Real examples of distressed properties and small development opportunities analyzed with practical investor logic.
A classic headline-cheap property that forces the investor to distinguish between a low purchase price and a low total project cost.
An example of a low-basis two-unit property where rehab scope, vacancy timing, and management quality determine whether the deal works.
A small rental example showing why reserves, taxes, and maintenance discipline matter as much as acquisition cost.
A cash-flow oriented example built around realistic rent, reserve, and turnover assumptions.
An entry-level rehab example where the investor must control scope and hold time to protect the margin.
A modest entry-point rental scenario showing why location quality and reserve discipline matter as much as cheap basis.
A small land example focused on whether a vacant lot can realistically support a tiny development or resale strategy.
A low-acquisition rowhouse example that shows how thin neighborhoods can punish weak rehab assumptions.