Anonymous wrote:1. 4 level Condo
2. Kids bedroom on different floor
3. No window in/near kitchen.
4. South facing front door
5. Home older than 7 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Homes without mature trees. I prefer to be on a hill looking at beautiful trees. My shoulders softened just typing that.
This is an interested one, because I definitely see where you're coming from. I'd be concerned that new trees aren't going to survive, as new construction often plants trees in areas that are too small for the roots to develop properly. I also like to be in an established neighborhood, which mature trees usually signify. I don't know if it would be a deal breaker for me, especially if I was looking for my 20-year home, instead of a starter home that I planned to outgrow in 5-7 years, but still a + on my preferred list of things in my housing search.
On the other hand, if I had a house with no trees, then I could plant the type of trees I want to have, instead of trees I don't (like ones that drop berries on my car or fruit trees that attract bees near where my kids play). I'd still want there to be mature trees in my neighborhood in that situation though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No garage
Busy street
Cul de sac
Corner house
Near high tension power lines
Backing into commercial or retail development
No central ac
Next to rental properties
Sloping side yard
Sloping back yard
Let me guess, you are a perpetual renter.
Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised by the people who don’t like cul de sacs. Do you mean that you avoid purchasing on a street with a cul de sac or you just don’t want to live in the exact semi circle area? I prefer living on a dead end street or cul de sac due to lack of through traffic.
Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised by the people who don’t like cul de sacs. Do you mean that you avoid purchasing on a street with a cul de sac or you just don’t want to live in the exact semi circle area? I prefer living on a dead end street or cul de sac due to lack of through traffic.
Anonymous wrote:No garage
Busy street
Cul de sac
Corner house
Near high tension power lines
Backing into commercial or retail development
No central ac
Next to rental properties
Sloping side yard
Sloping back yard
Anonymous wrote:bedrooms on different floors-- specifically wanted a house with master and kids rooms on same floor
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Open first floor. I need rooms to retreat to, and I want my kitchen apart from the living room. I know I'm in the minority here.
I’m with you!
Me too
Anonymous wrote:For me, it's a pipestem. I'm not living on a shared driveway. Give me a house on a street like a normal person, where my house isn't hidden off the street behind two other houses where it's difficult to find and you risk getting blocked in by your neighbors when they throw parties. My friends who live on them love them and I just don't get it.
Also, sunken living rooms. There's no benefit to a step down into a room and it just means you can't expand furniture from an adjacent room into that room. When I've gone to open houses that I didn't realize had sunken living rooms, I've turned right back around and walked out. Hard pass.