Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: There are plenty of people who can't even afford a "shithouse."
OP here. No, I know that. I don't *really* think it's a shithouse. I'm just using that term because I know people on this board use it to refer to a small old house.
I think people replying here are getting hung up on the money and sq. ft. But my original point was just: here we are, spending all this money trying to make this old house look nice. I'm just worried that I still won't be happy with it at the end of the project. It's the best we can do with limited resources but it's not what I would choose if things were different, kwim? Like, we will we regret not moving to a further out suburb for a bigger, newer house? I'm just wondering if anyone else is in a similar situation and what you think of it?
Anonymous wrote:I'd be thrilled with that size house.
Anonymous wrote:But, but, but....we spent a ton of money on high end paver stones. Does this mean the developer is just going to dig them up when they knock this shitter down? Lawdy, what to do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: There are plenty of people who can't even afford a "shithouse."
OP here. No, I know that. I don't *really* think it's a shithouse. I'm just using that term because I know people on this board use it to refer to a small old house.
I think people replying here are getting hung up on the money and sq. ft. But my original point was just: here we are, spending all this money trying to make this old house look nice. I'm just worried that I still won't be happy with it at the end of the project. It's the best we can do with limited resources but it's not what I would choose if things were different, kwim? Like, we will we regret not moving to a further out suburb for a bigger, newer house? I'm just wondering if anyone else is in a similar situation and what you think of it?
Anonymous wrote:There is almost never a return on investment on renovations, that is like personal finance 101. You can expect some percentage on the dollar but really gauge your timeline and make the place comfortable. And honestly for an older house 150k is a pretty meager price to work with especially with environmental issues of older homes. So you wil be fine, just enjoy the renovation as consumption and don't fool yourself that it is investment (thata where over improvement comes in).