
10 October 2007 | 6 replies
Kotter).Great that you have some development experience under your belt.

20 November 2007 | 9 replies
She has a book out that is on my list to read ... maybe someone on here has read it.She was a Realtor and a developer for a number of years.Good Luck,Jason

23 October 2007 | 5 replies
Buying to flip is still an option if you get it cheap enough to truly wholesale to a long term holder, but we are now mostly buying cheap, then doing lease options and helping buyers develop a long term strategy to clean their credit up and save some down money.

16 October 2007 | 3 replies
New development is rapidly approaching from Downtown, while other nearby neighborhoods with similar 1920-1930 homes are being lovingly restored.

3 February 2008 | 3 replies
I know of a development that just got approval in our town.

17 October 2007 | 9 replies
You have to check a lot of places to develop that skill.John Corey

17 October 2007 | 2 replies
Sarina,Some developers in CA will say that every condo conversion has attracted one or more lawsuits.

17 October 2007 | 10 replies
Sounds like you are wanting to do some developing.

20 October 2007 | 5 replies
we used to just do residential loans but my eyes and the owners eyes were always looking at bigger and better things.well we started doing international project funding for construction projects such as hotels, casinos, and condo developments (and of course the raw land projects in costa rica everyone seems to love).a few months ago my boss got rid of our residential side and now it is just the two of us.

30 December 2007 | 3 replies
The main problem that all of these Manhattan style high rise condos have is that the developers appear to be under funded and unestimated the pent up demand from one to two years ago.They marketed their condos at say $500 per sf only to find out that in reality their actual costs to build were in the $800 to $900 per sf range.So they back out of most of the projects.