Your premier resource for building code knowledge.
This forum remains free to the public thanks to the generous support of our Sawhorse Members and Corporate Sponsors. Their contributions help keep this community thriving and accessible.
Want enhanced access to expert discussions and exclusive features? Learn more about the benefits here.
Ready to upgrade? Log in and upgrade now.
ICE,
Post #2538, They could use "Brent the Kilted Warrior" on that job!
I want to know how Tiger gets up there to take these pictures?
How about making a banner to tow around neighborhoods saying that? Although most banner planes are PT-17s, slower."Inspecting the Hood!" with your host "Mr. ICE!"![]()
I asked them to remove it all and start over.I guess that neatness doesn't count?
PC:Near Anaheim..hun
Why such a concentration of folks there? I noticed there's a lot of decent looking two story buildings behind the tents, are those owners putting any pressure on the City Government or Governor Jerry Brown?
The only violation I see is an extension cord across the bike path.
I only know you don't need any permit to put up a tent around here.
Mercury News said:Back in September, a modest ranch house sold in Sunnyvale for $782,000 over its asking price, signaling that the Bay Area housing market was even crazier than it seemed.
That sale was extreme: The buyer paid $2,470,000 for a four-bedroom, two-bath house — less than 2,000 square feet — that had listed for $1,688,000. But the deal turns out to have been an over-the-top version of what has become the new normal in the Bay Area, where home buyers are more likely to pay over-asking prices than anywhere else in the nation, according to a report from Zillow.
The analysis shows that 68.5 percent of the homes sold last year in the San Jose metropolitan area went for over the asking price. The median amount paid over list price was $62,000, which translates as 6.8 percent above list. Those were the highest numbers in the country.¹
... and they have architects, engineers, special inspectors, and qualified bonded contractors so they don't need inspection anyway.
it's now too expensive to build houses except for the wealthy, and they have archtiects, engineers, special inspectors, and qualified bonded contractors so they don't need inspection anyway.