Wanna Buy an RV Park?
Where the town failed, money finally prevailed. The Rocking H has gone into bankruptcy the banko court has asked for outside help in attempting to liquidate the park as an asset. RV Park Consulting responded to the job, and wrote this interesting squib on the park's condition:
"The Rocking H is permitted for 150 RV sites on city sewer and city utilities. Some sites are narrow. Most of all, the park has been let go. First impression is to bring in a bulldozer. The pool is drained (it leaked) paint peeling, 2400 square foot clubhouse needs re-roofing. It has been used for “storage”. There are piles of junk on site. There is a single wide mobile home with two doors which is used as two rental units. The other rental cabins on site need to be renovated or replaced. There are older mobile homes on site also. The existing park doesn’t entice modern RVers to stay. "
We know from first-hand experience some of the "conditions" at the "H." Some years back we had a group that rented the "clubhouse" on a weekly basis for meetings. The lighting was almost non-existent, heat was non-existent, and we'd tell everybody to be sure to visit their own bathroom before they came, because the toilets were closed and padlocked.
Why would anyone want to buy the Rocking H? RV Park Consulting thinks the "H" would be an ideal "project" to pick up for a song, invest a few more dollars in, then turn around and sold as "condo units." How much of a song are they singing? The firm figures an investment of a little over two and a quarter million to buy out the old park, another couple million for improvements, and then sell out 94 "condos" at anywhere between $70,000 and $125,000 each.
We propose a much better idea: How about a new Escapees park? With volunteer labor that $2 million in improvement costs could certainly be reduced substantially. And with as popular an area for RVing as Quartzsite is, this fulltiming RV group could hardly do better for a new location. The big fight over sewage disposal is over--according to the consultants, the park is now hooked up to city sewer. With that major hurdle out of the way, this could be an ideal opportunity for SKPs to make more moves into Arizona. We'll get a few photos and post a followup shortly.


