Cheaper to tear down the awning if it wasn't shared.My amateur guestimation is 5000. That's based on my diy experience fixing similar things on my own house.
Cheaper to tear down the awning if it wasn't shared.
Could they just install a new support column to fix it for the interum?
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This. For a sale, I would jack up the sagging roof, put in a new post, and then just clean everything up.
What I see looks like replacing the slanted slab, and complete roof replacement. I also thought you owned both units. I have no experience with multi family homes. You could do some jacking and gutter adjustments to make it better as long as everything isn't a rotten mess. Depends on the goal, do you want to fix it or just make it look not so bad?Cheaper to tear down the awning if it wasn't shared.
Could they just install a new support column to fix it for the interum?
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You do know that everybody that has been following this knows your address now, since you linked the listing in that other thread.
To fix that thing the right way, it would probably take $500 just in materials between concrete, lumber, and shingles. Probably be a couple days worth of work if I did it myself.
Try to get estimates to jack the slab up (i.e., way cheaper than tearing it all out and pouring a new slab).
If you really need to raise the concrete, the best, cheapest and quickest solution is polyurethane raising foam. It's an amazing product that's done by drilling some 1/2" holes and using a foam injector. The foam sets up like a rock and is permanent. This isn't your Home Depot foam out of a can either.