8 January 2014 | 5 replies
The smaller developers have taken to purchasing smaller city lots that can be short platted or lot line adjusted and building 1 and 2 homes or townhomes on the lots, we call this infilling.
10 January 2014 | 6 replies
About a month after I moved into my own home, we got massive flooding in the city that hadn't been seen in decades.
9 January 2014 | 15 replies
The more research I do on here and on city-data forum, the more I see these 'ghetto' rarely turnaround.
9 January 2014 | 1 reply
I've been seeing a big inflow of properties in the marketplace and looking at the price history, it looks like most of the state has had a steady decline since 2006.Are there cities in Ohio, like Toledo, which will be forgotten by job creators and renters, like Detroit?
9 January 2014 | 13 replies
Usually you can shut it off at the City meter and they usually have a way of locking it there if there is nothing else.Usually damages due to tenant negligence are their cost but you can't get blood from a stone.I would get them out and find someone who can afford the place WITH Heat.Offer her an out, say why don't you stay at your mothers, here is a termination agreement sign it and we're done.
8 January 2014 | 3 replies
Use a city/county and search for 60%+ equity.
10 January 2014 | 2 replies
I live in a city that is projected to be impacted by the Bakken oil boom in the very near future.
9 January 2014 | 3 replies
I can't help but notice that the one city that needs help in all aspects, Detroit, didn't make the list.
9 February 2014 | 11 replies
They saw the error and within 24 hours they sent the tax payment including late fees to the city and they went back to the seller to get this portion of the funds back.
9 January 2014 | 14 replies
Which means that natural gas could be lienable; in the City of Phila, PGW is the municipality's gas service, so gas is lienable in Phila.