Dyna Sluyter wrote:
Now if one really wants affordable housing and an "industrial" living environment there are plenty of bargains to be had in our currently depressed commercial space market. One can save thousands by doing plumbing and such oneself or acting as one's own general contractor. Better deals yet can be had in greater Minnesota... rather than waste a quarter million of more on a "loft", my friend bought a 2,000 square foot medical clinic building in Starbuck, Minnesota. for $90,000 she got up to date heat, air conditioning, a kitchen, and a bunch of bathrooms in a building that the old part of was only half a century old. Thrown into the deal was a former brick bank building from the 1920s, as big as many of Minneapolis' fashionable lofts all by itself.
Some of us who have considered loft housing and some of us who already have it, don't want to live in Starbuck.
Personally, I want a loft on the ground.
WizardMarks, Central
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