House shopping, you decide.
Our house shopping is finally appearing to net some results.
There are two places that we are interested in but are at opposite sides of the spectrum. Both places meet our requirements and are about the same price. Both are move-in ready. Given the choice which would you choose? House A (Gixxer 1000): Pros: HUGE 5 bed / 5 bath 3500+ sq.ft. HUGE, Incredible yard 3 car garage Beautiful, gated community Cons: High carrying costs (high HOA, big electric, big lawn bills, insurance, etc.) Less desirable area 45 minute commute House B (SV 650): Pros: Location, location, location Nice house, nice neighborhood 5 minute commute to work, beach, downtown More desirable area Smaller = lower costs of upkeep Cons: May want to upgrade/upsize when kids come along Neighborhood is decent, doesn’t “wow” you Yard is plenty big for entertaining but not big enough for fiddys All constructive input is appreciated. |
What's the sq ft on house B?
You have told us next to nothing on house B. House A sound like the choice not to make |
I'd go smaller, but I think the idea of any less than 10 people living in 3500 sq ft is just assanine. :lol:
That's personal preference. I'd rather have a cozier place with lower bills(including gas mileage) than a giant box out in the suburbs. I had the big box in suburbs. It's mega lame. |
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Plan B |
house A sounds like a waste unless you're really into trying to impress people from the "outside" No kids why have that big of house. huge costs can get much worse if something needs to be fixed. Yeah don't think contractors don't notice the size of the house being worked on. if you look like you got money they'll want a lot of it.
House B sounds like a no brainer. good location/size/price all good House C sounds like you already don't really like it but if it was a choice between it and being homeless you'd make do with it. |
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House B is a 3/2 2cg just shy of 2000 sq. ft. What else would you like to know? |
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2000 is a lot of space. Like a lot. |
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The bedrooms are nice and big but the center of the house doesn't flow as well as I'd like. If it were more open, I wouldn't think twice about it. |
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Do you have pics of floor plans? |
knocking down walls isn't hard to do.
you save 1 hr a day on commute - this should give you plenty of time to fix the hole in the wall. |
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And the money you save NOT paying HOA fees can go toward renovation. And yes, I watch HGTV WAAAAAAY too much. |
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As soon as I saw it, I said "That wall will be removed before we move in." The listing agent was horrified. :lol: |
2000 sq ft gets real real small when you start having kids...........
school district? |
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But the short commute would be the deal sealer. You can't buy time, or sanity, which commutes suck the life out of. :cool: And this way you can put the car up on blocks, which you can't due in an HOA place. |
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You're in FL, right? Does house A's neighborhood have a lot of foreclosures?
House B sounds like a winner. 5 minutes to the beach and downtown has a LOT of value. Jobs come and go, but the beach ain't movin'. I wouldn't call 2000 sq ft a ton of space (me, my wife, and 4 cats fill it pretty well with all our crap), but it's certainly not crowded for the average family. And does B have space to expand the garage? Build a workshop/bike storage/detatched? A regular 2-carhole leaves zero room to boogie. But if you don't have to deal with HOA bullshit and have at least a bit of land, there's potential. I would guess that house A is new/recent construction, and B is older, maybe 80s? New construction in boom areas tends to be of shit quality, but tropical weather ages stuff quickly. |
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you can raise a family in an outhouse, doesn't mean you or the family will like it.
and babies take up alot more room then older kids. |
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yup , i live in houston (well not anymore really) but anyways, whats your point?
we came out of a 1800sq ft townhouse, it sucked w/ 1 kid. just cuz you had fond memories of your child, doesn't mean back then you wished you had your own room or space. you just don't remember it. fleck/hurri-heather , do ya'll have kids? |
We have a 3 bedroom ranch that's just under 1400sq feet on 100x100
No problem with 2 kids, 2 adults, 2 cats and 2 goldfish. |
I would consider that a good location would = greater land/house appreciation.
Also, I've seen HOA's raise their fees like crazy in some places. If the carry costs are high now, what will happen later.... Plus if a smaller house means not being house poor... Definately B! |
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my guess is the i-net answer would be, we'd stay.....:?: |
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We went with house A when we bought. It wasn't exactly like your description, but it isn't that far off either.
We looked at all of the trade offs and decided that for us, it was the right choice overall. |
couple other things to think about -
how long do you plan to live there? with the housing market in the toilet right now you can pick up those huge houses in fancy places pretty dirt cheap. Hold on to that for about 2 years and you might find yourself making a large profit selling it for something you want in a better location. Resale value of either house? school districts? even though you don't have kids a potential buyer might. You mentioned renovating the smaller house, how much will that cost you? if you're going to spend 30K on renovations why not get a house that doesn't require that? |
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and smaller always isn't better also. how'd you have a 4bdrm 1000sq ft house? |
possible needs for a mac-mansion:
show off doesn't like to be around the spouse can't control the children - or doesn't like children compensation for a small **** underground pot-farm likes to waste money on utility bills |
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And cheap houses built in the 70's with really small rooms. :shrug: My parents sold the house not to long ago, but I guess they took down the listing. I was gonna post it up so you didn't think I was lying. :lol: |
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easy for me to say - I have spring water |
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i think we pay $300-325/mos for all our bills gas/elec/water, adn this was last month, w/ 100+ deg temps everyday, and Z at home w/ the AC cranked. thats for cuttle.........and we have a 3400+ sq ft house. so we prolly pay alot less then fleck in bills throughout the yr........so who's wasting? |
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The whole point of raising children is getting them out of the house. If it's a small house, they'll move out sooner. :p |
Some additional factors have already been mentioned. Age of each house. School districts. Amount of foreclosures in each neighborhood. What you are going to have to spend to get either house how you want it.
Some that haven't been mentioned. Traffic in each area. Crime in each area. Sex offenders in each area. How much you are stretching your finances to buy. If it were me, with all things being equal, I would go with house A. While most on this board would prefer the smaller house, from what I have seen most in the public would choose the larger house. At least around here there are a lot more families who would prefer a 5/5/3,500 over a 3/2/2,000. |
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ok same neighborhood samo samo, would fleck rather have his family in a 800sq ft house or 3500sq ft house, both that he can afford comfortable. Quote:
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2. Fleck I'm guessing is in an older house than yours, so that has to be taken into consideration when you think about efficiency. And EVERYONE in KC has $300 gas bills in the winter. |
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sure it does, but cuttle made a blanket statement about big houses and big elec. bill that always isn't true. and why am i the only 1 defending "big" houses, :whatwhat:, i know troy and lee both have big houses......:hitfan: |
Choice B period
Choice A tends to be foreclosure central.........Younger, less-stable homeowners who bought way out in the outskirts because that's the only place they could afford to buy a real house instead of a condo. But they're not desireable neighborhoods because they don't have any history, they aren't close to anything, and the architecture is generic. So they suffered the biggest drops in value. See: desert areas of Cali, Phoenix and Vegas. |
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I'm a small minority, I know. I hate huge houses. You never see the people you live with, something always needs cleaning. We live in a small duplex at the moment, but we have a basement, so it allows a spot to spend time alone, usually cleaning/working on the bikes. Everyone needs a refuge, but I would rather it be the basement than 3500 sq ft. :) |
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you think your gonna get that kinda efficiency from a cheap house, not. even "green" houses are crazy expensive. |
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so ever sit. is diff. even for mike, and w/ that i'm out for the day, CYA! |
have a good evening. :D
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I think you already know what my choice would be, Sean. http://smiliesftw.com/x/laugh2.gif
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Just bigger, newer homes with bigger lawns? What if it also means generic architecture, with very few trees, nothing to do within walking distance, and all your neighbors were $40K millionaires who are only 3-4 paychecks from missing their mortgage payment? |
Two co-workers also agree B is the right place. :lol:
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Choice A = OWN3D
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With the info given, I'd go with the better location = B.
Although I want to know when the houses were build. I prefer newer homes myself. :cool: |
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Originally Posted by cuttle View Post
possible needs for a mac-mansion: show off To who, my neighbors, whose houses are similiar? Or my family, who cares about nothing pertaining to my house except that now when they visit they don't have to stay at a hotel? that's just sad - how do you find your own house late at night if they are all similar? doesn't like to be around the spouse Now I carpool with my wife, which gives me an extra 1.5hrs a day 5 days a week that we never had before see - you can have a good time in a small space can't control the children - or doesn't like children My children don't need to be "controlled", and we spend lots of time together in the game room - which we didn't have room for at the old house. such a huge house and your kids don't have their own room to play in? I'd complain to the architect. compensation for a small **** Dammit, you might have me there. we need to decide by ourself: PICS!!! underground pot-farm Negative. As I understand it, the clay content in the soil out here makes it hard to grow good ganja. apparently you thought about it..... likes to waste money on utility bills Can't speak for everyone, but my utilities are about $75/ month higher than my old house. 3 times the size of the old house, but eliminated the pool / spa. That's impressive - just imagine how little your bills would be in the similar build house with less square footage |
I still really believe that if people thought about having to clean 20 ft cathedral ceilings and change the light bulbs up there, they wouldn't buy a house that had them. :D
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Please tell me how you do it. |
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JC |
House B
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I would have married her, but she was a redhead. ETA: It's not that I don't like redhead's, but my mom is one, so, you know, creepy. JC |
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of course living in the apt gave us lots of time and extra cash for traveling and getting out, so we never felt cramped. |
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they help me mess w/ house stuff i help them mess w/ car stuff he did have to rent a 20' A-frame ladder when he changed the fan in the "great" room Quote:
i guess this ? is like, why buy a gix1k, when a 6 will do or a 'busa......... |
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this may blow your mind but utilities don't cost the same in every state. how much do the utilities cost per month where you are for an 800 sq ft home? then you would see your larger house costs more then smaller. going to a larger house my utilities went up a huge amount. NO I DIDN'T WANT A LARGER HOUSE, but I love the land and being out in the country. I have blueprints in the making, if I stay the two story farm house is getting bulldozed and replaced with a house half it's size. |
Do what makes you happy. That's all that really matters.
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because I bought the house in the country. it's a very old farm house, that's what you get when you buy out of town. No desire at all to live in a subdivision. oh and I have never had a litre bike, I prefer the 600 sportbikes |
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so a bigger house w/ better effeciency may actually be cheaper utility wise vs a cheaper home thats not as efficient. the cost is relative to the area, its how much your household uses. our elec. bill was in the $70-80 range during the winter in our new house. our old townhouse was in the $250-300's....... kinda strange very few actually buy smaller houses, but most buy bigger, yet everybody is on the small house bandwagon..... Quote:
sounds like your kids are outta of the house or about to be, where mike is in the beginning stage of his "family". |
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as far as my kids yep they're out. remember when I said I raised them in the apt? The only reason I bought a large house is because it was sitting on the piece of dirt that I wanted. My son was there for the last couple years of his schooling, but he would have easily fit in the house I'm thinking of building. |
Why can't ya'll just say, "I like to be glamorous" and "I like to be confined." :lol:
I am a small house person as well. My wife is a large house person because she has a ton of junk. We settled in the middle with a 2000 sq ft house. Actually she won pretty much everything because I am in a subdivision in way too big of a house. I grew up in everything from a 500 sq ft trailer to a 3500 sq ft mac mansion in a nice HOA community living with my family growing up. The mac mansion life isn't for me. It's mostly cause of the people mac mansion subdivisions usually bring in (see the emails from crazy people, our subdivision in the large home was very much like that) and I have no want to remotely maintain something of that size. I very much dislike having to maintain a 2000 sq ft house. The only reason I bought bigger was the wife. As I tend to only occupy one room, well two if you count the garage. She has crap everywhere. I am better off in the country because of my complete dislike for most human beings. Good builders are a lot a like. I have a good friend that is a builder for the mac mansion subdivisions. It's amazing how you add fancy words to the same materials that he uses on smaller homes to trick the rich people. Efficiency is more about age of home, than price and size. If you really want efficiency. Build it yourself and pick out all the best efficiency building materials. Otherwise you will get a lot of the same materials. |
[QUOTE=Trip;251642]Why can't ya'll just say, "I like to be glamorous" and "I like to be confined." :lol:
QUOTE] no because if I say I like to be confined they'll put me back in that little room. :didntdo: |
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I voted House B but in my case I guess we bought house A. It's huge and yes...too big for two people but we found a deal that we couldn't or didn't want to refuse at the time.
Our house is 3300 sq. ft. but it had sat vacant for 9 months due to the owners being transferred to Ohio and the house being purchased by the company the guy worked for. It had been taken off the market twice but the financing fell through both times and we just happened to be looking right when it went back on the market. We bought it for below tax value. :idk: We love the place but I'm sure our next home will be smaller. 3 stories gets old when the master is on the top floor and you get to the basement to pull out of the garage and realize you forgot something and it's on the dresser in the bedroom. :wtfru: |
A townhome with $250-300 electric bills? How is that going to happen. The most I've ever paid is $50-60, and that's California, not some cheap state like Texas lol.
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old house w/ poor effeciency plus TX is deregulated, so of course our rates are higher vs what they're supposed to be. |
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I think it's interesting how 2000 sq feet is considered small :)
Our current house is like 1100 sq feet and that includes the garage :) 2000 sq feet in this city will run you over 340,000 and that doesn't include a garage, use able basement and parking for more than 1 car.. I've learned I don't want an exceptionally huge house. I hate cleaning and the fact I feel I "need" to fill it with crap. I choose B - location is important.... |
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and we had a prog. thermostat too. hey Kirsty, you know everythings bigger in TX lol i didn't think garages were included when talking house sq ft |
So for those who bought homes 2x as large as their previous one.......How much did you spend on furniture & artwork in order to fill the extra space, lol
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I HATE big houses. Of course, I don't care if YOU live in a big house... I just prefer the security of the walls being a little closer and everything within earshot. My idea of heaven would be a 450 sqft cabin in the Alaskan mountains (Cordova, specifically). So my opinion might be slightly skewed in this question of house A or house B. :lol: |
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alot :rockwoot: |
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Now as far as "artwork"...well we're still working on that part...still have some bare walls. Oh well. :idk: She had a 1400 sq. ft. townhouse and I had a 1000 sq. ft. condo but we both also had storage units rented that needed to be emptied as well. Both had been married before too so we had a bunch of stuff in these storage units that we weren't using but didn't want to get rid of either...so it came in handy with the bigger place. Ok now that I think of it...your question didn't really apply to my situation but I posted this anyways. :lol |
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we had the biggest UHAUL truck full of stuff, and our house looked pretty empty.
now we got a jog stroller and another stroller parked in the formal dining room...... we got a new King sized bedroom set, now there's a portable crib and bassinet next to it....... and charlie's room has our old queen bedroom set + a full on crib in it. Quote:
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we have 1500 sqf for the two of us, and we don't even use it all :shrug:
Granted, it helps to have another 1200 sqf of ride-in basement for my hubbies crap and my bikes..... |
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Not much, I got to unload our storage rental. Yay! |
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I don't like paying taxes in the first place, why spend more for something bigger and have to pay more taxes on top of that? I like where we live now, the garage/basement is the same size as the living space. plenty of room down there for my half finished projects. |
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