
Retirement Community
1775 Powder Mill Rd, York, PA, 17403
The Project Has 11 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
The Project Has 9 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
The Project Has 10 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
The Project Has 63 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
The Project Has 1 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
The Project Has 1 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
The Project Has 22 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
131 E Maple St Has 1 Units Available
222 W College Ave Has 1 Units Available
Carriage Works Apartments Has 80 Units Available
Dutch Kitchen Has 59 Units Available
George Street Commons Has 28 Units Available
George Street Project Has 36 Units Available
Helfrich Building Has 9 Units Available
Historic Fairmount Apartments Has 38 Units Available
Homes At Thackston Park Has 39 Units Available
Hudson Park Towers Has 70 Units Available
Parkside Towers Has 82 Units Available
Parkview At Manchester Heights Has 64 Units Available
Pullman Building Has 23 Units Available
Shady Oak Apartments Has 35 Units Available
Shelly School Apartments Has 17 Units Available
Sherrill Apartments Has 20 Units Available
Skw Housing Project Has 34 Units Available
Smyser Street Apartments Has 21 Units Available
Springwood Overlook Has 84 Units Available
Stony Brook Gardens Has 84 Units Available
Tyler Run Apartments Has 80 Units Available
Waverly Court Apartments At Eastgate Has 46 Units Available
Westminster Place At Queen St Has 50 Units Available
Wyndamere Apartments Has 65 Units Available
York Scattered Site Project Has 31 Units Available
York Ymca Sro Project Has 120 Units Available
Yorktowne Apartments Has 4 Units Available
Bell House Has 20 Units Available
Cable House Has 83 Units Available
Cloverfield Kingston House Has 102 Units Available
Delphia House Has 103 Units Available
Penn Apartments Has 7 Units Available
Village At York Has 72 Units Available
York Towne House Has 200 Units Available
Autumn House West Has 1 Units Available
COLONIAL MANOR NURSING HOME Has 1 Units Available
Country Meadows Of Has 1 Units Available
Country Meadows Of York Has 1 Units Available
County Meadows Of Leader Heights Has 1 Units Available
LUTHERAN NRSG AND REHAB CTR Has 1 Units Available
Lutheran Social Services of Souentral Pennsylvania - LSS Foundation Has 1 Units Available
MANORCARE HEALTH SERVICES-KINGSTON COURT Has 1 Units Available
MANORCARE HEALTH SERVICES-YORK NORTH Has 1 Units Available
MANORCARE HEALTH SERVICES-YORK SOUTH Has 1 Units Available
MISERICORDIA NURSING & REHABILITATION CENTER Has 1 Units Available
NORMANDIE RIDGE Has 1 Units Available
Pace Resources Has 1 Units Available
PLEASANT ACRES NURSING AND REHAB CENTER Has 1 Units Available
Pool Fitness Center Has 1 Units Available
REST HAVEN-YORK Has 1 Units Available
The Brunswick At Longstown Has 1 Units Available
Village At Kelly Drive Ersonal Sistd Lvng Ctrd Lvi Has 1 Units Available
Wheeling Financial Associates & Securities Service Network Has 1 Units Available
You see one roach in the kitchen at midnight. Then another near the bathroom. Then tiny black dots inside a cabinet. Or worse, you wake up with itchy bites and find dark stains along the mattress seam. Now you have the question every renter hates asking: who has to pay for pest control, you or the landlord? The answer is not as simple as renters want it to be. In many U.S. apartments, landlords are generally responsible for providing habitable housing and addressing serious pest problems. But the details depend on your state, city, lease, building type, timing, evidence, and whether the tenant caused or worsened the infestation.
Recently, there’s been a big story in the Housing News—HUD is fully tackling the homelessness crisis! You might wonder, why has this suddenly become such a big issue? In fact, homelessness has been around for a long time, but now HUD has finally decided to face it seriously! Whether it's due to the impact of the pandemic or economic uncertainty, more and more people are finding themselves without a place to live, and HUD's action couldn’t have come at a better time.
You sold your house. The buyer is ready to close. The lender is ready. The title company is ready. But your moving truck is not. Your next home is not ready. Your new-build closing was delayed. Your apartment lease starts next month. Your kids still have school. You need a few extra days or weeks after closing. That is where a post-closing occupancy agreement, often called a rent-back, leaseback, seller possession, seller occupancy, or use-and-occupancy agreement, can help. It allows the seller to stay in the home temporarily after the buyer becomes the legal owner. But this is not a casual favor. Once the deed transfers, the house is no longer yours. You are staying in someone else’s property, and a badly written rent-back can create insurance disputes, eviction problems, property damage fights, mortgage occupancy issues, escrow battles, and closing drama.
A home at the end of a quiet cul-de-sac can feel like the ultimate family dream. No constant through traffic. Fewer strangers driving by. Kids riding bikes in a circle. Neighbors who actually know each other. A backyard that feels more private. A street that feels like a tiny protected village. That emotional appeal is exactly why cul-de-sac homes often command a premium. Buyers do not just pay for square footage. They pay for perceived safety, quiet, privacy, status, and a low-traffic lifestyle. But here is the part many families overlook: a cul-de-sac is not automatically safer in every way. It may reduce through traffic, but it can create hidden risks involving driveway backovers, delivery vehicles, emergency access, walkability, evacuation, and kids treating the street like a playground.