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#1
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In order to get a permit from the city to do some remodeling (upgrade the
kitchen, paint the exterior, etc.), he has to fork over $15,000(!) to have an asphalt sidewalk installed on his 60' frontage. His would be the only residence in the area with a sidewalk. http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/htm...dewalk24m.html |
#2
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On Wed, 25 Mar 2009 12:16:06 -0500, against all advice, something
compelled "HeyBub" , to say: In order to get a permit from the city to do some remodeling (upgrade the kitchen, paint the exterior, etc.) You need a permit for that? -- Real men don't text. |
#3
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On 2009-03-25, HeyBub wrote:
In order to get a permit from the city to do some remodeling (upgrade the kitchen, paint the exterior, etc.), he has to fork over $15,000(!) to have an asphalt sidewalk installed on his 60' frontage. He's not remodeling, he's doing a complete teardown and building a new house. That's why the sidewalk requirement kicked in. Wayne |
#4
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On Mar 25, 10:16*am, "HeyBub" wrote:
In order to get a permit from the city to do some remodeling (upgrade the kitchen, paint the exterior, etc.), he has to fork over $15,000(!) to have an asphalt sidewalk installed on his 60' frontage. His would be the only residence in the area with a sidewalk. http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/htm...280_sidewalk24... The democrats there are hell bent on the detroitification of Seattle. He should move. Improvements will be severely punished. |
#5
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HeyBub wrote:
In order to get a permit from the city to do some remodeling (upgrade the kitchen, paint the exterior, etc.), he has to fork over $15,000(!) to have an asphalt sidewalk installed on his 60' frontage. His would be the only residence in the area with a sidewalk. http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/htm...dewalk24m.html What kind of asphalt are they going to use, one with gold nuggets instead of gravel aggregate? That works out to $83.33 per square foot. If it was me, I would argue that the charges are out of line and demand that competitive bids be taken for that job. Also the sidewalk should not be built until after construction is completed as heavy vehicles could damage the priceless artifact requiring replacement. |
#6
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![]() "EXT" wrote in message anews.com... HeyBub wrote: In order to get a permit from the city to do some remodeling (upgrade the kitchen, paint the exterior, etc.), he has to fork over $15,000(!) to have an asphalt sidewalk installed on his 60' frontage. His would be the only residence in the area with a sidewalk. http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/htm...dewalk24m.html What kind of asphalt are they going to use, one with gold nuggets instead of gravel aggregate? That works out to $83.33 per square foot. If it was me, I would argue that the charges are out of line and demand that competitive bids be taken for that job. Also the sidewalk should not be built until after construction is completed as heavy vehicles could damage the priceless artifact requiring replacement. It's all of the things required by the city that go with the sidewalk, like hiring an engineer, closing the street while under construction, putting in a landscaped buffer strip between the sidewalk and street and a curb on the street, etc. Tom G. |
#7
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In article ,
Wayne Whitney wrote: On 2009-03-25, HeyBub wrote: In order to get a permit from the city to do some remodeling (upgrade the kitchen, paint the exterior, etc.), he has to fork over $15,000(!) to have an asphalt sidewalk installed on his 60' frontage. He's not remodeling, he's doing a complete teardown and building a new house. That's why the sidewalk requirement kicked in. Wayne Maybe he can use a loophole often used around here -- leave a small section of one wall somewhere. Then it's called a remodel. |
#8
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![]() "Smitty Two" wrote in message news ![]() In article , Wayne Whitney wrote: On 2009-03-25, HeyBub wrote: In order to get a permit from the city to do some remodeling (upgrade the kitchen, paint the exterior, etc.), he has to fork over $15,000(!) to have an asphalt sidewalk installed on his 60' frontage. He's not remodeling, he's doing a complete teardown and building a new house. That's why the sidewalk requirement kicked in. Wayne Maybe he can use a loophole often used around here -- leave a small section of one wall somewhere. Then it's called a remodel. The house across the street was built on a remodel permit. The original "house" is a small, stone foundation from the 1800s. All else of the house was long gone. The "remodeled" house is 50 feet from that foundation. How that got that past our notoriously strict zoning board is a mystery. And I'm sure there is some entity that would not allow the original foundation touched. Our 150 ft driveway cost $6000 to pave and this town (Harvard, MA) is not cheap. $15K for a 60 ft sidewalk? Gary |
#9
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In article ,
"Abby" wrote: How that got that past our notoriously strict zoning board is a mystery. I imagine it involved golf, money, and possibly the company of a woman. Most city government decisions are made in the coffee shop. Council room chatter is just a puppet show for local TV. |
#10
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Abby wrote:
The house across the street was built on a remodel permit. The original "house" is a small, stone foundation from the 1800s. All else of the house was long gone. The "remodeled" house is 50 feet from that foundation. How that got that past our notoriously strict zoning board is a mystery. And I'm sure there is some entity that would not allow the original foundation touched. Some towns don't have zoning. The 4th largest city in the nation, for example. Every few years HUD comes to Houston and does a land-use survey (subtitled: "How can this be?") and they find that land use patterns don't deviate much from those in cities with Draconian zoning rules; Heavy industry is over there, shopping centers are on heavily-traveled streets, light manufacturing is clustered in office parks, single-family residences are in quiet neighborhoods, and so on. The shake their heads, put away their pencils, and retire. The potential problems with no zoning are usually self-correcting. A few years ago, Shell Oil bought a lot on the most up-scale street in the city (homes start at about $3 million) and announced they were going to build a gas station! Several nearby neighbors were not enamored of the idea. They cut up their Shell credit cards and said "We'll use our influence to ruin your whole life and that of everybody you ever knew!" People like John Connely, Robert Mossbacher, Michael DeBakey. Shell donated the lot to the city for a pocket-park. In areas of the city populated by the less-well-connected, more direct methods are generally employed. Arson, for example. |
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