Wow, your insecurity is really rampant. Yes, I'm sure that people who get priced out of more desirable areas reluctantly buy in Pimmit Hills. |
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| No one reluctantly buys anything one day after it got listed. That's a pretty quick turnaround for a reluctant buyer. I'd call someone who buys after one day on the market a very eager buyer, not a reluctant one. |
Meh.
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Happy easter to you all!
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Who knows? Maybe it's someone who got outbid on houses in nicer neighborhoods deciding they needed to act quickly. Or maybe this is the dream home for someone who wants big, new and close-in and doesn't care if it screams "tacky McMansion" to other people. The bottom line is that the tax assessment on that address is going to increase, so it's not bad for the county. |
Tacky mcmansion? Sorry that term is only used for tract housing that look the same this is a single tear down. Why don't you post a picture of your dream house or own house |
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You could put the most beautiful, well-featured home in Pimmit Hills and it still wouldn't convince me to live there. I like living in a neighborhood where the homes are of a similar style and within a similar price range.
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None of these scenarios qualify as "reluctant", don't you think? Whoever bought this house must have decided pretty quickly that this house was what they wanted. |
Ohhhhhhh snap one mil in the ph under contract one day listed and the home isn't even ready for a month . Shit just got real son. |
In English, please, Baxter. |
I agree that PH's re-development still has ways to go, but it's incorrect to think that large, new houses in this area are unheard of. There's quite a few of them around, a couple to most blocks. They are a minority, but a sizable and growing one. Why aren't these homes being replaced by modest middle-class homes? Because it's not cost-efficient to demolish a small, poor-quality tract home only to put a modest-size one in its place. Modest, middle-class homes in PH are original PH houses with modest additions and inside remodeling - typically go for 500-600K, and fast. That's a product of addition and remodeling, not demolition. Once you factor in the cost of demolition and site prep, building a smaller home there ends up too expensive for its size. The lowest cost new home would a small craftsman by NDI - still about 2500 sq ft and around 700-800K, all told. Yes, there are limits to what can be done with PH considering its location. That's a good thing, because it's zoned for SFH, and the community has resisted all attempts to build townhouses within its limits. Otherwise, I don't see the relationship between hard boundaries and neighborhood future. |
I think the term covers a generic Colonial built by a flipper in a teardown neighborhood. My dream house? Something like: http://www.realtor.com/realestateandhomes-detail/201-Suffolk-Rd_Chestnut-Hill_MA_02467_M32156-14360 http://www.realtor.com/realestateandhomes-detail/19015-Shaker-Blvd_Shaker-Hts_OH_44122_M36047-28639 http://www.realtor.com/realestateandhomes-detail/11-Sherman-Ave_Bronxville_NY_10708_M36721-20809 http://www.realtor.com/realestateandhomes-detail/4414-Lowell-St-Nw_Washington_DC_20016_M50075-09537 |
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Do a lot of CIA staff (not contractors) live in Pimmitt Hills given the proximity it is to OHB/NHB in Langley?
Just curious. |
| of course, all of this pushes anyone who is truly middle class in this area completely out of the inner burbs. Let's be honest, Pimmit is one of the last places where anyone making around Fairfax median income can still buy a SFH. You may think they are ugly shitboxes, but they are SOME families only shot at the "American Dream." The options are ridiculously limited for so many families. |