
Retirement Community
93 W Avenida de Los Arboles, Thousand Oaks, CA, 91360
The Project Has 6 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
The Project Has 19 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
The Project Has 3 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
Esseff Village Apartments Has 51 Units Available
Hacienda De Feliz Has 25 Units Available
Hillcrest Villas Has 60 Units Available
Los Feliz Apartments Has 36 Units Available
Los Feliz Apartments Phase 2 Has 20 Units Available
Schillo Gardens Has 29 Units Available
Shadows Apartments Has 148 Units Available
Stoll House Apartments Has 11 Units Available
Villa Garcia Has 54 Units Available
Conejo Future Apartments Has 90 Units Available
Mountclef Apartments Has 3 Units Available
Warwick House Has 6 Units Available
Atria Hillcrest Has 1 Units Available
Castle Hill Retirement Village Has 1 Units Available
Everlasting Springs Has 1 Units Available
Heartland Home Residential Carefclty Fr The Eldrly Has 1 Units Available
Hillcrest Royale Has 1 Units Available
OAKVIEW AT UNIVERSITY VILLAGE Has 1 Units Available
Thousand Oaks Royale Retirement Has 1 Units Available
University Village Thousand Oaks Has 1 Units Available
A long commute can make an apartment more affordable or appealing, but it also affects daily time, transportation costs, and personal energy. Before choosing a rental farther away, renters should evaluate the commute under real conditions, not just rely on map estimates. This guide explains what to check first before signing a lease.
An apartment above a restaurant can look convenient until the smell of oil, smoke, garlic, or fried food starts drifting into your unit. The worst odors often appear before lunch, during dinner prep, or late at night—not just when the restaurant is crowded. Before signing, renters should test the apartment during real kitchen hours, not just during a quiet daytime tour.
Finding an apartment with a small family-owned management company can feel like a gamble. There may be no Google reviews. No Reddit discussions. No hundreds of comments from previous tenants explaining every detail. The company website may be simple. The leasing process may happen through phone calls instead of apps. The owner may personally answer questions instead of sending everything through a corporate portal. That does not automatically mean the company is bad.
Recently, almost all the Housing News has been talking about HUD's new regulatory changes! Why has this adjustment attracted so much attention? This isn’t just a routine policy update; it’s a transformative shift with far-reaching impacts. HUD's new rules seem poised to completely reshape the housing market, changing things that have long been considered "the norm." Let’s explore the story behind these changes and the potential impacts they might have.