Plot of land with a decommissioned gas station

  • Erstellt am 2020-09-11 08:53:13

Tassimat

2020-09-11 13:43:09
  • #1
But she wants to sell already? The problem of the old gas station or tanks will be the same for other buyers. You are asking quite a few questions, such as the soil report. Does the good lady have that directly on hand, or does it have to be searched for inconveniently? From the answers you might be able to tell whether other interested parties have already asked the questions and she therefore knows what information you need.
 

11ant

2020-09-11 13:43:14
  • #2
The attribute "available" for a time bomb is indeed fine real estate agent jargon. As a precaution, I would assume that a landfill will classify the entire volume of sand filling as contaminated. It's hardly a mineral resource. No alien would believe the funny things that happen because the real estate market is sick. Was the proximity to the river (with regard to flooding) partly the reason that continued operation of the gas station was no longer economically viable under current regulations?
 

Nida35a

2020-09-11 14:06:41
  • #3
How long was the gas station? Before the invention of sealed tanks and connectors? 50 or more years, then forget it, then it is a time bomb that can ruin you. Why is the property probably still available?
 

qwertzui

2020-09-14 15:06:25
  • #4
Hello dear ones!

Thank you for your abundant input, the membership here in the forum has really been worth it for me. I took the weekend to assess myself ( ) and came to the conclusion that for me, an old safety-first person, there are just too many maybes involved. So I am trusting my gut feeling and will not pursue this property further.
More or less got "rewarded" for it today when a lady I had inquired with got in touch. She now wants to sell her property Viewing is next Monday. But this time completely free of contaminants, just a green meadow with two or three little trees on it.

Best regards
qwertzui
 

Tassimat

2020-09-14 15:09:57
  • #5
Well, that's great news that you have a new and simpler plot in sight.



Hopefully no big oaks right in the building area.
 

qwertzui

2020-09-14 15:14:36
  • #6
Fortunately not, but nicely at the edge at the end of the garden, where they don't hurt anyone. Of course, they are also welcome to stay there
 

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