
Retirement Community
1975 E Court St, Kankakee, IL, 60901
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 1 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
The Project Has 79 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
Crestview Village Apartments Has 132 Units Available
Eastgate Apartments Has 58 Units Available
Revera Project Has 44 Units Available
Riverwoods Apartments Has 125 Units Available
Austin Apartments Has 18 Units Available
Dudley Burrell Apartments Has 35 Units Available
Harbor Street Apartments Has 8 Units Available
Kankakee Kommons Has 101 Units Available
River Woods Has 125 Units Available
Butterfield Court Senior Living Center Has 1 Units Available
Greenwood Home Has 1 Units Available
Kankakee Court Mentally Retarded Has 1 Units Available
MANORCARE OF KANKAKEE Has 1 Units Available
MILLER HEALTH CARE CENTER Has 1 Units Available
Neighborhood Opportunities Has 1 Units Available
PROVENA HERITAGE VILLAGE Has 1 Units Available
Riverside Health Care Has 1 Units Available
Westwood Oaks Has 1 Units Available
Life is always surprising and you don't know forever what happens next moment. You just were told to restructuring the company in the aid plan of section 8. As the fear of unemployment hit me at once, you started to worry: does this affect my housing aid? Don't worry, let's look at this together. What kind of help can you get after you get lost?
A few days in your move-in date can quietly create hundreds of dollars in extra cost through prorated rent and lease overlap. Mid-month moves are not always cheaper, and start-of-month moves are not always better—but the difference often shows up in your first bill. Before signing, renters should think about timing as carefully as rent price.
The apartment looked perfect until my phone ruined the fantasy. It had the bright living room, the clean kitchen, the big windows, the closet space I had been chasing for months, and the kind of staged calm that makes you forget you are standing inside a rental unit with shared walls, shared floors, shared ceilings, and neighbors you have not met yet. The leasing agent was pointing out the quartz countertops. I was already imagining my couch against the longest wall. The building looked modern. The hallway smelled clean. The photos online had not lied. For about ten minutes, I thought I had found the one. Then I did one simple phone test.
The house looked solid until a tiny camera went underground and ruined the fantasy. From the street, nothing looked scary. The lawn was trimmed, the kitchen had been updated, the bathroom tile looked clean, and the seller kept saying the home had been “well maintained.” Even the inspection felt mostly normal. A few old outlets. Some tired caulk. A water heater with a birthday coming soon. Nothing that sounded like a deal killer. Then my inspector asked one question that changed everything: “Do you want to sewer scope it?” At first, it sounded like one more annoying buyer expense. Another add-on. Another inspection fee in a process already full of fees. But that sewer scope ended up saving me from a hidden underground pipe disaster that could have cost around 15000 dollars after closing.