one question is how would i transport the walls of a granny flat i can buy?
re buying a second hand granny flat.
i've spoken to council re permits and size for my yard so thats ok .
my biggest worry is that what if parts are missing
will it end up being a much wanted bargain cheap and much more affordable than new (but this is actually new )
or could it end up with big troubles
dismantling it,
transporting it,
permits,
rebuilding it probably by builder and handyman who dont do granny flats daily like a granny flat company does.
someone was renovating a home and putting a granny flat in.they ran out of money and sold everything. the new owner just wants to get rid of the new but unfinished granny flat and sell it cheap
is it a big deal if some parts might end up being missing? or can building parts always be replaced easy enough so it will still end up a huge bargain.
its a good sized 2 bedroom, kitchen meals and lounge perfect for my garden at a bargain price and i could pay it off fast and have a good income quickly coming in for minimal outlay
new granny flats might be over 65000 totally finished ( on a platform not built in) with permits and everything done by the granny flat company carpets, curtains all finishes.
this one would be under 10 000 for the granny flat itself, maybe i can bargain them down .
but i would have to
dismantle transport store get permits rebuild, carpet, curtains, and have it rebuilt by builder who doesnt work in granny flats daily like the companies do.
would i end up saving a great deal costing maybe 20 000 or 30 000 in total for everything rather than 70 or could it end up being big trouble?
where i want to put it takes a few months for permits and by that time the warrantee on it would be over. If i was doing it in sydney where permits are streamlined to 10 day process currently
then i'd be putting it up within the month and would see if parts are missing and it would still be under warrantee.
bargain or troubles?
re buying a second hand granny flat.
i've spoken to council re permits and size for my yard so thats ok .
my biggest worry is that what if parts are missing
will it end up being a much wanted bargain cheap and much more affordable than new (but this is actually new )
or could it end up with big troubles
dismantling it,
transporting it,
permits,
rebuilding it probably by builder and handyman who dont do granny flats daily like a granny flat company does.
someone was renovating a home and putting a granny flat in.they ran out of money and sold everything. the new owner just wants to get rid of the new but unfinished granny flat and sell it cheap
is it a big deal if some parts might end up being missing? or can building parts always be replaced easy enough so it will still end up a huge bargain.
its a good sized 2 bedroom, kitchen meals and lounge perfect for my garden at a bargain price and i could pay it off fast and have a good income quickly coming in for minimal outlay
new granny flats might be over 65000 totally finished ( on a platform not built in) with permits and everything done by the granny flat company carpets, curtains all finishes.
this one would be under 10 000 for the granny flat itself, maybe i can bargain them down .
but i would have to
dismantle transport store get permits rebuild, carpet, curtains, and have it rebuilt by builder who doesnt work in granny flats daily like the companies do.
would i end up saving a great deal costing maybe 20 000 or 30 000 in total for everything rather than 70 or could it end up being big trouble?
where i want to put it takes a few months for permits and by that time the warrantee on it would be over. If i was doing it in sydney where permits are streamlined to 10 day process currently
then i'd be putting it up within the month and would see if parts are missing and it would still be under warrantee.
bargain or troubles?
Last edited: