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Anoka County City of LinoLakes <br />PHYSICAL DEPRECIATION A reduction in utility resulting from an impairment of <br />physical condition. For purposes of appraisal analysis, it is most common and <br />convenient to divide physical deterioration into curable and incurable components. <br />• PHYSICAL CURABLE DEPRECIATION Physical deterioration which the <br />prudent buyer would anticipate correction upon purchase of the property. The <br />cost of effecting the correction or cure would be no more than the anticipated <br />addition to utility, and hence ultimately to value, associated with the cure. <br />• PHYSICAL INCURABLE DEPRECIATION Physical deterioration which in <br />terms of market conditions as of the date of the appraisal is not feasible or <br />economically justified to correct. The cost of correcting the condition or <br />effecting a cure is estimated to be greater than the anticipated increase in <br />utility, and hence ultimately in value of the property that will result from <br />correcting or curing the condition. <br />FUNCTIONAL DEPRECIATION Impairment of functional capacity or efficiency. <br />Functional obsolescence reflects the loss in value brought about by such factors as <br />overcapacity, inadequacy and changes in the art, that affect the property item itself <br />or its relation with other items comprising a larger property. The inability of a <br />structure to perform adequately the function for which it is currently employed. <br />FUNCTIONAL CURABLE DEPRECIATION Functional obsolescence which <br />may be corrected or cured when the cost of replacing the outmoded or <br />unaccep -table component is at least offset by the anticipated increase in utility, <br />and hence ultimately in value, resulting from the replacement. <br />• FUNCTIONAL INCURABLE DEPRECIATION Functional obsolescence that <br />results from structural deficiencies or superadequacies that the prudent <br />purchaser or owner would not be justified in replacing, adding or removing, <br />because the cost of effecting a cure would be greater than the anticipated <br />increase in utility resulting from the replacement, addition or removal. <br />ECONOMIC OBSOLESCENCE Impairment of desirability or useful life arising <br />from factors external to the property, such as economic forces of environmental <br />changes which affect supply- demand relationships in the market. Loss in the use <br />and value of a property arising from the factors of economic obsolescence is to be <br />distinguished from loss in value from physical deterioration and functional <br />obsolescence, both of which are inherent to the property. Also referred to as <br />Locational or Environmental Obsolescence. <br />EASEMENT A right held by one person to use the land of another for a specific purpose <br />such as access to other property. <br />EQUALIZATION The adjustment of estimated market valuation of real property in a <br />particular area to establish a more equitable division of the total tax burden within the <br />area. <br />ESTIMATED MARKET VALUE Represents the assessor's estimate of the property's <br />actual market value. Market value is defined as the most probable price that a well <br />informed buyer would pay a well informed seller for a property without either party being <br />unduly forced to buy or sell. In other words, what the property would likely sell for if it <br />52 <br />