Unusual real estate abroad becomes fashionable and popular, and the crisis and non -standard desires of private investors helped her become such. For some it is cheaper and easier to turn real estate rarities into commercial objects than to support them without benefit and benefits.
Abroad, in connection with the underfunding of the budget sphere, municipal authorities sell obsolete real estate objects to private property: water -beflated towers and barracks, buildings of railway stations and invalid lighthouses, sea platforms and mills. They are in the hands of their skillful owners become living quarters or commercial real estate.
This trend began during the crisis, since these objects were cheaper than the apartment and houses offered by realtors. For example, a windmill with a plot of 20 acres and an area of 30 kV. m is only 130 thousand, and this is in France, and in Britain they offer a mill converted under the hotel for only 500 thousand pounds. Such real estate can be purchased even cheaper in Portugal, so, for less than 24 thousand euros – a house of 2 floors, a water mill and a cellar for wine.
Those who love sea views should pay attention to the sold lights in New Jersey (USA) at a price of 27 to 260 thousand dollars. Lighthouses are sold in Ireland, Croatia, Scandinavia and Great Britain. Real estate in Croatia is so inexpensive, and if you approach it wisely, you can dig a real diamond at a hard price.
The local authorities of European countries cannot yet contain some churches and abbey, so they also go “from the hammer”. The old chapel, built back in 1880, but having all the attributes of modern life, is put up for sale for 125 thousand pounds in Jokhir (England). In the United States, what, we can say, should not be sold – these are cemeteries. There you can also buy barracks and other military facilities withdrawn from the use of the army.
Unusual real estate becomes fashionable and popular, and the crisis and non -standard desires of private investors helped her become such. For some it is cheaper and easier to turn real estate rarities into commercial objects than to support them without benefit and benefits. This applies, for example, lighthouses, which today are practically not used for its intended purpose, because modern vessels have special equipment for navigation.
The same position with real estate in the military who was relocated. The remaining objects began to be unprofitable to maintain, and it is impractical to use them. So they transfer such standard objects into non -standard real estate. So, in one of the US states, a former police station with imprisonment cameras and court territory was put up for sale.