Forum Discussion
- GulfcoastExplorerThere's lots of LOTS for sale on eBay and Zillow. The midwest and southern states seem to have the lowest prices. Be sure to get a lot that has a full street address.... as in 105 main st, not just main street.
- bukhrnExplorer IIIAre you going to leave the trailer on it for 10-20 weeks consecutively, or use it a couple weeks at a time ?
If it's just a couple weeks, and take it out to dump & refill, I don't know why you'd need anything, just like dry camping or boondocking. - wiskeyVIExplorerSome states, there's just no way! Oregon comes to mide, prolly Washington as well.
- JRscoobyExplorer IIA friend semi retired, found a small town, bought a commercial building. Park a old TT inside, for kitchen and bedroom. His tractor and end-dump, and TC park in living room.
- Roy_LynneExplorer
solismaris wrote:
What's to stop me from just buying a nice lot somewhere and putting my trailer on it, using it maybe 10-20 weeks out of the year for camping?
Presumably, zoning laws.
But seriously, is this possible any place in the northeast us? (MA, ME, NH, VT)?
Before you invest, make sure you check state, county and city zoning laws. We had a gentleman invest in some land here in Washington and then found out it wasn't allowed. - Roy_LynneExplorer
solismaris wrote:
What's to stop me from just buying a nice lot somewhere and putting my trailer on it, using it maybe 10-20 weeks out of the year for camping?
Presumably, zoning laws.
But seriously, is this possible any place in the northeast us? (MA, ME, NH, VT)?
Before you invest, make sure you check state, county and city zoning laws. We had a gentleman invest in some land here in Washington and then found out it wasn't allowed. - CFergusonExplorer IIAnswered your own question: Zoning.
That said, and as noted already, there are LOTS of places in the USA that still 'allow' you that freedom.
Your research starts.................Now. - wanderingaimlesExplorerOne way I have seen people get around this is to buy a location with an old mobile home on it, well and septic are in and they just tap in, another is if you can find somewhere that a house has recently burned out or down. Again well and septic are in, and if they had a separate garage that had power to it, even better.
- lane_hogExplorer IIIt's not a permanent residence, so trying to apply building codes might not be the right approach, folks...
Look for unincorporated land where there isn't a HOA or other county/town rule which says you can't park/store a vehicle long term.
As long as you're not dumping black tank waste on the ground, I don't see why your holding tanks wouldn't suffice. Solar panels on the roof go a long way towards not needing electricity, and you can always bring water to fill your fresh tank. - DrewEExplorer IIIn Vermont (and I think New England generally), zoning regulations are determined on a town by town basis. I think there are some areas where that would not be prohibited, particularly on sufficiently large lots.
Septic may be the biggest hurdle from a legal point of view if it's required. At least in Vermont, it's very easy for a septic system design and approval to be five figures--and that's before any parts are bought or dirt is moved. Electric service is, of course, also not inexpensive to install, particularly if fairly distant from the power lines.
DuchmenSport's approach may be more practical. The obvious downside is that you have a whole extra house to maintain.
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