Job Recruitment Website - Property management company - Is there no property formalities to decorate? (Decoration preparation)

Is there no property formalities to decorate? (Decoration preparation)

Q:

Our family got the key in June this year and hasn't started decorating yet. Our property is rented by investors of the developer. Because investors and developers have some unclear interests, they will not open property procedures for us, so let's start decorating. We have signed the renovation contract in the decoration company, but can we start work without property formalities?

But the problem is not that we don't want to go through the formalities and pay the property fee and decoration deposit, but that the property is not under our control. This is not our responsibility. They can't delay our owner's renovation plan. What if I have to complain to the administrative department because of this property?

Later, I contacted the developer, and he said that it didn't matter if I started, and I wouldn't be allowed to pay the property fee. He also said that he would change the property again. (This property was originally found by engineering investors, and it has the name of a large property unit, but the property in the community is very messy. Many owners who renovated it two years ago did not go through any property formalities. If the developer says so, can I start work with confidence?

A:

There is no reason for the property company to refuse you to go through these procedures, and there is no right to stop you from decorating your own house. Decoration management in property management is entrusted by all owners to supervise the owners' personal decoration behavior to avoid damaging the public interests. So we can start the renovation, as long as we are careful not to harm the public interest and do a good job in neighborhood relations. You should also find a developer to solve this problem. If you want to complain, you can complain directly to the consumer association. If the developer gives you such a statement, you can start work with confidence. Of course, if you want to ensure that your rights and interests are not damaged, you can ask the developer to give you a written letter, which is foolproof!