Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After a lull, there are a ton of new listings available to view this weekend. This isn't even all of them. With a few exceptions, it seems like listing prices are lower than they have been during the past year. I imagine some of these will be bid upwards quickly, while others will languish.
After a week, only FIVE of those 13 listings are pending. Market seems to be cooling fast.
It seems tiny. 1575 sq ft over three feet is about 500 sq ft per floor, and the basement is its own unit.Anonymous wrote:What am I missing? $865,000 seems wildly underpriced for three bedrooms.
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/618-7th-St-NE-20002/home/9898581
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After a lull, there are a ton of new listings available to view this weekend. This isn't even all of them. With a few exceptions, it seems like listing prices are lower than they have been during the past year. I imagine some of these will be bid upwards quickly, while others will languish.
After a week, only FIVE of those 13 listings are pending. Market seems to be cooling fast.
Anonymous wrote:After a lull, there are a ton of new listings available to view this weekend. This isn't even all of them. With a few exceptions, it seems like listing prices are lower than they have been during the past year. I imagine some of these will be bid upwards quickly, while others will languish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does everyone think this will go for?
$995,000, 3BR/3.5BA, 2,024sf:
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/620-G-St-NE-20002/home/21648640
I'm not a huge fan of the all-white open floor plan trend, but this isn't quite as flippery as many I've seen—the kitchen counters are dark, and there's still exposed brickwork. Otherwise, it seems pretty well done, and the finishes look nice, and I like the outdoor space. That location not far from Union Station is going to be a draw, too. On the downside, it's hard to tell but from the pictures one of the BRs looks pretty tiny and I'm not sure the other is actually legal (could that really be an egress window in picture 21?).
I suspect this is priced for a bidding war (and will get one).
Somewhere between $1.1m - $1.3m given it's over 2,000 square feet, has a basement and is so close to Union Station (and in true Capitol Hill). There are comparable homes on the Hill East side of the neighborhood going for $1.1m, so the location I would think would definitely put it over that threshold.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thoughts on this one?
4BR/3BA, 1814sf, $990,000:
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/403-6th-St-NE-20002/home/9899007
The location is great, but it's kind of an odd mix of original features and ill-chosen updates. I don't think I've seen a rowhouse that has both original unpainted woodwork still intact but also has that stupid oval door. It looks like they replaced the hardwood floors at some point, the kitchen and baths look dated (and not in a vintage way), and there's so much carpet.
I can't decide if the interior will be too off-putting or if someone will see its problems as easily fixable.
Over a month later, this is still sitting—without a price drop. I wonder if something is wrong with it other than the obvious.
I also find it kind of hilarious that the agent lists "approximately 20 minutes by car from Amazon's HQ2 complex" as a feature for a Capitol Hill rowhome.
The interior is incredibly off-putting (the 90s was not a good time for interior design), it's on a busy street, there's no parking, and sold "as is" is real estate talk for lots of expensive repairs await. For 1800 sq ft, this would get buyers at $800k. Not a million.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thoughts on this one?
4BR/3BA, 1814sf, $990,000:
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/403-6th-St-NE-20002/home/9899007
The location is great, but it's kind of an odd mix of original features and ill-chosen updates. I don't think I've seen a rowhouse that has both original unpainted woodwork still intact but also has that stupid oval door. It looks like they replaced the hardwood floors at some point, the kitchen and baths look dated (and not in a vintage way), and there's so much carpet.
I can't decide if the interior will be too off-putting or if someone will see its problems as easily fixable.
Over a month later, this is still sitting—without a price drop. I wonder if something is wrong with it other than the obvious.
I also find it kind of hilarious that the agent lists "approximately 20 minutes by car from Amazon's HQ2 complex" as a feature for a Capitol Hill rowhome.
The interior is incredibly off-putting (the 90s was not a good time for interior design), it's on a busy street, there's no parking, and sold "as is" is real estate talk for lots of expensive repairs await. For 1800 sq ft, this would get buyers at $800k. Not a million.
No argument here.
I'm surprised the owners haven't at least pulled all that carpet out. It's not that hard to do, and even floors that need refinishing are going to show better than that carpet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thoughts on this one?
4BR/3BA, 1814sf, $990,000:
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/403-6th-St-NE-20002/home/9899007
The location is great, but it's kind of an odd mix of original features and ill-chosen updates. I don't think I've seen a rowhouse that has both original unpainted woodwork still intact but also has that stupid oval door. It looks like they replaced the hardwood floors at some point, the kitchen and baths look dated (and not in a vintage way), and there's so much carpet.
I can't decide if the interior will be too off-putting or if someone will see its problems as easily fixable.
Over a month later, this is still sitting—without a price drop. I wonder if something is wrong with it other than the obvious.
I also find it kind of hilarious that the agent lists "approximately 20 minutes by car from Amazon's HQ2 complex" as a feature for a Capitol Hill rowhome.
The interior is incredibly off-putting (the 90s was not a good time for interior design), it's on a busy street, there's no parking, and sold "as is" is real estate talk for lots of expensive repairs await. For 1800 sq ft, this would get buyers at $800k. Not a million.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thoughts on this one?
4BR/3BA, 1814sf, $990,000:
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/403-6th-St-NE-20002/home/9899007
The location is great, but it's kind of an odd mix of original features and ill-chosen updates. I don't think I've seen a rowhouse that has both original unpainted woodwork still intact but also has that stupid oval door. It looks like they replaced the hardwood floors at some point, the kitchen and baths look dated (and not in a vintage way), and there's so much carpet.
I can't decide if the interior will be too off-putting or if someone will see its problems as easily fixable.
Over a month later, this is still sitting—without a price drop. I wonder if something is wrong with it other than the obvious.
I also find it kind of hilarious that the agent lists "approximately 20 minutes by car from Amazon's HQ2 complex" as a feature for a Capitol Hill rowhome.
Anonymous wrote:Thoughts on this one?
4BR/3BA, 1814sf, $990,000:
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/403-6th-St-NE-20002/home/9899007
The location is great, but it's kind of an odd mix of original features and ill-chosen updates. I don't think I've seen a rowhouse that has both original unpainted woodwork still intact but also has that stupid oval door. It looks like they replaced the hardwood floors at some point, the kitchen and baths look dated (and not in a vintage way), and there's so much carpet.
I can't decide if the interior will be too off-putting or if someone will see its problems as easily fixable.
Anonymous wrote:I was hoping to attend the open house for this home yesterday but it was canceled.
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/615-K-St-NE-20002/home/9898330
I thought the listing price was a little high but now I’m assuming the sellers will get it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you think this one has been sitting so long? I know the layout is a bit quirky and the bathrooms could use an update, but very spacious overall even if there are only 3 official bedrooms, there is also a den room. Maybe people don't like the big condo building being next door?
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/629-5th-St-NE-20002/home/9896708
Pretty sure that’s a house next door. Or, at least, that’s the impression it gives from the street. (I guess it could be a very small condo building.) It’s a quirky layout for sure, and many people hate the basement kitchen thing. I’d have to see inside to know for sure but that cutout that brings all the light into the kitchen/basement also eliminates a lot of usable floor space.
Those are two condos next door:
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/625-5th-St-NE-20002/unit-1/home/113745659
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/625-5th-St-NE-20002/unit-2/home/108560160
I think it's just overpriced. $1.25M isn't unreasonable for 2100sf, especially that close to Union Station, but it is a bit on the high end—and it's more likely to be the result of a bidding war for a house that listed lower than a good starting price. And I'm seeing right that they listed it in May at $1.2M, then increased the price two weeks later to $1.25M? That does not sound like the strategy of a motivated seller.