-40%

Broward County, Tamarac Florida Commercial Property / Pre-Foreclosure

$ 263.47

Availability: 13 in stock
  • Zoning: Commercial
  • State/Province: New York
  • Seller State of Residence: New York
  • Acreage: 0.02
  • City: Tamarac, Florida
  • Property Address: W COMMERCIAL BOULEVARD, TAMARAC, FL
  • Type: Recreational, Acreage
  • Zip/Postal Code: 33351

    Description

    Serious Bidders Only
    Non-Payment at the end of Auction
    may result the Suspension of your eBay Account.
    This is a CASH SALE! Not for Payments!
    No Minimum! No Reserve! High Bid Wins This Auction!
    This could be your chance to go into Business and Get Paid
    every month by just Putting up a Billboard for
    Advertisement on one of the most busiest highways in Florida!
    Legal Description:
    LYONS COMMERCIAL SUBDIVISION UNIT NO 2 69-43 B LOTS 4 & 5
    BLK 9,LESS S 7 & LESSPOR DESC IN OR 31932/1254 & LESS
    POR DESC IN OR 36866/1013
    Lot Size:
    0.02 ac = 1,200 sf
    Property Address:
    W COMMERCIAL BOULEVARD,
    TAMARAC, FL 33351
    Florida Real Estate Properties and Land go up Every Year!
    "Don't Wait to buy land, Buy Land and wait" - Will Rogers
    "He is not a full man who does not own a piece of land." - Hebrew Proverb.
    Commercial Boulevard
    Commercial Boulevard is a 15.2-mile-long (24.5 km) highway serving northern Broward County, Florida, mostly designated as State Road 870 (SR 870). The road extends from its western terminus in Sunrise at SR 869, the Sawgrass Expressway, and serves as a major commercial route through Oakland Park, and Fort Lauderdale, intersecting Florida's Turnpike, U.S. Route 441 (US 441), Interstate 95 (I-95) and US 1 before reaching its eastern terminus at SR A1A (Ocean Boulevard) in Lauderdale-by-the-Sea, Florida.
    The westernmost 2.7 miles (4.3 km) of Commercial Boulevard are designated, but not signed, as County Road 870 (CR 870).
    Route description
    Commercial Boulevard begins at exit 5 of the Sawgrass Expressway, with SR 870 beginning at SR 817 (University Drive). The road heads east, with an interchange with the Turnpike, followed by an intersection with US 441. Entering Fort Lauderdale, SR 870 intersects with Powerline Road, and then enters Oakland Park, passing by Fort Lauderdale Executive Airport, Lockhart Stadium, and Fort Lauderdale Stadium before an interchange with Interstate 95. Continuing east, SR 870 intersects with State Road 811 before reentering Fort Lauderdale, intersecting with US 1. It then enters Lauderdale-by-the-Sea and reaches its eastern terminus at an intersection with State Road A1A (Ocean Boulevard).
    Tamarac, Florida
    Tamarac is a city in Broward County, Florida, United States. As of the 2010 United States Census, the city had a population of 60,427. It is part of the Miami/Fort Lauderdale area, which was home to an estimated 6,012,331 people in 2015.
    Geography
    Tamarac is located at 26°12′13″N 80°14′47″W (26.203581, -80.246376). According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 12.1 square miles (31.3 km2), of which 11.6 square miles (30.1 km2) is land and 0.46 square miles (1.2 km2) is water (3.92%).
    Broward County, Florida
    Not to be confused with Brevard County, Florida.
    Broward County is a county located in Southeast Florida. It is the second-most populous county in the state of Florida and the 17th-most populous in the United States, with over 1.94 Million inhabitants as of the 2020 census. Its county seat and largest city is Fort Lauderdale, which had over 180,000 people in 2020.
    Broward County is one of the three counties in which make up the Miami metropolitan area, which was home to 6.14 Million people in 2020. It is also one of the most ethnically diverse counties in the entire country.
    The county has 31 municipalities, which consist of 24 incorporated cities and many unincorporated areas. It is also Florida's seventh-largest county in terms of land area, with 1,322.8 square miles (3,426 km2). Broward County's urbanized area occupies 427.8 square miles of land. The largest portion of the county is the Conservation Area that extends to the county's Western border. The conservation area is 796.9 square miles and consists of wetlands. At its widest points, the County stretches approximately 50.3 miles east to west and approximately 27.4 miles from north to south, averaging 5 to 25 feet in elevation.
    History
    Native people
    The earliest evidence of Native American settlement in the Miami region came from about 12,000 years ago. The first inhabitants settled on the banks of the Miami River, with the main villages on the northern banks.
    The inhabitants at the time of first European contact were the Tequesta people, who controlled much of southeastern Florida, including what is now Miami-Dade County, Broward County, and the southern part of Palm Beach County. The Tequesta Indians fished, hunted, and gathered the fruit and roots of plants for food, but did not practice any form of agriculture. They buried the small bones of the deceased with the rest of the body, and put the larger bones in a box for the village people to see. The Tequesta are credited with making the Miami Circle.
    Founding of Broward
    Although the area has been settled since about 1400 B.C., Broward County was founded on April 30, 1915. It was intended to be named Everglades County, but then-Speaker of the Florida House of Representatives Ion Farris amended the bill that established the county to name it in honor of Napoleon Bonaparte Broward, governor of Florida from 1905 to 1909. Throughout his term as governor, Broward championed Everglades drainage and was remembered for his campaign to turn the Everglades into ?useful land?. This opened up much of today's urban Broward County for development, first as agricultural land and later as residential. A year before Broward became governor, Dania became the first incorporated community of what is now Broward County, followed by Pompano in 1908, and Fort Lauderdale in 1911.
    In 1915, Palm Beach County and Dade County contributed nearly equal portions of land to create Broward County. Dixie Highway was also completed through Broward County in 1915. In 1916, the settlement of "Zona" was renamed Davie in recognition of Robert P. Davie, a land developer who purchased a great deal of reclaimed Everglades land.
    Broward County began a huge development boom after its incorporation, with the first "tourist hotel", in Fort Lauderdale, opening in 1919. A year later, developers began dredging wetlands in the county to create island communities.
    Geography
    According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has an area of 1,323 square miles (3,430 km2), of which 1,210 square miles (3,100 km2) is land and 113 square miles (290 km2) (8.5%) is water.
    Broward County has an average elevation of six feet (1.8 m) above sea level. It is rather new geologically and at the eastern edge of the Florida Platform, a carbonate plateau created millions of years ago. Broward County is composed of Oolite limestone while western Broward is composed mostly of Bryozoa. Broward is among the last areas of Florida to be created and populated with fauna and flora, mostly in the Pleistocene.
    Of developable land in Broward County, approximately 471 square miles (1,219.9 km2), the majority is built upon, as the urban area is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean to the east and the Everglades Wildlife Management Area to the west. Within developable land, Broward County has a population density of 3,740 per square mile (1,444 per square kilometer).
    Broward approved the construction of Osborne Reef, an artificial reef made of tires off the Fort Lauderdale beach, but it has proven an environmental disaster. - Wikipedia.org
    Adjacent counties
    Palm Beach County - north
    Miami-Dade County - south
    Collier County - west
    Hendry County - northwest
    Nature and wildlife areas:
    Butterfly World, Coconut Creek
    Anne Kolb Nature Center, Hollywood
    Butterfly World, a botanical sanctuary in Coconut Creek
    Fern Forest Nature Center, Coconut Creek
    Flamingo Gardens, a botanical garden and wildlife sanctuary
    Secret Woods Nature Center, Dania Beach
    Sawgrass Recreation Park
    The Everglades parks, which have multiple entrances in Broward County
    Other areas and attractions:
    Hollywood Beach Boardwalk
    Beach Place, a strip of stores, restaurants,
    and bars across the street from the beach along the
    Atlantic coast, in Ft. Lauderdale
    Broward Center for the Performing Arts
    Hollywood Boardwalk
    Florida Grand Opera
    Fort Lauderdale Swap Shop (colloquially known to locals as simply the Swap Shop)
    Sawgrass Mills, a large outlet shopping mall in Sunrise
    The BB&T Center in Sunrise, where the NHL's Florida Panthers play their games
    The Festival Flea Market Mall in Pompano Beach, America's largest indoor flea market
    Riverwalk (Fort Lauderdale)
    Additionally, with 23 miles of beach, Broward County is a popular destination for scuba diving, snorkeling, and droves of young Spring break tourists from around the world.
    Pictures and Places to Go in the Area:
    Fern Forest Nature Center
    Woodmont Natural Area
    Waters Edge Park
    Sawgrass Lanes
    Hop on Hop off Bus
    Jungle Queen
    Mai Kai Restaurant
    Fort Lauderdale
    Pompano Beach
    Hollywood
    Deerfield Beach
    Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino
    Museum of Discovery and Science
    Bonnet House Museum & Gardens
    Helicopter Tours
    Florida Everglades Airboat Adventure and
    Wildlife Encounter
    Fishing Charters
    Day Cruises to the Bahamas
    Miami
    South Beach
    Snorkeling
    Jungle Island
    Miami Seaquarium
    Deep Sea Fishing
    Videos of fun things to do in the Area:
    https://youtu.be/nccnwAgZJCE (Westpoint Retail Plaza - W. Commercial Blvd,
    Tamarac, Florida)
    https://youtu.be/19h1k0MaK7c (W. Commercial Blvd., Tamarac,
    FL Presented by Andrea Aragon.)
    https://youtu.be/cWlpaok2BS4 (Anglin's Fishing Pier and the
    shops of Commercial Blvd. Fort Lauderdale, Florida 9/11/2020)
    https://youtu.be/lbmQCTDvfoM (Top 10 Things To Do in Fort Lauderdale and Miami)
    https://youtu.be/zTjeKgBxLTc (10 things to do in South Florida)
    https://youtu.be/Opitp1tJ9d4 (11 Things to do in Fort Lauderdale)
    https://youtu.be/0wxkE60xw5E (20 Best Things To Do in Florida - Miami, Orlando, Tampa Travel Guide!)
    https://youtu.be/35Wyo1OMfvo (Best Places to Live in Broward County FL)
    Read Entire Auction Before Bidding. Read TERMS and CONDITIONS.
    Read Before Bid! Any questions contact before auction ends.
    This is a County Delinquent Taxes Sale. BY WINNING THIS AUCTION YOU WILL HAVE THE RIGHT TO FORECLOSE ON THIS PARCEL AND GET A MARKETABLE DEED DIRECTLY THROUGH THE COUNTY !!!
    You will receive all the Transfer Paperwork in just 3-4 business days after your payment is received!
    Do Not Hesitate to Ask Any Questions Prior Bidding!
    Buyer is advised to do any and all due diligence before bidding.
    You are bidding on the lien that is secured by this parcel and may initiate the foreclosure process by applying a Tax Deed Application through the county at any time from 3 months to after 2 years have elapsed since April 1 of the year of the issuance of the lien and before the expiration of 7 years from the date of issuance in accordance with Florida Statute 197.502, Florida Statutes.
    Grantee of Tax Deed entitled to immediate possession (Reference: Florida Statute 197.562)
    PAYMENT:
    The Transfer Documentation Fee of 9.00 will be added to your Final Bid Amount.
    The Total Payment is due within 4 business days.
    The payment can be made by certified funds: Certified Cashier's Check, Postal Money Order,
    Credit Card, Cash App, PayPal or Zelle.
    The Document Transfer to Buyer from County takes about 2-4 weeks after payment clears.
    Contact us in 24hrs after the close of the auction to make the payment or 50% deposit. If total funds are not received within 4 days (unless you notify us to extend a payment due date), the winning bidder will be reported to eBay as a non-payer and/or have bidder eBay account being suspended and /or being responsible to pay any and/or all fees associated with posting this listing and you would have forfeited the deposit.
    TERMS and CONDITIONS:
    Your bid is a binding contract to pay the amount of your bid if you are the winning bidder.
    By bidding, you agree that you have:
    a. Made ALL DUE DILIGENCE regarding the auction item and bidding; accordingly, or
    b. Waived your right(s) of doing your DUE DILIGENCE and are bidding at your own risk and on your own
    decision to do so.
    c. Read and Agreed with current Terms and Conditions of this auction.
    d. There are additional fees if you decide to do a foreclose.
    READ before you BID!
    ASK ANY QUESTIONS NOW before you bid and buy!
    We have listed all information accurately and to the best of our knowledge, but you MUST do your OWN due diligence before you bid, NOT after the auction has closed.
    IF you wait until AFTER you have won the auction to ask questions, we will NOT be responsible for your lack of due diligence!
    All sales are final, no refunds will be given, unless the lien is redeemed during the transfer process. In this case, the seller reserves the rights to give a refund or substitute the item of similar value.
    Please note that this auction is not an immediate sale of the real property. The winning bidder of this auction will receive a legal document, tax lien certificate, representing a first lien against the property (Florida Statutes 197.102 (3) and may foreclose and gain title to the property in accordance with The Florida Statutes 197.502 https://www.leg.state.fl.us/Statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&Search_String=&URL=0100-0199/0197/Sections/0197.502.html
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    Look, you get the first lien rights on the property which gives you 18% interest and the
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    We will be happy to answer your questions and guide you through the foreclosure
    Process.
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    Thank You and Happy Bidding!