But will we like it?
Series: Estates Gazette ; (0240) 5 October 2002, 158-159(2)Publication details: 2002Subject(s): Summary: The last in a four part series on the new voluntary code of practice for commercial leases considers how the code will be judged and what the property industry can do to ensure it succeeds. Highlights three sources of evidence to evaluate the code: research carried out by the University of Reading; customer complaints gathered by RICS; and stakeholder evidence. Suggests that landlords should advertise their support of the code in their paper work and emphasises the role of the internet to publicise the code and monitor its effectiveness. Concludes that the industry should work towards compliance by December 2003. Includes case study of how Hermes Property Asset Management is publicising the code to its clients. Code available at www.commercialleasecodeew.co.uk| Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Journal article | London Journal article | ABS66074 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 120368-1001 |
The last in a four part series on the new voluntary code of practice for commercial leases considers how the code will be judged and what the property industry can do to ensure it succeeds. Highlights three sources of evidence to evaluate the code: research carried out by the University of Reading; customer complaints gathered by RICS; and stakeholder evidence. Suggests that landlords should advertise their support of the code in their paper work and emphasises the role of the internet to publicise the code and monitor its effectiveness. Concludes that the industry should work towards compliance by December 2003. Includes case study of how Hermes Property Asset Management is publicising the code to its clients. Code available at www.commercialleasecodeew.co.uk