Charlotte Condo Details

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Charlotte Condo Details


If you are thinking about buying a Charlotte condo, there are a few things to consider. Condominium plans are easy to figure out for those who have an interest in their condo community. Keep in mind that not all walls in condominium buildings are property lines, and that not all property lines will have walls when you actually stand in that location. Your building's common-property ground-floor area is not subdivided on the plan, but may in fact house the lobby, a laundry room, exercise and meeting rooms, hallways and elevator shafts.

Not many people know that Charlotte is the largest city in North Carolina and the twentieth largest in the United States, with a population of approximately 610,949. Charlotte-Gastonia-Salisbury has a population of 2,120,745. Additionally, Charlotte is the county seat of Mecklenburg County, and is located in south-central North Carolina, near the South Carolina border. The Queen City was named in honor of Queen Charlotte of Mecklenburg, wife of King George III of United Kingdom. Then, there are the crossroads, perched atop a long rise in the piedmont landscape, is the heart of modern Uptown Charlotte. The trading path became Trade Street, and the Great Wagon Road became Tryon Street, in honor of William Tryon, a royal governor of colonial North Carolina. In the seventeen hundreds, townsmen signed a proclamation later known as the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence, a copy of which was allegedly sent, though never officially presented, to the Continental Congress a year later.

The date of the declaration appears on the NC state flag. Just a few days later, the same townsmen met to create and endorse the Mecklenburg Resolves, a set of laws to govern the newly independent town. Charlotte was a site of encampment for both American and British armies during the Revolutionary War, and during a series of skirmishes between British troops and the village earned the lasting nickname Hornet's Nest from frustrated Lord General Charles Cornwallis.

The city's first boom came after the Civil War, as a cotton processing center and a railroad hub. Population leapt again during World War I, when the U.S. government established Camp Greene north of present-day Wilkinson Boulevard. Many soldiers and suppliers stayed after the war, launching an ascent that eventually overtook older and more established rivals along the arc of the Carolina piedmont. Historically driven preservationists often struggle to maintain old city landmarks in the face of modern-minded boosters.

It is the perfect place to find a lovely condo that will suit all your living needs. You can find your suite by its actual location on the plan and mark the civic address suite number on it. If you are thinking about buying the suite, make sure that the legal unit number for the suite matches the legal description of the property you might be buying. Be careful never to confuse your property's civic address with its legal unit number. Remember that titled parking stalls have no civic address, and should only be numbered as per the condo plan. Be prepared because there are a few buildings that number their stalls in another sequence. If you are reading the plan before buying a condo home, ponder the unit factor table, keeping in mind that unless the plan declares how unit factors were allocated, look for any unfairness in the allocations. These are good things to keep in mind when buying a Charlotte new condo.


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