OP
Golfgar4
Elite Member
- Joined
- Feb 21, 2002
- Messages
- 4,342
- Location
- Janesville, Wisconsin
- Tractor
- None -yet. Until then FunBuggy (EZ-Go) will have to do!
Hi Mark!
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( The requirements we had to meet do not vary regionally, they very from county to county and town to town around here. )</font>
The same is true here. For example, the township just north of the one where the property is does not allow dividing larger parcels into any parcels smaller than 35 acres, while the township to the east will let you go down to 20 acres. The township that we'd be involved in is one of the few left that will let you apply for as small as 1 acre. But as mentioned earlier, that probably wouldn't be approved, so we'd stick to minimum of 3 acre parcels.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( In our case, dropping below 5 acres mandated paved roads to specific standards, fire protection, county water (because of availability) and many other things. Above 5 acres gravel roads and wells would have been fine in our zoning. )</font>
It is also similar here. As far as I know, anything under 3 acres would have had stiffer restrictions than the Ag2 zoning. I've been waiting to hear back from the Township Supervisor to confirm this, and to get other information, but he hasn't returned my call yet.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Here we can not expect the lots to sell overnight so it must be viewed as a longer-term investment. )</font>
Obviously I wouldn't know what the time frames would be for your area, but this is something that we've looked into. In our area, this kind of property sells, on average, within 21 days of being placed on the market. I would consider that a very short time, and a very good thing!
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Personally, it looks to me like you are on to something and I would put forth the effort to investigate it as much as I could. )</font>
Thanks for the encouragement! Interestingly, the wife and I had a 3 hour drive one way this past weekend, so we ended up discussing nothing but this project for 6 hours! /forums/images/graemlins/ooo.gif
We literally went from the idea of sub dividing this 40 acre parcel into smaller parcels and then building our new place on one of the parcels, to dividing it into larger parcels and selling them off. We would still move into the existing structure and live there until our new place was built. But instead of building on one of those parcels, we would wait until we had a sold a few of the parcels and then use the money from the sale to purchase the kind of wooded acreage that we really want. Then we would build our new place and when it was finished, sell off the rest of the parcels and the farm.
Like you said, you put down your money and hope for this best! We still have a ways to go, but we're headed in the right direction, we're getting good advice from our realtor and the TBN brain trust, and we truly believe that we can make this work for us!
And somewhere in all of this, I'm going to get my tractor!! /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( The requirements we had to meet do not vary regionally, they very from county to county and town to town around here. )</font>
The same is true here. For example, the township just north of the one where the property is does not allow dividing larger parcels into any parcels smaller than 35 acres, while the township to the east will let you go down to 20 acres. The township that we'd be involved in is one of the few left that will let you apply for as small as 1 acre. But as mentioned earlier, that probably wouldn't be approved, so we'd stick to minimum of 3 acre parcels.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( In our case, dropping below 5 acres mandated paved roads to specific standards, fire protection, county water (because of availability) and many other things. Above 5 acres gravel roads and wells would have been fine in our zoning. )</font>
It is also similar here. As far as I know, anything under 3 acres would have had stiffer restrictions than the Ag2 zoning. I've been waiting to hear back from the Township Supervisor to confirm this, and to get other information, but he hasn't returned my call yet.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Here we can not expect the lots to sell overnight so it must be viewed as a longer-term investment. )</font>
Obviously I wouldn't know what the time frames would be for your area, but this is something that we've looked into. In our area, this kind of property sells, on average, within 21 days of being placed on the market. I would consider that a very short time, and a very good thing!
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Personally, it looks to me like you are on to something and I would put forth the effort to investigate it as much as I could. )</font>
Thanks for the encouragement! Interestingly, the wife and I had a 3 hour drive one way this past weekend, so we ended up discussing nothing but this project for 6 hours! /forums/images/graemlins/ooo.gif
We literally went from the idea of sub dividing this 40 acre parcel into smaller parcels and then building our new place on one of the parcels, to dividing it into larger parcels and selling them off. We would still move into the existing structure and live there until our new place was built. But instead of building on one of those parcels, we would wait until we had a sold a few of the parcels and then use the money from the sale to purchase the kind of wooded acreage that we really want. Then we would build our new place and when it was finished, sell off the rest of the parcels and the farm.
Like you said, you put down your money and hope for this best! We still have a ways to go, but we're headed in the right direction, we're getting good advice from our realtor and the TBN brain trust, and we truly believe that we can make this work for us!
And somewhere in all of this, I'm going to get my tractor!! /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif