
6 October 2016 | 1 reply
BUT NOW due to mining recession house prices are plummeting and so are jobs - it's not looking better in the close future.My girlfriend and I have joined the "Rich Dad" based mentorship program for the UK and connected with a local investors group who already invest into UK (with the same program).The plan is to start with lower budget "buy to let" and find the odd good deal to flip a property for cashflow to reinvest.

14 November 2016 | 7 replies
Need some trim work done soon and some other odd projects here and there.

7 October 2016 | 4 replies
Id recommend you consider getting it listed while the odds are in your favor.

5 January 2017 | 13 replies
While most Net Zero buildings are energy efficient, perhaps even highly so in comparison to minimum building code requirements, there is nothing requiring them to anywhere new the efficiency level of a Passivhaus .... this is why you will see odd things like warehouses with large rooftop solar installations being able to claim Net Zero.On the other hand, Passivhaus sets three metrics which a building must meet to be certified as Passivhaus compliant: The building must have a heating and cooling demand of not more than 15 kWh/m2 (4,755 BTU/sq ft; 5.017 MJ/sq ft) per year and a peak heat load of 10 W/m2.Total primary energy consumption (energy for heating, hot water and electricity) must not be more than 120 kWh/m2 (38,040 BTU/sq ft; 40.13 MJ/sq ft) per yearThe building must not leak more air than 0.6 times the house volume per hour (n50 ≤ 0.6 / hour) at 50 Pa (0.0073 psi) as tested by a blower door.Ironically, the research and pilot projects which fuelled what eventually became the Passivhaus standard was carried out in Saskatchewan as a National Research Council (NRC) project in the 1970s (the house is still in use today) and a similar project (Minnesota?)

12 October 2016 | 34 replies
So its odd that Ali would take a defensive posture in this thread..

7 October 2016 | 0 replies
So wife and I have a property under contract which ideally will turn into a 4 bed 2 bath rental. While doing home inspection realized ceilings in bedrooms are from 6'8" to 6' 3" high. The home is an old log house fro...

13 August 2016 | 5 replies
Odds are the property may have title issues, and if you close on it you will soon be responsible for those title defects if you don't get them cleared by an attorney prior to closing.

16 August 2016 | 45 replies
However, I am not really sure what @Jon S. original post was trying to accomplish and find items 2 and 3 particularly odd.

12 February 2019 | 8 replies
I used my secondary VA for a bigger house, only restriction was it had to be 144k.
1 March 2017 | 16 replies
Many factors can make a condo non-warrantable and restrict your loan options.