myfs_86689 Posted October 14, 2002 Share Posted October 14, 2002 I am looking to buy a condo and saw a very nice place. The only problem is that the floor in the condo slopes to the North. The slope is greatest in the hallway and living room. The kitchen is level and the bedrooms are mostly level; the dining room slopes a little. The building itself is on a flat street. When the foundation was initally laid, it sank about 4 inches to the North. For whatever reason, the builders did not fix the slope and built the building on top of the sloped foundation. All the windows and doors open and close fine, although the bathroom door will close by itself because of the slope. The report says that the building is structurally sound and has not sank since it was initally built -- the building was built in 1912. In regards to Feng Shui, is the slope something we should worry about? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Staff Cecil Lee Posted October 15, 2002 Staff Share Posted October 15, 2002 Dear Anon,1. Thank you for the description of the condo.2. Your situation seems rather unique. 3. Frankly, there is no current reference to your situation i.e. whether it is good or bad Feng Shui to have an interior that is distinctively sloping.4. The only parallel to your situation is that some Feng Shui practitioners have advised their clients to get their contractor doing the flooring to gently slope the floor in the living room i.e. from from the main door down towards the middle of the room. This is not obvious to the household.5. The purpose is literally, with the hope to `catch' wealth. 6. In my opinion, this is just an idea and from past observations e.g. of houses been advised to do so, there is really no distinct advantage nor disadvantage for this.7. Therefore, in your case, if the slope is minimal, to me, it seems OK.8. Overall, (if you can) try to check out how well the past owners (tenants) were doing when they stayed in the house. However, if there are situations where there may be a problem, then, one may have to reference it in relation to the birth chart of the house e.g. house built or major renovation done during that period.Personally, if you and your family feel comfortable with the current situation, this is fine.Warmest Regards,Cecil Quote On 10/14/2002 12:59:00 PM, Anonymous wrote:I am looking to buy a condoand saw a very nice place.The only problem is that thefloor in the condo slopes tothe North. The slope isgreatest in the hallway andliving room. The kitchen islevel and the bedrooms aremostly level; the dining roomslopes a little. The buildingitself is on a flat street.When the foundation wasinitally laid, it sank about 4inches to the North. Forwhatever reason, the buildersdid not fix the slope andbuilt the building on top ofthe sloped foundation. Allthe windows and doors open andclose fine, although thebathroom door will close byitself because of the slope.The report says that thebuilding is structurally soundand has not sank since it wasinitally built -- the buildingwas built in 1912. In regardsto Feng Shui, is the slopesomething we should worryabout? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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