Buying Guide - Weekend Plot in the Forest with Old Cabin

  • Erstellt am 2024-06-12 09:35:03

Markus_S

2024-06-12 18:52:43
  • #1


That really summarizes a lot well. I just spoke briefly with the real estate agent, who confirmed many of these details. There is apparently a spring directly at the hut. Currently, however, it only causes a lot of mud and has never been used for more.

The access road after rain or in winter with a normal car without all-wheel drive is probably only manageable with luck.
 

schubert79

2024-06-13 06:50:13
  • #2
Then hands off. Especially at that price.
 

Asuni

2024-06-13 15:28:45
  • #3


I agree. There are plenty of dog-friendly accommodations in the area where you can settle for years to relax and start hiking tours without having to deal with all the financial and physical effort involved with this particular forest property.
 

ypg

2024-06-13 16:25:56
  • #4

Exactly, then there would be no more protected status for the property.
I would buy something like that for €10,000, but not for €100,000. Also the hut itself: the ceilings in the bedrooms look like they have water damage, in the kitchen the ceiling is already coming down.
The same forest all the time can also get boring in the long run. The dog is also not allowed to run free there during breeding and fawning season.
I would rather look for a natural campsite in a forest or lease a natural plot somewhere that you can fence and put up a hut that can be taken down again or moved (mobile home, tiny house, recreational hut). The latter can also be nostalgic.
 

Grundaus

2024-06-14 07:51:10
  • #5
Forest costs around €3-4 per m² plus the timber value. That would already be significantly more. Plus the right of residence or the right to completely renovate the existing hut
 

ypg

2024-06-14 08:13:26
  • #6
This is not about an investment, but rather about some recreational value.
 
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