Area Calculation Sample Clauses

Area Calculation. Carpet Area of Said Unit: The carpet area for the Said Unit or any other Apartment shall mean the net usable floor area, with area of cupboard of such Said Unit excluding the area covered by the external walls, areas under services shafts, and exclusive balcony but includes the area covered by internal partition walls of the apartment. Balcony Area: The net usable area of the exclusive covered balcony/ies (if any) attached to the.
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Area Calculation. Carpet Area of Designated Apartment: The carpet area for the Designated Apartment or any other Apartment shall mean the net usable floor area of such Designated Apartment, excluding the area covered by the external walls, areas under services shafts, and exclusive balcony but includes the area covered by internal partition walls of the apartment. Balcony Area: The net usable area of the exclusive covered balcony/ies (if any) attached to the.
Area Calculation. Carpet Area of Unit: The carpet area for the Designated Apartment or any other Unit shall mean the net usable floor area of such Unit, excluding the area covered by the external walls, areas under services shafts, and exclusive balcony but includes the area covered by internal partition walls of the Unit. Balcony Area: The net usable area of the exclusive covered balcony/ies (if any) attached to the Unit. Built-up Area: The built-up area for the Designated Apartment or any other Unit shall mean the Carpet Area of such Unit and Balcony area and 50% (fifty percent) of the area covered by those external walls which are common between such Unit/Balcony and any other Unit/Balcony and the area covered by all other external walls of the such Unit/Balcony. Proportionate Common Area: The proportionate share of the Common Areas attributable to the Designated Apartment is undivided Square feet more or less.
Area Calculation 

Related to Area Calculation

  • Payment Calculation District shall pay Contractor at a rate of $ per . OR District shall pay Contractor as described in attached Exhibit A

  • Calculation Any figure or percentage referred to in this Agreement shall be carried to seven decimal places.

  • Penalty Determination H&SC section 39619.7 requires CARB to provide information on the basis for the penalties it seeks. This Agreement includes this information, which is also summarized here. The provision of law the penalty is being assessed under and why that provision is most appropriate for that violation. The penalty provision being applied, in this case, is H&SC section 42402 et seq. because TJX sold, supplied, offered for sale, or manufactured for sale consumer products for commerce in California in violation of the Consumer Products Regulations (17 CCR section 94507 et seq.). The penalty provisions of H&SC section 42402 et seq. apply to violations of the Consumer Products Regulations because the regulations were adopted under authority of H&SC section 41712, which is in Part 4 of Division 26. The manner in which the penalty amount was determined, including aggravating and mitigating factors and per unit or per vehicle basis for the penalty. H&SC section 42402 et seq. provides strict liability penalties of up to $10,000 per day for violations of the Consumer Product Regulations with each day being a separate violation. In this case, the total penalty is $196,800 for 171 days of administrative and emission violations. The penalty, in this case, was reduced because TJX made diligent efforts to cooperate with the investigation and to comply, including developing new business practices to ensure future compliance. These business practices include modifying relevant purchasing practices, delivering staff training, and implementing a vendor certification program for the relevant vendor population. Final penalties were determined based on the unique circumstances of this matter, considered together with the need to remove any economic benefit from noncompliance, the goal of deterring future violations and obtaining swift compliance, the consideration of past penalties in similar negotiated cases, and the potential cost and risk associated with litigating these particular violations. The penalty reflects violations extending over a number of days resulting in quantifiable harm to the environment considered together with the complete circumstances of this case. Penalties in future cases might be smaller or larger on a per ton basis. The final penalty, in this case, was based in part on confidential financial information or confidential business information provided by TJX that is not retained by CARB in the ordinary course of business. The penalty, in this case, was also based on confidential settlement communications between CARB and TJX that CARB does not retain in the ordinary course of business. The penalty also reflects CARB's assessment of the relative strength of its case against TJX, Inc., the desire to avoid the uncertainty, burden and expense of litigation, obtain swift compliance with the law and remove any unfair advantage that TJX may have secured from its actions. ls the penalty being assessed under a provision of law that prohibits the emission of pollution at a specified level, and, if so a quantification of excess emissions, if it is practicable to do so. The Consumer Product Regulations do not prohibit emissions above a specified level, but they do limit the concentration of VOCs in regulated products. In this case, a quantification of the excess emissions attributable to the violations was not practicable.

  • Calculation of Overtime If the overtime work has been carried out before as well as after the regular working hours during a certain day, the overtime periods shall be added together. Only full half hours are included in the calculation.

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