The point here is how the contaminates will flow from the dump. In this case, SG, PS, PP, BP, LR, and Eastwood are all in its flow path. I don't think Turtle Rock or even OH has much to worry here.
I wouldn't buy Eastwood. Here's my reasoning.
1. Interest rates will rise next year, home prices are at its peak now. Raising interest rates with peak prices is a really bad combo.
2. Eastwood is next to one of this country's biggest trash dump. So is Beacon Park.
3. Eastwood sits right...
I don't know. "z" lots or lots with 3.6 sides covered seems all like bad news down the line. Builders are greedy, and buyers are sheepish or desperate. Bad combination.
I think shared driveway is way better, at least you can see all of your driveway. I'm just terrified that my neighbor will destroy the side of my house (via kids, pets, plants, water damage, environment, etc) and not know it until it's too late.
Zero lot line properties are cropping up everywhere. It's crazy but people are buying them. How can anyone buy property where they do not have access to the side of their home? Where neighbors can trash the side of your wall and you wouldn't even know it?
Why is this legal? Crazy to think about it.
Does anyone know what that open piece of land on the southwest corner of Eastwood is? Looks like some kind of basin? There's also another land similar by Jeffrey Trails, next to the west side of Cyprus Village.
On this topic; having EPA claim something is safe doesn't mean it actually is. If a child develops some sickness because of TCE, there just isn't a way to collect evidence to prove that fact. Stuff like this takes decades and many lives to play out.
haha except by the time you take your $2M cash to Hidden Canyon, the realtor at Hidden Canyon will smile and hand you a $4M price tag (written in Chinese).