Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm getting a "this is what it looks like before the economy crashes" sort of vibe.
If I had a dollar for every comment like this on this site since 2016
This time might actually be different.
We've decided not to list my mother's second home in DC in part because the market is down. It's hard to ignore the micro and macro economic indicators for this in DC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm getting a "this is what it looks like before the economy crashes" sort of vibe.
If I had a dollar for every comment like this on this site since 2016
This time might actually be different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm getting a "this is what it looks like before the economy crashes" sort of vibe.
If I had a dollar for every comment like this on this site since 2016
This time might actually be different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm getting a "this is what it looks like before the economy crashes" sort of vibe.
If I had a dollar for every comment like this on this site since 2016
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Surprised this one in Cherrydale is sitting. We toured it and it was well done. Maybe the 3 beds vs 4 on the 2nd floor is a dealbreaker for many?
https://www.redfin.com/VA/Arlington/2133-N-Oakland-St-22207/home/11233072
I think it’s probably the apartment building in the backyard. Picture 25 with the soaking tub in front of a giant window overlooking an apartment building is a choice.
Anonymous wrote:My Fairfax Co neighborhood finally had a pickup in listings and sales. They've gone under contract quickly, but prices are only up modestly. There aren't any sky-high listings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm getting a "this is what it looks like before the economy crashes" sort of vibe.
If I had a dollar for every comment like this on this site since 2016
Anonymous wrote:I'm getting a "this is what it looks like before the economy crashes" sort of vibe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:anonnymoose33 wrote:McLean/Great Falls have very little inventory at $1.5-$2m with most houses going quickly. A few aberrations, such as this one, which has been sitting since November with just one price reduction: https://www.redfin.com/VA/Mc-Lean/1904-Lamson-Pl-22101/home/9475356
Hmm. Interesting. That's a head scratcher.
It's a quick flip for a 2,300 sqft house that's priced $150-200K too high
Yeah ... it's priced too high. Obviously. But it's still interesting; there is massive demand for houses in the Mclean hs pyramid and extremely low inventory. And 2300 sq feet is not a Mcmansion but it is not tiny either.
I think the price combined with the obvious flip and questionable choices - the staging and finishes make it look like a cheap air BNB, and the low ceiling open floor plan seems like a headache if you have kids.
Anonymous wrote:anonnymoose33 wrote:McLean/Great Falls have very little inventory at $1.5-$2m with most houses going quickly. A few aberrations, such as this one, which has been sitting since November with just one price reduction: https://www.redfin.com/VA/Mc-Lean/1904-Lamson-Pl-22101/home/9475356
Whenever the first photo is of the interior, I always know there's a problem. Surprised that agents think that burying what the exterior looks like is an effective strategy.
Anonymous wrote:This one sat for months in Arlington Forest - looks like it ended up with a small bidding war once the spring market opened?
https://www.redfin.com/VA/Arlington/4810-3rd-St-N-22203/home/11243329
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This one sat for months in Arlington Forest - looks like it ended up with a small bidding war once the spring market opened?
https://www.redfin.com/VA/Arlington/4810-3rd-St-N-22203/home/11243329
Man, Arlington Forest has been 100% two story colonial revival for decades. I guess the teardown and rebuild movement has finally reached that neighborhood.