| I would figure out the last time electrical, plumbing, windows, roof, all appliances were replaced. Also, get a GREAT inspector. |
I agree with this. New houses are built from trash and they feel like trash. But I’d also assume ~20 grand each year for a while in upkeep and updating if the house hasn’t been recently renovated. |
| This is not an older home. This is an ugly starter home. It has potential, but it would require a lot of work. I’d expect a bargain price for the amount of work it needs. |
It's walking distance to Ballston and the stuff on Langston |
I don’t think it’s ugly. It’s a perfectly fine house, and it is kind of a bargain for the area. |
| Stone and brick facade, coupled with a ducted HVAC system--but--with mini-splits added in key locations suggests a poorly insulated wall and roof assembly. Everything that matters is hidden behind clean and polished drywall and trim and new roof and siding (what is the condition of the plumbing and electrical systems? What was deteriorated before the upgrades that they covered or glossed over rather than mitigated?) |
| I love older homes and I think they usually are better quality than newer homes. I’d have no qualms about getting an redone older homes if we got an inspection (although it’s also true that most inspections aren’t that valuable) |
I agree with this! We’ve only lived in old homes that have been maintained lovingly (kind of …at least in good spirit?) so the work needed has been maintenance, and upgrades you’d have with any house after time - it just happens to be all the time instead of getting a 5-10 year grace period This house is cute and in a great location for being urban but in the kind of suburbs. |
Probably because it’s on a very busy road and very close to a major highway. There would be a lot of traffic noise anytime you were outside enjoying the yard, and at least some noise inside. Doesn’t matter though, it’s under contract. |