|
Inner Light posted:
lol yes that sucks. You want space on both sides of the stove. Also no backsplash and like H110 said the microwave won't open all the way. No one who gives a gently caress and/or knows how to cook was involved with the creation of that "kitchen". Countertops are a preference but.....ewwww. I'm not sure if I hate the countertops or if they just absolutely don't match with anything else in there or both. Bonus points on the past-counter-depth fridge that is taking up your already limited space in front of the stove. I bet the oven door barely clears 90 degrees. Motronic fucked around with this message at 02:57 on Feb 23, 2021 |
# ? Feb 23, 2021 02:54 |
|
|
# ? Jun 4, 2024 19:43 |
|
Inner Light posted:
There is nothing about this kitchen that I like except for the fact that it's more open than a standard galley kitchen. But otherwise, literally nothing.
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 03:01 |
|
This is great lol. I will go ahead and cancel my tour of that hovel. I would post more pics in this thread especially of the condos I'm strong on, the issue is they can easily be reverse image searched so if I win an offer goons will have my address!
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 03:06 |
|
My oven is currently up against a wall and if there wasn't electrical on the other side I would have torn that poo poo out the day I moved in. Having no clearance on one side of your cooktop suckssss.
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 03:09 |
|
Sirotan posted:My oven is currently up against a wall and if there wasn't electrical on the other side I would have torn that poo poo out the day I moved in. Having no clearance on one side of your cooktop suckssss. Did you notice this when you considered the place and it just wasn't a dealbreaker for you, with the other factors about it? That's one thing I'm figuring out, what are downsides and which downsides reach the level of dealbreakers. i.e. I can dislike countertops or bathroom vanities but those shouldn't be dealbreakers, usually.
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 03:12 |
|
Inner Light posted:Did you notice this when you considered the place and it just wasn't a dealbreaker for you, with the other factors about it? That's one thing I'm figuring out, what are downsides and which downsides reach the level of dealbreakers. i.e. I can dislike countertops or bathroom vanities but those shouldn't be dealbreakers, usually. Yes. I bought my place with the intention of completely redoing the kitchen within the first year or two (or three or four...), so I'm putting up with how lovely and gross it is right now. The best advice I got from my realtor was to focus on the things I can't change. My house is a fixer upper, but the location is excellent, and the layout is really nice, and it has other features I wouldn't compromise on and that are hard or impossible to add on otherwise (a basement, garage, etc). Countertops can be changed, depending on the space, layouts might not be.
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 03:30 |
|
Sirotan posted:My oven is currently up against a wall and if there wasn't electrical on the other side I would have torn that poo poo out the day I moved in. Having no clearance on one side of your cooktop suckssss. I have a half-wall on the right side of my stove. It's actually got all the water pipes in it. I know because they failed to hold in all the water at one point. Anyway... The half-wall is actually pretty alright because it means the stuff I put on the other side of it is protected from the stove while not blocking my arm from making movements and still giving me decent access to the counter on that side. I would hate it if it were just a full wall, though, for sure. Inner Light posted:Did you notice this when you considered the place and it just wasn't a dealbreaker for you, with the other factors about it? That's one thing I'm figuring out, what are downsides and which downsides reach the level of dealbreakers. i.e. I can dislike countertops or bathroom vanities but those shouldn't be dealbreakers, usually. When I was buying houses, yeah what Sirotan said - biggest dealbreakers were things that I couldn't change. For me, the kitchen was really important so many houses where the kitchen was too small or blocked off from the rest of the house, I didn't even look at. Places where there wasn't a vent to the outside and where one couldn't be added easily were also eliminated, things like that.
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 03:38 |
|
A buddy found this potentially ever-so-slightly gem which is an exquisite example of how not to stage a property for sale. It's a duplex. Half of it's just poorly designed, cluttered, and very messy. Half of it's decorated with stuff that I assume was too gaudy for a McMansion. Oh, also, the "nice" part of the duplex is filled with an uncomfortable number of mannequins. NWS tagged for the naked mannequin.
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 05:25 |
|
poeticoddity posted:A buddy found this potentially ever-so-slightly gem which is an exquisite example of how not to stage a property for sale. But aside from the, uh, decor that is likely fetish related, it doesn’t look good and feels decidedly un-Tahoe. I don’t think I’ve ever been in a Tahoe house that didn’t have some kind of wood paneling in it. Edit: oh it does have wood paneling! I can see it in one of the bedrooms, painted white.
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 07:29 |
|
Inner Light posted:
In the future, if you can’t open the oven and the fridge at the same time, then it should probably be a deal breaker. Jokes aside, an oven against a wall like that will guarantee you burn yourself at least once. You’ll eventually get lazy and stop lowering the oven door all the way down then sliding the middle rack out. You’ll start leaning and twisting to cook something. that’s when you misjudge the angle and tap your forearm against the open door.
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 09:18 |
|
skipdogg posted:I can't imaging just buying a house in a city I've never lived in. This is what my partner and I are potentially doing. We at least have friends in two of the top 5 possible cities, one of which I'm familiar with from visiting but not super familiar with neighbourhoods/living areas. Related, but are there any recs for shorter rental stuff, or is that probably specific to different cities? Airbnb was a big nope, friend recommended VRBO(I think that's what it was, my partner checked it out) and they were absurdly expensive. Every rental on Zillow that we're seeing is for a full 12 month lease. Fuuuuck, it's less than a month away and I just want to know where the gently caress I'm going to be spending the next 5-9 years of my life
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 12:45 |
|
Johnny Truant posted:This is what my partner and I are potentially doing. We at least have friends in two of the top 5 possible cities, one of which I'm familiar with from visiting but not super familiar with neighbourhoods/living areas. Idk what it's like where you are, but we've often used Airbnb for medium term (1-3 months) rentals during low demand parts of the year. You can often get 10-30% below advertised, even if they already have long stay discounts, if you contact a bunch of them
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 13:35 |
|
AmbientParadox posted:In the future, if you can’t open the oven and the fridge at the same time, then it should probably be a deal breaker. The parallel scars on my right forearm from my last apartment confirm
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 14:19 |
|
pointsofdata posted:Idk what it's like where you are, but we've often used Airbnb for medium term (1-3 months) rentals during low demand parts of the year. You can often get 10-30% below advertised, even if they already have long stay discounts, if you contact a bunch of them We only performed a cursory search for one city for longer term rentals on Airbnb and found 0 luck, but I'm gonna be doing some more digging this week or next. Need to maybe search for 'sublet' or something on craigslist, too.. I'm sure the pandemic is not doing us any favours.
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 14:20 |
|
AmbientParadox posted:In the future, if you can’t open the oven and the fridge at the same time, then it should probably be a deal breaker.
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 15:13 |
|
Are wrought iron burglar bars on some houses in an older area I'm looking at a big deal? I didn't think twice about it initially before but my paranoid mom said something about it when I was showing her a house I like. Do keep in mind she's a suburbanite boomer and would not live in any city interior. I already assume I should improve the doors to the house so that they're harder to kick in and maybe add the shatter resistant film to the windows and maybe motion activated flood lights and rosebushes under windows and I'll be fine for the most part, but that's what I would do with any house I buy. I told her that property crime is in every city and you should just make your house harder than the next house to gently caress with and that would deal with everyone except someone intent or targeting you specifically, which is a bigger loving problem and probably not related to the neighborhood you live in. Buying a house is activating my fear response
biceps crimes fucked around with this message at 15:25 on Feb 23, 2021 |
# ? Feb 23, 2021 15:20 |
|
Dik Hz posted:I'm in this post and I don't like it. Not empty quoting my old lovely apartment.
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 15:25 |
|
gay_crimes posted:Are wrought iron burglar bars on some houses in an older area I'm looking at a big deal? I didn't think twice about it initially before but my paranoid mom said something about it when I was showing her a house I like. Do keep in mind she's a suburbanite boomer and would not live in any city interior. I already assume I should improve the doors to the house so that they're harder to kick in and maybe add the shatter resistant film to the windows and maybe motion activated flood lights and rosebushes under windows and I'll be fine for the most part, but that's what I would do with any house I buy. I told her that property crime is in every city and you should just make your house harder than the next house to gently caress with and that would deal with everyone except someone intent or targeting you specifically, which is a bigger loving problem and probably not related to the neighborhood you live in. Buying a house is activating my fear response Post / username combo lol. In all seriousness, look up the crime stats for the neighborhood. Bars on a few windows could mean anything from there being a legit problem with break-ins to the neighborhood having been a bit rough 30 years ago. Or maybe a couple non-white families moved in and some octogenarians poo poo themselves and decided to bunker up while posting frantically to Nextdoor about how "the neighborhood is changing "
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 15:28 |
|
A lot of neighborhoods in NYC still have burglar bars even though the area gentrified and there isn't much crime while yuppie couples get $10 coffees pushing $3k strollers. It definitely depends.
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 15:34 |
|
gay_crimes posted:Are wrought iron burglar bars on some houses in an older area I'm looking at a big deal? I didn't think twice about it initially before but my paranoid mom said something about it when I was showing her a house I like. Do keep in mind she's a suburbanite boomer and would not live in any city interior. I already assume I should improve the doors to the house so that they're harder to kick in and maybe add the shatter resistant film to the windows and maybe motion activated flood lights and rosebushes under windows and I'll be fine for the most part, but that's what I would do with any house I buy. I told her that property crime is in every city and you should just make your house harder than the next house to gently caress with and that would deal with everyone except someone intent or targeting you specifically, which is a bigger loving problem and probably not related to the neighborhood you live in. Buying a house is activating my fear response
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 15:44 |
|
Johnny Truant posted:This is what my partner and I are potentially doing. We at least have friends in two of the top 5 possible cities, one of which I'm familiar with from visiting but not super familiar with neighbourhoods/living areas. I got lucky and was able to find an apartment complex that let me do a 3 month lease. I paid above the usual 12 month rate for the convenience, but it was possible (extra 300 a month I think). I needed a place for only 3 months, but I was also willing to sign a 6 month lease and break it if needed. It can be hard to find short term stuff. You can also try looking for corporate housing. I know my old apartment complex kept 3 or 4 apartments fully furnished and rented them out monthly to corporate folks in town visiting. YMMV of course, I'm in San Antonio, multiple Air Force bases, lots of folks always coming and going.
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 15:57 |
|
We did the same when we moved back to NoVA. We had lived in the area before, but our move from California came up quicker than we expected. It helped most of our stuff was already in storage, so it just meant getting out the bare essentials for a few months. Only downside was when the kitchen reno post-closing took a week too long and we had to stay in a hotel, but at least by that point we had moved.l our furniture into the home. The only problem was not actually seeing the apartment in person and boy... we might not have done that particular apartment. Love to spend more on heating that up versus our much larger townhome because the sliding glass door and windows had no insulation. We considered AirBnB, but at least with the apartment you can extend the lease if you need to by a few months, whereas someone might have already booked the next month at an AirBnB.
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 16:24 |
|
gay_crimes posted:Are wrought iron burglar bars on some houses in an older area I'm looking at a big deal? I didn't think twice about it initially before but my paranoid mom said something about it when I was showing her a house I like. Do keep in mind she's a suburbanite boomer and would not live in any city interior. I already assume I should improve the doors to the house so that they're harder to kick in and maybe add the shatter resistant film to the windows and maybe motion activated flood lights and rosebushes under windows and I'll be fine for the most part, but that's what I would do with any house I buy. I told her that property crime is in every city and you should just make your house harder than the next house to gently caress with and that would deal with everyone except someone intent or targeting you specifically, which is a bigger loving problem and probably not related to the neighborhood you live in. Buying a house is activating my fear response Bars on the windows might block your escape/rescue in event of fire - if for example fire is blocking your basement stairs. So if you aren't concerned about crime it might be worth having them removed. But it's worth looking at crime reports in the area. And in many cases it's illegal for your realtor to discuss crime rate so it's something you should look up anyway.
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 16:45 |
|
esquilax posted:Bars on the windows might block your escape/rescue in event of fire - if for example fire is blocking your basement stairs. So if you aren't concerned about crime it might be worth having them removed. I’m partial to trulia’s crime map data
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 16:55 |
|
gay_crimes posted:Are wrought iron burglar bars on some houses in an older area I'm looking at a big deal? What's the location? There are a ton of homes and apartments around Los Angeles that at first glance you'd think be a bad area and it probably was a few decades ago. Personally, it if were me I would have taken the bars down but no one does
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 18:15 |
|
Crosby B. Alfred posted:What's the location? The area I'm seeing some of the wrought iron bars is a stretch of neighborhoods in San Antonio from King William District/Lavaca neighborhood near downtown up to around the Monte Vista/midtown area, they're older historic areas esquilax posted:Bars on the windows might block your escape/rescue in event of fire - if for example fire is blocking your basement stairs. So if you aren't concerned about crime it might be worth having them removed. There's some property crime in the area but it's pretty similar to where I live now, except the houses here are a bit newer and don't have the burglar bars
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 18:17 |
|
kw0134 posted:A lot of neighborhoods in NYC still have burglar bars even though the area gentrified and there isn't much crime while yuppie couples get $10 coffees pushing $3k strollers. It definitely depends. There are whole swaths of LA that are like this. All the old houses, or houses that haven't been updated recently, still have bars on the windows from the 1990s.
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 18:27 |
|
Hilariously dumb stupid question, What's the verdict with buying a home in Miami or New Orleans especially when it comes to flooding, hurricanes including Climate Change? What I want to know, is my Condo or High Rise Apartment going to be swallowed by the ocean in a decade? Any recommended reading on this subject is appreciated but for now I'm just browsing properties that aren't right next to the ocean or canals. Florida is might be weird, gross and sweaty but it's affordable!
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 18:50 |
|
Crosby B. Alfred posted:Hilariously dumb stupid question, I mean Do Never Buy is the short answer, but with respect to predicted flood areas I'd suggest googling for flood prediction maps for the area. There has been a ton of work here and almost every city/county/state has a map they've put together that's pretty detailed.
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 19:23 |
|
Crosby B. Alfred posted:Hilariously dumb stupid question, Christopher Flavelle has done some pretty interesting reporting on that, especially around Miami: cities are going to have problems that go far beyond the flood maps. Miami Will Be Underwater Soon. Its Drinking Water Could Go First posted:Barring a stupendous reversal in greenhouse gas emissions, the rising Atlantic will cover much of Miami by the end of this century. The economic effects will be devastating: Zillow Inc. estimates that six feet of sea-level rise would put a quarter of Miami’s homes underwater, rendering $200 billion of real estate worthless. But global warming poses a more immediate danger: The permeability that makes the aquifer so easily accessible also makes it vulnerable. “It’s very easy to contaminate our aquifer,” says Rachel Silverstein, executive director of Miami Waterkeeper, a local environmental protection group. And the consequences could be sweeping. “Drinking water supply is always an existential question.” The Nightmare Scenario for Florida’s Coastal Homeowners: Demand and financing could collapse before the sea consumes a single house. posted:On a predictably gorgeous South Florida afternoon, Coral Gables Mayor Jim Cason sat in his office overlooking the white-linen restaurants of this affluent seaside community and wondered when climate change would bring it all to an end. He figured it would involve a boat.
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 19:36 |
|
That's exactly my concern even my Condo isn't swallowed by a sinkhole. I suspect my own property values won't do well with all of the other risks even if they don't impact my own property directly but how in the hell do you begin quantifying that risk?
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 19:39 |
|
Doesn't Miami have unusually porous coral bedrock? Like, even if you wanted to build a levy around the city and pump water out New Orleans style, the porosity of coral rock is on par with loose gravel, you'd never be able to catch up with the water even during a dry spell, let alone a hurricane Probably a great place to rent for the next ten years
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 19:45 |
|
gay_crimes posted:Are wrought iron burglar bars on some houses in an older area I'm looking at a big deal? I didn't think twice about it initially before but my paranoid mom said something about it when I was showing her a house I like. Do keep in mind she's a suburbanite boomer and would not live in any city interior. I already assume I should improve the doors to the house so that they're harder to kick in and maybe add the shatter resistant film to the windows and maybe motion activated flood lights and rosebushes under windows and I'll be fine for the most part, but that's what I would do with any house I buy. I told her that property crime is in every city and you should just make your house harder than the next house to gently caress with and that would deal with everyone except someone intent or targeting you specifically, which is a bigger loving problem and probably not related to the neighborhood you live in. Buying a house is activating my fear response We bought in a neighborhood where it’s pretty obvious that most houses had the iron bar doors, and occasional bars on windows. Our realtor was pretty adamant that if a neighborhood has these, it’s likely a company or two preyed on the fears of old timers a few decades ago. Anyone buying now typically removes them, and as the neighborhood turns over there are less and less of them.
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 19:49 |
|
https://popula.com/2019/04/02/heaven-or-high-water/quote:People say Miami is douchey, but really, I loved almost everything about it, the symmetry of the blue umbrellas on the beach, riding a bike under a canopy of trees, sitting on a wall watching the sunset, definitely not thinking about how sea water might be infiltrating the septic systems behind me. The whole time I was there I was like, yeah, I could see why no one wants to admit how hosed this place is.
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 20:06 |
|
Nybble posted:https://popula.com/2019/04/02/heaven-or-high-water/ america.txt
|
# ? Feb 23, 2021 20:13 |
|
My wife and I toured a house last week and put an offer on it. Asking 659 and we bid 675 with 20k earnest. They provided a preinspection but it was so light that I and my realtor questioned the integrity of it. The house had a lot of non professional diy fixes and upgrades of poor quality which worried me but it looked good and "pinteresty" in photos so it was going to sell. My wife loved it, I was so so. It also needed a new kitchen. Regardless it didn't matter. The top bids went to mid 800s with waived inspection, and 200k earnest money released from escrow and non refundable. Welp. Can't even be upset about missing out when we weren't even in the ballpark
|
# ? Feb 24, 2021 02:16 |
|
Just lol at 200k non refundable earnest money on a 659k ask
|
# ? Feb 24, 2021 02:26 |
|
How do you already know what the winning / top bids were? All the listing agents I've dealt with have been tight lipped until closing, in case the deal falls through. I'm in the running for a condo that fell through right now.
|
# ? Feb 24, 2021 02:34 |
|
Grossly under listing the property only to watch it get bid to the moon is classic San Fransisco What's the going rate per square foot in that neighborhood? Sounds like you bid ~$500/sq ft and it sold for ~$625
|
# ? Feb 24, 2021 02:39 |
|
|
# ? Jun 4, 2024 19:43 |
Would you rather be house poor or rent rich
|
|
# ? Feb 24, 2021 02:52 |