Recent comments in /f/baltimore

Sickofbaltimore t1_j9d1gzl wrote

No.

The facility fee is required to be a separate line item for outpatient hospital-based visits. So people notice it. You are still paying it for other outpatient visits but the charge items are together so you might not see it listed.

Edit: every hospital has this information on their website if you search for the facility fee.

4

fre_d_dy t1_j9d19vm wrote

So there’s a ton a variables. If you can assume the structure is still good, the roof, framing etc. Also assuming you got have mold, asbestos etc.

Process wise your looking at demo, permits, install of all the stuff inside the walls, drywall, flooring and finishes (paint, trim, fixtures, tile etc). With inspections throughout each stage.

Figure you might spend: $10-15k each for electrical, plumbing and HVAC (central heating/air).

$5-10k each for drywall, flooring (including subfloor, leveling, flooring material and trim)

$3k-5k each for demo, appliances, kitchen cabinets and counters, paint, and adding a new layer on the roof

So you could easily be spending $75k-100k. Assuming you don’t have any big ticket surprises.

21

needleinacamelseye t1_j9czqtf wrote

It's going to depend on what condition the vacant house is in (is there a roof? are the floors intact? are walls crumbling?) and on the cost of labor. I once heard that it costs about $150/sq. ft. to do a full renovation/refinish of a shell of a rowhouse, but I can't remember where I saw that number or what it includes.

Edit: I found this paper from last year which estimates that the cost/sq. ft. to bring a vacant up to code is between $100 and $200/sq. ft.

58

the-denver-nugs t1_j9cwccf wrote

little havanah is basically there for drinks with a view of the harbor. food is honestly pretty shit if you want authentic. I've been to miami a good deal and work with hispanics in restaurants. like food isn't shit on its own and i will eat it, it just isn't near authentic tho from eating there it does seem like a bit is microwaved.

3