Future of the House

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I'd imagine the bank will seize it and the house put up for auction which is common with foreclosures. Honestly the best thing would be for someone to buy it and rip it down putting a new house on the land, or remodel it so it doesn't look like the Chandler's house. Either way the next owners will have idiots stopping by and that would suck.
 
If Chris goes to prison/state hospital and barb goes to a nursing home, the bank will take it. Also, I’m sure troons/Chris supporters will ransack the place for Internet fame.
 
It's not getting torn down. Tear-downs mainly happen in built-out urban areas where the land is scarce and expensive.

If you want to build a new house in a podunk place like rural Virginia, there's plenty of vacant land you can do that on without having to go to the trouble of demolishing an existing house.

Go to any small town and you'll find plenty of rundown houses that are well past their prime. The land is worth so little that it's just not economical to renovate the house or tear it down and build a new one. So the houses just degrade over time and usually end up being rented to working poor tenants.
 
POMS GN 02607.001, POMS GN 02607.160

As of the 31st continuous day of confinement after his conviction, NGRI, IST, or SDP, the monthly Tugboat will be suspended. Taxes nowadays are paid in monthly escrow, which takes care of that concern. Barb's SSDI and pension will not be enough to pay for everything else. Chris' car will be (or already has been) towed, and will eventually be seized and auctioned off. Hopefully someone has moved it back to 14BC or at least a place it won't be lost.

It seems likely that Bob had a will, though we have never seen it. If he did not then Chris owns at least 1/6 and Barb 2/3, see https://kiwifarms.net/threads/future-of-the-house.96821/post-9620968
 
Barb owes tons of money in debt. She’ll owe even more after she’s inevitably put in a home.

The house is effectively gone. It will get put up for auction to pay Barb’s debts. (It still won’t be enough, and many will be left holding the bag.) At best, probably only 5% of the home’s contents will be kept or sold. The rest will end up in a landfill, including all of the artifacts. No one wants to deal with that shit in a biohazard site.

The house is pretty worthless. It’s amazing how fast they trashed it after it was renovated after the fire. The land is also worthless since it’s the middle of nowhere. But some developer will buy it for next to nothing. They’ll renovate for a cheap as possible and sell it to a random middle class family.
 
The land is also worthless since it’s the middle of nowhere.
You know, this makes me very relieved Chris is not a strong and forceful person because the house and surroundings remind me of all those cases of rapists and murderers who'd capture their victims and would keep them in far-away places, just desolate homes easily ignored by bypassers and so on.
 
i dont know about virginia but in ohio if your elderly relative goes into a home they let a designated member stay in said home as long as they maintain it and keep up the mortgage payments until like a few months after the elderly relative dies then its sold off and the money goes somewhere (i cant remember as this was years ago for me) either to the state or the care home to pay for the cost of the nursing home
 
The house is not in a “terrible location” or “in the middle of nowhere,” it’s 6 miles north of Charlottesville, an upscale college town (University of VA.) Nor is the market “terrible,” real estate is red hot atm and houses are snapped up the second they are listed for sale, usually at way above asking price amid bidding wars. Idk where some of you get these ideas from.
 
My prediction is that the bank will foreclose as soon as they have the opportunity to, the house will be sold at auction, and a corporation will buy it, reno/flip it, and it'll be rented out to people who have never heard of Chris-Chan.

The weens will be a nuisance for any unsuspecting future tenants, but I doubt anything as dramatic or exciting as some of these other predictions will happen. I sincerely doubt there will ever be a 14BC Museum.

They miiiiight sell the items inside as part of an estate sale or auction them off after purchasing, but I wouldn't be surprised if most of the things in there are just...tossed. Hoards like these are nothing new to property flippers and prospective landlords.
 
Cole Smithey might have a claim to whatever doesn't go to the bank after Barb dies. I doubt that Barb wrote a coherent will.
I bet Barb becomes a ward of the state and any assets not taken by the bank instead go into a trust, which is managed by the government to help pay for treatment.
 
It's not getting torn down. Tear-downs mainly happen in built-out urban areas where the land is scarce and expensive. If you want to build a new house in a podunk place like rural Virginia, there's plenty of vacant land you can do that on without having to go to the trouble of demolishing an existing house.
When Ed Gein was caught, his "house of horrors" attracted lookie-loos. It got intolerable for the neighbors. So one night, the house mysteriously caught fire and for some reason, none of the neighbors called the fire department. A local bought the land cheap and now if you go there and ask where Ed Gein's house was, no one will tell you.
 
The house is not in the 'middle of nowhere' in any sense of the word. It's only a few miles from Charlottesville.

Not only does Charlottesville have a major ivy league university in UVA, but it has become a MAJOR higher end government job location now that NOVA has filled up. Some people actually live there and commute into NOVA/DC every morning. (I know because I used to do it till the pandemic hit, it's a long but easy drive.)

It's also one of the biggest population hubs in Virginia along with Hampton Roads, NOVA, and Richmond. The land alone would fetch a decent price if they had to demolish the house. Indeed, the areas around Ruckersville and soon to be Ruckersville proper are gentrifiying quickly. Charlottesville proper hasn't built much affordable housing the last decade and it's expensive as fuck to live within the city boundaries. The VAST majority of the population is actually homed in the surronding counties like Palmyra, Louisa or Mineral. Anyone with real money is either in the upscale parts of the city near the university or out at Lake Monticello; a high end, very nice gated community.

A LOT of you have obviously never lived in or passed through Virginia. Yes, Ruckersville is lower income for now, but it's right next to one of the biggest growing economic areas and highway lanes in the state. It's a very different situation compared to when Barb and Bob bought the house or even golden era Chris in the 00's.
 
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Kind of sucks what happened to Bob.

Had a nice house, nice job.

Then Barb and Chris happened, the house was lost to hoard, and then lost entirely.
 
Kind of sucks what happened to Bob.

Had a nice house, nice job.

Then Barb and Chris happened, the house was lost to hoard, and then lost entirely.
Honestly, even going as far back as 2009 with videos like "I WANT EVERYTHING ABOUT MY HOUSE OFF THE INTERNET!", Bob sounded senile or like his mental capacity was waning - I'm getting the impression that some time after Chris began to enter adulthood, that Bob's mental capacity started to decrease, to the point that any proactive involvement he had in Chris' life or his future more or less disappeared.

It did kind of surprise me, because at least in Chris' younger years, Bob seemed like a somewhat-active and involved father and something must have changed that.
 
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