Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We purchased a tear down in Arlington in 2008. The lot was a quarter acre on an okay street. We paid $340k. We built a new home with NDI. The site work cost us about $60k, but that was on the low end for site work. The base price of the new house was $220k. We spent about $40k on upgrades, I think. Would have liked to have had another $20-$30k for additional upgrades.
So, total cost was about $660,000. We got a four bedroom, three 1/2 bath house with a screened in porch and one-car garage. Granite in kitchen and hardwood floors on the first floor. We specifically chose a design which we thought would not stand out like a sore thumb on the street. We've had a LOT of compliments from people in the neighborhood, so I think we did ok in that regard.
Our house is now appraised over $750,000.
How many SQRFT and which model? $60k seems a bit high, is that because of arlington zoning costs?
Anonymous wrote:In Arlington you can get a tear down in the $550k range (further out on Lee Highway by Lee Harrison shops). Builders build for about $80-$100 per square foot. You could definitely do something with Stanley Martin Custom Homes for about $1 million. Nothing fancy, but adequate.
A lot on John Marshall just sold for $1.1 million. They tore down the house, and I assume that they are going to build 2 new houses. They will probably be about $1.4 million each.
It's much cheaper to build your own because you have the risk, not the builder.
Anonymous wrote:We purchased a tear down in Arlington in 2008. The lot was a quarter acre on an okay street. We paid $340k. We built a new home with NDI. The site work cost us about $60k, but that was on the low end for site work. The base price of the new house was $220k. We spent about $40k on upgrades, I think. Would have liked to have had another $20-$30k for additional upgrades.
So, total cost was about $660,000. We got a four bedroom, three 1/2 bath house with a screened in porch and one-car garage. Granite in kitchen and hardwood floors on the first floor. We specifically chose a design which we thought would not stand out like a sore thumb on the street. We've had a LOT of compliments from people in the neighborhood, so I think we did ok in that regard.
Our house is now appraised over $750,000.
Anonymous wrote:
OP, most of the PPs sound very sour on new construction which tells us loud and clear they can not afford it. Simple. I would do what another pp said and find an aggressive realtor who will work for you during this process. Some are builders and realtors. While it is true you would likely not want to be the first new house in some neighborhoods (the resentment!!!!) - there are plenty of people who now own old houses and are tearing down on the same property rather than build one, two or more half ass additions over the years. No one wants an old home that is trying to look like a new home. It will never look right. We are in the market now, so I know first hand. People buy new houses.....because they can.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And yet, those midget 50s and 60s tract homes built for the lower classes WERE STILL CONSTRUCTED MORE SOLIDLY THAN HOUSES ARE TODAY!
Are you a home builder.
We live in one of those and we have had several builders knock on our door asking if we would sell it. We tell them know, we are going to renovate and add on to it and they offer to do the work becuase those houses are so sound it is easy to add a second floor on and create a much better house than they can build from scratch.
Additions still don't pay off the same ROI as new construction and you still have an old part that needs maintenance vs the new addition.
Not sure I fully agree with that, on new construction you will often take a depreciation hit and have the already mentioned issues of new construction like settling, nail pops, etc., all of which can be frustrating -- and "new" does not mean without flaw or not needing punch list type work or even repairs.
I represented a well known quality builder in NJ who our family dealt with for many years and the owner/president of the company even told me --- to my shock & surprise -- that he did not recommend buying a new house, even one of his ... "let someone else deal with the headaches & stress and give it a shakedown cruise for a few yrs."
Depending on what you do in an addition, you can still recoup substantial % of cost, on the work we're doing on a $500k reno/addition it projects to 65-70%+ recoupment, which means net cost of only $200k or so. Overall less expensive than moving and paying a whole new set of closing costs, RE commissions, VA transfer taxes etc.
If the old part of the house is well maintained and sound (ours is), I'm not sure there's a huge difference in maint. between old & new (we have new systems already in the 62 yr. old main house).
And there is no question the quality of construction in our 1950 Broyhill house is better than almost all the new construction I see including many in the $1.5M -2M range.
new homes have 10 year warranty and 2-5 year cosmetic warranty so those issue would work themselves out and be fixed for free.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Additions still don't pay off the same ROI as new construction and you still have an old part that needs maintenance vs the new addition.
How long are you planning to stay? Once your new house is 5-10 years old, it will start needing as much maintenance as an older house.
What sort of things? Won't you have a better chance of having to replace items on an older home and have major problem come up like water intrusion, basement issues etc... roofing. New home come with a 10 year warranty.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I guess I don't stand a chance of getting a reasonable deal if the area is full of aggressive realtors trying to make money off of novice home-buyers like me. I'm ok with paying the realtor a fee (Well, actually, I'd rather not, but I don't think I can outsmart the system as it currently stands)
OP, you seem very inexperienced to be taking this on yourself. Are you aware that one of those "aggressive realtors" can work FOR you, walk you through every step of an incredibly complicated process, WITHOUT being paid a fee by you?