In the early 70’s the city of Oakland California had a glut of abandoned homes in high crime neighborhoods which led to lending and insurance redlining.
The vacant homes were magnets for illegal activity and squatters and a fire hazard.
City said the costs to raze were often more than the property was worth.
A novel idea came about to solve blight, crime and get the property back on the tax rolls while avoiding additional city expense.
Low income first time would be home buyers could submit their name for a lottery to buy with the conditions they move in, pay taxes, make improvements so property no longer blighted and after 5 years eligible to purchase from the city for $1.
I walked by several of these shells on my way to school and from day to day witness the deterioration…
I wanted one in the worst way but too young at the time.
It was 10 years later in 1983 I bought my first home and total cash price was $11,500 and no government program as it was listed on the MLS
Not long after buying I met my backyard neighbor who told me I paid too much and that he only paid $1 for his place 10 years ago.
I still own my $11,500 SF Bay Area home to this day…
Kind of the same deal in Detroit with block after block of abandoned homes when I was there… homes that could be bought for as little as $1,000 no strings…
www.hud.gov