Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like it’s set on higher ground. I’d give it consideration. We avoided houses that were on the down hill.
+1. If you look at the flood map on Redfin, the dark colors aren't near the house structure.
Anonymous wrote:Looks like it’s set on higher ground. I’d give it consideration. We avoided houses that were on the down hill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what
"Within the next 10 years, this property has a 91% chance of 1 inch of flood water reaching the building at least once. Within the next 15 years, this property has a 97% chance of 1 inch of flood water reaching the building at least once."
1 inch? Not worried. Do your homework OP but 1 inch doesn't worry me.
Part of my message got cut off. Meant to say "this is what Flood Factor data says"
If you look at the actual flood risk map on floodfactor.com, even the worst case scenario (the 0.2% risk) doesn't get water -- or even that close to -- to the house.
PP here - the "flood factor" data is very misleading in general. I wouldn't trust it, or at least I wouldn't rely on it to help me make my decision on whether or not to buy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what
"Within the next 10 years, this property has a 91% chance of 1 inch of flood water reaching the building at least once. Within the next 15 years, this property has a 97% chance of 1 inch of flood water reaching the building at least once."
1 inch? Not worried. Do your homework OP but 1 inch doesn't worry me.
Part of my message got cut off. Meant to say "this is what Flood Factor data says"
If you look at the actual flood risk map on floodfactor.com, even the worst case scenario (the 0.2% risk) doesn't get water -- or even that close to -- to the house.