View Full Version : real estate!!
tulip
03-04-2008, 01:25 PM
I just put some money down (totally refundable should I change my mind) to reserve a condo currently under construction...whew! I'm quite excited, as this is another step in my new life. It'll be a very cool, modern place downtown. Should be done by the end of June, when my current lease is up! whoo-hoo!
Blueberry
03-04-2008, 01:28 PM
Congratulations!!!!
Good for you!
I'll probably be moving to a condo within two years, I wish it were a cool, modern place downtown but our downtown has been gentrified and prices are out of this world. Well, my world anyway :(
tulip
03-04-2008, 01:41 PM
Good for you!
I'll probably be moving to a condo within two years, I wish it were a cool, modern place downtown but our downtown has been gentrified and prices are out of this world. Well, my world anyway :(
That's one of the reasons I moved away from DC.
IFjane
03-04-2008, 03:29 PM
Congratulations, Tulip!!! How exciting!
Where downtown? I get to Richmond every now and then....and a couple very very good TE friends live down there. One even works downtown. :)
KayTee
03-04-2008, 06:53 PM
Sounds awesome, Tulip! And does your new condo happen to have a river view? Living there should be quite convenient for access to great local bike routes. (BTW, I'm the TE-er who works in downtown RIC.)
Trek420
03-04-2008, 07:22 PM
Congratulations! And selfishly on my part, whew!
I'm just glad anytime I hear/read of someone buying. Hey, instead of reserving a cool place downtown you could just buy my pad instead (after I do the hard part of course, living through the construction mess and finish a remodel for you :rolleyes:).
It's not cool or near downtown, more on the cute, lotsa greenery side. But I'm a 2 mile flat bike ride to BART and from there the wonders of downtown SF and the Bay Area.
Right now the kitchen looks like this though. :eek:
Condos, the good news - you're not an owner. The bad news - you're not an owner. This can mean rules, more rules, delays and missmanagement unless you luck out and have a real good HOA.
HOA fees are not tax deductable so consider if you can afford them how much more house could you buy?
But the flip side is your home needs a new roof, gutters cleaned, sidewalks repaired .... you're free to be off riding :D
shootingstar
03-04-2008, 08:28 PM
Congrats...it's a new phase in life...because it can be.
I bought and owned a condo myself for 14 years...had a bike locker, near bike paths...etc. All the more reason to bike more often, public transit...if there's a mortgage to whittle down. :)
tulip
03-04-2008, 08:31 PM
Thanks, all. It's quite exciting. It'll be nice to own something and pay less than I'm paying in rent. And it'll be so cool and sleek, just my style!
Jane and KayTee, the prospective place is downtown; there is lots of redevelopment going on in the area. The Fan is out of my budget at the moment, and I'm a city girl and I am not interested in the 'burbs. I like other parts of Richmond, but this place was just right. Richmond has a great program to encourage preservation of historic structures: 10 year property tax abatement. I won't be there that long, as I would like to get a bigger place when my situation allows in a year or two. It's very small, but I used to live in Paris, and it's a pretty good size for Paris (okay so Richmond isn't quite Paris, but at this price, I can go to Paris a few times a year)!
Trek, yeah, I debated about a condo vs. a house. My budget is really tight given the divorce and my budding consulting business. Plus now that I live alone, I'm not wild about being in a single family house all by myself. I also travel alot and don't want to leave an empty house as much as I would have to. And my other houses (both single family) were alot of work! I know there are condo fees, but they are low in this case.
This will be the third place I have bought, so it's not a new process. I'm still looking for other places in case this one should fall through for some reason.
Richmond is the Paris of Virginia, dincha know?
Mr. Bloom
03-05-2008, 01:36 AM
HOA fees are not tax deductable so consider if you can afford them how much more house could you buy?
But the flip side is your home needs a new roof, gutters cleaned, sidewalks repaired .... you're free to be off riding :D
Amen...but while HoA fees are not deductible, neither are home maintenance expenses. For my condo (home #2), my fees are only 2/3 of what I pay Larry The Lawn Guy to cut the grass at Home #1...but at Home #2, I worry about nothing outside. I consider it quite a good deal...
Condos, the good news - you're not an owner. The bad news - you're not an owner. This can mean rules, more rules, delays and missmanagement unless you luck out and have a real good HOA.
I encourage you to get on the board for the HoA and consider a couple things:
Many new condos keep the HoA fees way too low and don't reserve for long term maintence; it's better to pay a little more monthly now, then to have to cough up a huge increase or assessment for a problem later.
Make sure the rules balance personal freedom AND maintaining property values. What one owner views as wacky and cool may be a huge deterent to potential buyers...and that hurts value. By the same token, a bunch of rigid rules won't necessarily help values either.
Hire a management company to manage day/day stuff and be the "hammer" when something goes awry.
My condo is 20 years old, but we have a six figure reserve and haven't ever had an assessment or had an increase in dues in 10 years despite:
- maintaining all the grounds,
- resurfacing the parking lot,
- replacing all the cedar shake roofs
- and dealing with ongoing unit repairs.
Velobambina
03-05-2008, 01:58 AM
Very exciting news! Congratulations.
Geonz
03-05-2008, 03:59 AM
Exciting!! Keep us posted on the progress.
I lived in Richmond for 5 years. It's a neat town.
Bad JuJu
03-05-2008, 04:42 AM
Congratulations and good luck with your new place!
If I were single again, I'm pretty sure I'd consider a condo over a house. I'm pretty handy with small projects around the house, but there's some stuff we've had to do on the homes we've owned that I wouldn't know how to begin to tackle on my own.
Let us know how it's going.
spindizzy
03-05-2008, 12:00 PM
Congrats! Real estate is generally a good investment. And it's yours!
7rider
03-05-2008, 03:21 PM
If I were single again, I'm pretty sure I'd consider a condo over a house. I'm pretty handy with small projects around the house, but there's some stuff we've had to do on the homes we've owned that I wouldn't know how to begin to tackle on my own.
Yeah....congrats.
When I was single, I bought a townhouse. It was wonderful to have the security of home ownership, without the hassles. On a saturday morning, I'd ride my bike past a friend's house and holler and wave while he was out mowing the lawn!! :p
jeannierides
03-06-2008, 11:10 AM
Richmond is the Paris of Virginia, dincha know?
Indeed it is.;)
Tulip, congratulations! I am the *other* TE'er who lives in Richmond. I currently live in a Townhome that I do not own. I'm planning to do something about home ownership myself, sometime in the not too distant future.:rolleyes:
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