That depends on the municipality.
As long as the owner has a temporary certificate of occupancy.
Yes.
If the municipality requires a CO, then, yes. However, that's between the landlord and the city, and really has nothing to do with the tenant. There still may be nothing wrong with the unit, and the tenant is still obligated to pay the rent.
In Michigan, a landlord can enter a rental property without permission in emergency situations or if the tenant has abandoned the property. Otherwise, the landlord must provide reasonable notice to the tenant before entering the rental unit for non-emergency reasons.
no it will not
A landlord can only go onto property unannounced to handle an emergency. In Pennsylvania, a landlord needs to give the tenant 24 hours notice to enter a property
Quite simple: the landlord may reclaim the property without judicial process.
No. Before any tenant is evicted from a property, the landlord must follow judicial proceedings.
Under most state laws a landlord must give you adequate notice before he can enter your property for routine maintenance or inspection. Absent this notice, he may enter your property if it's an emergency. However, in many states, your request for maintenance or repairs is sufficient to allow your landlord to enter your property without consent.
No, tenants generally cannot remove plants from a rental property without permission from the landlord.
Most states have a rule, under their landlord and tenant act, that if the rent is due, and a specific time has passed - in most states it's 15 days - and there is evidence that the property has been abandoned, such as the electricity being turned off, then the landlord may take possession of the property without going to court.
I can't see why not: as long as the tenant is not being displaced from the property as a result of the construction, unless proper notice is given accordingly, the landlord has every right to build and expand the property.