separation for a “bedroom” (although there are no doors or interior walls). These studios might be called an alcove studio or an L-shaped studio.
2. Loft Apartments
While lofts have a similar layout to a studio apartment, meaning everything is in one open space with no interior walls except for the bathroom, lofts are typically much larger with very high ceilings and tall windows. Many lofts are located in historic warehouses that have been converted into living space, so they feature elements like exposed beams, brickwork, and original wood floors.
3. Garden Apartments
Have you seen the term “garden apartment” and wondered what that meant, exactly? A garden apartment is a smaller apartment community (typically one to three floors) set around a green space or garden area. These apartments typically don’t have elevators and are more plentiful in suburban and rural communities. While you won’t necessarily have your own garden space in a garden apartment, the community might offer shared walking paths, trees and shrubs, ponds, and other natural elements.
4. Convertible apartments
If you don’t want a one-bedroomapartment but you are concerned that a studio will be too small, a convertible apartment might be the perfect solution. A convertible apartment doesn’t have a bedroom, but it does have an area that could work as a bedroom. This might be the separate area in an L-shaped studio, a smaller room with sliding glass doors, or an area separated from the main living area by a half or partial wall. It’s “convertible” because you could use this space for anything, from a bedroom to an office to an art studio.
5. Micro Apartments
Basically, a micro apartment is a very small studio. Where the typical studio is around 600 square feet, a micro apartment is less than 400 square feet. In fact, a micro apartment can be as small as 100 square feet! (If you are not sure how much square footage that is, it’s about the size of a doctor’s exam room.) Micro apartments work because most of the space is multi-functional (for example, the kitchen table might fold into the wall when not in use, or the couch might convert into a bed).
6. Walk-up apartments
An apartment building without an elevator is known as a walk-up. Unless you rent on the main level, you’ll have to climb stairs to reach your walk-up apartment. These buildings are typically six floors or less and are often less expensive than larger apartment buildings with elevators. If you don’t mind climbing stairs every day, walk-ups are a terrific option for those looking for less-expensive options in the city.
Land acquisition is the power of the government (federal, state and local government) to take control of private land for the purpose of industrialisation (i.e building of industries, factories etc), development of infrastructural facilities (e.g schools, railways stations, roads, Bridges etc) or urbanisation of the land.
Types Of Land Acquisition
Land acquisition can said to be divided into two parts, namely
Global/General Acquisition
Committed Acquisition.
Committed Acquisition
A parcel of land is said to be under committed acquisition when the government has indicated an intention to use that land for a specific purpose in the the interest of the general public such as provision of amenities (schools, roads, fly-overs, recreational park, tunnels etc).
Global or General Acquisition
Lands that are under “general acquisition” or “global acquisition” can later be confirmed ‘free’ or ‘committed’ as the case may be.
A land under general acquisition can become free by a process called excision.
“Excision is a process whereby the government releases a portion of an expanse of land that is not committed” If a parcel of land that was formerly under acquisition becomes excised; it is then considered free and becomes gazetted.
The gazette then becomes the title on the land and such land is safe to buy because a proper title can be processed on the land.
A second case where lands under general acquisition can be released is, if an individual purchased a land that was under acquisition without going through an excision process.
Such lands can go through another process called “ratification” or “regularization” in which the land owner pays for the land to be ratified or regularized. The only conditions in this case is that, the land in question must not fall within a committed area and that the purpose for which the land was bought does not disrupt the original plan of the state.
Conditions for ratification may differ from state to state and country to country