Real Estate News
On Monday, heavy machinery got caught up in the process of removing a 5,100-square-foot housepiece and carrying the truck away.

The ruins of the house on a chunk of sand overlooking the beach in Wellfleet, Massachusetts, on February 25th.
WellFleet, Massachusetts (AP) – A gorgeous home that was about to fall into Cape Cod Bay due to erosion has been demolished.
The possibility of a collapse of the 5,100-square-foot home threatened an oyster bed in nearby Wellfleet Port, but the debate over its removal left it wobbling at the edge of a mass of sand for months. However, on Monday, a heavy machine got caught up in, deleting a housepiece and carrying the truck away. By Tuesday, only those concrete slabs, chimneys and generators remained.
“On the other hand, it’s sad because it was a beautiful home that became a landmark for the place,” said John Cobbler, a member of the Wellfleet Environmental Committee. “On the other hand, I’m pleased that it’s gone. It’s a great relief for our town and our environment.”
The gorgeous home is located nearby, tumbling down to Cape Cod Bay. Does anyone stop it?
Cobbler said the attorney for owner John Bonomi submitted a request to town last week to remove the house. Bonomi’s attorney declined to comment on the Associated Press.
The house was built in 2010 on the bay side of the Cape Cod Peninsula. The original owners sought permission in 2018 to build a seawall to stop the erosion. The committee rejected Seawall due to unintended effects on the beach and concerns about how it would carry the bay’s nutrients. They also questioned whether it would save the house.
In 2019, New York lawyer Bonomi bought the house for $5.5 million.
Meanwhile, erosion has progressed. A report prepared for Wellfleet last year estimated that the house could fall into a bluff within three years, sending the wreckage to the town’s port where shellfish farmers grow oysters of the same name, and the Environmental Commission asked Bonomi to plan to remove the house.
Just a week before the demolition, strong winds hit the cape for three days, exposing more concrete pillars of the house.
Bonomi’s lawyer told the committee at a January meeting that it had been sold to the House to a rescue company that would not fund the removal of the House. However, town conservation agents noted that no transfer of the act was recorded at the time, and neither did check records on Tuesday nor found a record of the sale.
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