Common-Interest, Trusts, and Business Ownership

To map the landscape of modern real estate ownership, you must first stop looking at property solely as two-dimensional patches of dirt. When a developer builds a fifty-story high-rise, they are slicing thin air into hundreds of distinct legal cubes. When an investor wishes to shield their assets from public view, they conjure legal arrangements that mask the true owner. And when a group of developers buys a fifty-acre tract, the purchaser on the deed is often an invisible, artificial person created entirely by state law. As a real estate professional, you are not merely selling physical structures; you are selling highly abstract legal structures. You must master how ownership is sliced geographically (condominiums and cooperatives), temporally (timeshares), chronologically (trusts), and corporately (business entities).

A high-rise building extending over a neighboring structure perfectly illustrates the concept of property as divided three-dimensional airspace rather than flat land.
A high-rise building extending over a neighboring structure perfectly illustrates the concept of property as divided three-dimensional airspace rather than flat land.
Source: Air rights 318 Third Ave by Beyond My Ken, CC BY-SA 4.0.
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