Maine's Coastline WRECKED By Flooding | Wells Beach | Maine Real Estate

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  • Опубликовано: 18 янв 2024
  • Over the last weekend the state of Maine experienced major Coastal flooding with the Governor declaring a civil state of emergency. Today we are live at Wells Beach to document some of the damage that mother nature inflicted, talk with beachfront homeowners, and look into what kind of impact this may have on real estate here on the coast of Southern Maine.
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    01:20- Interview with Beachfront Homeowner
    05:30- What does it mean for Real Estate?
    06:28-Looking at damaged homes
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    A native of New Hampshire, Cameron Avery moved out to the Seacoast when he was 18 years old and has loved every minute of it. Now living in Kittery ME with his wife Kelly, Cameron has lived throughout Seacoast NH and Southern ME. Before becoming a full time licensed REALTOR ™ in both Maine and New Hampshire, Cameron owned and operated his own carpentry business, working on classic New England Architecture throughout the Seacoast. He uses his skills and experience with construction, customer service, and marketing to help people navigate the sometimes tricky road of buying and selling real estate. His unique skill set partnered with a passion for helping others creates the perfect combination for making the home buying/selling process an enjoyable and profitable experience for everyone involved.
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Комментарии • 7

  • @Livetheseacoast
    @Livetheseacoast  5 месяцев назад +1

    Do you think that the coastal flooding in Maine communities will have a large impact on real estate? Comment below, we'd love to hear from you!

  • @drticktock4011
    @drticktock4011 2 месяца назад +1

    I'm a licensed Professional Engineer who specializes in coastal engineering (>20 yrs). FYI...shoreline defense (i.e., seawall shown+scattered armour stone rubble) should have a crest elevation that factors: local storm water level + (inverse) barometric pressure + tides + wind setup + wave setup. The cross-shore shoreline topography plays a role too. Finally, the short-crested wave ride on the elevated water level. The water level usually causes the *real* damage although the waves are more dramatic. The Coastal Engineering Manual provides guidance, but a PE is needed to really design (in concert with federal, state, and local policy/permitting. There is a lot more I could go into.

  • @livinginsouthernmaine
    @livinginsouthernmaine 4 месяца назад

    Hey Cam, Thanks for inviting me to your video. Lets have coffee again soon.

  • @donsimpson3935
    @donsimpson3935 4 месяца назад

    more

  • @maxcanthelpit
    @maxcanthelpit Месяц назад

    "I sold my house here and bought one on the water down in Florida". Well, can't say Michael doesn't walk his talk ;) I looked at those homes a month or so ago. Yes, the newer homes did better, but even they suffered from washed out driveways and the desire of the ocean to marry the marsh behind those homes. So the question is, where will the money come from to re-build all new homes? What about tax costs for infrastructure? Insurance costs? Anyway, many of those homes won't be ready for this season. Once new tax/insurance rates kick in (and if more storms) I don't think that little piece of road is gonna make it. But I've been wrong before, but 99% ain't 100% haha

  • @donsimpson3935
    @donsimpson3935 4 месяца назад

    more