Our Goal
Empowering Condominium Boards by Providing Comprehensive Easily Understood Reserve Fund Studies.
Religious Facilities, Personal Care Homes, & Non-Profits
Since 2006 we have been providing Long Term Repair and Capital Plans for personal care homes, churches and religious institutions as well as non-profit corporations. These reports have enable our clients to better plan for the future by identifying and prioritizing repair and capital projects, planning expenditures over a 25 year period and dedicating sources of funding for the required work. It also enables those institutions relying on grants and donations to identify their funding sources when the work is planned and identify when funding is required.
Condominiums
TAS-Technical Advisory Services has been providing Reserve Fund Studies since 2006 to clients throughout Saskatchewan. We have a client first approach and provide a comprehensive, experienced, practical approach to Reserve Fund Planning. We have conducted over 200 reserve fund studies on Saskatchewan condominiums, including bare land, townhouse style, mixed use (commercial and residential), as well as walk-up apartment multi-tenancy units, and multi-floor tenancy with underground parkades and elevators. Our reserve fund studies have enabled our clients to ensure the replacement of common area components is properly funded, and have provided long term budgeting information with a 25 year plan cash flow used for future budgeting purposes of common area compartments is planned.
Fire Safety Plans, Standard Unit Descriptions
The Condominium Property Act, 1993,Condominium Property Regulations 2001 and their subsequent updates identify the requirement for Standard Unit Description.
Standard Unit Description enables the Condominium Corporation and residential unit owners to identify the level of fit-up provided by the developer in their standard package offered at the time of purchase at the time the unit was constructed. Improvements above the basic package offered by the developer or installed by past and current owners can then be identified as improvements.