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All Forum Posts by: Brett Caron

Brett Caron has started 1 posts and replied 6 times.

Post: Don't Shovel Your Roof!!!

Brett CaronPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Amsterdam, NY
  • Posts 6
  • Votes 2

I find a decent roof rake to clear a few feet up the roof from the eves to be more than sufficient on an asphalt shingle roof. A few good sunny days, and those few exposed shingles at the bottom will quickly clear up allowing snow to melt and not dam up. I agree going up on the roof is not a good idea.

Post: New Member - Upstate NY

Brett CaronPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Amsterdam, NY
  • Posts 6
  • Votes 2

@Justin Charpentier

Rotterdam is decent. Amsterdam has it's nice areas as well as it's poor areas. I'd say the ratio of decent neighborhoods to bad is 50/50 in Amsterdam, a bit higher than other areas. You can definitely pick up inexpensive houses in Amsterdam. If you're a re-habber there's plenty of houses in need of work. Although I don't think its too much of a flipping market because of the depressed prices, more of a Rehab and rent market I think.

Post: New Member - Upstate NY

Brett CaronPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Amsterdam, NY
  • Posts 6
  • Votes 2

@Justin Charpentier

It's interesting. The casino is about to open in February, If anything I think it will positively impact my area as Amsterdam is an easy 15-20mins commute to Schenectady. Rents have been going up in the downtown district in Schenectady, but not anything crazy. Taxes there are terrible. I think a decent 2 bedroom apartment is anywhere from 800-1000 plus/minus. I paid 800 on my large one bedroom 5 years ago there. You can get a large 3 bedroom or even a small house in Amsterdam for that. Not as much cool stuff going on there, but if the casino brings employment and people are looking for housing value around that area it's not a bad place to consider.

Post: $16,000 renovated house renting for $1,000+/mo

Brett CaronPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Amsterdam, NY
  • Posts 6
  • Votes 2

Awesome job. This is my life in a nutshell. Engineer by day, construction by night. They are long days, but money wise it pays of big. Hopefully by fall I'll have some after pictures of my own!

Post: New Member - Upstate NY

Brett CaronPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Amsterdam, NY
  • Posts 6
  • Votes 2

Hi guys, I'm a new member here at bigger pockets and I must say what a great resource!

A bit about me:

I'm an engineer from Vermont and I live in upstate NY, Amsterdam to be specific and I work in Schenectady. It's a depressed real estate market like many Rustbelt communities. Properties are cheap up here, (except in certain areas like Saratoga and a few others) but often time need a lot of work. I've always been a hands on guy and do 99% of the work myself except the big jobs. 

I've already gotten my feet wet with a few deals, as I bought and renovated my own house, purchased a duplex in 2015 which I rent, and bought a small single family home at auction dirt cheap that I plan to renovate. Another perk is that they are all on the street I live on so it definitely make the maintenance easy.

My goals this year are get the renovations on the SFH done as well as wrap some project up on my home. My own projects on my house take a back burner to my rental activities. They don't exactly make me money! As a result some stuff has dragged out. (I'm determined to get that basement rec room done this month!)

Anyway I'm still looking for other deals in my area, maybe not total rehab as I have one of those going right now, but it's definitely possible to buy viable rentals in my area. 

I'm interested to learn more about financing, credit, strategies, managing contractors, networking etc... I've kinda done everything on my own, short of my lawyer but the only way to grow is with networking. 

Post: Denver Apartment Rents Drop (Denver Post)

Brett CaronPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Amsterdam, NY
  • Posts 6
  • Votes 2

I visited Denver in February and I have to say, I've never seen so many condos and town homes being built at a time. It can't be sustainable. There were a few really large areas on the east side of the city that were just speed built neighborhoods.