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Originally Posted by Via Chicago
The point is, plenty of people work hard in life, and regardless of whether they do so flying cross country every week to tend to investments or getting up at 3AM to bake bread every morning for minimum wage, or teaching kids science, the economic rewards for each are vastly different. Some of the most noble careers in life pay very very little.
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And has anyone on this forum been ripping on bakers? No, the only profession being attacked here is real estate developers and landlords. Which, for the record, is not a glamorous career (no matter what HGTV says) and is a very noble one of providing housing for others. Also, I know plenty of teachers (3 of my wive's siblings are) who have invested in real estate, it's not mutually exclusive and that's exactly the point. If you want to invest in real estate in the USA you can, it's exceedingly easy to get started even at a low wage. Anyone who wants to complain that other's are making money doing so needs to acknowledge that they simply haven't tried it themselves, because you could very easily do it and that's a fact plain and simple.
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Bragging about 6-7 figure real estate investment returns (which is more or less a form of gambling) when 60% of the country has less than 1000 in savings (and seniors are declaring bankruptcy is increasingly record numbers is really not a good look and displays a lack of appreciation for what the situation really is for the vast majority of our peers in this country.
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Again, is it really inappropriate to talk about real estate investments on what is essentially the most active real estate related forum in Chicago? No one here is gloating about seniors going bankrupt, they are pointing out the facts that no, downzoning doesn't "hurt greedy developers" and no, it won't lower housing prices. People are simply pointing out that the only way to actually lower housing prices long term is to increase supply and that's what we, the evil greedy developers, are doing.
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Dude, you're the one who appeared in a video titled "Little Village - Real Estate Gold Mine". What kind of message does that send to people, that you're framing A) a poor neighborhood as some sort of "gold mine" to be harvested, and B) real estate investment as some sort of sure thing/can't loose proposition? I don't think I'm the one channeling a go-go 80s "greed is good" philosophy here
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First of all, I have my issues with the guy who made that video, it was sold to me as educational and he edited a douchey spin on the whole thing. But yes, we did intend to highlight the investment potential of Little Village. Why? Because, whether you like the tone he used or not, there is a lot of "underutilized" property there. Most people who got bitchy about that video were hollering just as you are: "OMG LV ISN'T UNDERUTILIZED! COLONIZER, THERE ARE PEOPLE LIVING HERE ALREADY".
Well guess what, there wasn't anyone living in any of the buildings I've renovated down there except one squatter who set fire to one of the buildings I ended up buying and caused a neighboring building that was occupied with 3 families to go vacant. THAT is displacement. The fact that there were 12 units of abandoned housing on that block is displacement. The two vacant lots I got that used to have 2 flats on them is displacement.
Disinvestment is displacement
The Economist article I posted in City Discussions is correct, poverty is already a high displacement condition. The first building I bought on that block went vacant because a gang banger threw a molotov cocktail through the stairwell window to chase a rival gangbanger out. The other two buildings I bought went vacant because no one had invested a dime in them for 130 years. The building next to those two caught fire because the neighboring building was left to rot for 10-15 years and vacant buildings are a hazard. These are stories that have been told many many times over in Little Village. I'm about to buy another 6 unit down on the same block that is 50% vacant because the rear units were left to rot and the storefront, again, was burned by some punk kids shuttering the business. So you have a handful of people, at least one of which I know is a heroin addict because I see him buying it, living in a half abandoned building. Tell me wise sage, is that safe for anyone involved? Or am I evil for pushing a handful of people out of a building that is basically a death trap?
That article is right that redevelopment is the ONLY remedy for these problems. Look at what effect I had:
1. Giant six unit building on the corner was left vacant and unsecured by the bank. Was at one point home to multiple vagrants. Was being used as a party house by the local deuces gang (which no longer exists partly because I deprived them of their meeting spots). I bought it and restored 6 units of housing to the market. I "undisplaced" those six vacant units and removed a serious hazard and blight in the process.
2. I bought another 6 vacant units in two buildings which had already burned (again displacing 3 more units next door which were occupied) and restored them to habitable condition. Creating six more units on that block. Oh and this one was also being used as a deuces party house, deuces "2" tags all over the interior and marijuana plants growing in pots in the windows.
3. I'm about to renovate six more units only three of which have anyone living in them at all (again, this building is the site of constant drug activity now) which will "displace" 3 units, but end up adding 6 new units back to the market when done.
So let's look at the scoreboard: I add 18 units of renovated housing to the market. I displace 3 units so net I add 15 units of housing that was simply uninhabitable before. The fact that these units were vacant so long resulted in 3 more units being destroyed, had I gotten to the blighted buildings sooner that would never have happened. Overall the footprint of my "gentrification" on this block is 18 additional units of housing at the cost of 3 units in what is currently a death trap being vacated.
So is that "80's gogo greed" or is that noble? Is that helping the affordable housing shortage or is it hurting? Is Little Village under utilized or is it the perfect place to bring vacant housing back online to house more people?
You tell me...