I cannot begin to tell potential homebuyers how bad Christopher Court Condominium is. My only reason for staying here is that my mortgage is upside down. Even though writing this truthful review will drive down my home's value even more, I finally can take no more after 11 years, and I have to let people know: Do NOT buy a condominium at Christopher Court. This list of problems represents a tiny sampling of the mess:
- I live in a building with a common landing on which a stair has been steadily eroding for more than two years--to the point where the stair broke away, exposing the rusting iron support rod. It took the Board and the management company more than two years (that's right more than 2 X 365 days) to do anything about it (despite repeated emails). It just got fixed!
- The paint on the railing surrounding my building's outdoor heat-pump unit enclosure has been badly chipping and peeling for more than two years (despite an email and photo sent over two years ago). The wood is now grey and deteriorated.
-The ceiling on the top floor of my unit has leaked BADLY six times in one year (that's right--the leaking started in July 2015). Each time, I have to move furniture around and cover it in plastic to protect it. Finally today (finally!) the contractor came out and did a water test and determined where the leak is, sealed it, and put a tarp over it. Now the negotiations will begin about who pays for what.
Keep reading--I'm saving the most horrific for last, but first ...
- As I mentioned, I live in a building with a common landing. Well, the rules say, individuals can't put their belongings on the common areas. Completely logical right? Well, my neighbors have or have had on the common landing the following items off an on for years and the Board does nothing: dead, rotting plants; hanging dead plants infested with bugs and covered in cobwebs; dirty, pollution filemed statuettes filled with gray, pollution covered fake flowers; beat up old outdoor furniture with cigarette burns in them; a beat up old dining room chair (that's right a dining room chair on the outdoor landing and neither the Board nor the management company would do a thing about it); shoes; sandals; weed filled pots; large pots covered over with rat bedding (instead of proper mulch) that gets grey and sopping wet in the rain; a broken flower pot filled with cigarette butts; plastic containers filled with algae covered standing water in the summer. The list goes on. I have sent numerous emails with photos: nothing happens. Our Board and our management company (neither Vanguard nor Tidewater) do nothing. It's so bad, a neighbor from another building reported that a prospective buyer on walking by our landing said to her real estate agent: "This place is trashy. I won't buy here," and turned around and left.
-And now the best for last: I am the. survivor of an aggressive form of breast cancer. Breast cancer likes to migrate to the lungs among other areas of the body. Well, my downstairs neighbor foreclosed and an investor bought her place and rented it out to three adult smokers. My condo was so badly polluted by second-hand smoke, my voice became hoarse, my cat developed chronic lung inflammation (and had to live on antihistamines and cortisone) and began sneezing blood (he died of cancer--I wonder why?), and the Board and the management company (Vanguard) declined to help me. According to HOA meeting minutes, the Board acknowledged that they could invoke the nuisance clause in our bylaws (but they never did). I forgot to mention I also have cardiac issues. Finally, because the only solution I had was to declare bankruptcy and leave, I hired a lawyer and prepared to sue. My cardiologist and oncologist wrote letters. A licensed engineer came out and measured nicotine levels in my apartment (they were 50 times higher than what the U.S. government would require to be regulated in terms of air pollution). Still the Board and management company did nothing (Vanguard). Vanguard's lawyer said they weren't responsible. My lawyer convinced them otherwise thanks to the HOA meeting minutes which recorded that they had said they could invoke the nuisance clause. Still nothing was done. Finally, the downstairs homeowner kicked the renters out.
Folks, buy anywhere, but do not buy a condominium at Christopher Court. I would even suggest avoiding condos all together. Unless you are willing to spend money to sue, you don't really have any rights at all. read more