Odor Nuisance definition

Odor Nuisance means any release of any offensive or noxious odors or fumes from the Premises, which release (a) is in violation of any Applicable Law, (b) creates a nuisance or (c) materially and adversely impacts any portion of the Building, the Project or the use of any portion of the Building or Project by other tenants.

Examples of Odor Nuisance in a sentence

  • Tenant acknowledges that Landlord would not enter into this Lease with Tenant unless Tenant gave Landlord reasonable assurances that other occupants of the Building or the Project (including persons legally present in any outdoor areas of the Project) will not be subjected to an Odor Nuisance (as defined below), and that the Building and the Project will not be damaged by any exhaust, in each case from Tenant’s operations in the Premises.

  • Tenant acknowledges that Landlord would not enter into this Lease with Tenant unless Tenant assured Landlord that under no circumstances will any other occupants of the Project (including persons legally present in any outdoor areas of the Project) be subjected to an Odor Nuisance (as defined below), and that the Premises and the Project will not be damaged by any exhaust, in each case from Tenant’s operations.

Related to Odor Nuisance

  • odour nuisance means a continuous or repeated odour, smell or aroma, in an affected area, which is offensive, obnoxious, troublesome, annoying, unpleasant or disagreeable to a person:

  • Nuisance means any injury, harm, damage, inconvenience or annoyance to any person which is caused in any way whatsoever by the improper handling or management of waste, including but not limited to, the storage, placement, collection, transport or disposal of waste or by littering;

  • noise nuisance means an unwanted sound, in an affected area, which is annoying, troublesome, or disagreeable to a person:

  • Public nuisance means a building that is a menace to the public health, welfare, or safety, or that is structurally unsafe, unsanitary, or not provided with adequate safe egress, or that constitutes a fire hazard, or is otherwise dangerous to human life, or that in relation to the existing use constitutes a hazard to the public health, welfare, or safety by reason of inadequate maintenance, dilapidation, obsolescence, or abandonment. “Public nuisance” includes buildings with blighting characteristics as defined by Iowa Code section 403.2.

  • Odor means that property of an air contaminant that affects the sense of smell.