Christian Bernkopf has been Appointed General Manager at Rembrandt Hotel Bangkok
The Rembrandt Hotel & Suites Bangkok, is pleased to announce the appointment of Christian Bernkopf, a German national with over two decades of hotel management experience as its General Manager. Christian arrives with an exceptional experience spanning across Asia, Middle East and Europe holding senior management positions with major hotel groups such as Hyatt Hotels, Centara Hotels & Resorts, Minor Hotels Group and Pullman Hotels. Most recently he held the position as the General Manager at the Pullman Danang Beach Resort.
A housing cooperative is a common form of home ownership in Finland. Finnish housing cooperatives are incorporated as (non-profit) limited-liability companies (Finnish: asunto-osakeyhtiö, Swedish: bostadsaktiebolag), where one share usually represents one square meter (sometimes ten) of the apartment. Owning shares that correspond to one apartment in a housing company is generally considered as much owning your own home as actually directly owning a (single family) house. However, shares are not considered as real estate but as personal property and the co-op can take possession of the apartment for a term time and evict the tenant or owner because of disturbance or unpaid maintenance fees.
These structures are preferred by some planned neighborhoods and gated communities. This exists under various names depending on the jurisdiction, such as “unit title”, “sectional title”, “commonhold”, “strata council”, or “tenant-owner’s association”, “body corporate”, “Owners Corporation”, “condominium corporation” or “condominium association”. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. This section does not cite any sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. A homeowners association (HOA), whose members are the unit owners, manages the condominium through a board of directors elected by the membership.
England and Wales, as commonhold is a creature of statute and comparatively rare, and condominiums are more likely to be found in the form of leaseholds. This did not create a significant problem until the 1950s when “flats” (where ownership is divided horizontally) first began to appear on the market as more affordable, particularly for first-time buyers. A positive covenant is, broadly, one that involves the expenditure of money to perform. In English law, it is not possible to enforce a positive covenant on successive owners of freehold land, other than to maintain a boundary fence, without creating an elaborate trust.
Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Historically, this representative was one of the owners themselves; in the 21st century, however, the owners’ convention typically hires a professional building manager who does not personally live in the building. The condominium acts as a non-profit legal entity maintaining the common areas of the property, and is managed by a representative (Hungarian: közös képviselő) elected by the owners’ convention. Condominiums in Hungary are traded and mortgaged on the same market as any free-standing single-family home (Hungarian: kertesház; “garden-house”), and are treated much like other forms of real estate.
These are more readily amendable than the declaration or association bylaws, typically requiring only a vote of the HOA board. Condominiums are usually owned in fee simple title, but can be owned in ways that other real estate can be owned, such as title held in trust. Typical rules include mandatory maintenance fees (perhaps collected monthly), pet restrictions, and color/design choices visible from the exterior of the units. Generally, these sets of rules and regulations are made available to residents and or as a matter of public record, via a condominium or homeowners association website, or through public files, depending on the state and its applicable laws.