You open a Phase I and look for the bottom line, any RECs, what still hangs over the site, and what to do next. The report scatters those answers across sections, appendices, and consultant prose that slows you down. Then the deal moves and you have to check it again. Same document, same scavenger hunt. It is repetitive work that adds no new insight and still eats an hour each time the file comes back into focus. Due Diligence ~5 min to run Generate Phase I Environmental Tear Sheet Vic prompt Use Vic to generate a Phase I environmental tear sheet from my Phase I report. Purpose Cuts Phase I report review from 60 minutes to 5 minutes. Keeps environmental risks visible without full report re-reads during deal underwriting. Inputs Phase I Report Required Output Format Optional Additional Context Optional Outputs A one-page Phase I Environmental Tear Sheet with bottom-line verdict, environmental findings table, compliance obligations, two-line property overview, and up to three action items. Time saved Cuts Phase I review from about 60 minutes to about 5 minutes. How it works You give Vic the Phase I report and, if you care about format, a preferred output style. You can add context such as the asset type or what the investment committee cares about. Then run it with a single line: Use Vic to generate a Phase I environmental tear sheet from my Phase I report. Vic reads the document and pulls what matters for an acquisition decision. The output is a clean, one-page tear sheet built for quick review and reuse. It opens with a two-line property overview so anyone can see what asset is under review. Then it states the bottom-line verdict from the report. The center of the page is a findings table that lists RECs, CRECs, and HRECs in plain terms. You can see the status of each item without digging through narrative sections. This is the part people look for, so it sits front and center and reads fast. Below that, Vic lists ongoing compliance obligations. If the report ties the site to monitoring, reporting, or institutional controls, those items are spelled out so they do not get lost between diligence and closing. This is where deals pick up quiet liabilities, so keeping it visible matters. The page ends with up to three action items. These are the next steps implied by the report, not a generic checklist. If the Phase I points to more investigation or follow-up, it shows up here in simple language that can go straight into your deal tracker. The one-page limit is the point. You get a document that fits in your underwriting file, drops into an investment memo, or can be shared with a lender without dragging the full report along. When the deal comes back a week later, you read the same page in a few minutes and move on. This does not replace the Phase I. It gives you a consistent front door. When something looks off, you can go back to the source with a clear target instead of paging through sections. For most passes, the tear sheet keeps environmental risk in view while the rest of the deal moves. The time savings are direct. What used to take about an hour to piece together from the report takes about five minutes to generate and review. More important, the answers show up the same way every time, which makes comparisons across deals cleaner and faster.