Anonymous wrote:Speaking of houses that don’t look like typical flips, here’s one that manages an old west saloon vibe. Currently set up as two 2BRs. “Renovated last in the late 70's/early 80's.”
$975k, 4BR/2.5BA, 1814 sf:
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/921-N-Carolina-Ave-SE-20003/home/9904840
Anonymous wrote:What do you all think of this one? Lots of space, but wow did not expect that price!?
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/1427-K-St-SE-20003/home/9918233
Anonymous wrote:$875k for 3br/2ba and 1280 sq ft:
"Blank canvas" attached to an apartment building. Mutilated during a previous renovation.
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/520-13th-St-NE-20002/home/166622514
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
$825k - 2br/1.5ba: I like these one-way streets, but what do you think about houses that open directly onto the sidewalk?
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/646-Acker-Pl-NE-20002/home/9898847
This one closed yesterday for $931,000!
$106k over asking and for only two bedrooms with no parking and no setback from the sidewalk. WOW.
I never realized some of these houses set along the ground still had basements, so it makes a little bit sense, but still that’s a lot of money
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
$825k - 2br/1.5ba: I like these one-way streets, but what do you think about houses that open directly onto the sidewalk?
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/646-Acker-Pl-NE-20002/home/9898847
This one closed yesterday for $931,000!
$106k over asking and for only two bedrooms with no parking and no setback from the sidewalk. WOW.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
$825k - 2br/1.5ba: I like these one-way streets, but what do you think about houses that open directly onto the sidewalk?
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/646-Acker-Pl-NE-20002/home/9898847
This one closed yesterday for $931,000!
$106k over asking and for only two bedrooms with no parking and no setback from the sidewalk. WOW.
Anonymous wrote:
$825k - 2br/1.5ba: I like these one-way streets, but what do you think about houses that open directly onto the sidewalk?
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/646-Acker-Pl-NE-20002/home/9898847
Now this home I am SHOCKED is pending after just a few days:
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/1012-8th-St-NE-20002/home/9900949
I peaked inside the other day when I was on a walk and the interior looks beautiful, but $1.6 million for H Street corridor?? Not to mention it’s on 8th too!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$900k - 4br/3.5ba: This house is huge and under a million.
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/1123-K-St-NE-20002/home/9907783
"Everything was New in 2005!" Do you think the listing agent knows that 2005 was 16 years ago? The interior looks...fine. Not awful, I suppose, but...well, like something remodeled as a rental 16 years ago.
The house to the right, though, looks like it's in really poor repair. Do you suppose that will affect the sale price of this house?
Heh. I guess they couldn't write "Everything is coming to the end of its life cycle! Enjoy replacing all of it in a few years!"
The house needs a lot of work, but it's livable as is and probably priced too high to interest a flipper. A chance for an actual family to make it their own.
it looks fine? I’m not seeing “a lot of work.”
I haven't seen the house in person so can't speak to any actual issues that would come up in an inspection, but just based on pictures, most people would want to do a bunch of upgrades. Developers take advantage of this and charge a premium for gray paint and white cabinets from Home Depot. By buying a house pre-flip, a family could choose the finishes they actually want.
Also yes, the house next door could be problematic. Their pest issues will be your rodent and roach issues. Their mold and deterioration issues could very well become yours as well. Eventually someone will buy and renovate, and their construction issues will be your construction issues.
This is still on the market almost three weeks later, which is almost surprising for a 2,696 sq ft house in H Street/Near Northeast. I'm guessing that the house next door is the biggest problem; the interior is dated, but I don't see anything someone couldn't live with to get that much space for less than $1M in the current market.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this one was discussed as the "I can see Chick Fil A from my house" discount... Sells for 10% over list and then promptly listed for rent. Odd. Investors are buying row houses to rent out? I thought the math on that was cramped...
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1439-G-St-NE-Washington-DC-20002/424583_zpid/?
And at that rate, I can't see them making too much money. Just the mortgage is 3K/mo (if 20% down), insurance another 100, taxes another 500. Add in opp cost of capital/maintenance, they are underwater from day 1. Something seems off. Last minute job relocation?
Anonymous wrote:I think this one was discussed as the "I can see Chick Fil A from my house" discount... Sells for 10% over list and then promptly listed for rent. Odd. Investors are buying row houses to rent out? I thought the math on that was cramped...
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1439-G-St-NE-Washington-DC-20002/424583_zpid/?