What does decorative order mean?

What does decorative order mean?

Author
Discussion

lawrence567

Original Poster:

7,507 posts

197 months

Friday 4th September 2009
quotequote all
As above, what does decorative order mean on a housing description?

pmanson

13,387 posts

260 months

Friday 4th September 2009
quotequote all
Good condition I think?

anonymous-user

61 months

Friday 4th September 2009
quotequote all
It should say "good decorative order" rather than just "decorative" as that means nothing. Guess it's a typo!

prand

6,023 posts

203 months

Friday 4th September 2009
quotequote all
I'd have thought you'd have to add something like "good" "bad" or "average" to that phrase to make sense. By itself doesn't work, though it might be lazy EA shorthand.

lawrence567

Original Poster:

7,507 posts

197 months

Friday 4th September 2009
quotequote all
Nope it just says "decorartive order".

anonymous-user

61 months

Friday 4th September 2009
quotequote all
lawrence567 said:
Nope it just says "decorartive order".
As I said above - it's a typo!

randlemarcus

13,598 posts

238 months

Friday 4th September 2009
quotequote all
Betcha it means they've papered over the cracks and the damp patches smile

mk1fan

10,648 posts

232 months

Friday 4th September 2009
quotequote all
What is it relating too?

A term in a commercial lease? An Estate Agent's details?

Initial thoughts are those of Gary.

Edited by mk1fan on Friday 4th September 14:39

deckster

9,631 posts

262 months

Friday 4th September 2009
quotequote all
Frankly the fact that they've mentioned it makes me worried. It's just one of those things I'd take for granted, like walls and a roof. 'Good decorative order' probably means that decor is terrible; 'average' means the wallpaper is hanging off the walls and half the doors are missing.

But don't let that put you off.

Vron

2,538 posts

216 months

Friday 4th September 2009
quotequote all
Its all subjective anyway.

I have just put my house up for sale. The same agent I bought it from (2 years ago) came round to value it. I have completely renovated the property.

The first thing he said when he walked in was 'oh yes the interior was really dated etc etc'. I pointed out his brochure from when I bought it which used terms like 'exquisite', 'splendid' and 'superb' laugh

mk1fan

10,648 posts

232 months

Friday 4th September 2009
quotequote all
The agent wasn't herbialfa was it??












Cheap shot I know.