I really appreciate the diverse background here, and there's always someone who can see your situation from a different point of view on here, so I want to run this one by you guys & gals for input.
I recently stumbled upon a building for sale in our small, economically depressed hometown where we live. My wife & I both feel its a good deal - even for this location - and has potential, but let me give you some background on us before I get into the details of the building.
US:
I've owned this house for 6-years, it's about 1500sq-ft on about an 80'x110' double-lot on the corner. I have a 24'x30' detached garage plus a 16'x12' shed. I paid $78k - which was honestly on the high end, and have refi'd twice, still owing $72k, which is about $15k more than I could sell it for today.
We both work an hour away from here & carpool everyday. We tried to move closer to work last year, but I refuse to get caught in a situation where I have to depend on renting this house in order to afford another one. With us having 4-kids, size is definately an issue & we really couldn't find anything suitable that was close enough to be worthwhile, cheap enough to afford, and not a total money-pit. It looks like realistically(presuming no drastic job changes)we're stuck here for the next 5-years, and since it's our hometown maybe longer.
The Building
The building I found for sale is a 100-year old former Opera House & Masonic lodge in our withering downtown(all 1-block of it). It's a 3-story 40'x60' brick building, so about 7200sq-ft total. The first floor has a 15'x40' store front, behind that is about 25' of gravel floor, and at the rear is a 20'x40' cement pad with garage door to the rear. There's also an angled entrance to the gravel area off the side alley which used to have a garage door & could easily be reinstalled. It has about 20' celings, gas heat & 200amp service...in otherwords, it could easily be a dream garage!
The second floor is 2400sq-ft furnished apartment(it actually used to be 2-separate apartments & has 2-baths & 2-kitchens), and there's an old but functioning freight elevator from the 1st to 2nd floors. It's slow & not something you'd want to ride all the time, but for heavy stuff or my F-I-L who has bad knees, it's a nice feature. There's a large deck off the back as well.
The 3rd floor is the former ballroom. It never had it's wiring completed when they rewired the apartment, there's no water, and with no heat the plaser ceiling is falling down. But it's 2400sq-ft of open space that has some future potential.
The roof on the building is an 8-yr old rubber roof & is solid, but needs a coat of rubber, which I priced at $500 & I can roll it on. The brickwork is all in pretty good shape & has had recent tuck-pointing, though I did see a few loose/broken bricks that would need attention. The apartment has 2-separate furnaces, one has a blower motor out, but there's a complete spare furnace included. One of the upstairs bathrooms has a bad outlet & the other one needs the drain leak fixed on the shower. There's a 1st floor bathroom that was plumbed to the storm-sewers years ago & needs reloacted & replumbed. One of the 6'x6' front windows is broken & needs replaced, and of course there's 100's of "little things" that will take up much more time & money than I can presently imagine. One of the big things is the whole entire building is full of junk....and I'm not talking GRM "hey that's some cool stuff!" kind of junk, I mean imagine all the leftover stuff that didn't sell from every rummage sale, auction & thrift-shop you've ever seen! It will take $2k-$2500 in dumpster fees just to get rid of most of it.
I can buy the building between $10k-$12k.
The Money
We're thinking about cashing in our retirement to buy & fix up the building, moving into it & trying to either rent our house or(preferably) sell it on contract. Our mortgage & escrow is $725/mo. & I know I couldn't get that much rent out of it, but I'm sure it would rent pretty quickly for ~$550/mo. Yes, we would be taking a loss on it, but the taxes/utilites/insurance on the building will be ~$550/mo. too, so it would basically be a net-wash.
A couple of our motivating factors are: 1.) While we both have good jobs that are secure today, should something happen, as long as we could pay the taxes on the building we'll have a place to live, and if worse comes to worse & we loose the house, oh well. But that's a "doomsday" situation that we don't expect to happen. 2.) While we don't really want to cash in what little retirement we have, if we could get our home sold on contract(which I think is pretty likely), we would be pretty close to living debt-free. 3.) We're young enough, and our kids are old enough, that we should have plenty of years - many of them after the kids have grown - to still be working & saving for retirement. 4.) With a storefront, and a garage in the back, there's the possibility of opening some type of business. We've discussed some ideas, some more plausible than others, but we would want to get settled in before we pursued that seriously.
So - if you read through all that , what would you do?????