Depending on exact location, an acre of land will be around 30,000 to 50,000 an acre. In high demand areas, the acreage can go up to 100,000 per acre.
Zoning regulations concerning density allowed often make reference to the number of residential dwelling units that can be built on each acre of land (an acre of land is 43, 560 square feet of land). The residential zoning density or units allowed per acres will usually vary be the type of residential development being proposed (e,g., single family detached homes, town homes, or condominiums).
It's open to negotiation. However, two points are worth bearing in mind. On the one hand, the price may be much lower than the average house asking price -- which will limit an agent's interest in spending money on promoting it. On the other hand, it usually takes much longer to sell raw land than houses -- which can further reduce an agent's incentive to advertise the property. The main exception is with land that can be developed, which is likely to mean a price in the hundreds of thousands (or even millions). While this limits the number of potential buyers, it can also attract an agent with all the "right connections."
A business park or business estate is an area of land in which many office buildings are grouped together. All of the work that goes on is commercial, not industrial or residential. These are popular in many suburban locations, where it is cheaper to develop land because of the lower land costs and the lower building costs for building wider, not necessarily higher. They are also often located near motorways or main roads.
You could get a commercial type policy -- the last one I sold in Texas was about $1200/year for $300,000 liability. They charge per acre. Insuracne is regulated by state governments. All insurance questions should be required to state what state you are in. Don't just love the English language? Why don't you have homewners insurance??? You have to live somewhere. You can buy a renters policy that has personal liability as part of the package and ask the agent if it will extend to vacant land.
a selchie is half seal and half man. Also spelled selkie. BUT it is not like a mermaid where it exists as human on the upper half and seal body, on the lower half. It is either human when it is on land in it's human form or it is seal when it is living in the ocean.
The price of land depends on which island, and WHERE on the island.
The average price of an acre of land in Mississippi can vary widely based on location, quality of land, and other factors. However, as a rough estimate, the average price can range from $1,000 to $5,000 per acre in Mississippi.
The land of Kentucky has different variables in price. The average price per acre of land in Burnside Kentucky is between $3000 and $5000 dollars.
The cheapest land with no timber or structures in Mississippi is roughly $800 to $1200 an acre. Land with timber is closer to $1500 to $2500 an acre.
Can you be more specific? An acre of land in downtown Charlotte is going to cost more than an acre in Wilson NC.........
The average price of an acre of land in Summers County WV mountain side is $19,900.
7500
$129000
An acre of land in Sedgwick, Kansas, can range from $3,937 to more thanÊ$14,000 per acre. The price depends on whether or not the land can be parceled from a larger section of land or not.
This would obviously depend on where in Louisiana you are buying this acre of land. An acre in New Orleans' Garden District is worth more than an acre at the Arkansas border for example.
The average price for land is 800 to 1200 collars an acre. If you are close to a city, you will pay more.
1 acre of land is 43,560 square feet, 1/640 square mile, anywhere. Price???