To the government, it was a defunct offshore light tower that hadn't
helped ships navigate the waters off North Carolina in more than a
decade. To a Minnesota entrepreneur, the platform out in the Atlantic is
a launching pad for research into wind power and other technologies.
First,
some renovations will be needed at the Diamond Shoals Light Tower,
which sits about 13 miles off Cape Hatteras. Its buyer hopes to get his
first view of his new property next week – provided, of course, that the
landing pad is sturdy enough for a helicopter.
“The pilot says
he's confident it will be OK,” said Dave Schneider of Richfield, Minn.,
who plans to chopper out Wednesday for his first look. “He says if we
try to land and it looks shaky, we're not going to land.”
Schneider,
56, paid $20,000 for the tower and platform in September after he was
the only bidder for it in an auction by the General Services
Administration, which sells real estate that the federal government no
longer needs. In doing so, he brushed aside the GSA's 2-year-old
inspection that concluded it would cost $2.3 million to renovate the
structure that resembles an oil rig platform.
He pored over the
125-page engineering report before deciding it wasn't in as poor shape
as it first appeared. It's sturdy, sitting in 50 feet of water and with
pylons going 150 feet into the seabed. Of the renovation estimate, $1
million is for a boat-winching system and boat, neither of which he
needs. Another $189,000 was earmarked for contingencies, and part of the
renovation was for labor, some of which Schneider will do himself.
And then, there's the view.
“When
you look at real estate, it's always location, location, location,” he
said. “Who wouldn't want to have a location in the Atlantic Ocean?”
The
Diamond Shoals Light Tower was made operational in 1966 to help ships
cross a treacherous area nicknamed the Graveyard of the Atlantic.We
mainly supply professional craftspeople with crys talbeads wholesale
shamballa Bracele , It was automated in 1977, removing the need for a
full-time Coast Guard Crew. Its condition deteriorated over the years,
and the light was extinguished in December 2001.
Schneider plans
to be on the tower for four to five hours Wednesday, using cameras on
hard hats to record his tour of each room, including getting
measurements for all of it. The living quarters housed below the landing
pad include five bedrooms, a galley and a recreation room.
The light tower isn't the only unusual property available through GSA auctions. For example,Quickparts builds injection molds
using aluminum or steel to meet your program. the former Stanley
Mickelsen Safeguard Complex near Hampden, N.D. – the country's first
anti-ballistic nuclear missile defense system – is up for grabs, as is a
cave storage facility in Atchison, Kansas. Some properties never go up
for auction, said Lori Dennis, GSA branch chief in real property
utilization and disposal in Atlanta.
The government worked with
local leaders to turn a former munitions plant in Chattanooga, Tenn.,
into a Volkswagen plant that makes Passats, she said. “We do get a lot
of unusual properties, and we're traditionally successful at getting rid
of them,” she said.
Business-oriented, methodical people tend
to buy traditional properties such as federal buildings, while more
daring, entrepreneurial types buy nonconventional properties such as
light towers, she said.
That's true of Schneider, who is
president of a supplies and logistics firm that works with government
contracts. He also serves as president and CEO of Zap Water Technology,
which installs equipment that turns water and salt into an eco-friendly
sanitizer and cleaner in meat plants, schools and other places.
He
wants to use the tower for research not only by Zap Water, but by other
companies. He envisions researchers taking advantage of the tower's
enormous space to study wind turbines, solar power, climatology, metal
coatings, marine biology,Interlocking security cable ties with 250 pound strength makes this ideal for restraining criminals. and other subjects.
“There's tons of different research industries I would like to bring out there,” he said.
Before
Schneider bought the tower, he consulted Richard Neal of Mint Hill, who
bought North Carolina's other light tower two years ago for $85,000.
After restoring the tower in Frying Pan Shoals, including adding a hoist
so people can get from a boat to the tower without climbing, he opened a
bed and breakfast at the site in June. For $300 per person, plus the
cost of transportation, people can spend a weekend diving and fishing or
just watching movies and sunsets from 30 miles off Southport.
His
advice? “Keep the long-term perspective. Fix the things you need to fix
first. Keep a healthy dose of patience and explain to people what
you're trying to do. And they'll want to help.”
Schneider does
hope to recruit volunteers willing to help renovate the tower in
exchange for some breathtaking views and unmatched fishing and diving
opportunities.
He said he's no different than the person who
wants to restore a 1966 Camaro and sees one that's rusted and
dilapidated but still beautiful.The oreck XL professional air purifier,
“I have the same situation. It's just a heckuva lot bigger,” Schneider
said. “It's old, it's rusty and it was made in 1966.Purelink's real time location system protect healthcare workers in their daily practices and OMEGA interventions. But there's a lot of potential there.”
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