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sdcellar.
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May 23, 2010 at 11:14 AM #554050May 23, 2010 at 12:04 PM #553097
bearishgurl
Participant[quote=garysears] . . . I think land prices might be really starting to crumble. One bank threw in the towel in late April, lowering the price for 9 acres raw land from 190k to 50k. That seems significant to me. That listing is still current if anyone is interested.[/quote]
Gary, if the parcel is in Lakeside zip, it most likely does not have sewer access, which means you will have to install septic and/or dig a leachfield. It could also be VERY cost-prohibitive to hook up to water, depending on how far you’ll have to go with with piping.
I checked on this a few years ago for a friend considering a lot in 91941 and it was going to cost about $6,800 to hook up to City water (all said and done) which was nearby in the alley. Metropolitan Water Dist. gets a premium (kickback) for all new water hookups in the County.
If you or any other Piggs are interested in the parcel, I recommend a “due diligence” be conducted on it before placing an offer.
May 23, 2010 at 12:04 PM #553203bearishgurl
Participant[quote=garysears] . . . I think land prices might be really starting to crumble. One bank threw in the towel in late April, lowering the price for 9 acres raw land from 190k to 50k. That seems significant to me. That listing is still current if anyone is interested.[/quote]
Gary, if the parcel is in Lakeside zip, it most likely does not have sewer access, which means you will have to install septic and/or dig a leachfield. It could also be VERY cost-prohibitive to hook up to water, depending on how far you’ll have to go with with piping.
I checked on this a few years ago for a friend considering a lot in 91941 and it was going to cost about $6,800 to hook up to City water (all said and done) which was nearby in the alley. Metropolitan Water Dist. gets a premium (kickback) for all new water hookups in the County.
If you or any other Piggs are interested in the parcel, I recommend a “due diligence” be conducted on it before placing an offer.
May 23, 2010 at 12:04 PM #553691bearishgurl
Participant[quote=garysears] . . . I think land prices might be really starting to crumble. One bank threw in the towel in late April, lowering the price for 9 acres raw land from 190k to 50k. That seems significant to me. That listing is still current if anyone is interested.[/quote]
Gary, if the parcel is in Lakeside zip, it most likely does not have sewer access, which means you will have to install septic and/or dig a leachfield. It could also be VERY cost-prohibitive to hook up to water, depending on how far you’ll have to go with with piping.
I checked on this a few years ago for a friend considering a lot in 91941 and it was going to cost about $6,800 to hook up to City water (all said and done) which was nearby in the alley. Metropolitan Water Dist. gets a premium (kickback) for all new water hookups in the County.
If you or any other Piggs are interested in the parcel, I recommend a “due diligence” be conducted on it before placing an offer.
May 23, 2010 at 12:04 PM #553789bearishgurl
Participant[quote=garysears] . . . I think land prices might be really starting to crumble. One bank threw in the towel in late April, lowering the price for 9 acres raw land from 190k to 50k. That seems significant to me. That listing is still current if anyone is interested.[/quote]
Gary, if the parcel is in Lakeside zip, it most likely does not have sewer access, which means you will have to install septic and/or dig a leachfield. It could also be VERY cost-prohibitive to hook up to water, depending on how far you’ll have to go with with piping.
I checked on this a few years ago for a friend considering a lot in 91941 and it was going to cost about $6,800 to hook up to City water (all said and done) which was nearby in the alley. Metropolitan Water Dist. gets a premium (kickback) for all new water hookups in the County.
If you or any other Piggs are interested in the parcel, I recommend a “due diligence” be conducted on it before placing an offer.
May 23, 2010 at 12:04 PM #554065bearishgurl
Participant[quote=garysears] . . . I think land prices might be really starting to crumble. One bank threw in the towel in late April, lowering the price for 9 acres raw land from 190k to 50k. That seems significant to me. That listing is still current if anyone is interested.[/quote]
Gary, if the parcel is in Lakeside zip, it most likely does not have sewer access, which means you will have to install septic and/or dig a leachfield. It could also be VERY cost-prohibitive to hook up to water, depending on how far you’ll have to go with with piping.
I checked on this a few years ago for a friend considering a lot in 91941 and it was going to cost about $6,800 to hook up to City water (all said and done) which was nearby in the alley. Metropolitan Water Dist. gets a premium (kickback) for all new water hookups in the County.
If you or any other Piggs are interested in the parcel, I recommend a “due diligence” be conducted on it before placing an offer.
May 23, 2010 at 7:51 PM #553197garysears
ParticipantDue diligence of course. There must be a pretty big issue with the property for the price drop like that. My money is going elsewhere anyway. I threw the APN in the DPLU mapping site and it looks like there are environmental restrictions at a minimum.
May 23, 2010 at 7:51 PM #553302garysears
ParticipantDue diligence of course. There must be a pretty big issue with the property for the price drop like that. My money is going elsewhere anyway. I threw the APN in the DPLU mapping site and it looks like there are environmental restrictions at a minimum.
May 23, 2010 at 7:51 PM #553791garysears
ParticipantDue diligence of course. There must be a pretty big issue with the property for the price drop like that. My money is going elsewhere anyway. I threw the APN in the DPLU mapping site and it looks like there are environmental restrictions at a minimum.
May 23, 2010 at 7:51 PM #553890garysears
ParticipantDue diligence of course. There must be a pretty big issue with the property for the price drop like that. My money is going elsewhere anyway. I threw the APN in the DPLU mapping site and it looks like there are environmental restrictions at a minimum.
May 23, 2010 at 7:51 PM #554165garysears
ParticipantDue diligence of course. There must be a pretty big issue with the property for the price drop like that. My money is going elsewhere anyway. I threw the APN in the DPLU mapping site and it looks like there are environmental restrictions at a minimum.
May 23, 2010 at 8:23 PM #553212bearishgurl
Participant[quote=garysears]. . . I threw the APN in the DPLU mapping site and it looks like there are environmental restrictions at a minimum.[/quote]
It this is true, Gary, then count on duking it out with County’s APCB and DPLU over CEQA issues from here on into eternity. Start out by paying for a lengthy “EIR” to be prepared. By the time your bill for all this is done and you can finally APPLY to bring water to the property, you will have spent more than the orig. asking price, IMO.
Remember, Lakeside is the home of the environmentally sensitive “donax reed” which grows up to 8 ft. tall, among other “valuable” flora and fauna. It’s what keeps the snakes alive. You and/or your high-priced engineer had better not accidentally step on any! Same prob. in Bonita – LOL!
May 23, 2010 at 8:23 PM #553317bearishgurl
Participant[quote=garysears]. . . I threw the APN in the DPLU mapping site and it looks like there are environmental restrictions at a minimum.[/quote]
It this is true, Gary, then count on duking it out with County’s APCB and DPLU over CEQA issues from here on into eternity. Start out by paying for a lengthy “EIR” to be prepared. By the time your bill for all this is done and you can finally APPLY to bring water to the property, you will have spent more than the orig. asking price, IMO.
Remember, Lakeside is the home of the environmentally sensitive “donax reed” which grows up to 8 ft. tall, among other “valuable” flora and fauna. It’s what keeps the snakes alive. You and/or your high-priced engineer had better not accidentally step on any! Same prob. in Bonita – LOL!
May 23, 2010 at 8:23 PM #553806bearishgurl
Participant[quote=garysears]. . . I threw the APN in the DPLU mapping site and it looks like there are environmental restrictions at a minimum.[/quote]
It this is true, Gary, then count on duking it out with County’s APCB and DPLU over CEQA issues from here on into eternity. Start out by paying for a lengthy “EIR” to be prepared. By the time your bill for all this is done and you can finally APPLY to bring water to the property, you will have spent more than the orig. asking price, IMO.
Remember, Lakeside is the home of the environmentally sensitive “donax reed” which grows up to 8 ft. tall, among other “valuable” flora and fauna. It’s what keeps the snakes alive. You and/or your high-priced engineer had better not accidentally step on any! Same prob. in Bonita – LOL!
May 23, 2010 at 8:23 PM #553905bearishgurl
Participant[quote=garysears]. . . I threw the APN in the DPLU mapping site and it looks like there are environmental restrictions at a minimum.[/quote]
It this is true, Gary, then count on duking it out with County’s APCB and DPLU over CEQA issues from here on into eternity. Start out by paying for a lengthy “EIR” to be prepared. By the time your bill for all this is done and you can finally APPLY to bring water to the property, you will have spent more than the orig. asking price, IMO.
Remember, Lakeside is the home of the environmentally sensitive “donax reed” which grows up to 8 ft. tall, among other “valuable” flora and fauna. It’s what keeps the snakes alive. You and/or your high-priced engineer had better not accidentally step on any! Same prob. in Bonita – LOL!
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