Simplified Interior Renovation: What Documents You’ll Need and How to Save Time
Imagine this: you’re renovating a 30-ping old apartment. Following the standard procedure for ‘general interior renovation,’ you’ve prepared a stack of blueprints and structural calculations as thick as a dictionary. Once submitted to the city government, your documents embark on a lengthy bureaucratic journey. Reviewers scrutinize every sprinkler head’s location, every wall’s thickness, leading to rejections, revisions, and resubmissions. Two months pass, the apartment remains a ruin, your construction crew has moved to other projects due to the permit delay, and your mortgage interest continues to accrue.However, on a parallel track, another homeowner renovating a similar apartment opts for the ‘simplified interior renovation’ application. Their architect prepares just a few key floor plans and a signed ‘certification form.’ After submission…