goalkeeper
2019-01-23 21:16:28
- #1
Well, 50:31 is still harmless - it is not uncommon for building plots in newly offered areas to be oversubscribed four, five, or even multiple times.
Each plot is special, meaning the more concrete the offer, the more its validity is limited to the individual case. As a financing dummy, naming you the current list price for a "Stadtvilla Cindy 152" should be easy to do at any time.
If you want to know more precisely, that also requires more work – that a provider only makes an offer against a reasonable chance of implementation, I find understandable. In this process, the provider faces three risks: 1. You don’t get financing; 2. Someone else gets "your" plot; 3. You have numerous "irons in the fire." Only one of these risks – except of course the unavoidable one that you find a better provider – must be evaluated for the provider’s effort not to have been in vain (but certainly not for free, as qualified offers are really time-consuming).
We have dealt with this question multiple times and regularly, the result is always the same: I say that it requires a large dose of naivety or a cynically sadistic mindset to develop plots for any kind of house groups in "scattered ownership"; several discussants share this view more or less extensively; and some others think I am at least exaggerating or overdramatizing; often the latter is supported by the fact that there are successful cases (which I do not deny, but with such high stakes I firmly reject such roulette).
So Cindy 152 has not been offered to us so far – all our previous appointments took between three and four hours and each room was planned accordingly so that it can also be properly calculated and offered.