
16 September 2015 | 7 replies
We do so and send it over after a brief phone call with the person who says it's their property and please make the offer out to hisname with a fast closing.Property is a tear down in a real good area (I guess you could rehab it too but that margin would be small, maybe renting it would work after rehab).

14 September 2015 | 0 replies
I bought a tear down house (VA loan) but the property has a million dollar view.

25 September 2015 | 8 replies
If anyone reports you to the building inspector, you will have to tear it down and face a fine.

17 September 2015 | 33 replies
(not sure about NC's laws but in MA you need a supervisors license) If you do take the GC I highly recommend hiring an architect that will design your space, as well as an engineer if you are tearing down walls.

16 September 2015 | 3 replies
Not a bad tear down project.

23 September 2015 | 33 replies
Then you buy a Ford and tear it apart and put it back together again with your Ford manual.

16 September 2015 | 0 replies
But as I read everyone's horrible sob stories, when I'm done wiping the tears from my face, I think that they'd be better off dealing with a landlord directly because they won't clear anyone’s application process around here.Of course then I think about the BP community and I say there's no way in hell most BP landlords would let these people stay in their homes.

17 September 2015 | 4 replies
It's a disease that can tear families apart.Looking forward to hearing what you decide to do.

3 January 2016 | 13 replies
What gets a bit sketchy is the added line items that specifically say the contractor can add charges due to any unforeseen expenses such as work that is needed after tearing out an area that couldn't be known until a certain wall or shingles were removed.

27 April 2019 | 19 replies
In my area of Burnaby (Capital Hill) tear downs on a 33 x 120 were going for 1.4 in may of 2016, but now are asking 1.2 and getting no action.