• Heavy steel workshop System 1
Heavy steel workshop

Heavy steel workshop

Ref Price:
get latest price
Loading Port:
China Main Port
Payment Terms:
TT OR LC
Min Order Qty:
-
Supply Capability:
-

Add to My Favorites

Follow us:


OKorder Service Pledge

Quality Product, Order Online Tracking, Timely Delivery

OKorder Financial Service

Credit Rating, Credit Services, Credit Purchasing

Light steel structure

Light steel structure is an environmentally friendly economic plant which is convenient for both assembly and disassembly. Its main load-bearing component is steel, including steel columns, steel beams, steel truss and steel roof. The light steel as the frame and the sandwich board for building materials are installed in standard module series, and components are connected by bolts. light steel structure is suitable for all kinds of modern industrial workshop, logistics warehouse and industrial buildings.

Features:

Comfortable: Steel structure plant adopts high efficiency energy-saving system with respiratory function, which can adjust indoor air humidity; roof has with ventilation function, which can help form air flow upside the room, therefore satisfying ventilation and cooling demand inside of the roof.

Time saving: the whole installation belongs to dry construction mainly including connection with bolts, therefore there is no environmental effects of season.

Environmental protection: 100% of materials can be recycled, which truly realizes pollution-free.

Energy saving: steel structure of light steel plant uses efficient energy-saving wall, with good thermal insulation, heat insulation and sound insulation, which can save 50% energy.

Q: also after being a real estate agent for a couple years, can a person choose to be either one? or can he only be a real estate broker?
I'm a CA broker who owns both a real estate company as well as a mortgage company. The money can be great for both. Which makes more money for you depends on a number of issues, such as personality, work ethic, size of your sphere of influence, knowledge of the industry, and so on. I have made more money doing loans than I have doing real estate. However, I do very well on the phone - which is great for getting loans done. I have dozens of clients that I have great rapports with that I've never met face to face. I've received referrals from people that have only heard my voice on the phone and exchanged faxes and emails with me. Plus, I hate showing homes to buyers. Listing is OK, but I really don't care for the marketing and open houses. On the commercial side, where I spend most of my focus now, I work primarily the real estate side. Again, I play to my strengths of building rapport and sharing knowledge. The investors often travel to the properties that I recommend and never meet me. I work daily from my garage in shorts and a t-shirt and make more money than ever before -- doing real estate. It's economy of scale though. For me, I'm well suited to residential loans, and commercial real estate and loans. I don't really care for the residential real estate. My friend however is a stellar realtor. He would die doing loans. He loves going out to the homes, showing them to buyers, listing them and doing the marketing. He does his fair share of time on the phone getting listings, but thrives getting face-to-face with the clients. Loans would bore him to death. He's charasmatic. I'm.... not as much. I love the depth of knowledge about finance that I gather in doing the loans. He loves the thrill of the sale. If you love doing the work of which ever you choose, you'll excel in that area and make a better living - both financially, and personally. Sorry for the non-committal answer - but it's probably the most accurate one I could give.
Q: My mom is a real estate broker and makes damn good money with what she does. I asked her how it works, she tells me but I don't understand and then she points out that it's for very smart people and that I don't need it anyways. I love my mom, but grrr! You know. Anyways, I want to learn the steps of getting into Real estate, I do know a lot from what my mom tells me but I don't understand if you need a huge amount of money to start? Do you have to take classes? Is there an easier way to try it out? Is it ok to buy say a 2 story lake side house kind of place and what would I get out of it? What's the deal with selling property? All these kinds of questions...Main question is, What are the steps to getting into Real Estate and are there any short cut ways of getting into it?Thanks!
It depends on where you live right now. For me, I live in Southern California so the procedure here is to take three classes: Real Estate Principle, Real Estate Practice, and an additional course that is closely related to real estate like business law...
Q: I need investors in real estate who are looking to make a good business.Problem is I don't know how or where to look.
You might join the local real estate investment group. You would find this group by googling real estate investment group followed by the city and state in which you reside. This group would normally hold weekly or semi-monthly meetings. There are nominal dues paid monthly or annually. At these meetings you would have an opportunity to meet other investors both retail as well as wholesale. Meetings normally cover various subjects in the real estate investing field to include methods of investing, finding the right property and the best way of using the property for your financial gain. You would have a chance to meet and speak with those individuals that have been investing for years. You might advertise in your local paper, however, if you are a rookie most seasoned investors would not want to utilize you and your services for lack of experience. Individual investors normally use and invest with those that they have done business with in the past and trust, as well aN individuals that have established a track record and know what they are doing. I hope this has been of some benefit to you, good luck. FIGHT ON
Q: I am a college student and am interested in learning about real estate, but I have no clue how to start. I bought a book, but I think it's the next step, I need something to fill the gap. - Can anyone direct me to a website with a beginners guide?- If someone could write maybe a paragraph or two as an introduction that would be great.- If I wanted to get started in real estate out of college, how would you recommend I start?
Dear student, it is a gr8 question. To start with investing in real estate is prescribed as best investment practise world-wide by all those gurus who talk about 'Abundance'. So u r already on the right track. As regards investing goes, you have to see how much is that u want to invest to being with and for what duration. Are you looking at short-term gains or long-terms horizons, r u interested in taking risks or be conservative in terms of returns. Once u have answered all these question as to where, how much, for how long, and what u want out of it, sourcing the same becomes easier. Books on this subject may be available but it is better to read newspapers, classified columns, do self research so that u start understanding this market slowly and steadily i.e. understanding the pulse of it just as stock broking. However, would always advise you to go for deals which have clear titles, paperwork since real estate investments are as good as the papers which hold them. All the very best to you!! Best regards, Deepa Mandal TimeSquare Realty -The gold standard 9833392792
Q: I want to get into the real estate business but I don't know where to start. I don't want to really be in school for it either. Where do I start and what do I do?
You must have a good amount of money.Please be an apprentice to a real estate magnet until you get good experience.Real estate is a gambling business.Meanwhile you may concentrate on small purchases and their selling s.
Q: Chris Bowser has a program about real estate where he teaches on how to buy and sell real estate on ebay without seeing the property physically.
Generally okorder It will demystify many of the things when it comes to buying real estate no money down.
Q: My father's interested in buying a house and have it rented out. He's saying it's a really good investment and we can really get a good sum of money from it. Could you give me any websites that talks about all the things related to investing in real estate? I'm curious at all these especially during these hard economic times and money is hard to come by.
Its always profitable to invest in real estate :-)
Q: Okay, so I'm a little weird but I LOVE spending free time browsing redfin . And I'm not even in the market for a home! Real estate just fascinates me BIG time. I'm a stay at home mom but when my young ones get into school full time, I'd love to find a job in real estate. With that said, I'm not a huge people person so dealing directly with buyers/sellers doesn't interest me. I'd like to do something a little more behind the scenes, on the technical side. Not really sure if there's a profession for that. Obviously i don't want to just do data entry (I have an unrelated Master's degree) so is there something that is very real estate oriented that doesn't involve talking to people on the phone all day and meeting up with people for showings?
you can always get certified as an appraiser...gets you out to houses, do a little research, type up reports, and your personal interaction is minimal.
Q: Would like a professional opinion on when the texas real estate market will improve
All real estate values are extremely local. So much so that I have seen a store sell a location and move next door (and spend thousands to move and thousands more for the transaction) to an identical size and shaped space- just because the location (next door!) was better. Just within my city in North Texas there are huge differences in market activity from block to block. I have one transaction closing next week where the buyer has agreed to pay more than the mortgage company appriasal value- and that normally tells me that the market around that home is pretty strong. I know other areas just a few miles away that don't seem to have any buyers. There are a lot of ways that location matter of course- not just how the neighborhood looks. If people in your area feel very secure about their jobs then they are more likely to buy a house. If the schools are good in your area then people might be more likely to move to your area. If the transportation works well in your area, If the recreation in your area, if the government in your area, if the enviroiment in your area...all those things figure into location. If you look at the foreclosure rates for Texas and compare them to the nationwide statistics you will find we are doing much better than the rest of the country in that area. In my area the Barnet shale is pumping large amounts of money into the economy- kind of like very large stimulos checks each month. What you maybe asking is when will my home go up in price?. I can not predict the future price even on my own home. I can tell you that My home did not seem to go up in value this last year- I think it may go up a small amount this next year. I think in part the national economy is holding us back- but I do not believe my home has gone down in value at all in the last four years- and there are very few areas of the country where a homeowner can say that.
Q: I mean, I have done my research on real estate (In the US, Dublin, London, Oslo, Geneva, Tokyo as well as other major cities, and Oslo really takes the cake!).Are there methods one can use to profit from a trend that is in a bubble, about to burst, and then "short" it? Kind of like an equivalent in the stock market? Are there such methods or similar ones?If there isn't, then what do you suggest? I'm all ears!Thank you for your time!
Thank you for your time people! In response to the last guy, elhigh... No, In fact if you paid any attention to loanmasterone, he was damn kind and informative, and I took what he said seriously. It's not that I want success handed to me on a plate. I simply didn't know where to begin, and I was given very helpful advice. No one just gives anything here to you, they are merely signposts, and even though the first few lines of loanmasterone were obvious, the last bits of info were not so much, as real estate is a huge field full of sub-catergories. and now I have a much clearer picture, and the second person talked about REITs, which I will also do my research on. You called this harebrained? Besides, I have learned that sometimes if I want an answer or more clarity to something, I gotta risk looking dumb sometimes. Thank you again people!

Send your message to us

This is not what you are looking for? Post Buying Request

Similar products

Hot products


Hot Searches