Jason/Todd, thanks for taking the time on the video. It is amazing to get experts to share their experience. I am working to develop my first property with a group of more experienced developers. These videos have helped me not ask as many dumb questions. Please keep it up, and sharing any books, websites, youtube channels would be greatly appreciated!!! keep up the good work!
Great topic!!! I’m very excited to develop my second 80ac property. As a realtor of 29 yrs and owner of a small brokerage. I am learning this side of real estate is so exciting and much more rewarding for us! I’m looking to learn as much as I can!
Jason and Todd thank you for for this information! Great video, what a rare find for land development content and the different impacts of that development!
Thank you for taking the topic of land development and having a comprehensive discussion and giving us many insights on the various facets of land development
Hi Jason, thanks for taking the time to make these videos, they have been very informative. I noticed your website is down, can you get it back up and running?
2:26 I have a family member that does tons of subdividing land. So I’m trying to learn how to do it also. Any tips on finding qualified land that can be subdivided?
Thanks a lot for this video, it is really helpful for fellow citizens I am trying to buy a house and the way I see I could get most value in the overheated Vancouver (Canada) market is to buy a house with a squarish lot size twice or four times the typical lot size. I am hoping that even though the zoning may not be right to subdivide it now, it may change 5, 10 or 20 years down the line. Is this a folly? What are the typical mistakes I should look out for?
A Board denial based based on politics (because of NIMBY neighbors) can cost 10's of thousands of dollars, and many years in court- even if your application conforms. You may win (if your application conforms to the regs), but it WILL cost you. Ask me how I know. Then again, I'm just a little guy so ask Lennar, Toll or any of the other large nationals.
I loved the show and although the point they made about civil engineers having a provision for extra services and design changes was not wrong entirely, they aren’t providing the full understanding. It’s a complete one sided take in their favor. Civil engineers do not make a whole lot of money as it is. Nor are they responsible for knowing every little nuance in the code book. And all the requirements in the code book are subject to interpretation. I agree, just like any profession, there are people who will try to take advantage of you. The permitting process is grueling and some projects can drag on forever. Usually it’s pretty clear on who should bear the cost of changes. Not always, but more often than not. Rambling over :)
Thanks for the comment. I agree. For the most part I would say that the GOOD engineers definitely don't get enough credit for what they do. It can be a pretty thankless job.
Jason/Todd, thanks for taking the time on the video. It is amazing to get experts to share their experience. I am working to develop my first property with a group of more experienced developers. These videos have helped me not ask as many dumb questions.
Please keep it up, and sharing any books, websites, youtube channels would be greatly appreciated!!! keep up the good work!
Great topic!!! I’m very excited to develop my second 80ac property. As a realtor of 29 yrs and owner of a small brokerage. I am learning this side of real estate is so exciting and much more rewarding for us! I’m looking to learn as much as I can!
Great conversation…and as always, Todd kills it!
Jason and Todd thank you for for this information! Great video, what a rare find for land development content and the different impacts of that development!
Thank you for taking the topic of land development and having a comprehensive discussion and giving us many insights on the various facets of land development
Jason your content is really helpful. Supporting from New Zealand.
Excellent. Thank you so much, Jerome!
Hi Jason, thanks for taking the time to make these videos, they have been very informative. I noticed your website is down, can you get it back up and running?
It's up now! Thank you for your patience.
great resource Jason - I would love to work with you down the road
A wealth of information; thank you.
Great channel. Great info!
2:26 I have a family member that does tons of subdividing land. So I’m trying to learn how to do it also. Any tips on finding qualified land that can be subdivided?
...Todd - great interview. Keep up the good work.
Thanks a lot for this video, it is really helpful for fellow citizens
I am trying to buy a house and the way I see I could get most value in the overheated Vancouver (Canada) market is to buy a house with a squarish lot size twice or four times the typical lot size. I am hoping that even though the zoning may not be right to subdivide it now, it may change 5, 10 or 20 years down the line.
Is this a folly? What are the typical mistakes I should look out for?
Awesome awesome educational information
A Board denial based based on politics (because of NIMBY neighbors) can cost 10's of thousands of dollars, and many years in court- even if your application conforms. You may win (if your application conforms to the regs), but it WILL cost you. Ask me how I know. Then again, I'm just a little guy so ask Lennar, Toll or any of the other large nationals.
Hey you should make a course starting from the beginning to the end of the land development phase
Funny that you mention that! Keep your eyes peeled next year..
Totally agree
Great video, was trying to check out your website but seems like its down!
It is up and running now! Don't hesitate to reach out if you run into any other issues. Thank you!
Would you know the differences in developing for a mixed use zoning development
Unfortunately, I don't have much experience with mixed-use zoning development.
Please post more videos
I loved the show and although the point they made about civil engineers having a provision for extra services and design changes was not wrong entirely, they aren’t providing the full understanding. It’s a complete one sided take in their favor. Civil engineers do not make a whole lot of money as it is. Nor are they responsible for knowing every little nuance in the code book. And all the requirements in the code book are subject to interpretation. I agree, just like any profession, there are people who will try to take advantage of you. The permitting process is grueling and some projects can drag on forever. Usually it’s pretty clear on who should bear the cost of changes. Not always, but more often than not. Rambling over :)
Thanks for the comment. I agree. For the most part I would say that the GOOD engineers definitely don't get enough credit for what they do. It can be a pretty thankless job.
The last video was 2 years ago, are you guys still active on this channel?
Still active. Unfortunately things have been extremely busy, but we'll start posting more content this year. Thanks for checking in.
Lets see some new vids!
$1000 dollars per foot, one mile would be over 5 million dollars. You must have meant $100
Good catch. Thanks for the correction.