vultur09
Banned
My point is, the building is unfinished.
That's all you needed to say. The rest of your argument is completely moot. In your eyes the building is unfinished, in the eyes of the city inspectors it is fit for habitation hence the occupancy.
When you sign on to purchase a pre-construction residence, either for yourself or unwisely for 'investment' you are subject to this sort of exercise. It has zero relevance to paying down a mortgage. You are not amortizing a debt therefore not building any paper equity (an illusion anyway if you decide to sell and subject yourself to market vagaries, commissions and other costs) A builder can reasonably expect you to establish residency in your suite when it's suitable for occupancy. The inconvenience is relatively limited and part of the process. Any real frustrations arising from it result from a misunderstanding of the public policies that underlie it. I'm sure the developer wants you in there covering costs even sooner than your move-in date but public safety will determine otherwise.
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