Is this the bottom?
This house seems pretty reasonable to me.
http://www.redfin.com/stingray/do/print ... id=1616387
17043 2nd Ave NW
3,070 sqft
$419k
$136/sqft
In Shoreline.
Across from a park.
It looks nice too.
So, what is wrong with it?
I bet it sells within a week.
http://www.redfin.com/stingray/do/print ... id=1616387
17043 2nd Ave NW
3,070 sqft
$419k
$136/sqft
In Shoreline.
Across from a park.
It looks nice too.
So, what is wrong with it?
I bet it sells within a week.
Comments
Real list calls that house only 1850 square feet, so maybe the basement was more recently finished....The pictures do look nice, but you never know of the horrors that may be lurking behind the walls.
A house in Redmond that seems very similar to this Shoreline house sold recently for $495K. It is 2250 sq. ft. with a much larger lot. There is a 2700 sq. ft. house in Bellevue that's sat unsold at $445K for a couple months (no garage though).
2) Based on the pre bubble normal appreciation rate of 4% (being generous there) the house would be worth $215K today
3) But according to Redfin the kitchen has been updated. Looking at the pictures the kitchen looks "ok" but nothing spectacular. So let's add 30K for improvements.
4) That brings the value of the house today to $245K based on a "average appreciation" since 1999
5) They are asking $453K
6) That is $208K too much
By my calculation the house is 46% above what it would have been worth if the bubble had not happened.
Even if you play with the numbers you will see this house is over priced.
Remember, Seattle prices are just now nosing over.....we have a LONG way to go.
So its only 42% overpriced....well that is a different story!!!
It is a GREAT TIME TO BUY!!! :twisted:
You can't always assume a "sale" is really an on the market transaction. For instance, getting a non family member off the title of a home forces a "sale" at 1/2 the outstanding loan balance. Divorce has a similar transaction.
For this home, the last "sale" looks odd. Based on the fact it sold for $195K 4 years earlier and there were two sales at $148K within a month of each other in 1999, I'm guessing there was a divorce, quit claim, etc. going on. And if so, the $148K can't be used for valuation today. Go back to the 1995 sales price of $195K and use the sale methodology.
It still makes it overpriced.
Every new house from local builders that has a basement finished includes it in the sq ft, and they also charge just as much for it. But they are finishing the basement to code, and normally it is a daylight basement to take advantage of a sloping lot.
This is another thing to watch out for with older houses. They have more accumulated strangeness from previous owners to consider.
My point is that the "basement" is no longer a basement at my place - it's just space in my house. In fact, when I looked around before I bought I thought "where's the basement?". A minor bummer from a storage perspective (although the garage is big enough for that), but apart from that I'm happy with my basement. In fact, I'm sitting in it right now watching TV and enjoying the view.
There's a world of difference between DIY shitty remodel with 7 foot ceilings and a weird smell, and a professional job in a basement that was appropriate for the conversion in the first place.
Then I guess my lower level isn't a basement, even though it's situated directly on the concrete slab. The appraisal included the space, as it should in this case.
I *suppose* that multiple appraisers over the years could all have missed this, and I suppose that the assessors and tax records could also be inaccurate. Seems incredibly unlikely to me.
I think what's more likely is that renovated basement space, if permitted, inspected, heated and properly finished *is* actual space in house and can be reported as such. Obviously the quality of the final space is highly variable - that goes without saying.
Note to self: Never buy a house listed by Deborah Covey.
You don't need to see my house. The multiple appraisers and assessors over the years all deemed the permitted and inspected square footage to be valid and legal square footage. Just because you lost the debate over this doesn't excuse your bad attitude, although it never stopped you in the past.
I think you may need to grow up a little.
You win, you can have the last word. You need attention or something?
I think everyone got the point though. Basements don't usually count, unless they are finished and meet code.
If a basement isn't included in the square footage, hopefully it's noted somewhere in the other stats, or else I'd immediately skip to the next house in a web search.
NWMLS lists the house as pending, as of 4/10.