Anonymous wrote:DH and I currently live in a 5000 sq. foot house. No kids yet. Previous to buying the house we rented for years, and lived in a one-bedroom apartment in an urban high rise, a two bedroom rental condo in a third floor walk up buidling in Dupont, a three level rental townhouse in Bethesda, and finally our current single family house.
Out of all of these, I liked the rental townhouse and the single family house best. I hated living in apartments. I didn't like communal living, the way you could smell your neighbors' cigarette smoke coming under your front door, hear their music and noise from your walls, and were subjected to having to endure improvements on the building (such as painting the walls of your floor, having to endure the paint smell for weeks, etc.). I also didn't like being cramped in an apartment and having no storage space.
The townhouse was nice (rental) because it was more space and because we didn't have to deal with smells or noise from interior units on a common hallway. Though we still heard noise from the unit next door but it wasn't as bad. I just didn't like the communal living aspect of the townhouse.
So when we decided to buy our first place, we wanted to buy a big house on a huge yard. We wanted a huge yard (2 acres) so that we wouldn't have to be bothered by neighbors. Though the downside of a house is the expense when something breaks and all the maintenance and upkeep on a larger property.
Anonymous wrote:If you plan to have a family, buy a house NOW while interest rates are low and have not sky-rocketed back to the 80s levels. otherwise, by the time you decide to move, rates might be too high already and you might be majorly priced out of a lot of places you can afford now.
Anonymous wrote:DH and I currently live in a 5000 sq. foot house. No kids yet. Previous to buying the house we rented for years, and lived in a one-bedroom apartment in an urban high rise, a two bedroom rental condo in a third floor walk up buidling in Dupont, a three level rental townhouse in Bethesda, and finally our current single family house.
Out of all of these, I liked the rental townhouse and the single family house best. I hated living in apartments. I didn't like communal living, the way you could smell your neighbors' cigarette smoke coming under your front door, hear their music and noise from your walls, and were subjected to having to endure improvements on the building (such as painting the walls of your floor, having to endure the paint smell for weeks, etc.). I also didn't like being cramped in an apartment and having no storage space.
The townhouse was nice (rental) because it was more space and because we didn't have to deal with smells or noise from interior units on a common hallway. Though we still heard noise from the unit next door but it wasn't as bad. I just didn't like the communal living aspect of the townhouse.
So when we decided to buy our first place, we wanted to buy a big house on a huge yard. We wanted a huge yard (2 acres) so that we wouldn't have to be bothered by neighbors. Though the downside of a house is the expense when something breaks and all the maintenance and upkeep on a larger property.
Anonymous wrote:Dh and I love lofts and condos but like to grill. Condo didn't permit grills on balconies. We have wondered if penthouses permit them. (We grill 4 times a week year round.)
Anonymous wrote:I think both have pros and con's. We were in a condo for 5 years and recently bought a SFH.
Condo:
Pro: low maintenance, no wasting time on yard work, weekends are purely for relaxing, amenities: having a pool and tennis courts you don’t have to maintain is pretty nice. Low responsibility: roof leaks you call the condo and so forth, snow removal: other than digging out my own car they do all the other work
Cons: special assessments: we paid a hefty assessment for a major project/repair that did not benefit us/our unit in any way, rules: they have rules for everything we need to get permission for any changes we wanted to do like installing an above the range microwave, new windows, hardwood floors, Neighbors: you hear and smell everything your neighbors cook and do
Cond fees: I don’t know that they are a total waste of money or just throwing money away, there are no more and in many cases less than what you would be spending on house maintenance. When stuff goes wrong in a SFH is isn’t cheap.
SFH
Pro: yard, no rules, more space, better for older kids (lived in condo until son was 2), for us we outgrew the condo a lot sooner than we had planned
Cons: lots of work, always something to do, spending money on maintenance, when things break you have to find a contractor to fix it and spend the money
So I have likes and dislikes with both. I like the space and freedom of a SFH, but the maintenance is exhausting at times. I often miss the carefree weekends in the condo where we didn’t have to worry about doing any “house” work.