Monday, 7 April 2014

Home Exterior Renovation and Safety Tips

Exterior Renovating and maintaining of your building can have a big impact from trees to parking lots to protecting your building from damage when empty.
  1. Plant some saplings on your land and 20 years later your building will look much more attractive for it. You may want some advice on where to plant, but in front of the building is good, except, generally for retail plazas (you don’t want the view obstructed when they are frown).
  2. Repaint the parking line every few years to keep them looking fresh. For retail uses, ensure that virtually all parking is in front of the building, provided by laws permit.
  3. It’s an important to protect the exterior of your buildings on a regular basis. To prevent general wear and tear, place bollards art corner of your buildings, and curbs and guardrails along walls to protect corrugated metal siding from vehicles. In fact, the bottom 1,8-2,4 m (6-8ft) or 1.2 m (4 ft), at least of the wall below the corrugated metal siding of your building should be concrete, concrete blocks or bricks. You should also use curbs and guardrails to protect fences.
  4. If you lease your buildings to tenants, sooner or later you will have an empty one. Make sure that these are no doors, vents, or windows open and if a glass pane is broken, replace it at once. If you do not, birds will get inside. To prospective tenants, the droppings are unsightly, smelly, a potential health hazards, and you will find them very difficult and costly to clean. Avoid this situation; it is a curse.