
18 February 2021 | 2 replies
I know it means larger seed capital but I'd love to hear thoughts on things like installing solar panels, electric car chargers, and renovating units to be completely off the grid.

21 February 2019 | 182 replies
Reminds me of us in 1982 when we decided to build our own passive solar house which we finished in only 10 years.

31 January 2023 | 17 replies
Toss some solar panels on the canopies and get even more income (no idea if that numbers even pencil out).

30 August 2012 | 12 replies
It you have a heaping stack of equity delivering de minimis yields you should probably deploy some of it elsewhere.

29 October 2018 | 36 replies
I joined the basic level, used my previous knowledge and experiences, combined with theirs and others and have had nothing but success almost 2 yrs laterDo your research, project worst case, expect worst case, communicate, establish expectations, goals, exits plans A,B,C,D,E and F.

18 June 2018 | 2 replies
HI everyone,I'm new to BP but I was wondering if anyone knows how to rent out roof tops for solar panels?
25 July 2015 | 19 replies
It will take you to the Delaware County Library page -- look for legal forms-- check it out.
25 January 2020 | 2 replies
Hi, I want to start investing in commercial real estate, I was thinking to use an Umbrella Structure, so, open an LLC in Delaware filing a partnership tax return ( I will have the 99% of interest as main owner and a corporation than I will open, it will have 1%, I don't like using disreguarded for the Parent company, also because I heard that for financing, etc.. it will be harder to obtain) and then having disregarded LLC as subsidiaries of the parent company, opened in the State of the property that I will buy (for example if I will invest in florida, I will open an LLC subsidiary in Florida that I will use to do transaction) and with these subsidiaries, I will purchase, sell and hold properties.

20 June 2020 | 73 replies
The whole point is this is about the de-urbanization of America for those that can afford it - the priority being to go to these suburbs where you get more bang for buck, have a homey feel, don't have to be in the thick of things all the time.Here's a great article by Andrew Left , a guy who made billions by predicting trends and exposing frauds ( @chris k. check this out)https://citronresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/RH-The-Clear-Winner-from-the-De-Urbanization-of-America.pdfIt seems every three hours CNBC is interviewing a realtor about this trend.Instead of Citron editorializing, look at these headlines from NY, SF, Seattle,London, Paris, and every over urban market over the past few weeks:• “Zillow, Redfin predict a suburban boom in US real estate as remote workbecomes more common”• “Wealthy New Yorkers flee Manhattan for Suburbs and Beyond”• “New Yorkers Fleeing City Hunt for Million-Dollar Suburban Homes”• “City Dweller looking to move to suburbs amid pandemic”• “Young are joining the rich fleeing America’s big cites for the suburbs”• “Remote work may trigger a suburban boom in real estate”• “Investors are prioritizing greenery and open space, even if it means leaving thehistoric city center”The work at home and move to larger spaces trend is just beginning.