
Retirement Community
3401 Hennepin Dr, Joliet, IL, 60431
The Project Has 14 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.
The Project Has 40 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
1001 Hacker Has 1 Units Available
1001 Wabash Has 1 Units Available
309-311 Young'S Avenue Has 2 Units Available
509 Florence Has 2 Units Available
Briggs-Rosalind Homes Has 74 Units Available
Inwood Towers Has 134 Units Available
Larkin Village Apartments Has 476 Units Available
Senior Suites of Joliet Has 88 Units Available
Victory Senior Centre Has 57 Units Available
Victory Senior Centre Phase Ii Has 30 Units Available
Ann Street Group Home Has 6 Units Available
Margaret Street Group Homes Has 6 Units Available
Marycrest Village Has 56 Units Available
Mound Road Apartments Has 8 Units Available
Rgp Apartments Has 8 Units Available
Riverwalk Homes Llc Has 356 Units Available
Salem Village Iii Has 98 Units Available
Terry Drive Group Home Has 6 Units Available
Wilco Residences Has 24 Units Available
DEERBROOK CARE CENTRE Has 1 Units Available
Emeritus at Joliet Courtyard Has 1 Units Available
Essington Place Has 1 Units Available
FAIRVIEW CARE CENTER OF JOLIET Has 1 Units Available
HILLCREST NURSING & REHAB CTR Has 1 Units Available
JOLIET TERRACE Has 1 Units Available
Joshua Arms of LSSI Has 1 Units Available
Manor at Essington Has 1 Units Available
OUR LADY OF ANGELS RET HOME Has 1 Units Available
PROVENA VILLA FRANCISCAN Has 1 Units Available
SALEM VILLAGE NURSING & REHAB Has 1 Units Available
SUNNY HILL NURSING HOME OF WILL COUNTY Has 1 Units Available
Victory Centre of Joliet Has 1 Units Available
The listing looks perfect. The apartment has bright photos, modern cabinets, in-unit laundry, and a Walk Score that makes the neighborhood sound like a dream. Grocery store nearby. Coffee shop nearby. Transit stop nearby. Restaurants nearby. Then you move in and discover the truth. The grocery store is across a six-lane road with no comfortable crossing. The bus comes every 35 minutes. The sidewalk disappears halfway to the train station. The street feels fine at noon but uncomfortable after dark. The commute that looked easy on the map becomes a daily punishment.
Your renewal offer just arrived, and the landlord wants more money. Same apartment. Same old appliances. Same noisy upstairs neighbor. Same package room that somehow loses everything except junk mail. But now the rent is higher. Most renters see the new number, panic for three minutes, complain to a friend, and then sign because moving sounds exhausting. That is exactly what many landlords count on. But here is the truth: rent renewal is not always a take-it-or-leave-it moment. In the right market, with the right evidence, you may be able to lower the increase, freeze the rent, get a free month, secure free parking, waive fees, or upgrade your lease terms.
Did you hear? The Federal Housing Administration has just revised its requirements for building housing. This is really great news. What does this mean? Let's look at it together.
A lease clause requiring renters insurance is common in U.S. apartments, but many renters misunderstand where the requirement comes from. It is usually not the state forcing you to buy a policy—it is the landlord making insurance part of the lease terms. Before signing, renters should check the coverage amount, proof rules, fees, and what the policy actually protects.