Bob Mehosky wrote:Well, "nonsense" is a relative term......
I haven't prepared any formal plans for my house, but I'm estimating it would be anywhere from $25,000-$50,000 worth of work to convert it - and it would add zero to the value of my home in the short term.
The question is, is there $25,000-$50,000 worth of benefit to the city over the next 50 years if a multi-family house becomes a single-family house? Also, is there a benefit to an owner 20 years down the line if the majority of multi-family houses became singles?
The only way this could work is if it was a win for the city's bottom line and a win for a homeowner who wants to invest in Lakewood.
Bob
That was supposed to be "no sense."
Nate Kelly has the numbers, and it was a very good thing that he had the city look at it
in case it ever does come up, but I really find it personally to be pretty hard to justify
the added expense which I thought was well north of $60,000.
This is why I thought it made sense one of the ideas from the first LakewoodAlive
meeting from one of the speakers, about marrying lots.
The real problem Lakewood has is as you have pointed out it is built out, and the bottom
has not dropped out of Lakewood as it has in Collinwood, Hough, Glenville, Detroit
Shoreway, etc. So many of the so called plans, are just hot air. Example Art Districts,
how can we compete with Collinwood, homes at $12,000 within sight of their art
district. Or the same in and around Detroit Shoreway's unbelievable effort to rebuild.
Then in the not too distant future is the massive Greater University Circle project, that
will bring homes from $300,000 - $2,000,000 with a 20+ year tax abatement, and all
sorts of incredible pluses including homes nearby like my friends place in East Cleveland
that he purchased for $15,000 and would be worth $500,000 just ten blocks farther
south, and/or in 5 years,as the area builds out.
IMHO Lakewood has squandered our lead in this, by chasing Big Box stores and malls,
instead of actually looking at the future and what is needed to make us stand out in the
region. This is my number one frustration, before "we chase rabbits"* we should do
what is needed now to make things right. It is the regionalist that would prefer to see
Lakewood bottom out, close down and loose value, so that developers can buy us out
for pennies on the dollar, and redevelop. The short sightedness of a few killing what
we have and more importantly what makes us different.
.
* chasing rabbits, racing term for trying to explain things, that are could be more simply understood or fixed.
.