Contemporary charcoal cottage in Inglewood seeks $650K
It’s downwind from DonLee Farms, a meat processing facility on Beach Avenue that spews some nauseating smells into the air several days a week. La Colina is a narrow street that parallels the railroad tracks and dead-ends just past this property. People use the street as a dump for bulky household items like mattresses.
1950s Cliff May ranch house asks $950K in Long Beach
The grid pattern on the concrete floor indicates there was tile with grout; the grout is porous, so air gets through and changes the color of the concrete over the years. It’s not how you want polished concrete to look, and IMO, pretty sloppy in an almost-million dollar place.
Tri-level, park-facing Candler Park bungalow is flirting with $1M
That fan chandelier is just odd; it would worry me that the owner didn’t believe in air conditioning/HVAC was dead or undersized. In a humid climate like Atlanta, that could point to mold.
Will housing issues gain traction in 2020 election?
I hope not.
The Dimocrats need to have a simple, easy-to-understand 123 message.
1. Healthcare – broad, affordable coverage.
2. Clean air and water. Not climate change as it is too polarizing.
3. Roads and bridges. Not infrastructure as it is a bigly word.
One of 432 Park’s 95th-floor penthouses sells for $10M under asking price
And don’t forget that horrible blackout summer of 1977. People would suffocate to their death up there in this tower with no working air conditioners. Their windows don’t open. No thank you.
This continues the trend of churches, seminaries and schools selling their air rights to and partnering with real estate developers to help fund improvements to their developments. This helps both parties get what they want. Developers can build taller towers than they otherwise would be able to and have a tenant for the commercial space. Churches and seminaries receive money to make repairs, get new offices and can offer more programs to their congregants. A definite win-win here.
Elon Musk debuts test tunnel in Hawthorne: ‘I really think this is incredibly profound’
Perhaps its time to give property owners ground rights as well as air rights for uses other than utility, sewage etc.
Otherwise we may one day have the ground underneath us laced with such things… & riddled