Flood insurance issue. Any land surveyors out there? - land surveyors insurance
This information is my testimony of the amount:
Crawlspace Floor Height: 194 degrees
The lowest finished floor height: 197 degrees
I was told that if I raise the dust in my house to my cavity of 195 degrees, lowered the insurance of $ 2200 to $ 700. I raise to 197 degrees on the earth are the same as the lowest finished floor will be $ 400 per year.
I wonder, can I get rid of my cavities? If so, what to get rid of as "my cavity. The song that we have just the wall where the hole and then say, a new survey certificate, and that we do not go home?
Wednesday, January 6, 2010
Land Surveyors Insurance Flood Insurance Issue. Any Land Surveyors Out There?
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3 comments:
They have quite a long time to obtain a permit.
The soil must also be summarized .... I do not think that this is possible with a house at the beginning. At least not cheaply.
This will cost a small fortune, probably even more than the house is worth.
The only way to get rid of the motion space, is given to the poor house and take a stone base, then home.
It will cost 50-100K, and again, you must obtain the approval, and it will be difficult, this process will affect the environment.
They have quite a long time to obtain a permit.
The soil must also be summarized .... I do not think that this is possible with a house at the beginning. At least not cheaply.
This will cost a small fortune, probably even more than the house is worth.
The only way to get rid of the motion space, is given to the poor house and take a stone base, then home.
It will cost 50-100K, and again, you must obtain the approval, and it will be difficult, this process will affect the environment.
These "feet" and not "degree". No, that eliminates the mezzanine outside the wall. What is the flooded area by FEMA and the flood basic level?
Even if you "grow" upwards of mezzanine, which seems to be difficult and costly. What would you fill out, and how would you do? And service lines that normally run in the crawl space? Do they meet with local building codes?
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