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13 January 2019 | 9 replies
I am currently 27 years old and working from home as an engineer, I make my own hours and like what I do as I sacrificed a lot in my early 20s, not going out and traveling to attain 10certifications in my field and allow me to be where I am today.
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12 January 2019 | 87 replies
Then, there are folks from India who were engineers and jewelry store owners and started investing their money.
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16 January 2019 | 32 replies
I blew out my poor BMW X3 engine last week with all this driving back and forth and it has hit me for a while that there has to be a better way!
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11 January 2019 | 4 replies
I think a good approach is to figure out what you're comfortable paying monthly and then reverse engineer an offer based on that. 30 years at 8.5% is about the same monthly payment as 20 years at 6.5%.Other than that make sure all the same protections are built into the mortgage.
22 January 2019 | 13 replies
For perspective, I've seen Architects in San Diego and Los Angeles charge minimum $15,000 for feasibility studies for similar mid-rise apartment buildings (I'm a structural engineer).
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18 January 2019 | 3 replies
Kwon, I am a strutural engineer in Los Angeles so I can give you an idea on new construction costs.You can expect to pay $150/SF (square foot) on the low end and upwards of $400/SF+ on the high end.
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11 May 2019 | 17 replies
Here's my cost breakdown:Architect + structural engineer$ 7,000Park fee$ 4,450School fee$ 2,192Permit application$ 2,653Permit Issuance$ 9,416Contractor (estimated)$ 170,000Inspections (estimated)$ 4,000Landscaping and other miscellaneous$ 300Total (estimated)$ 200,011 Let me know if you need referrals for contractors.
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27 January 2019 | 2 replies
Greetings everyone, I am a young engineer, recent college grad with a financial freedom mindset.
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20 January 2019 | 14 replies
I moved to Phoenix,AZ (Tempe actually) from California just over a year ago for the engineering job of my dreams, deciding to rent an apt until I get familiar enough with the market to consider buying.Since then I’ve been working on reading and learning as much as possible while building a healthy savings and found myself most interested in a Multifamily duplex where I can rent one unit and live in the other.
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13 January 2019 | 3 replies
Would you be nervous buying a house with horizontal cracks in the foundation if a structural engineer says the way is sound and gives their backing to that assessment?