"We want to provide the best quality product that we can," Colburn told 5 On Your Side. "And then it’s up to me and my business partner, as project managers, to make sure the things they are quoting us on are being done and done correctly."Ĭolburn says their end goal of doing the job right, over turning a bigger profit. "Bringing in the trades, getting us our bids on what’s going to be done," Colburn says. His company just finished a house flip in Durham and he talked with 5 On Your Side about his process and how he says his company tries to execute these projects the right way.Ĭolburn says his company relies heavily on their licensed general contractor to vet workers. So, we can help add to that supply by fixing up these houses," said Adam Colburn, Owner of Oak and Arrow Home Solutions. "There’s never a problem with demand, it’s more the supply. They play an important role in the housing market. "I would say that right now, the large majority of our remodeling complaints are related to investors who are buying homes," Thoren said.īut just because a home is flipped doesn’t mean it’s a bad thing. Of course, the problem isn’t just people who watched a show and decided they want to flip a house. "It is the most of any year, by far," says Janet Thoren, Legal Counsel for the North Carolina Real Estate Commission. North Carolina’s Real Estate Commission just set their own overall complaint record at 1,683. ![]() ![]() His agency is heading for a record number of overall complaints this year, currently they have 655. "We’re getting more complaints now about house flipping across the state and especially in the rural parts of the state," Wiesner told 5 On Your Side. "But you cant believe what you see on TV all the time," warned Wiesner, because there’s a lot to the process that gets left out. Seeing a house transformed in 30 minutes might make anyone think they could flip a home.
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