Navigation X
ALERT
Click here to register with a few steps and explore all our cool stuff we have to offer!



 5231

A million dollar parking space was sold

by rafalmar1981 - 25 October, 2019 - 02:07 AM
This post is by a banned member (watersquad) - Unhide
23
Posts
1
Threads
4 Years of service
#9
That's great news LMAO
This post is by a banned member (hudakj) - Unhide
hudakj  
Registered
12
Posts
0
Threads
4 Years of service
#10
BIG NEWS!

Might be better to start investing in a parking garage instead.
This post is by a banned member (Yellowfoxx) - Unhide
24
Posts
1
Threads
4 Years of service
#11
(25 October, 2019 - 02:07 AM)rafalmar1981 Wrote: Show More
A parking space for nearly $ 1 million has been sold in Hong Kong, reports Bloomberg. It is possible that this is the highest price for this type of property in the world.

The parking space was sold for 7.6 million Hong Kong dollars, or 970 thousand. dollars. US. This is the equivalent of PLN 3.8 million.

This is insane, probably the parking spot is something from 3 to 10 time more expensive than the car itself
This post is by a banned member (longlife) - Unhide
This post is by a banned member (lamaiden974) - Unhide
148
Posts
7
Threads
5 Years of service
#13
I would have bet it was in Hong Kong. That place is so expensive.
This post is by a banned member (jameswew) - Unhide
jameswew  
Registered
4
Posts
0
Threads
4 Years of service
#14
Talking about parking spaces...
"Gregory W. Nemitz claimed ownership of Asteroid 433 Eros, on which NEAR Shoemaker landed in 2001. His company, called "Orbital Development",[23] issued NASA an invoice of $20 for parking the spacecraft at the asteroid. NASA declined to pay, citing the lack of legal standing."
This post is by a banned member (able999) - Unhide
able999  
Registered
4
Posts
0
Threads
5 Years of service
#15
(15 March, 2020 - 02:56 AM)jameswew Wrote: Show More
Talking about parking spaces...
"Gregory W. Nemitz claimed ownership of Asteroid 433 Eros, on which NEAR Shoemaker landed in 2001. His company, called "Orbital Development",[23] issued NASA an invoice of $20 for parking the spacecraft at the asteroid. NASA declined to pay, citing the lack of legal standing."

Will smaller orbiting bodies be the parking lots of the future?
This post is by a banned member (TheNewFDR) - Unhide

Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
or
Sign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 2 Guest(s)