Anonymous wrote:This house sucks I would pay the extra to buy new
Anonymous wrote:"almost all errands involve a car"
If I had to spend $1mil for a house, I damn sure would buy one where I could walk to buy a loaf of bread.
Anonymous wrote:I saw this house; it's great. However the sellers are asking for an extensive rent back- like months and months. They plan to build and haven't started the process yet or something. It's a strange situation and I don't get why they are selling now when they aren't really ready to move. I think they need the $$ for the next place.
Anonymous wrote:"almost all errands involve a car"
If I had to spend $1mil for a house, I damn sure would buy one where I could walk to buy a loaf of bread.
'Anonymous wrote:I liked this house a lot, and after a crappy day I decided to look at it online again and see what it sold for. Surprise! It's still on the market, 34 days later. Redfin thinks it's overpriced (which looking at comps it might be).
However, the sellers bought in 2007 for 997,500, so doubt they are willing to accept lower offers.
It's so weird though - cute enough house, in desirable neighborhood with good schools, and it's not gained any value since the bubble of 2007-08? Meanwhile my in-city house continues to rise (and is now worth more than a million, ~600K more than we paid for it back in 2001). How can that be? It makes me wonder if there's not a ceiling for "normal" houses, and DC will continue to see growth until everything and anything is worth roughly a million?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no such thing as a "nice, normal" FIVE BEDROOM house minutes away from the nation's capital.
OP here; I live in a nice, normal 3-bedroom house IN the nation's capital (in one of those famous walk-for-a-loaf-of-bread neighborhoods) and it isn't worth anything close to a million. We don't need 5 bedrooms at all, nor half an acre--I just think that house has a great look. Sort of modest but still really nicely done.
The reasons we are even contemplating moving are that we are kind of over sharing walls (one of our attached neighbors leaves her TV on all night) and our kids are approaching middle school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"almost all errands involve a car"
If I had to spend $1mil for a house, I damn sure would buy one where I could walk to buy a loaf of bread.
That's Capitol Hill or NOMA, where you can get a house for $1million but it'll only have three or four bedrooms, no yard and street parking.
You think only in Capitol Hill and NOMA people can walk to buy a loaf of bread? And there are no houses with yards from where you can do so?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no such thing as a "nice, normal" FIVE BEDROOM house minutes away from the nation's capital.
OP here; I live in a nice, normal 3-bedroom house IN the nation's capital (in one of those famous walk-for-a-loaf-of-bread neighborhoods) and it isn't worth anything close to a million. We don't need 5 bedrooms at all, nor half an acre--I just think that house has a great look. Sort of modest but still really nicely done.
The reasons we are even contemplating moving are that we are kind of over sharing walls (one of our attached neighbors leaves her TV on all night) and our kids are approaching middle school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no such thing as a "nice, normal" FIVE BEDROOM house minutes away from the nation's capital.
OP here; I live in a nice, normal 3-bedroom house IN the nation's capital (in one of those famous walk-for-a-loaf-of-bread neighborhoods) and it isn't worth anything close to a million. We don't need 5 bedrooms at all, nor half an acre--I just think that house has a great look. Sort of modest but still really nicely done.
The reasons we are even contemplating moving are that we are kind of over sharing walls (one of our attached neighbors leaves her TV on all night) and our kids are approaching middle school.
Anonymous wrote:There is no such thing as a "nice, normal" FIVE BEDROOM house minutes away from the nation's capital.