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	Comments on: Everything about this home is definitely one hundred percent real.	</title>
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	<link>https://looneylisting.com/2014/11/03/everything-about-this-home-is-definitely-one-hundred-percent-real/</link>
	<description>Weird Real Estate Listings and Strange Listing Photos</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Thu, 13 Nov 2014 23:08:37 +0000</lastBuildDate>
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		By: Emerald63		</title>
		<link>https://looneylisting.com/2014/11/03/everything-about-this-home-is-definitely-one-hundred-percent-real/#comment-19907</link>

		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Emerald63]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Nov 2014 23:08:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://looneylisting.com/?p=4579#comment-19907</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[There&#039;s more (or less) going on here than meets the (illustrator&#039;s) eye. The available lot - in a well established older residential area - does not look nearly big enough for the 4 proposed units. The plans for this unit (&quot;D&quot;) are included at the listing. Adding up the room widths, it looks to be about 26&#039;+/- wide it total. A mirror image unit next to it, plus a walkway between, adds up to appx 60&#039;. Street view suggests it &lt;i&gt;might&lt;/i&gt; all fit, but only by building up to the property line on both sides, something typically not allowed for free-standing structures.

But there&#039;s even &lt;i&gt;more&lt;/i&gt; crowding involved. Units C and D are at the rear of the property (backing onto a seedy looking 3 story apartment block), with Units A and B fronting the street. Take a look at Pic 8 at the listing. It shows a driveway running between A and B, meaning they&#039;re each even narrower than 26&#039;. The driveway leads to a motor court centered between the 4 units. That&#039;s the parking area for all of them, which makes it Unit D&#039;s front &quot;yard,&quot; not the back as Marty thought. His &quot;totally transparent trees&quot; are actually out back, if indeed there would be room to ever plant a thing. The &quot;lean-to&quot; in the second pic above (Pic 4 at the listing) is labeled on the floor plan as appx 9&#039;x5&#039; (ext dims). The rendering shows a similarly sized space (perhaps 9&#039;x7&#039;) between it and the back fence, with the only bit of grass available. Most of the back &quot;yard&quot; is filled with a paved patio and most if not all of the front is the parking court. And the nice looking green space to the side of Unit D? Yeah, not there. That&#039;s where Unit C sits. As for any trees, they&#039;d likely be in the neighbor&#039;s yard. 

Speaking of the neighbors, most of the surrounding homes are single story ranches and 1.5 story bungalows. I can&#039;t imagine they&#039;ll be too thrilled about &lt;i&gt;four&lt;/i&gt; new homes going onto &lt;i&gt;one&lt;/i&gt; lot, although there&#039;s enough varied land use nearby that it may not come as a surprise. There are oodles of hotels on the beach 3 blocks to the east and a good sized convention center 2 blocks to the west. Even so, this neighborhood has very narrow streets and there are &lt;i&gt;no&lt;/i&gt; curbs, let alone sidewalks, as shown in the renderings. 

Questions:
- How did they get a building permit? Are there next to no zoning regs here? 
- What fool is going to pay almost $400K for a single unit shoehorned in among 3 others in this setting?]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There&#8217;s more (or less) going on here than meets the (illustrator&#8217;s) eye. The available lot &#8211; in a well established older residential area &#8211; does not look nearly big enough for the 4 proposed units. The plans for this unit (&#8220;D&#8221;) are included at the listing. Adding up the room widths, it looks to be about 26&#8217;+/- wide it total. A mirror image unit next to it, plus a walkway between, adds up to appx 60&#8242;. Street view suggests it <i>might</i> all fit, but only by building up to the property line on both sides, something typically not allowed for free-standing structures.</p>
<p>But there&#8217;s even <i>more</i> crowding involved. Units C and D are at the rear of the property (backing onto a seedy looking 3 story apartment block), with Units A and B fronting the street. Take a look at Pic 8 at the listing. It shows a driveway running between A and B, meaning they&#8217;re each even narrower than 26&#8242;. The driveway leads to a motor court centered between the 4 units. That&#8217;s the parking area for all of them, which makes it Unit D&#8217;s front &#8220;yard,&#8221; not the back as Marty thought. His &#8220;totally transparent trees&#8221; are actually out back, if indeed there would be room to ever plant a thing. The &#8220;lean-to&#8221; in the second pic above (Pic 4 at the listing) is labeled on the floor plan as appx 9&#8217;x5&#8242; (ext dims). The rendering shows a similarly sized space (perhaps 9&#8217;x7&#8242;) between it and the back fence, with the only bit of grass available. Most of the back &#8220;yard&#8221; is filled with a paved patio and most if not all of the front is the parking court. And the nice looking green space to the side of Unit D? Yeah, not there. That&#8217;s where Unit C sits. As for any trees, they&#8217;d likely be in the neighbor&#8217;s yard. </p>
<p>Speaking of the neighbors, most of the surrounding homes are single story ranches and 1.5 story bungalows. I can&#8217;t imagine they&#8217;ll be too thrilled about <i>four</i> new homes going onto <i>one</i> lot, although there&#8217;s enough varied land use nearby that it may not come as a surprise. There are oodles of hotels on the beach 3 blocks to the east and a good sized convention center 2 blocks to the west. Even so, this neighborhood has very narrow streets and there are <i>no</i> curbs, let alone sidewalks, as shown in the renderings. </p>
<p>Questions:<br />
&#8211; How did they get a building permit? Are there next to no zoning regs here?<br />
&#8211; What fool is going to pay almost $400K for a single unit shoehorned in among 3 others in this setting?</p>
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