Anonymous wrote:feng shui so passe
I'd say it's not an issue if it's not a busy intersection and there is a way to plant a living fence and internal layout takes positioning of the house into consideration. Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:it's bad feng shui, so you are much less likely to get an all-cash chinese buyer.
childhood friend lived at a poorly-lit T intersection in the country and ended up with a car in their living room a few times until they bought some big boulders and installed them in the front yard.
How is it bad feng shui? Like there are rules about a house (in 2024 vs. a rural chinese village) that should not be on a t- or an a cross roads? What about stoplights or stop signs? What if the T is a cul de sac on each side?
Anonymous wrote:it's bad feng shui, so you are much less likely to get an all-cash chinese buyer.
childhood friend lived at a poorly-lit T intersection in the country and ended up with a car in their living room a few times until they bought some big boulders and installed them in the front yard.
Anonymous wrote:How busy is this perpendicular road where cars are at the stop sign?
Once it's dark, you have will car lights beaming at your house, in your windows, and the red blinker lights. Not for me.
Anonymous wrote:it's bad feng shui, so you are much less likely to get an all-cash chinese buyer.
childhood friend lived at a poorly-lit T intersection in the country and ended up with a car in their living room a few times until they bought some big boulders and installed them in the front yard.