Your governing documents, including any maintenance tasks included in the annual budget will give you the answer to your question.
Generally, all lawns, except lawns specifically owned and maintained by a single owner, are covered in landscape maintenance tasks, because these real estate assets are owned in common with all other owners.
If your budget line item reads 'landscape maintenance', your board of directors can define exactly which lawn areas are covered by that percentage of your assessment payment assigned to landscape maintenance.
Yes it can.
Perimeter is not defined for 3-dimensional objects.
The perimeter is defined as the distance around something.
It is defined by the state bar association.
Possibly, as it would be cheapest to have all the units re-roofed on a single contract than to do it individually. Also, roof maintenance is probably done by a contractor hired by the association.
Perimeters are not defined in the context of 3 d shapes.
network
states have defined territories but associations do not
Your answer depends on who owns the driveway. If your association owns it, it is responsible for maintaining it. You can file a maintenance request with the board or with the association manager. If you own it, you may want to discuss its repair with the board, to verify that you use the proper materials, the recommended vendor and so forth. You can find ownership of the driveway defined in your governing documents. Look for a section on Boundaries.
Yes. Given two equations ... one for area and one for perimeter ... in two variables ... length and width ... I'd say that the dimensions are uniquely defined.
Read your governing documents to determine who owns the coach light. Its ownership is probably not defined. If the balcony is dedicated to your unit or your unit together with other units -- thus, a limited common area, the upkeep and maintenance for it may be defined within that context. The safety and security for the community is the responsibility of the board, generally. You can report the broken light as a maintenance item. If within seven days -- pick a reasonable period -- the light is not repaired, you can take charge of the repair. You can pay a licensed, bonded and insured vendor to repair the light, then send the bill to the association for reimbursement.
A project has a defined starting and stopping point. Maintenance is ongoing work so it can't be considered a project.