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New Orleans -  6 bedrooms, 5 baths Keeping Room Finished Basement Extra large bonus room upstairs Level Backyard, Premium lot Brick front, HardiplankMore Info -->


 
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Foreclosure is the legal process by which a property, which has promised to repay the loan or debt may be sold to help pay back the loan, if it is in default. After it has been decided to continue the process, the property sold by public auction or trustee for the foreclosure sale. Some lien holders may also close to other assets such as debts, unpaid bills, or overdue taxes of employees.

          Many people looking to start a family, seek to live ina place they can call home. Nowadays, with high foreclosure rates, which will take place throughout the nation has created an opportunity for many potential buyers look for bargains. And now, we could have a great time to buy real estate in Louisiana. Investing in a foreclosure, you can create a huge profit. Many properties, which are sold in foreclosure auctions attract hundreds of bidders. But when the first service provider, which has local rules, surveys, and inspecting the property to ensure the loan is taken before the tip can be useful. 

 


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About Audubon Foreclosure



Audubon Park is a city park is located in New Orleans. The park is about six miles to the west of New Orleans and the city center sits on land that was purchased by the city in 1871. It is bounded on one side of the Mississippi River and the other by the Tulane and Loyola universities. Park is in honor of the artist and naturalist John James Audubon who lived in New Orleans since 1821.

The land now housing the park was the colonial plantation days. This was the last major part of what was to become uptown New Orleans is not divided into residential redevelopment and 19 century. Was used by the confederate and Union armies in the U.S. Civil War, and the staging area for the Buffalo Soldiers. The area was annexed by the City of New Orleans, together with the surrounding communities in Jefferson City and the Green below the above-mentioned, in 1870, and the following year the city bought the land. Was used in the city park from the beginning, which was originally assigned to the "Upper City Park," but little was done for the first ten years. The land was to house the world fair, the World Cotton Centennial of 1884. Following the closure of the fair site, it was surrounded by a park, designed by Frederick Law Olmstead.

Audubon golf course opened in 1898 to the park.

At the beginning of the 20th part of the century the park became home to the Audubon Zoo.

Such early and mid-20th century park attractions such as the miniature railway, a swimming pool and the swan boats in the lagoons was completed in 1970.

The ring road around the park was closed at the beginning of the automobile traffic in 1980 and became a popular jogging and biking path.

In 2002, the golf course was renovated and expanded, the complaints are not many users of the park's golf than the original Olmstead design was damaged. That same year, the park around the City of New Orleans "Avenger Field", that "David Berger - Avenger Field in memory of David Mark Berger, graduated from Tulane University and adjacent to the other victims of terrorism.

Many of the park's old live oak trees have been blown down, when Hurricane Katrina struck the city in 2005, but because the park is part of the high ground near the river removed, it was more the majority of the flooding of the city after Katrina. It is used as a makeshift encampment for a helicopter port and National Guard troops and aid workers after the storm.

The Zoo and Aquarium with the golf course is open Tuesday to Saturday.

 

 

 


 



 

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