Anonymous wrote:Deal breakers -
Pipe stem driveway
No driveway
Busy street
No sidewalk
More than 3-4 steps to enter the main door
Yards or driveways with retaining walls, terraced back yards
Neighbors with dilapidated homes, messy unkempt landscaping- either it’s a have for rodents and wildlife or it’s a target for a tear down and I’ll have to live in a construction zone.
Anonymous wrote:Bamboo seems to be a big no-no for a lot of folks. Is that an aesthetics judgement or are there problems inherent with bamboo? I'm unfamiliar
My $.02:
No garden apartments, i.e. sub-grade condos
No pool for a SFH (too much maintenance)
No bad neighborhoods (been there)
Actually I think I should start a new thread regarding condos as this thread is more SFH oriented
Anonymous wrote:Bamboo, streets or neighborhoods with the word plantation, streets named after confederate soldiers, no garage, no backyard (doesn't have to be big), no basement, average to below average school cluster, unattractive neighborhood. Basically, things that you can't easily change.
Anonymous wrote:Funny thing about most (not all) of these answers is that if all of you really disregarded houses for all the items you listed, you wouldn't be living in anything at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cul-de-sac. Anyplace with an HOA.
Why no cul-de-sac?
NP and cul-de-sacs are not exactly a deal breaker for me, but I also prefer not to live on one. I don't like to look out at that much pavement and I can't stand the way people park on it sort of all over the place sometimes parallel to the curb (like you should park on a street) and sometimes pulled straight in. It looks disorganized and like you live in an unmarked parking lot.
Interesting. I like cul de sacs but usually the ones that have circular beds in the middle, exactly for that reason. It discourages parking there.
Anonymous wrote:Cul de sacs are all the rage amoung families I know. It's a lot safer and kids can play easier. The other streets are thoroughfares of traffic and it can be dangerous. There's usually a social island, too. Farther away from everything? No. I have no idea what that means. What does that even mean. I get out just as easy as on any street.
A lot of city families became suburban families in these last 2 years. And suburbia is great. I can PARK, lots of kids, sense of
community, amenities like parks, playgrounds, pools, sports fields, paths for walking and riding, dogs, and there's shopping where I need it.