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York Apartments

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Yohn Property Management - Kitchen at One West

Yohn Property Management

(3 reviews)

Not only was our condo neighborhood poorly managed, we have come to find out now that Yohn is gone…read morethat she mismanaged the HOA by taking a loan out for reserves and now WE have to repay that loan via huge HOA fee hikes.

One star for the moving out experience. I absolutely enjoyed my one-year lease with Yohn Property…read more The moving out experience, specifically the refund of deposit, was an experience of nightmare. It was extremely hard to communicate with Graham Will, who assisted with the refund of deposit. I was charged for the oil splash in the kitchen area. The oil splash in the kitchen was an issue I addressed with three staff from their team months ago before I moved out. There was maintenance request record as well as phone calls. All three staff assured me no charge would occur when move out for the kitchen oil splash considering the placement of the stove top and walls. I was extremely thankful at that time because they actually reached out to me, explained to me and assured me peace of mind. In addition, the move-out tips I received from Trish indicated "no charge for oil splash in kitchen." However, after I moved out, I was charged for the kitchen oil splash. As to the cleaning fee, I regret not to take some photos at the time I moved out. I trusted them and thought they would make good judgment. I spent days deep-cleaning my apartment just to avoid outrageous cleaning fee. Specifically, I cleaned stove top, oven as emphasized in the "moving-out tips." However, in the move-out report, it indicated "dirty stove and oven." Maybe different people have different perception of "being dirty." During my communication regarding the move-out report, I just told Graham that I cleaned them really careful, shouldn't be "dirty." The immediate response I got was like: so you are telling me someone deliberately threw some dirt on the stove? (It's not verbatim, but that's the meaning). What I should respond then? Well, okay, then I just gave up my disagreement on the cleaning fee. I am just frustrated by the moving-out experience, the refund of deposit. It's terrible. I just took a video in the apartment expressing my happiness after I cleared out and cleaned the entire apartment, but didn't take photos of specific areas. If I did, I probably would be more confident to tell Graham, they are not dirty. This is my personal experience, just for your information. So you can find a way to avoid it if you have similar situation as me. :)

Predix Property Management

Predix Property Management

(13 reviews)

My partner and I rented an apartment at Gable Flats, a converted tobacco factory managed by Predix…read moreProperty Management, for about 18 months. Unfortunately, our experience showed a pattern of poor safety oversight and communication. One particularly alarming situation occurred during construction on the building when workers demolished an old chimney and were throwing bricks from the roof (about 3-4 stories up) into a walkway used by tenants and neighborhood kids on bikes. There were no warning signs or barricades. I was so concerned I actually called the police before contacting Predix. Their response was that the building owner hired the workers, so they had no control because the workers weren't their employees. However, Predix was our only contact and tenants were never given a way to reach the building owner. Another issue was that for most of our tenancy the historic windows were sealed with plexiglass and could not open, which created serious ventilation concerns. When the apartment below us was painted before new tenants moved in, fumes filled our apartment through small gaps in the old brick structure. My partner--who hasn't had asthma symptoms since childhood--started wheezing, and we both developed severe headaches and nausea. Predix later said the painter didn't realize he needed to remove the plexiglass and ventilate the unit. We also experienced two heating failures during the winters we lived there. The first time the heat went out sometime Thursday afternoon while we were away visiting family and was not repaired until Tuesday. When we returned Saturday evening, the apartment temperature was in the low 50s. After dealing with a third-party weekend answering service and a lot of runaround, Predix eventually dropped off two space heaters, but because of the high ceilings and apartment size the temperature never rose above the high 50s. We were even told to drive to Walmart at 9pm to buy extension cords ourselves, which Predix would reimburse if we returned them later with the heaters. To make matters worse, Predix left the space heaters in our apartment for months despite repeated follow-ups asking them to retrieve them. Eventually we received a frantic message one weekend saying they urgently needed them for another unit. Although we were away, we allowed them into our apartment so another tenant wouldn't have to deal with the same situation. The final straw that led us to terminate our lease was how Predix handled a building-wide window replacement project three months before we moved out. Tenants were given just over two weeks notice before work would begin and asked to sign what was presented as a "lead removal notice." After reading it carefully, only a small portion actually addressed lead. The rest was essentially a contract allowing Predix and contractors to enter our apartment anytime between 8am and 7pm for a three-week period, requiring us to move belongings four feet away from the windows, and stating that Predix would not be responsible for any damages. Because I work nights and sleep during the day, I told them I could not agree to those terms. Predix responded saying we would be violating our lease by refusing entry, even though the clause they cited clearly applied to maintenance--not major renovations. They initially said they would simply skip replacing our windows. About a week later we were asked to join a phone call with two Predix managers. Apparently the building owner was not comfortable leaving one apartment untouched because it would cost too much to bring contractors and equipment back later. What followed was an hour-long call where the managers repeatedly talked over us and tried to pressure us into signing the original document. Eventually we agreed to specific conditions: 1)the work had to happen on a specific date due to my work schedule 2)Predix would take responsibility for damage to belongings not moved four feet from the windows 3)the windows would be replaced from the outside The morning of the replacement everything seemed organized. The windows were covered with plastic tarps and tape, and because the noise was intense my partner and I left to run errands. When my partner returned, the coverings had been removed and our apartment had turned into a wind tunnel. Papers and my rare plant collection were blowing around the room. Because of the wind, the contractors switched to doing the replacement from inside the apartment, leaving construction debris and dirt everywhere--which we had to clean ourselves. One of my plants worth about $400 was damaged during the process and later died. Predix ultimately offered $150 in compensation. The building itself is beautiful and unique, but the management repeatedly demonstrated poor communication, lack of accountability, and concerning safety practices. While the apartment had a lot of charm, the experience with Predix ultimately made it not worth it.

I believe that there's some profiling happening with the property manager. Spoke with a property…read moremanager about the apartments in Seven Valleys and she told me that she would notify me when the next phase of the project was complete. Contacted her about a unit that was available prior to that time and she never responded back to me.

York Apartments - apartments - Updated June 2026

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