Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well none of them are buried in any of the areas in my close-in suburb, so you would have to rule out entire regions.
This.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Small deal.
Really? I'd consider it a big factor in choosing a home.
+1
This, plus no sidewalks are a deal breaker - mostly because the no sidewalks areas are too expensive NOT to have sidewalks. Ridiculous.
Yeah. No sidewalks is a bigger deal. I'm not a fan of visible power lines though.
Um, no one is. But that is how we get electricity in lots of places, so you take it or leave it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Small deal.
Really? I'd consider it a big factor in choosing a home.
+1
This, plus no sidewalks are a deal breaker - mostly because the no sidewalks areas are too expensive NOT to have sidewalks. Ridiculous.
Yeah. No sidewalks is a bigger deal. I'm not a fan of visible power lines though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Small deal.
Really? I'd consider it a big factor in choosing a home.
+1
This, plus no sidewalks are a deal breaker - mostly because the no sidewalks areas are too expensive NOT to have sidewalks. Ridiculous.
Yeah. No sidewalks is a bigger deal. I'm not a fan of visible power lines though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well none of them are buried in any of the areas in my close-in suburb, so you would have to rule out entire regions.
This.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So if you are the type who only thinks new builds are good and loves cookie-cutter McMansions in a new subdevelopment, then you may actually care about those things.
And this. This issue has never occurred to me and I have bought four houses.
Weird. I guess in the land of the blind the one eyed man is king.