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Thread: Detroit homes sell for $1 amid mortgage and car industry crisis

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    Default Detroit homes sell for $1 amid mortgage and car industry crisis

    Detroit homes sell for $1 amid mortgage and car industry crisis


    Fallen leaves blow past an empty home in Detroit

    Some might say Jon Brumit overpaid when he stumped up $100 (£65) for a whole house. Drive through Detroit neighbourhoods once clogged with the cars that made the city the envy of America and there are homes to be had for a single dollar.

    You find these houses among boarded-up, burnt-out and rotting buildings lining deserted streets, places where the population is shrinking so fast entire blocks are being demolished to make way for urban farms.

    "I was living in Chicago and a friend told me that houses in Detroit could be had for $500," said Brumit, a financially strapped artist who thought he had little prospect of owning his own property. "I said if you hear of anything just a little cheaper let me know. Within a week he emails me a photo of a house for $100. I thought that's just crazy. Why not? It's a way to cut our expenses way down and kind of open up a lot of time for creative projects because we're not working to pay the rent."

    Houses on sale for a few dollars are something of an urban legend in the US on the back of the mortgage crisis that drove millions of people from their homes. But in Detroit it is no myth.

    One in five houses now stand empty in the city that launched the automobile age, forged America's middle-class and blessed the world with Motown.

    Detroit has been in decline for decades; its falling population is now well below a million – half of its 1950 peak. But the recent mortgage crisis and the fall of the big car makers into bankruptcy has pushed the town into a realm unique among big cities in America.

    A third of the population are unemployed. Property prices have fallen 80% or more in large parts of Detroit over the last three years. The average price of a home sold in the city last year has been put at $7,500 (£4,900).

    The recent financial crash forced wholesale foreclosures among people unable to pay their mortgages or who walked away from houses that fell to a fraction of the value of the loans they had taken out on them.

    Banks are selling off properties in the worst neighbourhoods, which are usually surrounded by empty and wrecked housing, for a few dollars each. But even better houses can be had at a fraction of their former value.

    Technically, Brumit paid $95 for the land and $5 for the house on Lawley Street – which fitted what estate agents euphemistically call an opportunity.

    Brumit said: "It had a big hole in the roof from the fire department putting out the last of two arson attempts. Both previous owners tried to set it on fire to get out of the mortgages. So there's a big hole about 24ft long and the plumbing had almost entirely been ripped out and most of the electrics too. It was basically a smoke damaged, structurally intact shell with a snowdrift in the attic."

    Setting fire to houses to claim the insurance and kill off the mortgage is not uncommon in Detroit; a blackened, wooden corpse of a house sits at the bottom of Brumit's street. But it is more common for owners to just walk away from their homes and mortgages.

    On the opposite side of Lawley Street Jim Feltner and his workers were clearing out a property seized by a bank. "I used to be a building contractor. I was buying up places and doing them up. Now I empty out foreclosures. I do one or two of these a day all over the city," he said. "I've been in Detroit 40 years and I've watched the peak up to $100,000 for houses that right now aren't worth more than $20,000 tops. I own a bunch of properties. I have 10 rentals and I can't get nothing for them, and they're beautiful homes."

    Feltner's workers are dragging clothes, boots and furniture out of the bedrooms and living room, and dumping them in the front yard until a skip arrives. Kicked to one side is a box of 1970s Motown records. A teddy bear lies spreadeagled on the floor.

    "You could get about five grand for this place," said Feltner. "Nice house once you clean it out. All the plumbing and electricals are in it. Roof don't leak."

    Brumit said a man called Jesse lived there. "Jesse had mentioned that he was probably going to get out of there because he knew he could buy a place for so much less than he owed. That's a drag. You don't want to see people leaving," he said.

    The house next door is abandoned. On the next street, one third of the properties are boarded up.

    It's a story replicated across Detroit.

    Joan Wilson, an estate agent in the north-west of the city, whose firm is offering a three-bedroom house on Albany street for $1, says that more than half of the houses she sells are foreclosures in the tens of thousands of dollars. "The vast majority of people that call to enquire, almost the first thing out of their mouth is that they want to buy a foreclosure. I have had telephone calls from people looking online that live, for example, in England or California, who've never set foot in the area. They're calling about one specific house they see online. I tell them they need to look at the neighbourhood. Is it the only house standing within a mile?"

    But what is blight to some is proving an opportunity to remake parts of the city for others living there. The Old Redford part of Detroit has suffered its share of desolation. The police station, high school and community centre are closed. Yet the area is being revitalised, led by John George, a resident who began by boarding up an abandoned house used by drug dealers 21 years ago and who now heads the community group Blight Busters. They are pulling down housing that cannot be saved and creating community gardens with fresh vegetables free for anyone to pick.

    "There's longstanding nuisance houses, been around seven, eight, nine years. We will go in without a permit and demolish them without permission," said George. "If you, as an owner, are going to leave something like that to fester in my neighbourhood, obviously you either don't care or aren't in a position to take responsibility for your property, so we're going to take care of it for you." Blight Busters has torn down more than 200 houses, including recently an entire block of abandoned housing in Old Redford. "We need to right-size this community, which means removing whole blocks, and building farms, larger gardens, putting in windmills. We want to downsize – right-size – Detroit," George said.

    Houses that can be rescued are done up with grants from foundations.

    "Detroit has some of the nicest housing stock in the country. Brick, marble, hardwood floors, leaded glass. These houses were built for kings," George added. "We gave a $90,000 house to a lady who was living in a car. She had four children. It didn't cost her a dime. We had over a thousand people apply for it. It's probably worth $35,000 now."

    Old Redford is seeing piecemeal renewal. One abandoned block of shops has been converted to an arts centre and music venue with cafes. One of the few remaining cinemas in Detroit – and one that's among the last in the US with an original pipe organ – has been revived and is showing Breakfast at Tiffany's.

    Brumit calculates that he has spent $1,500 to buy and do up his house, principally by scavenging demolition sites. He will move in with his wife and four-month-old child once it is complete, probably in the summer.

    He said: "The Americans we know got ripped off by the American dream. But [the renovation] is the most like moving out of the country that we can actually do. We're the minority in terms of ethnicity and this is a rich environment … there's 30% open space in the city and that doesn't include the buildings that should be torn down. You're in a city riding your bike around and you hear birds and stuff. It's incredible."

    Source: The Guardian (2 March 2010)



    Wake up and smell the coffee.


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    I don't know, a lot of the houses for sale for essentially pennies on the dollar are properties built way back in the 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s. They're very old houses; no one would want to choose them over new houses built in the 90s or the 00s.


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    Shit, I should buy a few, renovate, and flip.

    Become a real-estate tycoon.

    Or when I was a Heathen I proposed the idea of building up a Heathen enclave in a city, buy buying up cheap buildings in the ghetto and have Heathens renovate them, open businesses and revitalize the area. But other Heathens thought it was a stupid idea.

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    Quote Originally Posted by AcadianDriftwood View Post
    Shit, I should buy a few, renovate, and flip.

    Become a real-estate tycoon.

    Or when I was a Heathen I proposed the idea of building up a Heathen enclave in a city, buy buying up cheap buildings in the ghetto and have Heathens renovate them, open businesses and revitalize the area. But other Heathens thought it was a stupid idea.
    Yeah, do it in the crime capital of the USA.


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    Quote Originally Posted by Libre View Post
    Yeah, do it in the crime capital of the USA.
    Revitalize the place and make it safer.

    Heathens were making similar comments. They don't see past that.

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    Quote Originally Posted by AcadianDriftwood View Post
    Revitalize the place and make it safer.

    Heathens were making similar comments. They don't see past that.
    No soup for you!


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    I bet the property taxes are cheap!
    This sounds like a trap thought up in some horror movie.
    Artist reads about a house for sale for $1. The artist buys the house and is then devoured by hungry masses of unemployed auto worker zombies.
    Imagine, this same house would sell for a few hundred thousand in any of the large cities on the West Coast, sold as is with a hole in the roof.
    The lot alone would be worth 1/2 a million in San Francisco.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Bloodeagle View Post
    I bet the property taxes are cheap!
    This sounds like a trap thought up in some horror movie.


    Imagine, this same house would sell for a few hundred thousand in any of the large cities on the West Coast, sold as is with a hole in the roof.
    The lot alone would be worth 1/2 a million in San Francisco.
    Probably but would you want to live in such a shitty hood?


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    Exclamation "Coming soon, to a neighborhood near you!"

    Originally Posted by lei.talk
    No nation is so big and so powerful that it does not fall prey to the iron laws of the survival of its civilization. A civilization will continue intact as long as the people, or race, who built that civilization, remain present.

    As soon as those originating people disappear, or are assimilated into a new racial group, then that original civilization will "fall" or become changed to reflect the new racial population make-up.

    In each and every one of these cases, the original White population was displaced by an immigrant non-White or mixed-race population. The very nature of those civilizations was changed as the new, largely mixed-race population, was unable to maintain the original technical and cultural levels of the White civilization. These civilizations "fell" because the people who created them, vanished.

    And now, as the United States of America starts to change its racial make-up, the same factors are at work: formerly White cities are turning into ruins, quite literally. To view the modern US equivalents of the ruins of White civilization, follow the individual city links listed below.




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    I still find it rather odd that the big three (Ford, GM and Chrysler though Chrysler is now no longer since it's owned by FIAT) are doing better than ever and they aren't employing people in Detroit. Why they chose to abandon the city I do not know.


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