Friday, January 17, 2014

ERA Landmarks... Believe in the Disappearance..OOps Difference!!

Finally the Curtains have been drawn on the Real Estate Brand Name.. "ERA LANDMARKS". Why the Company did not acknowledge it to its consumers.. is as much a mystery as the change in name???

ERA LANDMARKS IS NOW ADEL LANDMARKS




A lot of Customers after having read the blog dated:- 24.12.2013 had spoken to the Company to endorse the new name on to their respective builder buyer agreements at that time the senior management called it a rumor... not surprisingly cause every time new evidence of the methodology of the company is presented the first reaction of the said company is always to discredit the news or the carrier of the new information.  Hope Now they would not raise the same ignorance and would step forward to fulfill its contractual obligation of endorsing and being the Confirming partner along with the Licensee Company to the agreement with the Buyer of its properties. For those who did not get to read the earlier post on the blog here is the link... http://eraredwoodfbd.blogspot.in/2013/12/era-landmarks-to-adel-landmarks.html

Sunday, January 5, 2014

Is Haryana not the place to purchase Flats!!

      Here is an Article that was published within 4 days of the judgement that gave common areas to the builder. My question is when in townships in Noida, Home buyers would have all control of their projects and in Haryana the same working class would be deprived of the advantages of living in Community Building... then would you still prefer a house in Haryana??  With Daily conflicts with Builders and their maintenance staff would your property prices appreciate as maybe of Noida??? 

·         14 Dec 2013
·         Hindustan Times (Delhi)
·         Jeevan Prakash Sharma jeevan.sharma@hindustantimes.com

Homebuyers will be ‘exploited’

Experts and RWA representatives say developers likely to misinterpret SC judgment
Legal experts and RWA representatives have differing opinions on the Supreme Court’s interpretation of the relevant provisions on common areas and facilities in both the Haryana Development and Regulation of Urban Areas Act, 1975, and the Haryana Apartment Ownership Act, 1983.PICTURE REPRESENTATIONAL PURPOSE ONLY
While some experts are of the view that the apex court has struck a balance between the rights of the RWAs and developers, others argue that the judgment will be used by the real estate developer to exploit vulnerable homebuyers.
Gurgaon residents have been having problems. Anjali Jain, the a resident of a group housing project, says, “There is a school in my complex which the developer sold to an educational institution years ago. The monthly fee is R25,000, an amount that just 2% of the residents can afford. While our children go to other schools far away, students from far flung areas who can afford to pay the fees come here.”
The complaint of another resident is that the “Supreme Court hasn’t given a definition of what the community and commercial facilities will include. Now the developer can take stake claim to our parks arguing that it is a community facility. This could happen even to the temples and similar community services.”
And what happens if, as per the judgment, the developer gets to control the convenience shops in a residential complex? “Our experience shows that lots of such shops have been closed and turned into other profitable ventures such as property dealerships, beauty parlours, fast food eating joints etc. The residents have to go out of their societies and travel to distant places to buy things of basic need,” says Ashish Kaul, an apartment owner in Gurgaon.
Residents of The World Spa, a group housing project in Gurgaon’s Sector 39 & 40, have reasons to worry. A few years ago hundreds of residents fought against the developer for rights to the community club. “Now after the judgment the developer can take back the club and lease it out to anybody or run it on his own to make money. What if he charges an exorbitant amount both for membership and monthly usage? We will suffer, outsiders will enjoy the benefit and the developer will make money,” complains a resident.
Highlighting a few g rey areas in the real estate regulation acts of Haryana, Santosh Paul, a Supreme Court lawyer who appeared for the residents of Silver Oaks, says, “The government of Haryana needs to amend laws along the lines of the Maharashtra Ownership Flats Act (MOFA), which gives ownership rights over everything that exists in the complex to flat owners. There is no ambiguity in the MOFA while real estate development acts in Haryana are full of grey areas.”
Mukul Rohatgi, senior advocate who appeared for DLF in the case, contradicts Paul, saying, “Every state has made real estate laws according to its own housing requirements. So is the case with the state of Haryana. I don’t see any issue with the real estate development acts.”
Rohatgi adds, “If the residents feel aggrieved because of a nursery school leased out to expensive educational institutions, they can complain to the education department. If the convenient shopping centers are not used for the purpose for which they are constructed, the residents can complain to the competent authority. However, these violations don’t mean that the rights of colonizers will be curtailed. Developers don’t charge money from flat buyers to construct community and commercial facilities. I think the judgment is a balancing act between the rights of the flat buyers and builders.”
Kaul, in redponse, says, “If we have go to the court for everything, then we will spend the rest of our lives fighting in court.”