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This is a selected list
of appraisal and building terms which assessing officials and
their staff may encounter in their work. It is not, therefore,
a complete list of terms used in appraisal and building
construction. Some terms have been omitted because their
meanings are common knowledge; others have been omitted
because it is believed they will seldom, if ever, be
encountered.
4-3-2-1
Rule - Rule that states
that the first 25% of depth represents 40% of the value; the
second 25%, 30% of the values; the third 25%, 20% of the
value; and the final 25%, 10% of the value.
65/35 Rule - Rule
states that the value of a triangular lot with its base on the
facing street will be approximately 65% of that of a
rectangular lot of the same frontage and depth. The value of
the triangular lot with its apex on the facing street will be
35% of that of a rectangular lot of the same frontage and
depth.
Abstraction Method - Method of land valuation whereby
improvement values obtained from the cost model are subtracted
from sales prices of improved parcels to yield residual land
value estimates.
Accessory
building - A building subordinate to and used in
conjunction with a principal or main building. Accessory
buildings include barns, cribs, sheds, and private
garages.
Ad Valorem Tax - Tax
levied based on the value of an item. The property tax is an
ad valorem tax.
Adaptive Estimation Procedure
(AEP) - A computerized procedure using properties of
which sales prices are known to produce a model that can be
used to value properties for which sales prices are not known.
Also called feedback.
Adjusted Sale Price -
The sale price adjusted, as necessary, for the effects of
time, financing, and personal property.
Adjustments -
Modifications in the reported value of a variable, such as
sale price. These adjustments can be used to estimate market
value in the sale comparison approach, for example, by
adjustments for differences between comparable and subject
properties.
Age/Life - A method
of estimating accrued depreciation based on the age of the
property and its economic life. Another term is straight line
depreciation.
Allocation Method -
Method of land valuation used in the absence of vacant land
sales, by using a typical ratio of land to improvement
value
Amortization Rate -
The ratio of the periodic amortization payment to the total
principal amount to be amortized; corresponds to a sinking
fund factor or rate; the difference between the mortgage
(annual) constant (RM) and the nominal rate of interest
(I).
Amortization Schedule
- A schedule of debt repayment specifying the timing and
amount of payments; a program of retiring debt through the
scheduled, systematic repayment of principal.
Amortization - The
process of retiring a debt or recovering a capital investment
through scheduled, systematic repayment of principal; a
program of periodic contributions to a sinking fund or debt
retirement fund.
Anchor
Bolt - A bolt embedded in a building foundation for
use in fastening the building superstructure to the
foundation.
Annual Percentage Rate
(APR) - The effective annual interest rate. Truth in
lending legislation requires that loan instruments and
advertising show the interest cost to the borrower in the form
of an annual rate, as distinguished from the nominal
rate.
Anticipation - Market
value accounts for the present worth of future benefits or
detriments associated with the ownership of
property.
Appraisal Date - The
date as of which the assessments for a tax year are
made.
Appraised Value - An
estimate of the actual value of a property before the
application of the legal assessment ratio and partial
exemptions.
Apron -
The wood trim beneath a window sill; also applied to concrete
or blacktop area adjoining a building or loading
dock.
Arable Land - Land
suitable for cultivation.
Arm's-Length Sale - A
sale between two unrelated parties, each of whom is reasonably
knowledgeable of market conditions and under no undue pressure
to buy or sell.
Ashlar - Cut stone
laid in a definite pattern but seldom in regular
courses.
Assessed Value - The
monetary amount that a property is entered on the assessment
roll for purposes of computing the tax levy. Assessed values
differ from the assessor's estimate of actual value for three
major reasons; fractional assessment ratios, partial
exemptions, and decisions by assessing officials to override
market value estimates.
Assessment Date - The
status date for tax purposes. Appraised values reflect the
status of the property and any partially completed
construction as of this date. (October 1-Pretax
year)
Assessment Level -
The common or overall ratio of assessed values to market
values.
Assessor - The head
of an assessment jurisdiction, which may be an elected or
appointed position.
Attribute -
Characteristic, of a property.
Balance
- The principle of balance as used in appraising is that the
greatest value in property will occur when the type and size
of improvements and uses are proportional to each other as
well as to the land.
Balloon Framing
-Frame construction in which studs are fastened
together in such manner as to form a continuous or single
piece from floor to roof rather than using heavy timbers
joined by mortises and tenons. Commonly used in
barns.
Baluster - A small
pillar or column supporting a coping or handrail.
Balustrade - An
ornamental railing or parapet made of coping or a handrail and
balusters.
Band Of Investment -
A technique in which cash flow rates attributable to
components of a capital investment are weighted and combined
to derive a weighted average rate attributable to the total
investment.
Base Line - A
principle east-west line in the rectangular land survey
system.
Baseboard - A trim
board at the floor line of an interior wall.
Base-Lot Method - A
method of appraising land parcels whereby each parcel to be
appraised is compared with a parcel of known value, called the
base lot.
Batten - A narrow
piece of lumber commonly used to cover seam between two
boards.
Bay Window - A window
forming a recess in a room, and projecting beyond the regular
exterior walls of a building.
Bay - A
principal division or compartment of a building marked off by
columns, pillars, or similar structural parts.
Beam - A principal
horizontal load carrying structural member of a
building.
Bowstring Truss - A
roof or floor support having the form of a bow or
arch.
Building Capitalization Rate
(RB) – (1) The rate used to convert building income
into an indication of building value in certain residual
techniques or in a band of investment. (2) The ratio of
building income to building value.
Building Residual
Technique - A capitalization technique in which the
net operating income attributable to improvements is isolated
and capitalized by the building capitalization rate (RB) to
indicate the improvements’ contribution to total property
value.
When the improvements’ value is
added to the land value, a total property value is
estimated.
Built-Up Method - A
method of identifying the basic elements of compensable
contribution in the development of a discount rate or
capitalization rate. There are four basic components of a
discount or capitalization rate; the pure or riskless rate,
management, nonliquidity, and risk.
Built-Up Rate - An
overall capitalization rate or a discount rate that represents
the combination of a safe, or risk-free, rate and rates that
reflect other factors, e.g., nonliquidity, management,
risk.
Bundle of Rights -
The six basic rights associated with the private ownership of
property; right to use, sell, rent or lease, enter or leave,
give away, and refuse to do any of these.
Buttress. A support
built into and projecting from a masonry exterior wall to give
additional strength to the wall.
BX Wiring. Electrical
cable in flexible metal conduit.
Cadastral
Map - A map displaying property ownership boundaries,
dimensions, and other useful information, such as parcel
identification numbers.
Capitalization of Ground
Rent - Method of estimating land value in the absence
of comparable sales; applicable to farmland and commercial
land leased on a net basis.
Capitalization of Income
Method - Method of estimating accrued depreciation
similar to the sales comparison method except that values
based on the income approach are used instead of comparable
sales.
Capitalization Rate -
The ratio between net income and value. The current value of a
property can be estimated by dividing its current or
stabilized net income by the appropriate capitalization
rate.
Capitalization Rate -
Any rate used to convert income into value.
Carrara Glass - Heavy
exterior structural glass commonly colored black.
Casement. A hinged
window frame, commonly made so window will open
outward.
Cash Equivalency
Analysis - The procedure in which the sale prices of
comparable properties sold with atypical financing terms are
adjusted to reflect typical market terms.
Cash Equivalent - A
price expressed in terms of cash, as distinguished from a
price expressed totally or partly in terms of the face amounts
of notes or other securities that cannot be sold at their face
amounts.
Cash Flow Analysis
- A study of the anticipated movement of cash in
or out of real estate.
Cash Flow - The
periodic income attributable to the interests in real
property. See also, after-tax cash flow (ATCF); pre-tax cash
flow (PTCF).
Change - The tendency
of the social and economic forces affecting supply and demand
to alter over time, thus influencing market value.
Chimney, An upright
shaft of a fireproof enclosure for disposing of smoke or waste
gas. A chimney may contain one or more flues.
Clapboard Exterior
wall wood siding with one edge thicker than the other. Also
called lap siding.
Column. A heavy
upright structural member carrying building weight.
Comparative Unit
Method - (1) The most widely used method of cost
estimating. Direct and indirect costs are summed and divided
by an appropriate unit to derive a cost per unit. (2) A method
of appraising land parcels in which an average or typical
value is estimated for each stratum of land.
Competition - The
potential to make a profit or get a bargain (when markets are
not in equilibrium) attracts new suppliers and sellers. For a
while, the addition of new suppliers will tend to lower prices
and the increase in buyers will tend to raise prices. In time,
however, production will match demand and prices will
stabilize.
Conduit. A pipe or
tube enclosing electrical wires, also a pipe or tunnel
carrying water or enclosing pipes.
Conformity - The
value of a property depends in part on its relationship to its
surroundings. Value is created and sustained when the
characteristics of a property conform to the demands of its
market. Progression in value occurs when, the value of a
lesser-quality property is favorably affected by the presence
of a better-quality property; regression in value occurs when
the value of a better-quality property is affected adversely
by the presence of a lesser-quality property.
Consistent Use -
Consistent use is the concept that land should -not be valued
on the basis of one use, while the improvements are valued on
the basis of another.
Contribution - The
value of property component is measured in terms of its
contribution to the value of the whole, rather than by its
cost alone.
Conversion Factor - A
multiplier used to bring costs and valuations into conformity
with established standards as of a specified date.
Coping - The top
covering of an exterior wall, commonly masonry, to give the
wall a finished appearance and to shed water.
Corner Influence - An
effect on value found most often in commercial properties
because of greater case of entry and exit, accessibility to
higher volume of traffic and increased show-window and
advertising space.
Cornice - An
ornamental projection at the top of exterior wall of a
building.
Cost Approach - The
method of estimating the value of property by: (1) estimating
the cost of construction based on replacement or reproduction
cost new or trended historical cost (often adjusted by a local
multiplier); (2) subtracting depreciation; and, (3) adding the
estimated land value. The land value is most frequently
determined by the sales comparison approach.
Cost Index - An index
showing the variations in construction costs over
time.
Cost Manual - Cost
manual is a set of cost factors organized in schedules or
tables, with instructions for their use.
Cost of Development -
A method that projects improvements to the land, estimates the
total revenues and development costs, and calculates the value
residual to the land after subtraction of all costs, expenses,
and profit.
Cost to Cure -
Estimated cost to correct or replace a component or defect
within a property.
Course - A continuous
horizontal layer of stone, brick, or other building material
of uniform thickness in a building.
Curable - That part
of depreciation that can be revised by correcting deferred
maintenance and remodeling to relieve functional
obsolescence.
Curable Depreciation
- Items of physical deterioration and functional obsolescence
that are economically feasible to cure. See Also
curable functional obsolescence; curable physical
deterioration.
Curable Functional
Obsolescence - An element of accrued depreciation; a
curable defect caused by a defect in the structure, materials
or design.
Curable Physical
Deterioration - An element of accrued depreciation; a
curable defect caused by deferred
maintenance.
Curtain
Wall - A wall which does not support any of the
building weight other than its own weight. A curtain
may be removed and the building frame would still
stand.
Date of
Sale (date of transfer) - The date upon which the sale
is agreed. This is considered to be the date the deed, or
other instrument of transfer, is signed.
Debt Coverage Ratio
(DCR) - The ratio of net operating income to annual
debt service (DCR=NOI/IM). Also called debt service
coverage ratio (DSCR).
Debt Coverage - The
ability of a property to meet its debt service out of net
operating income.
Debt Sevice
(IM) - The periodic payment that covers
interest on and retirement of the outstanding principal of the
mortgage loan. Also called mortgage debt
service.
Debt - (1) One of two
characteristic types of investment, the other being equity.
The debt investor expects a priority of claim on investment
earnings and looks for security in the form of a lien on the
assets involved. Debt investors participate in bonds or
mortgages and receive fixed or variable interest on investment
with repayment of the principal upon maturity. (2) Money
borrowed, usually for a specified period of time, which may be
secured or unsecured.
Demand - Schedule
showing the amount of a good or service that would be
purchased at various prices during a given period.
Depreciation - The
loss in value to property, after construction or
purchase.
Depreciation
Schedules - Tables used in mass appraisal that show
the typical loss in value at various ages or effective ages
for different types of properties.
Depreciation - The difference between the
value of a building (or other improvement) and the cost of
replacement at the same date.
Depth Factor -
Standard, mechanical technique for determining the values of
an urban land lot having certain depth from the value of a
base lot having different dimensions.
Direct Capitalization
– (1) The method used to convert an estimate of a single
year’s income expectancy or an annual average of several of
several year’s income expectancies into an indication of value
in one direct step, either by dividing the income estimate by
an appropriate rate or by multiplying the income estimate by
an appropriate factor. (2) A capitalization technique that
utilizes capitalization rates and multipliers extracted from
sales. Only the first year’s income is considered. Yield and
value change are implied but not identified.
Direct Cost - Cost
incurred in construction on the site. For example: materials,
labor, supervision and utilities.
Discounted Cash Flow ( DCF)
Analysis - A set of procedures in which the quantity,
variability, timing and duration of periodic income, as well
as the quantity and timing of reversions, are specified and
discounted to a present value at a specified yield.
Divided Rights -
Rights to property that have been divided among several owners
in partnerships, joint tenancy, tenancy in common, and
time-sharing.
Drop Siding - Tongue
and groove wood siding forming a weather tight wall used as
sheathing and siding.
Drywall
- Interior wall constructed of material other than plaster,
such as wallboard, fiberboard, plywood, or other similar
material.
Economic
(External) Obsolescence - A cause of depreciation that
is a loss in value as a result of impairment inutility and
desirability caused by factors outside the property's
boundaries.
Economic Life (years)
- The period of time during which buildings or other
improvements on a property are expected to contribute
positively to the value of the total property. At the end of
this period, the improvements are normally demolished and
replaced.
Economic Rent - See
market rent.
Effective Age - The
typical age of a structure with respect to condition and
utility, as of the appraisal date.
Effective
Age - Computed or estimated age caused by
modernization or alterations which increase the life
expectancy of the building or by adverse conditions which
decrease the life expectancy of the building.
Effective Gross Income
(EGI) - The anticipated income from all operations of
real property adjusted for vacancy and collection
losses.
Effective Gross Income
Multiplier(EGIM) - The ratio between sale price or
value and effective gross income; a single year’s EGI
expectancy or an annual average of several year’s EGI
expectancies. (EGIM=V/EGI).
Effective Interest
Rate - Interest per dollar per period; the nominal
annual interest rate divided by the number of conversion
periods per year; also, the lender’s internal rate of return,
if no points are paid. Also called effective rate.
See also nominal interest rate (I).
Effective Tax Rate -
The tax rate expressed as a percentage of market value. It
will be different from nominal tax rate when the assessment
level is not equal to one.
Ellwood Formula- The
mortgage-equity procedure that provides precalculated mortgage
coefficients for many combinations of equity yields and
various mortgage terms; assumes that income flow is level and
that property value increases, decreases, or remains
stable.
Engineering Breakdown
Method - A detailed age-life method that can be used
in conjunction with the quantity-survey or unit-in-place
methods of estimating RCN.
Enhancement -
Increase in value due to improvements.
Equalization - The
process by which an appropriate governmental body attempts to
ensure that property under its jurisdiction is appraised
equally at market value, or as otherwise required by
law.
Equity Capitalization Rate
(RE) - An income rate that reflects the
relationship between a single year’s pre-tax cash flow
expectancy, or an annual average of several years’ pre-tax
cash flow expectancies, and the equity investment; used in
direct capitalization to convert pre-tax cash flow into an
equity value indication. Also called equity dividend
rate, cash on cash rate, and cash flow rate (RE =
pre-tax cash flow/equity).
Equity Ratio (1-M) -
The ratio of down payment to total price; the fraction of the
investment that is unencumbered by debt.
Exposed Beam
Construction - A type of construction in which the
roof is supported by heavy structural timbers rather than
conventional rafters and in which the roof supports are
exposed to the interior. This type of construction gives a
rustic appearance.
Fee Simple
Absolute (fee simple) - In land ownership, complete
interest in a property, subject only to governmental
powers.
Fee Simple Estate -
Absolute ownership unencumbered by any other interest or
estate subject only to the four powers of
government.
Firewall - A wall constructed of fire
resistant material to prevent the spread of fire within a
building or between buildings. Exterior firewalls commonly
extend above the roof of the building.
Fixture - An item of
equipment that, because of the way it is used, the way it is
attached, or both, has become an integral part of a building,
or other improvement. Once the fixture becomes an integral
part of the building, it is classified as real
property.
Flashing - Strips
(usually metal) used at roof openings to make roofing joints
waterproofed.
Flexicore - A hollow
core precast reinforced concrete plank.
Flue - The lining of
a chimney, commonly tile or metal.
Fractional Assessment
- Assessments that by law or by practice have assessment
ratio/levels different from one.
Fractional Section -
A subdivision of a Township containing more or less than 640
acres of land. Typically accounting for the overage or
deficiency in acreage is done on the north and/or west side of
a section, and Fractional Sections are found on the north
and/or west side of a Township.
Front
Foot - A piece of land one foot wide abutting a street
or highway and extending back the full depth of the
parcel.
Functional
Obsolescence - A cause of depreciation which is a loss
in value due to inability of the structure to perform
adequately, the function for which it is used, as of the
appraisal date.
Functional Utility -
The ability of improvements to satisfy market standards and
demands.
Furring
- Thin strips of wood, metal, or brick fastened to a wall or
beam to level a surface for lathing, plastering attaching an
additional surface, or for making an air space.
Geographic
Information System (GIS) - One type of computerized
mapping system capable of integrating spatial data (land
information) and attribute data among different layers on a
base map.
Girder - A structural
member supported at both ends and designed to carry a
load.
Gross Rent Multiplier
(GRM) - The relationship or ratio between sale price
or value and gross rental income.
Gross Rental Basis -
Refers to a lease by which the lessor pays all operating
expenses for the real estate.
Ground
Area - Total area of enclosed portion of a building
computed from exterior measurements taken at top of
foundation.
Gunite - Concrete
blown into place by compressed air.
Header
- A layer of brick or stone in a building wall with the short
face to the front.
Highest and Best Use
- Most profitable use at a specific time, given legal,
physical and financial limitations.
Historical Cost - The
original cost of a building, improvement, or personal
property, as opposed to the current replacement, or
reproduction cost.
IAAO -
International Association of Assessing Officers.
Income Approach - The
method of estimating the value of a property based on income
capitalization. Income figures should reflect current market
conditions and typical management.
Income Rate - A
measure of investment that reflects the ratio of one year’s
income or the annual average of several years’ income to
value, e.g., overall capitalization rates (R0), equity
capitalization rate (RE), mortgage constant (RM).
Also called cash flow rate.
Incurable - A part of
depreciation where it is not economical to correct the
condition, and if corrected, the cost of correcting the
condition exceeds the value.
Indirect Costs -
Costs incurred in construction away from the site. For
example: fees, permits, insurance and loans.
Intangible Personal
Property - Rights over tangible real and personal
property, but not rights of use and possession, for example,
notes, bonds, stocks, patents, mortgages, copyrights, and
insurance policies.
Inwood Annuity
Capitalization - A traditional technique in which
present value factors, or Inwood coefficients, from standard
compound interest tables are used to discount a stream of
level income to present worth; an annuity that can be
capitalized with an Inwood factor, or coefficient.
Inwood Annuity - An
ordinary level income stream.
Inwood Factor - A
factor that reflects the present worth of $1 per period for a
given number of periods, discounted at a given discount rate;
obtained by calculation or from standard compound interest
tables. Also called Inwood coefficient.
Inwood Premise - The
premise stating that the present value of an income stream is
derived by applying a single discount rate.
Jamb -
Upright side of a doorway, window, or fireplace.
Joist - Timber to
which flooring or ceiling laths are fastened.
Kellastone - Stucco exterior wall material
with crushed rock finish and magnesite base.
Land
Capitalization Rate(RL) - (1) The rate
used to covert land income into an indication of land value in
certain residual techniques or in a band of investment. (2)
The ratio of land income to land value.
Land Description
Systems - commonly referred to as legal descriptions,
are written descriptions of the physical boundaries of
property rights.
Land Residual
Technique - A capitalization technique in which the
net operating income attributable to the land is isolated and
capitalized to indicate the land’s contribution to total
property value.
Lap Siding - Exterior
wall siding with one edge thicker than the other, also called
clapboard.
Law of Variable
Proportions - Often called law of decreasing returns
or the law of proportionality, which states that when the
quantity of one productive service is increased by equal
increments, the quantities of other productive services
remaining fixed, the resulting increment of product will
decrease after a certain point.
Lease Interest - One
of the real property interests that results from the
separation of the bundle of rights by a lease, i.e., the
leased fee estate or the leasehold estate.
Leased Fee Estate -
An ownership interest held by a landlord with the right of use
and occupancy conveyed by lease to others; the rights of
lessor or the leased fee owner and leased fee are specified by
contract terms contained within the lease.
Leasehold Estate -
The right to use and occupy real estate for a stated term and
under certain conditions; conveyed by lease.
Lessee - One who has
the right to use or occupy a property under a lease agreement;
the leaseholder or tenant.
Lessor - One who
holds property title and conveys the right to use and occupy
the property under a lease agreement; the leased fee owner or
landlord.
Lien - The legal
right to take or hold property of a debtor as payment or
security for a debt.
Lintel
- Horizontal piece of timber, stone, or metal over doorway
or window supporting the wall above the doorway or
window.
Live Load - The
weight carried by a floor by use including machinery,
equipment, materials and persons.
Load Bearing
Wall - A wall, which supports not only its own weight,
but that of the walls and roof above it. A load-bearing wall,
in contrast to a curtain wall, cannot be removed without
destroying the building.
Local Multiplier - An
adjustment to replacement or reproduction cost new or
historical cost, to reflect local costs.
Long-Lived Items -
Items that are the basic structure of a building and are not
usually replaced during economic life. For example:
foundation, roof structure, and framing.
Lot and Block Survey
- A plat in which a larger parcel of land is subdivided into
small units for the purpose of sale. Conveyances need to refer
only to the lot, block, and plat book
designation.
Louver
- A ventilator built of slats slanted so as to admit air
but to prevent water, snow, and other foreign ojects from
entering the opening. The slats may be movable or
rigid.
Market
Value - The most probable sale price of a property in
terms of money in a competitive and open market, assuming that
the buyer and seller are acting prudently and knowledgeably,
allowing sufficient time for the sale, and assuming that the
transaction is not affected by undue stimuli.
Marquee
- Covering over the entrance to a theater, hotel, or store. A
marquee usually is supported by supports from-the
building.
Mass Appraisal - The
systematic appraisal of groups of properties as of a given
date using standardized procedures and statistical
testing.
Meridian - A
principle north-south line in the rectangular land survey
system.
Metes and Bounds - A
land description system in which boundaries are described as
distances between two semi-permanent points or as lines
following compass bearings.
Mill Type
Construction - Heavy appearing structure with masonry
load bearing walls, heavy wood framing, and heavy plank or
laminated flooring.
Millage, Mill Rate -
One mill is one-thousandth of one dollar or one-tenth of one
cent. Used as a rate to calculate amount of taxes.
Model - Mathematical
equations used to analyze quantities of data. Most of the
models used in real estate appraisal are based on one of the
three approaches to value.
Model Calibration -
The development of adjustments, or coefficients based on sales
analysis, that identifies specific factors that have an actual
effect on market value.
Model Specification -
The formal development of a model in a statement or equation,
based on data analysis and appraisal theory.
Monitor
Roof - A comparatively small roof structure built
on the main roof to provide light and ventilation. Monitors
are found mostly in barns, sheds, and industrial
buildings.
Monolithic Concrete -
Poured (solid) concrete.
Mortgage Constant
(RM) - The capitalization rate for debt; the ratio of
the annual debt service to the principle amount of the
mortgage loan. Also called mortgage
capitalization rate (RM = debt service/ mortgage
principal).
Mortgage Debt Service
(IM) - The periodic payment for interest on and
retirement of the principal of a mortgage loan.
Mortgage Requirement
- The periodic level payment, or installment, required for
debt service, i.e., interest plus principal. on a direct
reduction loan. See also mortgage constant
(RM).
Mortice
- A rectangular hole in one piece of wood cut to receive a
projection on another piece, so as to form a Joint
Mud Sill Foundation -
A foundation constructed of heavy timbers laid on the
ground.
Mullion Upright
divider between windowpanes, or a series of joined doors, or
panels.
Multiple Regression
Analysis (MRA) - A statistical technique similar to
correlation used to analyze data in order to predict the value
of one variable (dependent), such as market value, from the
known values of other variables (independent) such as lot
size, number of rooms, etc.
MVS - Marshal
Valuation Service, published by Marshall Swift.
Neighborhood - The environment of a subject
property that has a direct and immediate impact on its
value.
Neighborhood Analysis
- A study of the relevant forces that influence property
values within the boundaries of a homogenous area.
Net Income - The
income expected from a property, after deduction of allowable
expenses.
Net Present Value
(NPV) - The difference, if any between the
present value of all expected benefits or positive cash flows,
and the present value of capital outlays, or negative cash
flows.
Newel
Post - The post at the foot of a stairway, or in a
winding stairway, the central, post around which the stairway
winds.
Nominal Interest Rate
(I) - A stated or contract rate; an interest
rate, usually annual, that does not necessarily correspond to
the true or effective rate of growth at compound interest;
e.g., a true or effective 1% monthly interest rate may be
called a nominal, annual interest rate of 12%, although true
growth with monthly compounding amounts to slightly more than
12.68% per year. See also effective interest
rate.
Nominal Tax Rate - A
mathematical expression of the relationship between the tax
levy and the total assessment for a jurisdiction. (Levy
divided by assessment = nominal tax rate.)
Observed Condition Breakdown
Method - This method breaks down depreciation
into all its various components; curable physical deterioration,
incurable short-lived-item physical deterioration, incurable
basis structure (long-lived items) physical deterioration,
curable functional obsolescence, incurable functional
obsolescence, and economic (external) obsolescence.
Obsolescence - Loss
in property value due to causes other than physical
deterioration such as becoming out of date, excess of supply
over demand, or loss in desirability and use for the specific
type of property.
Overall Age/Life
Method - Method of estimating accrued depreciation
based on straight-line depreciation in which the building is
assumed to depreciate by a constant percentage each year over
its economic life.
Overall Capitalization Rate (
RO) - An income rate for a total real property
interest that reflects the relationship between a single
years’ net operating income expectancy or an annual average of
several years’ income expectancies, and total price or value;
used to convert net operating income into an indication of
overall property value (RO=NOI/V).
Over-improvement - A building having a
value in excess of that which the value of the land on which
it is built justifies.
PAAA -
Property Appraisal and Assessment Administration.
Parapet
- A low wall at the edge of a roof, balcony, or terrace. May
be an extension of the exterior wall above the roof.
Parcel - An area of
land capable of being conveyed by a single legal description.
A single piece of land under one ownership. May be a lot or
acreage.
Parcel Identifiers -
A code, usually numerical, representing a specific land
parcel's legal description.
Parquet
Floor - Flooring consisting of wood blocks laid in
adhesive material in systematic (commonly colored)
patterns.
Party Wall - A wall
common to and separating two buildings.
Patio -
An outside floor area, without roof, constructed of brick,
tile, stone, state, or other similar material, usually
adjoining a house and used as an outdoor living area. Same as
a terrace.
Personal Property -
Property that is not real is personal. Characteristic of
personal property is its movability without damage to itself
or the real estate.
Physical
Deterioration - A cause of depreciation which is a
loss in value due to wear and tear and the forces of
nature.
Pier - Blocks of
concrete, stone, or wood used in lieu of a foundation wall to
support a building.
Pilaster - An upright column or pillar
projecting from an exterior wall to provide added support to
the wall, particularly at points of load
concentration.
Planimeter - A mechanical device for
measuring areas of plane surfaces by following property lines
with a needle on the instrument. In appraisal and assessment
work it is valuable for determining the acreage of parcels,
particularly of irregular shaped parcels.
Pole
Building - A building in which poles are placed
upright in the ground and serve as the foundation and as the
framework the building.
Price - Amount paid
for an item.
Principal
Building - A main building such as a residence,
apartment building, motel, commercial or industrial
building.
Private Encumbrances
- Private hindrances that affect value and sale price such as:
easements, condominium controls, and deed or subdivision
restrictions.
Property - An
aggregate of things, or rights to things, which are protected
by law. There are two basic types of property: real, and
personal.
Property Record
Card - Card on which description and measurements of
each parcel of land and buildings thereon are recorded, and on
which the valuation Of the property is computed.
Property Tax Levy -
The total amount of money to be raised from the property tax
as set forth in the budget of a taxing
jurisdiction.
Qualitative - Pertaining to the subjective
nature of some variable of interest. For example, view, fire
protection, quality, or site/location.
Quantitative -
Pertaining to the objective nature of some variable of
interest. It can be measured or counted with little ambiguity.
For example, number of bathrooms, year built, additions, or
size.
Quantity Survey
Method - Method of cost estimating which requires
complete itemization of all construction, labor, and material
costs by components and subcomponents and all indirect
costs.
Quarter Section - A
subdivision of a Section containing 160 acres more or less,
described by referencing the center point in the Section, i.e.
the NE 1/4 is north and east of the center point.
Rafter
- A beam, usually sloping, supporting a roof.
Ramp - An inclined
runway or walkway.
Range Lines - Lines
in succeeding six-mile increments on either side of a
Meridian.
Ratio Study - A study
of the relationship between appraised values and market
values. Indicators of market values may be either sales, or
independent appraisals. The common interest in ratio studies
is the level and uniformity of the appraisals.
RCN - Replacement
cost new / reproduction cost new.
Real Estate - The
physical parcel of land and all improvements permanently
attached.
Real Property - The
rights, interests, and benefits connected with real
estate.
Recapture Rate - The
annual rate at which capital investment is returned to an
investor over a specified period; the annual amount, in
addition to interest or return on interest (compound
interest), which can be recaptured from an investment, divided
by the original amount invested. The term was once mainly used
in reference to wasting assets. A recapture rate now applies
to situations in which some regular annual income may be
provided to compensate for loss in invested capital. When
capital is recovered gradually through income, the recapture
rate is the difference between the income rate for the
interest being appraised and the required internal rate of
return on the capital invested in that interest. It can be
positive, negative, or zero.
Reconciliation,
Correlation - the final step in the appraisal process
which resolves the differences that result from the
application of the three approaches to value.
Rectangular
Coordinates - A land description system where
boundaries are described as lines running from points on a X
and Y grid.
Rectangular Land
Surveys - Land description systems based on permanent,
uniformly sized rectangular grids which can be subdivided into
smaller units of land.
Regular Section - A
one square mile subdivision of a township containing 640
acres.
Remaining Economic
Life - The number of years remaining in the economic
life of a structure as of the appraisal date, and provides a
basis for estimating replacement cost new less
depreciation.
Replacement Cost -
The cost of constructing a substitute structure of equal
utility using current materials, design and
standards.
Reproduction Cost -
The cost of constructing a replica, or identical structure,
using the same materials, construction standards, design and
quality of workmanship.
Riser - Upright part
of a stair step.
Risk Analysis -
Quantitative methods that assess risk according to probable
occurrence. See also probability analysis; utility
functions.
Risk Factor - The
portion of a given return or rate of return from capital
invested in an enterprise that is assumed to cover the risks
associated with the particular investment; as distinguished
from, and in excess of, the return or rate obtainable from
funds invested where the safety of principal is virtually
assured.
Risk Rate - The
annual rate of return on capital that is commensurate with the
risk assumed by the investor; the rate of interest or yield
necessary to attract capital.
Risk - The
probability that foreseen events will not occur. See also
probability; uncertainty.
Risk-Adjusted Discount
Rate - In risk analysis, a discount rate that includes
all of the elements of risk associated with an income stream
for a specified period and adjusted to offset additional term
risk.
Romex Wiring -
Electrical cable in flexible non-metallic conduit.
Rurban
Land - Small tracts of land having both urban and
rural characteristics, and located outside of the corporate
limits of a town, village, or city and outside of densely
populated outlying subdivisions.
Safe
Rate - The rate that can be obtained on an investment
with maximum safety and minimum risk.
Sale Price - The
price for which a property was sold.
Sale Ratio/Assessment
Ratio - The ratio of an appraised (or assessed value)
to the sale price, or adjusted sale price of a
property.
Sales Comparison
Approach - Method of estimating accrued deprecation
through the comparison of sale prices of similar
properties.
Sales Comparison
Method - Method of estimating the value of a property
based on an analysis of sales of similar
properties.
Sales Ratio Study - A
ratio study that uses sales prices as proxies for market
values.
Sash - A frame for
holding panes of glass in a window or door.
Saw Tooth
Roof - A roof whose cross section resembles the teeth
of a saw. The vertical side of the roof has windows to provide
ventilation and light.
Separated Rights -
Rights to property that have been separated by deed such as:
air, mineral, water, and leaseholds.
Sheathing - The inner
covering placed next to the studding or rafters of the walls
or roof of a building.
Shed Roof - A lean-to
single slope roof.
Sheetrock - Trade
name for drywall sheets with a gypsum base and paper
covering.
Short-Lived Items -
Items of a structure which have a shorter life than the basic
structure. For example: roofing, water heaters, floor covering
and interior finish.
Siding - Finished
exterior wall of a frame building.
Sill - The bottom
horizontal member of a window or door.
Single Property
Appraisal - systematic appraisal of properties one at
a time
Sinking Fund Factor
(1/Sn) - The compound interest factor that indicates
the amount per period that will grow, with compound interest,
to $1.
Sinking Fund -
A fund in which periodic deposits of equal amounts of
money are accumulated to pay a debt or replace assets; usually
designed to receive equal annual or monthly deposits that will
accumulate, with compound interest, to a predetermined sum at
the end of a stated period of time.
Site Amenities - The
specific location-related attributes of a property; such as
topography, utilities, street traffic, view, etc.
Situs - The physical
location of property.
Sleeper
- Strips of lumber fastened to the sub-floor for fastening
finish flooring to and for providing a dead air space beneath
the flooring.
Span - The horizontal
distance between supports, as for an arch or roof.
Spandrel Beam - A
beam between two columns for carrying the exterior wall of a
building.
Spandrel - The triangular space between
the curves of an arch and the straight line construction above
the curves.
Split-Level
House- A house with living area on two or more floors
separated by about one-half standard story of
height.
Sprinkler
System - A fire protection system consisting of
overhead water pipes and nozzles so installed and regulated
that water is sprayed automatically over the protected area
when the temperature in the area reached a predetermined
point.
Stile - Upright piece
in the frame of a door or window.
Stratify - For
purposes of analysis, to divide a sample of observations into
two or more subsets, according to some criterion, or set of
criteria.
Studding - Upright
framework to which walls of a building are
attached.
Sub floor - Rough
flooring laid on floor joists to form a base for finish
flooring.
Substitution - A
property’s value tends to be set by the potential cost of
acquiring or producing an equally desirable substitute
property.
Substructure - The
part of a building below the top of the foundation.
Superstructure - The
part of a building above the top of a foundation.
Supply - A schedule
showing the amount of a good or service that would be offered
for sale at various prices during a given
period.
Surplus Productivity
- The income from a property remaining after the costs of
labor, management, and capital have been paid. This income is
attributable to the land.
Suspended Ceiling - A
ceiling hung below the ceiling joists.
Tax Map -A map showing all lots and tracts
of land in their relative size, shape, and location. Also
known as plat map, or property location map.
Tenon - The end of a
piece of wood cut so as to fit into a hole in another piece of
wood, and so form a joint.
Terra Cotta - A clay
and fine sand structural product used mainly-for facings and
ornamentation.
Terrace
- An outside floor area, without roof, constructed of
concrete, brick tile, stone, slate, or other similar material,
usually adjoining a house and used as an outdoor living area.
Same as a patio.
Terrazzo - A highly
polished flooring made of wet cement and marble
chips.
Through Lot - A lot abutting two
parallel, or approximately parallel, streets.
Tilt-Up
Construction - Concrete exterior wall construction in
which precast reinforced concrete sections are lifted into
position in the wall. This type of construction is sometimes
found in commercial and industrial buildings.
Time-Adjusted Sale
Price - An amount of money, or the value of a
commodity in dollars, expected to be receivable in the future
is always worth less than an equal amount actually in hand at
the present.
Tongue and
Groove - Lumber (usually flooring or siding) or other
building material in which one edge has a projecting tongue
and the opposite edge has a groove that fits over the tongue
of matching material to form a locked joint.
Township - An
approximately 36 square mile division of land employed in the
Rectangular Land Survey System. Townships are bounded by two
successive Range Lines on the east and west and two successive
Township Lines on the north and south.
Township Lines -
Lines in succeeding six mile increments on either side of a
Base Line.
Tract - A single
piece of land under one ownership. Maybe a lot or acreage.
Same as parcel.
Transite - Building
material made of asbestos fibers and cement under
pressure.
Transom - A low
window opening above a door or another window.
Tread - The top, or
horizontal, part of a stair step.
Truss -
A series of beams, bars and similar structural members
assembled into an open web pattern to support a roof or floor,
itself supported at both ends.
Under-improvement - A building having a
value less than that which the value of the land on which it
is built justifies.
Unit Foot
Value - The value of a piece of land one foot wide
abutting a street or highway and extending back from the front
the standard lot depth.
Unit Front Foot - A
piece of land one foot wide abutting a street or highway and
extending back from the front the standard lot
depth.
Unit Heater - A
complete heating unit, without ducts, for heating the area in
which it is located, such as a room or other part less than
the complete area, of a building.
Unit Land Value Map -
A map showing the value of land per unit front toot, square
foot, or acre in an assessment area.
Wainscot - The lower part of an interior
wall (approximately four feet high) when finished different
from the remainder of the wall, as with tile.
Wall Ratio -
Relationship of the exterior walls (perimeter) of a building
to the ground area of the building. The wall ratio is used for
determining the base unit cost of commercial and industrial
buildings, and is found by dividing the square feet of the
building ground area by the perimeter of the exterior
walls.
Wallboard. An
interior wall and ceiling fiber material cut into sheets for
use in place of plaster.
WEIGHTS
AND MEASURES
Linear Measure
1 Foot12 inches
1 Yard 3 feet - 36
inches
1 Rod 5 1/2 yards - 16 1/2
feet
1 Furlong 40 rods - 220 yards - 660
feet
1 Mile 8 furlongs - 320 rods -
1,760 yards 5,280 feet
Surveyor's Linear
Measure
1 Link = 7.92 inches
1 Rod = 25 links
1 Chain = 4 rods - 100 links - 66
feet
1 Furlong = 10 chains
1 Mile = 8 furlongs - 80
chains
Square Measure
1 Square Foot = 144 sq.
inches
1 Square Yard = 9 sq. feet - 1,296
sq. inches
1 Square Rod = 1 pole or perch - 30
1/4 sq. yards - 272 1/4 sq. feet
1 Rod = 40 sq. rods
1 Acre = 160 sq. rods - 4,840 sq.
yards - 43,560 sq. feet
1 Square Mile = 640
acres
Surveyor's Square
Measure
1 Square Rod = 526 sq.
links
1 Square Chain = 16 sq.
rods
1 Acre = 10 sq. chains
1 Square Mile = 640
acres
Cubic Measure
1 Cubic Foot = 1,728 cu. inches -
7,481 gallons
1 Cubic Yard = 27 cu.
feet
1 Cord Foot = 16 cu.
feet
1 Cord of Wood = 8 cord feet - 128
cu. feet
1 Perch of Masonry = 24 3/4 cu.
feet
1 Bushel = 1.2445 cu.
feet
Angles and Arcs
1 Minute = 60 seconds
1 Degree = 60 minutes
1 Right Angle = 90 degrees -1
quadrant
1 Circumference = 360 degrees - 4
quadrants
Board Measure
1 Board Foot length in feet x width
in feet x thickness in inches.
Measurements in
General Use:
1 link is 7.92 inches
1 foot is 12 inches
1 yard is 3 feet or 36
inches
1 rod is 16 1/2 feet, 5 1/2 yards
or 25 links
1 surveyor’s chain is 66 feet, or 4
rods, or 100 links
1 furlong is 660 feet, or 40
rods
1 mile is 8 furlongs, 320 rods, 80
chains or 5,280 feet
1 square rod is 272 1/4 square feet
or 30 1/4 square yards
1 acre contains 43,560 square
feet
1 acre contains 160 square
rods
span is 9 inches
hand - horse measurement -
is 4 inches
knot - nautical - is
6,080.27 feet
fathom - nautical - is 6
feet
stone is 14
pounds
A square acre is approximately
208.7 feet on each side 1 acre is about 8 rods by 20 rods, or
any two combinations of rods whose product is
160.
Simple Formula Converting Square
Feet to Acres:
Multiply by 23 and point off 6
places
Example: 1500 ft. x 2050 ft. =
3,075,000 sq. ft. x 23 = 70.73 acres
(This method is not exact but is
useful for rough calculations)
To Find Capacity of
Cylindrical Tanks Standing-on End:
To find the capacity of cubic feet
of a tapered round tank or other object: See "Volume of
Frustum".
To find the capacity of a
cylindrical tank in gal1ons: Multiply area of base (
πr2 ) by height of tank to obtain capacity in cubic
feet.
Multiply capacity in cubic feet by
7.481 gallons per cubic foot.
Board
Measure:
Multiply thickness in inches by
width in inches, divide product by 12 and multiply result by
the length in feet. The result is board measure
content.
Conversion factors for
converting lineal feet of lumber into board feet
-
Example:
50 – 2" x 10"s 20’ long (read: 50
boards, that are 2 inches by 10 inches and are 20 feet
long)
50 x 20’ = 1000 lineal
feet
2" x 10" = 20 sq. inches – 12 = 1.
667 board feet x 1000 lineal feet
equals 1,667 board feet.
AREA AND VOLUME
FORMULAS
Rule of Right
Triangle
a. Square of hypotenuse of a right
triangle is equal to the sum of the squares of other two
sides.
b. Square of one-side equals square
of hypotenuse minus square of other side.
C 2 equals A
2 plus B 2
A 2 equals C 2
minus B 2
B 2 equals C
2 minus A 2
Triangle
Area equals 1/2 the product of base
and altitude
A=1/2 (bh)
Rectangles and
Squares
Area equals the product of length
and width
A=lw
Parallelograms
Area equals the product of base and
altitude
A=bh
Trapezoid
Area equals the product of the
height and 1/2 the sum of the bases.
A = (a + b x h) /
2
Hexagon
Area equals 3 times the product of
apothem and 1 side.
A = 3as
NOTE: Divide hexagon into
triangles.
Circle
Area equals the product of π
(3.1416) and radius squared.
A = π r2 or
.7854D2
Circumference equals the product of
U and diameter.
C =πD or C =
2πr
Prism
Lateral area equals the perimeter
of the base times the height.
Total area equals the combined area
of lateral faces and the bases.
Volume of any prism equals the area
of base times altitude.
Cube
Total area equals 6 times the
square of one edge.
Volume equals area of the base
times altitude.
Retangular Solid
Lateral area equals the perimeter
of the base times the height.
Total area equals combined area of
lateral faces and the bases.
Volume equals area of base times
altitude.
Cylinder
Lateral area equals the
circumference of base times height.
Volume equals the area of its base
times altitude.
Pyramid
A solid whose base is a polygram
and sides are triangles and meet in common point to form the
vertex.
Lateral area is equal to the
perimeter of base x ½ slant height.
Volume is 1/3 the base area x
altitude.
Cone
A solid whose base is a
circle and whose surface tapers to a point called vertex or
top. May be considered a pyramid with an unlimited number of
sides.
The lateral area equals the
circumference of base x 1/2 slant height.
Volume equals 1/3 of the product of
the base area and altitude.
Frustums
Lateral area of a frustum of a
right pyramid equals one half of the sum of the perimeters of
two bases times the slant height.
Lateral area of a frustum of a cone
is found by multiplying one-half the sum of the circumference
of the two bases by the slant height.
Total area of a frustum is the sum
of lateral area and the two bases.
For volume of a frustum take sum of
the areas of the two bases; to this add the square root of the
product of the areas of the two bases, multiply result by 1/3
of the altitude.
Sphere
(A solid bounded by a curved
surface, every point equally distant from the
center.)
Surface of a sphere equals 2 times
the square of the diameter.
Volume of a sphere equals the area
of the surface times 1/3 of the radius.
Circumference is the same as that
of a circle.
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