Example ContractsClausesrestorationVariants
Restoration
Restoration contract clause examples

Landlord’s Restoration Obligation. If any portion of the Building shall be damaged or destroyed by fire or other casualty (collectively, “Casualty”), Tenant shall give immediate written notice thereof to Landlord. Unless this Lease is terminated as provided in Paragraph 25.3 or Paragraph 25.3, Landlord shall, to the extent that insurance proceeds are available to Landlord therefor, proceed to repair and restore the damage (“Landlord’s Restoration Work”), with reasonable diligence and promptness, given the nature of the damage to be repaired, to substantially the same condition existing prior to the Casualty except for modifications required by zoning and building codes and other Applicable Laws and subject to reasonable delays for insurance adjustments, compliance with zoning laws, building codes, and other Applicable Laws and Force Majeure Events. Landlord’s Restoration Work does not include repair and restoration of the Tenant Improvements or subsequent Alterations made by Tenant or repair and restoration to Tenant’s equipment, furniture, furnishings, trade fixtures or personal property. Unless this Lease is terminated as provided in Paragraph 25.3 or Paragraph 25.4, if and to the extent that any damaged Tenant Improvements or Alterations must be removed in order for Landlord to effect Landlord’s Restoration Work or to eliminate any hazard or nuisance resulting from such damaged Tenant Improvements or Alterations, then, after Landlord gives Tenant access for that purpose, Tenant shall proceed with reasonable diligence, given the nature of the work, to remove such damaged Tenant Improvements or Alterations in accordance with Applicable Laws, subject to reasonable delays for insurance adjustments and Force Majeure Events.

Tenant’s Restoration Obligations. Unless this Lease is terminated as provided in Paragraph 25.3 or Paragraph 25.4, in the event of a Casualty, Tenant shall, to the extent that insurance proceeds are available to Tenant therefor (or would have been available to Tenant had Tenant carried the insurance required to be carried pursuant to this Lease and complied with the terms of such insurance policies), restore the Tenant Improvements to substantially the same condition existing prior to the Casualty except for modifications required by zoning and building codes and other Applicable Laws. Tenant shall otherwise have no duty or obligation to restore any of the Alterations or Tenant’s equipment, furniture, furnishings, trade fixtures or personal property therein, it being agreed that, subject to the preceding sentence, Tenant shall be permitted to restore the Premises to a condition different from that existing prior to the Casualty. Tenant shall proceed with reasonable diligence, given the nature of the work, to effect such restoration in a good and workmanlike manner and in accordance with applicable Laws, subject to Force Majeure Events. If this Lease is terminated as provided in Paragraph 25.3 or Paragraph 25.4, Tenant, no later than the expiration or sooner termination of this Lease, shall remove the damaged Tenant Improvements, Alterations and Tenant’s equipment, furniture, furnishings, trade fixtures or personal property unless the Building is to be razed and/or demolished, in which case Tenant shall have no obligation to remove any such improvements or personal property.

Landlord’s Repair Notice. Landlord, as soon as reasonably possible but in any event within sixty (60) days after the date of the Casualty, shall deliver a written notice to Tenant (“Landlord’s Casualty Notice”) indicating Landlord’s election # to perform Landlord’s Restoration Work, including Landlord’s good faith estimate (which shall be based on Landlord’s consultation with a qualified, independent, experienced and reputable architect and/or general contractor experienced in similar types of Landlord’s Restoration Work) of the number of days (assuming no unusual delays in the receipt of insurance proceeds, no overtime or other premiums, and no Force Majeure Event) measured from the date of the Casualty that will be required for Landlord to substantially complete Landlord’s Restoration Work (the “Estimated Restoration Period”) or # to terminate this Lease pursuant to Paragraph 25.3 as of the date specified in Landlord’s Casualty Notice, which date shall not be less than thirty (30) nor more than sixty (60) days after the date of such notice, unless Tenant exercised its right to terminate this Lease pursuant to Paragraph 25.4.

Repair Obligation; Abatement of Rent. Subject to Paragraph 15.1, Landlord shall, within a reasonable time after the discovery by Landlord of any damage resulting from a Casualty, begin with reasonable diligence to restore the Premises to substantially the same condition as existed immediately before such Casualty, except for modifications required by Regulations, and modifications to the Project reasonably deemed desirable by Landlord; provided, however, that Landlord shall not be required as part of the Restoration to repair or replace any of the Alterations, furniture, equipment, fixtures, and other improvements which may have been placed by, or at the request of, Tenant or other occupants in the Premises. Landlord shall have no liability for any inconvenience or annoyance to Tenant or injury to Tenant’s business as a result of any Casualty, regardless of the cause therefor. Base Rent shall abate only if and solely to the extent a Casualty damages the Premises and Tenant is unable to occupy and does not occupy the Premises for the Permitted Use.

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