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EE_
19th September 2015, 04:37 AM
Better hurry, won't last!

In America's most expensive city THIS is what $350K buys you in San Francisco

http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2015/09/18/01/2C711ED100000578-3239257-image-a-33_1442536151970.jpg

A dilapidated and tiny two bedroom, one bathroom home is being sold in the Outer Mission neighborhood of the city for $350,000
The 765-square-foot wood siding house is being showcased as a 'single family' listing
Built in 1906, it is described as a 'distinguished home in need of work'
By REGINA F. GRAHAM FOR DAILYMAIL.COM
PUBLISHED: 19:33 EST, 17 September 2015 | UPDATED: 00:34 EST, 18 September 2015

In many cities across the country, $350,000 is enough to buy a nice sized home with all the trimmings.
But in America's most expensive city, San Francisco, that amount of money is only enough to land a person in a wooden shack.
A new real estate listing in the Outer Mission neighborhood of the city has a dilapidated 765-square-foot wood siding home for sale for $350,000.
The two bedroom and one bathroom California dwelling sits on a 1,633-square-foot lot on 16 De Long Street in the city.
The tiny abode is being showcased as a single family home and costs an expensive $458 per square foot

The tiny abode is being showcased as a single family home and costs an expensive $458 per square foot
What money can buy: The tiny brown home pictured above is being sold in San Francisco for $350,000

What money can buy: The tiny brown home pictured above is being sold in San Francisco for $350,000
Located in the Outer Mission neighborhood, the 765-square-foot wood siding home only has two bedrooms

Located in the Outer Mission neighborhood, the 765-square-foot wood siding home only has two bedrooms

The tiny one-story abode is being showcased as a single family home. It costs an expensive $458 per square foot.
The listing describes the property as a 'distinguished home in need of work.'
Built in 1906, it looks minute and outdated compared with the other homes in the neighborhood.
The minute home sits on a 1,633-square-foot lot on 16 De Long Street in San Francisco, California

A recent report by Zumper revealed that San Francisco is the most expensive city in the US when it comes to renting homes.
The average cost for a one-bedroom apartment reached a record $3,530 in the city in August, compared with $3,160 in New York, $2,270 in Boston and $2,110 in Washington DC.
To rent a one-bedroom home in Los Angeles will set you back an average $1,830 a month, while in Seattle, it is $1,650.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3239257/In-America-s-expensive-city-350K-buys-San-Francisco.html#ixzz3mBA8GOaD

Fires, pollution, earthquakes, radiation, Illegals, liberals, homeless people shitting and pissing everywhere, queers, high cost of living, crowded cities, traffic, laws against everything, big brother surveillance everywhere...why are people dying to live there and pay anything for a place to stay? It must be worth it?

hoarder
19th September 2015, 07:40 AM
Not only do the banksters have control over when the money supply is expanded or contracted, they have control over where it is expanded and contracted. They inflate property values where the most race-mixing occurs and issue fewer loans in areas that are mostly White.