No visible repairs to Bangor Mall a month after the owner promised corrections

No visible repairs to Bangor Mall a month after the owner promised corrections

In the Bangor Mall, no visible repairs were carried out in the Bangor Mall after the owner had promised to remedy ongoing concerns that the city prompted last year.

Namdar published an explanation on April 17, in which it is said that the rainwater pipes were deleted and shaped in the camera, and a report on the necessary repairs was up to

The city has not received a report, and the engineering department must issue permission to work on an underground supply line that it did not have from Thursday, spokesman David Warren said.

It is the latest example that Namdar does not carry out the promises to repair the decaying infrastructure in the Bangor Mall. Without the repairs, the risk of more wastewater pipes, the through roof and extinguishing and the potholes damages cars.

Namdar did not answer an inquiry about the comment at the time of publication.

Bangor submitted two lawsuits against the owner of the Mall, Namdar Realty Group in 2024. In the first violations of the code, including a leaky roof, large potholes, a pound sign and rainwater drainage. The second dealt with code injuries after a sinkhole was opened around a 54-inch rainwater tube, which led to a break in a 10-inch wastewater pipe and an 18-inch rainwater tube.

No visible repairs to Bangor Mall a month after the owner promised corrections

A judge found that according to a decision on April 7, Namdar violated several city codes and provided the company a plan to remedy the problems by the end of May.

In April Namdar said that 95 percent of the repairs had been completed at the leaky roof, but that additional leaks were created. Further repairs, including the replacement of skylights, were underway, the company said at the time.

On April 22, Bangor sent an e -mail to a lawyer for Namdar and requested access to the roof to enforce roofers to check the repairs of roofers, said Warren. The city has not received an answer.

A reporter from Bangor Daily News saw four buckets on Thursday afternoon under apparent lacquer in the shopping center.

Warren said that Namdar's efforts to make repairs were “valued, but many of the city concerns remain.”

A representative of Namdar said in January to court that the sign of the shopping center at the intersection of the Hogan Road and the Bangor Mall Boulevard would be determined the following week.

In April Namdar said that a seller was “engaged” to replace the sign. The sign is on a relief that requires the written approval of the owner that Namdar said at the time of the requirement.

The sign is still broken.

Warren said that there are also concerns about the state of underground supply lines. The city previously said that more dolins are opened around the water ravings, which leads to a further break in a sewage line.

At that time, no court appointments are planned for the complaints. The hearings were previously planned for May 29 and 30 to determine the fines and fees, the Namdar.

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