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‘All our dreams are out of the window’: This Florida couple paid $350K for an empty lot to build 3 houses on — only to discover their land was ‘unbuildable’ due to 1 undisclosed problem
Exclusionary zoning is the use of zoning ordinances to exclude certain types of land uses from a given community, especially to regulate racial and economic diversity. [1] In the United States, exclusionary zoning ordinances are standard in almost all communities.
For example, the entire town of Los Altos Hills, California (with the exception of the local community college and a religious convent), is zoned for residential use with a minimum lot size of one acre (4,000 m 2) and a limit to only one primary dwelling per lot. All these restrictions were upheld as constitutional by federal and state courts ...
The development, on what was previously considered an "unbuildable" lot, received conditional approval for a water hookup. The development, on what was previously considered an "unbuildable" lot ...
The common usage of this term implies that swampland is worthless. Without development or some ability to develop it, it is not valuable for real estate purposes. There have been cases that swampland was purchased and turned into very valuable property, notably for the creation of Walt Disney World and also to some extent including many developed lands in Florida.
The Rockland ZBA closed the public hearing on a Chapter 40B project on the 'unbuildable' lot at 320 Concord St., after getting an agreement on height.
For example, a metes and bounds described parcel may be assigned the Tax Identification Number 14-55-118, which has nothing to do with the legal description of the property recorded in the deed other than its use to create the tax Block and Lot maps. In this case, the first number may be used to indicate the local municipality, the second ...
A judge has ruled that a Georgia railroad can buy land against the will of property owners to build a track, rebuffing a challenge that a libertarian group hoped could make it harder to use ...