We disagree! Most people do not have access to the equity underneath their feet—they do not have the income to utilize it as cash, and so it amounts to golden handcuffs. We enable middle and lower income homeowners to access it without moving—a huge plus for communities.
toomuchtodo|4 years ago
The riskiest part is extending credit (imho) to marginal borrowers (low to middle class), but the value of the land is proven, so the rest is logistics.
theptip|4 years ago
The investment risk would presumably be mostly if the owner moves and the subdivision becomes inegligible. Or of course if they aren’t as good at building as they think and can’t clear 20%, or housing market tanks…
pempem|4 years ago
There are tons of places offering this service, they just dont post on HN.
nrmitchi|4 years ago
I take it by this you're specifically targeting individuals who can't qualify for a HELOC or other (very common) methods of accessing home equity?
I assume you have data to suggest that "most people" with SB-9 eligible lots are incapable of opening a heloc?
celestialcheese|4 years ago
If your goal is to pay for college or buy a boat, HELOCs can be great.
This is super appealing to me because its a path I hadn't considered to becoming debt free with your primary residence, which is a large goal for many people, including myself.
metadat|4 years ago
A scaled denser version of the house linked in your post doesn't seem like particularly appealing scenario for individuals, in the long run.
OTOH, I can see the appeal from a pure capitalist perspective. You guys won't be the only ones seeking to take advantage of the new rules, it's not personal and I can't fault you for it.
sam_schneider|4 years ago
Most of the homeowners who wanted ADUs were lower income & couldn't find financing (likely not HN community). These are multigenerational households where the children live in the house their parents bought with them and their kids. They work two jobs—their yard is rarely used—no one stopped to mourn it.
They wanted to make money to help lighten the economic burden of living where they grew up, and maybe not work the night shift, or have to provide their own childcare while working full time.
I imagine a large subset of HN and the tech community will not want to lose their yards-and its a free world, we aren't going to take them away!
Most of our team is signed up for our buy product. If you think people you know would be interested, send them our way!
dionidium|4 years ago
This is a very natural way for cities to develop. So natural, in fact, that it's how every city in the country did develop before planners made that development pattern illegal via zoning. SB 9 isn't some kind of radical new way of doing things; it's a partial unwinding of rules that prevented the kinds of development that occurs when the market is allowed to meet the demands of buyers and sellers.
At some point in Providence's history they changed the rules here, too. My building is "non-conforming." It'd be illegal to build a two-family home on this lot today. Further, my building has a generous side lot, which was at some point combined with my own lot into one, leaving a conspicuous gap between my house and its neighbor. I would love to sell this land to a developer and would welcome an SB-9-style law in Rhode Island.
seanmp|4 years ago
sokoloff|4 years ago