Say if they put low income housing next to people with million dollar mansions..would these mansions lose real estate value immediately?
or would the real estate value of these neighboring houses lose value in the long term?
Probably, but it depends. What’s your point?
There are of course a number of factors to consider in any given area. There are some areas where low income housing is situated very close to very expensive housing but the timing, the proximity to major metropolitan areas, the rest of the surrounding neighborhood, etc. are variable factors that have enabled that situation.
Trick question.
Chuck Norris doesn’t live in YOUR neighborhood…
You live in HIS neighborhood.
I was thinking of setting food out and poisoning it so that he’d die and cease to be a nuisance to the neighborhood the next time headed for our trash bins. We’ve many children romping around and we don’t want their dog running free around them. We’re tired of poop in our yard and tired of picking up trash that he has dragged around our property. >:(
Trust me, we’ve (The other neighbors) tried confronting them and the poop on the porch thing. They’re not getting it.
I had a similar problem with a neighbor. The problem stopped as soon as I began shoveling up his dog’s poop and depositing it on his front porch. He took the hint and started keeping his dog restrained and in his own yard.
As mentioned in another response, call animal control on these goofballs. Take pictures/video of the dog roaming around unleashed, off its owner’s property. The photos and videos will have a time-date stamp on them. Owners are responsible for their animals, and if they’re not they should lose those animals.
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"Trust me, we’ve (The other neighbors) tried confronting them and the poop on the porch thing. They’re not getting it."
Again…have you called animal control? They can’t do their job unless you contact them about your problem. WE ARE THE WRONG PEOPLE TO B***H TO! CALL ANIMAL CONTROL! And try to provide them with evidence of your problems with the neighbor’s dog.
I hear basically the same story from everyone everywhere. Once nice neighborhoods with neatly kept lawns and nice looking houses, everyone knows each other and goes to each others garage sales in the spring, it is safe for the kids to play in the neighborhood, and crime is almost unheard of. Then a few neighbors move out for various reasons, and those houses are sold or more often rented out to illegals. Now the kids are bullied by the anchor kids, the once nice houses are run down, lawns are not mowed, garbage is left everywhere, crime is up, loud music blares at all hours of the day and night, property taxes go up to pay for graffiti and damage to public property, and property value goes down as the neighborhood is now a Mexican ghetto. And you don’t go out your door unless you are carrying a gun. So, sound familiar? I knew a lady who lived in a nice neighborhood, until it became an illegal ghetto, and she was the only one left in the neighborhood from when they built it. The rest were all illegals. She kept to herself, but had to put up with cops chasing criminals through her yard, often damaging her property. Her noisy rude illegal neighbors threw garbage in her lawn every day which she had to pick up herself, she did not even complain until they started throwing dirty used diapers outside her living room window to stink in the hot summer sun. When she phoned them to ask if they would pick them she was laughed at and later had rocks thrown through her window. Again she kept to her self as even her own family begged her to move out, she lived there 51 years and did not want to move. One night she walked two blocks to the convenience store to buy milk and eggs when she was beaten and raped by a man who followed her home from the store. She died the next day from her injuries. The man who attacked and raped her turned out to be an illegal alien, and lived 4 houses down from her! She was 76 years old. And the last survivor of her once nice neighborhood.
This happened last November. And this lady was a friend of my family. I continue to post her story in honor of her memory.
Crimes have risen in a area where crimes never happened, our schools have become more dangerous for our children, we have more illegals coming to this area. In the next county there is the presence of ms13. Rapes have increased where never before. Construction jobs are not being done by local workers instead they bus in loads of these criminals. In my state, murders of elderly by illegal aliens has risen. Neighborhoods that use to be nice, look like ghetto’s now.
I have started a neighborhood watch program in the small community I live in. It seems that I am the only one that cares about the protection and safety of our families and properties.
It’s a very nice and good thing if you do. If you don’t, it’s understandable.
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Professorville is a Registered Historic District in Palo Alto, California that contains homes that were used by Stanford University professors who preferred to own rather than lease university land. The area is bounded by Kingsley, Lincoln, and Addison avenues and the cross streets of Ramona, Bryant, and Waverly. The Professorville Historic District reflects the area’s origins and its early years to the founding of both Stanford University and Palo Alto itself.
The area’s eclectic architecture is known for its brown shingles with gambrel roofs. Classic examples are Professor Angell’s home at 1005 Bryant and the Bernard Maybeck-designed “Sunbonnet House” at 1061 Bryant. Professor A. B. Clark designed the stately 433 Melville house for Professor Charles Gilbert, one of Stanford’s first teachers and a leading citizen of Palo Alto.
Stately Dutch Colonials dominate three blocks of Kingsley Avenue. At 450 Kingsley Avenue is the former home of one of Stanford University’s pioneer professors, Ferando Sanford, who headed the physics department. The architect, Frank McMurray of Chicago, was a former student of Professor Sanford. He designed the three-story, 14-room frame house with a variety of features fashionable at the time–a Queen Anne corner tower, a Palladian window in front and an unusual archway reaching out past the second story. The comfortable, columned front porch reaches across the front to the west side of the house, where a doorway, once the carriage entrance, has been covered over.
The buildings, which give the Professorville area its strongest image, are the brown-shingled houses whose stylistic allegiances range from the Colonial Revival to the American Craftsman.
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http://www.HomesAndLandTucson.com/ am Hughes, the sought-after tree-lined neighborhood east of the university, began life around 1918 with residences for tourists. Houses in an appealing combination of styles continued to be built up to about 1953. The eclectic mix of 1,226 contributing properties includes the popular mission revival, inspired by California churches, and pueblo revival, a reworking of Indian dwellings, as well as craftsman, international, and ranch. Historic Sam Hughes Elementary, 23.6-acre Himmel Park, a library, a public swimming pool, and the retail stores and cafés of 6th Street are in the heart of the neighborhood.
For more videos or information regarding real estate or homes or land for sale in the Tucson, Arizona area, please visit, http://www.HomesAndLandTucson.com
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Resident, Tony Torrance looks at the overall condition of his neighborhood, English Avenue. A majority of the homes are vacant and boarded-up. Properties that are owned by banks and out-of-town companies have been neglected and have left English Avenue looking like a war zone. The few residents that are left are scared because the homes have been broken into and are being inhabited by drug dealers and users. With a quick tour of the neighborhood it’s easy to see that the city has taken no responsibility for enforcing the overwhelming number of code violations.
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From historic brownstones to luxury apartments, waterside parks to hopping nightlife, small-town feel to 10-minute NYC commute…Hoboken, NJ could very well be the best place to live in the U.S. The City of Hoboken was incorporated in 1855 and today has become The Sixth Borough equal in style and convenience to Manhattans other neighboring cities. Hoboken is filled with small specialty shops, jiving bars and multi continental restaurants. Hoboken has a prominent professional community, highly regarded Stevens Institute of Technology, and is home for some of the NY metro area’s most prominent business professionals, artists, musicians and entertainers. Hoboken is also noted as the birth place of Frank Sinatra and Baseball. Hoboken Real Estate is a unique mixture of feature and style. Today Hoboken real estate primarily consists of commercial buildings and recently built or renovated luxury condominiums. It has become a captivating alternative to Real Estate in Manhattan
It takes more than finding the right property to make a purchase or sale happen. In 2004, Matt Brown and Peter Cossio joined forces to form Hudson Realty Group, a specialty sales and marketing group within Halstead Property’s Hoboken office. Modeled after a boutique real estate firm, they offer clients the best of both worlds: personalized service and global brand name recognition.
Hudson Realty Group specializes in all housing types-including single-family homes, multi-unit buildings, brownstones, town homes, condominiums, lofts and new construction sales.
Visit our website to find out more about our real estate agency and see some of the properties we have available in Hoboken, Jersey City and surrounding areas.
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