An
apartment (or flat in Britain and other Commonwealth countries)
is a self-contained housing unit that occupies only part of a
building. Apartments may be owned (by an owner-occupier) or
rented (by tenants).
Some apartment-dwellers own their apartments, either as co-ops,
in which the residents own shares of a corporation that owns the
building or development; or in condominiums, whose residents own
their apartments and share ownership of the public spaces. Most
apartments are in buildings designed for the purpose, but large
older houses are sometimes divided into apartments. The word
apartment connotes a residential unit or section in a building.
Apartment building owners, lessors, or managers often use the
more general word units to refer to apartments. Units can be
used to refer to rental business suites as well as residential
apartments. When there is no tenant occupying an apartment, the
lessor is said to have a vacancy. For apartment lessors, each
vacancy represents a loss of income from rent-paying tenants for
the time the apartment is vacant (i. e., unoccupied). Lessors'
objectives are often to minimize the vacancy rate for their
units. The owner of the apartment typically transfers possession
to the occupant(s) by giving him/her the key to the apartment
entrance door(s) and any other keys need to live there, such as
a common key to the building or any other common areas, and an
individual unit mailbox key. When the occupant(s) move out,
these keys should typically be returned to the owner.
Apartments can be classified into several types. Studio or
efficiency apartments tend to be the smallest apartments with
the cheapest rents in a given area. These kinds of apartment
usually consist mainly of a large room which is the living,
dining, and bedroom combined. There are usually kitchen
facilities as part of this central room, but the bathroom is its
own smaller separate room. In the UK and Ireland, a roughly
equivalent term is bed-sit (bedroom and sitting-room combined).
Moving up from the efficiencies are one-bedroom apartments where
one bedroom is a separate room from the rest of the apartment.
Then there are two-bedroom, three-bedroom, etc. apartments.
Small apartments often have only one entrance/exit. Large
apartments often have two entrances/exits, perhaps a door in the
front and another in the back. Depending on the building design,
the entrance/exit doors may be directly to the outside or to a
common area inside, such as a hallway. Depending on location,
apartments may be available for rent furnished with furniture or
unfurnished into which a tenant usually moves in with his own
furniture. Permanent carpeting is often included in an
apartment.
Laundry facilities are usually kept in a separate area
accessible to all the tenants in the building. Depending on when
the building was built and the design of the building, utilities
such as water, heating, and electric may be common for all the
apartments in the building or separate for each apartment and
billed separately to each tenant. Outlets for connection to
telephones are typically included in apartments. Telephone
service is optional and is practically always billed separately
from the rent payments. Cable television and similar amenities
are extra also. Parking space(s), air conditioner, and extra
storage space may or may not be included with an apartment.
Rental leases often limit the maximum number of people who can
reside in each apartment. On or around the ground floor of the
apartment building, a series of mailboxes are typically kept in
a location accessible to the public and, thus, to the mailman
too. Every unit typically gets its own mailbox with individual
keys to it. Some very large apartment buildings with a full-time
staff may take mail from the mailman and provide mail-sorting
service. Near the mailboxes or some other location accessible by
outsiders, there may be a buzzer (equivalent to a doorbell) for
each individual unit. In smaller apartment buildings such as
two- or three-flats, or even four-flats, garbage is often
disposed of in trash containers similar to those used at houses.
In larger buildings, garbage is often collected in a common
trash bin or dumpster. For cleanliness or minimizing noise, many
lessors will place restrictions on tenants regarding keeping
pets in an apartment.
This article is licensed
under the
GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the
Wikipedia article "Apartment". |