High end homes
How far do you think high end homes are going to fall.
MLS#26188045 is asking $2.5 million. It sold in 2005 for $1.5 million.
http://www.redfin.com/stingray/do/printable-listing?listing-id=304523
MLS#26188045 is asking $2.5 million. It sold in 2005 for $1.5 million.
http://www.redfin.com/stingray/do/printable-listing?listing-id=304523
Comments
I don't care how many granite counters it has, the price of last sale seems much more reasonable.
This is the most ambitious flip I've seen in the Puget Sound market place on a time/dollar basis!
If flips are priced right, and then not selling, that's a different story.
Here is a great example:
MLS #26023925
This is a developer who has optioned a two acre lot, and is hawking an off the shelf architects northwest plan "custom" home. The listing indicates he hasnt closed on the lot yet and hasnt applied for a building permit yet. So this is a pure spec house offer. The $1.8 mil pricing is a calculation based on the cost of the lot, the cost of construction, and a reasonable profit.
Because these developer spec houses typify the eastside market in the $1.2 mil to $2.0 mil range new house market, construction costs drive the prices. Comparable older existing houses will tend to be priced a notch below the cost of construction pricing of the new ones.
Now a production builder doing a subdivision can certainly build more cheaply, both in terms of cost and quality.
I also wonder how much of the increase is to changing expectations. Now that granite countertops are considered a baseline for acceptable "quality" they have to go find ever more exotic surfaces. Also, 10 years ago was it considered necessary to have a 400sf motorized closet and 2,000+ bottle wine cellar? Superfast internet connections? I think that the increasing cost of keeping up with the Joneses has been nearly as much of an factor as permits and lumber.
Permitting and conditions imposed under the new Critical Areas Ordinances is an expensive and time consuming factor, for sure.