Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think our lot is 22 ft wide, but we may only be able to build to 20 ft. I'd love to ask a realtor, but we are going not going to use our buyer's agent to sell in the future.
It seems like money is the primary thing you are asking about so...
Drop 120k for the 2 car garage plus a studio apt above, deck the top of that to reclaim yard space. Air bnb for 20k-25k per year and by the time you move it'll have paid for itself before appreciation
Dc just made it way easier to build alley apartments and even the strictest proposed airbnb regulations allow owners to rent assessory units
Anonymous wrote:I think our lot is 22 ft wide, but we may only be able to build to 20 ft. I'd love to ask a realtor, but we are going not going to use our buyer's agent to sell in the future.
Anonymous wrote:We bought a NW DC rowhouse this year with an "as-is" single car detached garage. The beams are rotting, the door stopped working, it's not watertight, and there are holes in the walls. Also, it's not wide enough to fully open the doors on our compact car. We've had a few contractors look at it, and only one thought it it could be repaired, probably for 10-15k. I'm skeptical that the total wouldn't be more.
We're expecting a baby and need a parking situation that will allow us to get the baby in and out of the car easily (and we will probably get a bigger car within a couple of years). We looked into replacing the garage with a 2-car garage, but the quotes were 60-90k, and we don't have that much money for this project.
My question is: how much could our home value decrease if we replace the (crappy) single car garage with two parking spaces + a shed?
I assume parking for 2 cars would appeal to some buyers vs. our current one-car parking. The shed would provide a place for a stroller, bikes, etc. because we have stairs between the house and alley. The project would cost at least 10k, probably more (take down garage, replace single car pad with permeable pavers for 2 cars, install shed, and install new back fence to close off yard).
Other context: we live within short walking distance of 2 metro stops and a few bus routes. On our block, ~2/3 of the houses have parking spaces in the alley, and ~1/3 have garages (none built recently). Our plat shows the garage structure. Our house was listed with a 1-car garage when we bought it, so the garage is in the MRIS records.
What do you think?
Anonymous wrote:I'd rather have 2 parking spaces. There are people who will post that a garage is a requirement for them but I assume for people looking in the city they are generally more flexible as long as there is a parking space.
Anonymous wrote:What about rebuilding it as a carport?