Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look at the street view. Strikes me as a teardown, so I wonder if there's an issue with the easements that is making it unattractive to a developer, or if they need to wait for the seller to come down on price.
This is one of those properties that is awkwardly straddling the line—it’s currently a bit too overpriced to be a teardown, while also being unappealing with too much work ($$) to bring it up to standard to appeal to real live-in buyers.
I agree, but I think the 2 real bedrooms is the real issue. Most people move to Arlington for the schools which means they have kids...a 3 bedroom SFH is sort of the bare minimum. A true basement bedroom might be passable, but this is just an open basement rec room being passed as a bedroom.
Anonymous wrote:Look at the street view. Strikes me as a teardown, so I wonder if there's an issue with the easements that is making it unattractive to a developer, or if they need to wait for the seller to come down on price.
Anonymous wrote:My reactions:
Odd to have an ugly leaning chain link fence on a $1m house; that would need to be replaced
Backyard has a dilapidated putting green; that needs to be ripped up and returned to normal grass
Backyard is in rough shape with dead grass and the concrete patio looks like a bad DIY job
Only 2 truly functional bedrooms, and most people spending this much for a SFH want at bare minimum 3 legitimate bedrooms.
Upstairs bedrooms have those ceilings that cut into headroom; not a dealbreaker on their own but flat ceilings are preferable
Kitchen is serviceable but doesn’t look great or desirable
1,500 sq ft is a bit tight for spending this much
The whole picture just feels like a pile of compromises and the home (especially the exterior) gives off a vibe of owners who didn’t care to maintain the property.
Add up all the costs to resolve the above and you’re above $1 million. This is an $849k house at today’s interest rates, not a $939k house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look at the street view. Strikes me as a teardown, so I wonder if there's an issue with the easements that is making it unattractive to a developer, or if they need to wait for the seller to come down on price.
This is one of those properties that is awkwardly straddling the line—it’s currently a bit too overpriced to be a teardown, while also being unappealing with too much work ($$) to bring it up to standard to appeal to real live-in buyers.
I agree, but I think the 2 real bedrooms is the real issue. Most people move to Arlington for the schools which means they have kids...a 3 bedroom SFH is sort of the bare minimum. A true basement bedroom might be passable, but this is just an open basement rec room being passed as a bedroom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look at the street view. Strikes me as a teardown, so I wonder if there's an issue with the easements that is making it unattractive to a developer, or if they need to wait for the seller to come down on price.
This is one of those properties that is awkwardly straddling the line—it’s currently a bit too overpriced to be a teardown, while also being unappealing with too much work ($$) to bring it up to standard to appeal to real live-in buyers.
Anonymous wrote:Answer is always, it is overpriced.
Anonymous wrote:Answer is always, it is overpriced.
Anonymous wrote:Look at the street view. Strikes me as a teardown, so I wonder if there's an issue with the easements that is making it unattractive to a developer, or if they need to wait for the seller to come down on price.