Louisiana Foreclosure Listings

  Mortgage Calculator Avoiding Foreclosure  
  Bankruptcy Foreclosure Lawyers  
 

Featured Listing:

Foreclosure Map

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


 
Neighborhoods
Audubon
Central City
Central Biz District
City Park
Destrehan
French Quarter
Garden District
Harvey
Irish Channel
Kenner
Lakeview
Metairie
Navarre
River Ridge
St. Thomas
Uptown
West End

Overview

 

Home Foreclosure

How to Find Foreclosure Listings


 

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. 

 


View Listings-->

About Navarre Foreclosure



Navarre is part of the 4th Ward in New Orleans. It is limited to City Park to the east, I-610, which is the Lakeview neighborhood, which lies to the north, I-10 (formerly the New Basin Canal route), to the west and City Park Avenue (formerly BAYOU Metairie Road) to south, which is the Mid City New Orleans.

Contains a near Delgado Community College, the local Public Broadcasting Service television studios, and WYES-12 Greenwood, St. Patrick, Holt, and cemeteries. Most of the rest of the neighborhood is residential, mostly white middle and working class, a smattering of neighborhood businesses. Canal Boulevard, located in the main streets running north-south and Navarre Avenue, then east to west.

At the beginning of the 19th century, which could be of Navarre was mainly undeveloped swamp land a good distance from the young people in the developed parts of the city along the Mississippi River. The narrow high ground of Metairie was BAYOU beside the road, along the sides of the farmland was developed. The first area is an important turning point, to be developed in Greenwood Cemetery to 1852. Canal Street, City Park, and Lake Pontchartrain Railway drove along one edge of the neighborhood on its way out along the side of Orleans Canal Old Spanish Fort on Lake Pontchartrain. Otherwise, the earth at a distance equivalent to a couple of quarters ago, Metairie path swamp.

The 1880s and 1890s saw the first work back to the swampland area of development and 20 back to the beginning of the century the area of Florida Avenue was a large part of water. There was a significant development, mostly white, middle class single family residential homes, in 1920. Region, the back part of Navarre was the site of radio facilities in the United Fruit Company, until it is residentially converted 1940s.

 



 

Real Estate Information
New Orleans Apartments
New Orleans Jobs
 
Articles
Finding Bargains
Researching Foreclosure
 
Other Regions
Louisiana Foreclosures
Philadelphia Foreclosures
Charlotte Foreclosures
Columbus Foreclosures
Nashville Foreclosures
Baltimore Foreclosures
New York Foreclosures
Houston Foreclosures
Philadelphia Foreclosures
Seattle Foreclosures
Phoenix Foreclosures
Detroit Foreclosures
Chicago Foreclosures
Boston Foreclosures
Dallas Foreclosures
Riverside Foreclosures
Miami Foreclosures
© 2009 New Orleans Foreclosures | Privacy Policy | BPO Outsourcing Services |