HUD House
by
Book Details
About the Book
Taking on a handyman special can be a path to a dream house, but what is the fair price for a wreck? The U.S. Government provides the answer through its foreclosed homes offerings by the Department of Housing & Urban Development, or HUD. HUD House is a journal account of a successful bid and the rehab of a HUD house. Readers of HUD House will see how we bid and how we overcame snags in the process, will obtain methods of finding workers, will learn something about the actual daily process of rehabbing a modest home and might be able to decide if they want a HUD house. The journal includes inserts about issues raised, such as Do You Need a Lawyer? HUD House is pertinent now because:
About the Author
Nancy Lapidus is a retired high school biology teacher. She is a past president of the New York Biology Teachers’ Association, and a founder of the newspaper Adaptation, its official publication. She won the Alice B. Crow Award for dedication in counseling with her thesis recounting the mammoth efforts required to originate a drivers’ education course in New York City high schools. Arnold Lapidus started his working life in a gas station when he was thirteen years old. There he picked up knowledge of simple objects like screwdrivers, pliers and Philips head screws. Later he learned about math and computers and used this knowledge in a successful career whose theme has been to make difficult subjects easy to understand. Nancy has previously bought a fixer-upper for $44,000 and sold it for $73,000. Arnold notes the gross profit is greater than 50%. Arnie and Nancy currently live in the HUD house in the Poconos, Pennsylvania.