Talk:Jevremovac
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Object
[edit]What is this "object" the article keeps referring to, and that apparently needed to be "legalized"? Can someone who knows what it is please copyedit the article so it makes sense? Pinging PajaBG. Largoplazo (talk) 17:22, 21 January 2021 (UTC)
- Hi. I used the term "object" because initially no one knew what this is going to be in the end, and because it remained unfinished. Guess I can replace it with "edifice" or "building" in the first sentence. As the article says, "the legal permits weren't obtained", which makes the building illegal. As this is a common thing here, we have a legal process called "legalization". Basically, it makes illegal edifice legal after the fact - after the construction began or, in most cases, when it has been already finished. If in English some other term is used for this type of retroactive legal confirmation, I will replace "legalization" with it. I wasn't looking further, as Webster defined legalization as "to make legal; especially: to give legal validity", so I thought it fits the purpose. PajaBG (talk) 17:41, 21 January 2021 (UTC)
- The term "structure" seems suitable rather than "object". You might say "permitting" will be completed. Although—I don't believe I've ever seen a Wikipedia article about a building that mentioned a detail like the permitting process, and I wouldn't expect it in the absence of a noteworthy event, such as significant opposition to it or extraordinary barriers to obtaining it. Largoplazo (talk) 18:04, 21 January 2021 (UTC)
- On a general note, if you'd live here, you'd know about obtaining all sorts of permits, corrupt and impotent administration, (il)legal shortcuts, after-the-fact and after-the-fact-after-the-fact corrupt processes which in the end lead to nothing :) One of the most luxurious hotels in Belgrade, Hyatt Regency, was opened in 1990, and I am not sure if it obtained technical acceptance certificate (literal translation - usage permit) by this day. Here, I mentioned it because present management claims that they have unfinished structure on the premises for 25 years cause they were unable to finish it due to the lack of permits. Well, now they got it. PajaBG (talk) 21:01, 21 January 2021 (UTC)
- The term "structure" seems suitable rather than "object". You might say "permitting" will be completed. Although—I don't believe I've ever seen a Wikipedia article about a building that mentioned a detail like the permitting process, and I wouldn't expect it in the absence of a noteworthy event, such as significant opposition to it or extraordinary barriers to obtaining it. Largoplazo (talk) 18:04, 21 January 2021 (UTC)