tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5936637281134795592.post6644876986146933371..comments2024-03-08T08:55:52.985-08:00Comments on Whispers from the Edge of the Rainforest: Tues Post #1: From the outrageous down to the merely obscene; the continuing saga of 3390 The Crescent - amendedUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5936637281134795592.post-72555479536989678962015-01-03T13:26:04.077-08:002015-01-03T13:26:04.077-08:00700k? Keep dreaming...700k? Keep dreaming...Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00066963136931447671noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5936637281134795592.post-28544791905832064372012-10-02T17:09:55.681-07:002012-10-02T17:09:55.681-07:00I'd pay $4 million for that place in a second ...I'd pay $4 million for that place in a second (you know, if I had $4 million lying around). The lot is the size of roughly 6 regular house lots and the house itself is pretty much the size of 6 regular houses all mushed together. Even after the big crash nice houses in that area will still fetch over $700K. (keyword there being nice)<br /><br />Anyway it just goes to show how no one really knows what places like this are worth. They just need to find one buyer who is rich and dumb enough to take an interest and boom. The sellers don't seem terribly desperate if they can play these games so they are just looking to get lucky I'm assuming. <br /><br />The place that sold for $5.7 mil then assessed over $9 mil the next year baffles me though. They just proved it's worth by purchasing it on the open market. If that was me I would be livid, that extra $3.3 mil on the property tax bill can't be cheap. daversnoreply@blogger.com