Anonymous wrote:Did anyone else notice that some Hill houses have started to go for insane amounts over list?
Listed under $1.4; sold for over $1.6 --
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/1302-Massachusetts-Ave-SE-20003/home/9914359
Listed under $1.3; sold for $1.55 --
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/124-Kentucky-Ave-SE-20003/home/9911275
What is going on? Both of these are close to the park; maybe underpriced based on that? wow... both Payne too.
Anonymous wrote:This one sold for 1.3 - thoughts ? https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/622-13th-St-NE-Washington-DC-20002/422020_zpid/?utm_campaign=iosappmessage&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=txtshare
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another Emerald Street house just came up for sale:
3BR, 1.5BA, 1491 sqft, $875,000:
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/1313-Emerald-St-NE-20002/home/9912852
I rather like it (except for the stupid round-window Home Depot door). It's a little larger than the other two Emerald houses that we've talked about, by about 140 sqft.
BTW, 1335 Emerald closed at $940k yesterday. 1312 Emerald is scheduled to close today (list price was $869k).
So the extra square footage came from having essentially no yard? Just a front and back patio?
I'm trying to decide if I think the bump out is worth the loss of outdoor space. I agree with others it wasn't much to begin with, but one problem with the bump out is that it makes that main floor longer and thus darker in the middle -- the layout doesn't maximize the light coming in from either end, so the kitchen/dining wind up having almost no natural light except a little coming in from the back door. Without the bump out, you could have a sunny kitchen which to me is an intangible that helps a lot with livability. I think my inclination if this was my house would be keep the little yard/patio so I could do some small outdoor dining and a grill and have more light in the main floor. But I get that sellers are often trying to maximize square footage. My feeling is this is a tiny house suitable for 1-2 people or maybe a family of 3 if they are used to very compact living, and a little office of the kitchen doesn't change that -- I don't think a family of 4 is going to work in this house even with the bump out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another Emerald Street house just came up for sale:
3BR, 1.5BA, 1491 sqft, $875,000:
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/1313-Emerald-St-NE-20002/home/9912852
I rather like it (except for the stupid round-window Home Depot door). It's a little larger than the other two Emerald houses that we've talked about, by about 140 sqft.
BTW, 1335 Emerald closed at $940k yesterday. 1312 Emerald is scheduled to close today (list price was $869k).
So the extra square footage came from having essentially no yard? Just a front and back patio?
Anonymous wrote:For those of you scoring at home, 1312 Emerald closed for $870k. I still find it fascinating that 1335 sold for $70k more than 1312. I liked 1312 a lot better, at least from the online listings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another Emerald Street house just came up for sale:
3BR, 1.5BA, 1491 sqft, $875,000:
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/1313-Emerald-St-NE-20002/home/9912852
I rather like it (except for the stupid round-window Home Depot door). It's a little larger than the other two Emerald houses that we've talked about, by about 140 sqft.
BTW, 1335 Emerald closed at $940k yesterday. 1312 Emerald is scheduled to close today (list price was $869k).
So the extra square footage came from having essentially no yard? Just a front and back patio?
Looks like the back of the house has been bumped out the back as far as it could. Same with the houses on either side.
I kind of like the use of space—like how that bump-back has a laundry closet. It's hard to tell from the photos how large the middle bedroom is, though.
Anonymous wrote:Another Emerald Street house just came up for sale:
3BR, 1.5BA, 1491 sqft, $875,000:
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/1313-Emerald-St-NE-20002/home/9912852
I rather like it (except for the stupid round-window Home Depot door). It's a little larger than the other two Emerald houses that we've talked about, by about 140 sqft.
BTW, 1335 Emerald closed at $940k yesterday. 1312 Emerald is scheduled to close today (list price was $869k).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another Emerald Street house just came up for sale:
3BR, 1.5BA, 1491 sqft, $875,000:
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/1313-Emerald-St-NE-20002/home/9912852
I rather like it (except for the stupid round-window Home Depot door). It's a little larger than the other two Emerald houses that we've talked about, by about 140 sqft.
BTW, 1335 Emerald closed at $940k yesterday. 1312 Emerald is scheduled to close today (list price was $869k).
So the extra square footage came from having essentially no yard? Just a front and back patio?
Anonymous wrote:Another Emerald Street house just came up for sale:
3BR, 1.5BA, 1491 sqft, $875,000:
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/1313-Emerald-St-NE-20002/home/9912852
I rather like it (except for the stupid round-window Home Depot door). It's a little larger than the other two Emerald houses that we've talked about, by about 140 sqft.
BTW, 1335 Emerald closed at $940k yesterday. 1312 Emerald is scheduled to close today (list price was $869k).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This house seems priced low at under $900. Nice house!
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/1241-Maryland-Ave-NE-20002/home/9910242
It IS nice! And Maryland Ave is so much pleasanter after the redo. Much more like a boulevard. The reason this is under 900k (barely) is because there are really only two bedrooms, looks like. The 3rd is really a flex space in the basement. It’s still a nice house and a great neighborhood.
Oh wow I love that one. I think 900k is right though, despite having a lot of great features (good light, updated kitchen, outdoor space, decent sized master bedroom, separate TV/play area in finished basement). This is the stuff that keeps it lower:
- No main floor bathroom, and no en suite bath for master. And the bath in the basement is dated and looks pretty utilitarian. That is a tough sell for me, even at 900k.
- Second bedroom is smaller and third bedroom isn't really a room -- I think they are fudging on the "3 bedroom" thing. You could use that downstairs room as a guest room or maybe an IL suite, but most people would not use it as a kid's room, for instance.
This place is like a really, really nice, slightly bigger condo alternative. But it lacks a lot of the convenience and amenities of many of the rowhouses we're starting to see go for $1m+. They'll probably get 900k but I think it's honestly overpriced for what it is, especially because you could get an actual condo with a better bathroom situation for about 100k less.
I agree. It looks nice at first glance, but as someone who would love to be able to buy a 3BR in Capitol Hill for $900k...this isn't a 3BR. It's a 1470 sf 2BR with a small second BR.
The main floor layout is kind of odd, too—I kind of hate how much space the kitchen takes up. If you want a dining room table, you'd have to put it in the living room.
And it looks to me like there's hardly any outdoor space at all in back.