Home › Forums › Closed Forums › Properties or Areas › Interesting short sale in Hillcrest…
- This topic has 30 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 8 months ago by djrobsd.
-
AuthorPosts
-
March 24, 2008 at 11:25 AM #175425March 24, 2008 at 11:41 AM #175789djrobsdParticipant
I’m renting a 1br, 900sf, it’s currently $1600 a month. I absolutely love living here, the location is central to everything, and I get lots of sunlight. The sunsets are FABULOUS from the west facing units! The units facing the street (Park and University) are the ones that suffer the most. If you face the courtyard, it’s pretty quiet, I think the steel structure of the building really blocks out most of the noise for the inner units. The only thing you can really hear is the sirens from the ambulances and you’re going to hear that no matter where you live in Hillcrest.
The cairo is NOT a better building, it’s wooden construction, not steel, so you are going to hear every noise your neighbors make. I have yet to hear anything from my neighbors, except if they are stomping around above me, but you’re going to get that noise in any multi-story building you live in.
I definately think the prices must come down to rational levels before people will buy in here. How low can they go is a matter of how much burden the current owners can carry until they say enough is enough. If i’m renting a 1br for that price, the selling price would need to be about $225,00 for anyone to break even after property taxes and HOA fees.
March 24, 2008 at 11:41 AM #175797djrobsdParticipantI’m renting a 1br, 900sf, it’s currently $1600 a month. I absolutely love living here, the location is central to everything, and I get lots of sunlight. The sunsets are FABULOUS from the west facing units! The units facing the street (Park and University) are the ones that suffer the most. If you face the courtyard, it’s pretty quiet, I think the steel structure of the building really blocks out most of the noise for the inner units. The only thing you can really hear is the sirens from the ambulances and you’re going to hear that no matter where you live in Hillcrest.
The cairo is NOT a better building, it’s wooden construction, not steel, so you are going to hear every noise your neighbors make. I have yet to hear anything from my neighbors, except if they are stomping around above me, but you’re going to get that noise in any multi-story building you live in.
I definately think the prices must come down to rational levels before people will buy in here. How low can they go is a matter of how much burden the current owners can carry until they say enough is enough. If i’m renting a 1br for that price, the selling price would need to be about $225,00 for anyone to break even after property taxes and HOA fees.
March 24, 2008 at 11:41 AM #175799djrobsdParticipantI’m renting a 1br, 900sf, it’s currently $1600 a month. I absolutely love living here, the location is central to everything, and I get lots of sunlight. The sunsets are FABULOUS from the west facing units! The units facing the street (Park and University) are the ones that suffer the most. If you face the courtyard, it’s pretty quiet, I think the steel structure of the building really blocks out most of the noise for the inner units. The only thing you can really hear is the sirens from the ambulances and you’re going to hear that no matter where you live in Hillcrest.
The cairo is NOT a better building, it’s wooden construction, not steel, so you are going to hear every noise your neighbors make. I have yet to hear anything from my neighbors, except if they are stomping around above me, but you’re going to get that noise in any multi-story building you live in.
I definately think the prices must come down to rational levels before people will buy in here. How low can they go is a matter of how much burden the current owners can carry until they say enough is enough. If i’m renting a 1br for that price, the selling price would need to be about $225,00 for anyone to break even after property taxes and HOA fees.
March 24, 2008 at 11:41 AM #175890djrobsdParticipantI’m renting a 1br, 900sf, it’s currently $1600 a month. I absolutely love living here, the location is central to everything, and I get lots of sunlight. The sunsets are FABULOUS from the west facing units! The units facing the street (Park and University) are the ones that suffer the most. If you face the courtyard, it’s pretty quiet, I think the steel structure of the building really blocks out most of the noise for the inner units. The only thing you can really hear is the sirens from the ambulances and you’re going to hear that no matter where you live in Hillcrest.
The cairo is NOT a better building, it’s wooden construction, not steel, so you are going to hear every noise your neighbors make. I have yet to hear anything from my neighbors, except if they are stomping around above me, but you’re going to get that noise in any multi-story building you live in.
I definately think the prices must come down to rational levels before people will buy in here. How low can they go is a matter of how much burden the current owners can carry until they say enough is enough. If i’m renting a 1br for that price, the selling price would need to be about $225,00 for anyone to break even after property taxes and HOA fees.
March 24, 2008 at 11:41 AM #175440djrobsdParticipantI’m renting a 1br, 900sf, it’s currently $1600 a month. I absolutely love living here, the location is central to everything, and I get lots of sunlight. The sunsets are FABULOUS from the west facing units! The units facing the street (Park and University) are the ones that suffer the most. If you face the courtyard, it’s pretty quiet, I think the steel structure of the building really blocks out most of the noise for the inner units. The only thing you can really hear is the sirens from the ambulances and you’re going to hear that no matter where you live in Hillcrest.
The cairo is NOT a better building, it’s wooden construction, not steel, so you are going to hear every noise your neighbors make. I have yet to hear anything from my neighbors, except if they are stomping around above me, but you’re going to get that noise in any multi-story building you live in.
I definately think the prices must come down to rational levels before people will buy in here. How low can they go is a matter of how much burden the current owners can carry until they say enough is enough. If i’m renting a 1br for that price, the selling price would need to be about $225,00 for anyone to break even after property taxes and HOA fees.
March 24, 2008 at 11:49 AM #175794akbarpunjabiParticipantI know it is off the topic but whatever happened to the condo you owned (djrobsd)? Did the bank rework the loan? Did you get a short sale approved? Did you mail in the keys? Are you renting it out?
March 24, 2008 at 11:49 AM #175802akbarpunjabiParticipantI know it is off the topic but whatever happened to the condo you owned (djrobsd)? Did the bank rework the loan? Did you get a short sale approved? Did you mail in the keys? Are you renting it out?
March 24, 2008 at 11:49 AM #175804akbarpunjabiParticipantI know it is off the topic but whatever happened to the condo you owned (djrobsd)? Did the bank rework the loan? Did you get a short sale approved? Did you mail in the keys? Are you renting it out?
March 24, 2008 at 11:49 AM #175445akbarpunjabiParticipantI know it is off the topic but whatever happened to the condo you owned (djrobsd)? Did the bank rework the loan? Did you get a short sale approved? Did you mail in the keys? Are you renting it out?
March 24, 2008 at 11:49 AM #175896akbarpunjabiParticipantI know it is off the topic but whatever happened to the condo you owned (djrobsd)? Did the bank rework the loan? Did you get a short sale approved? Did you mail in the keys? Are you renting it out?
March 24, 2008 at 1:00 PM #175849djrobsdParticipantHaha, I posted a thread on here when I sold it, but I think a lot of people missed it since it was over the weekend. I sold it for $350,000. I had to bring $20,000 to close, and give the buyer the plasma TV on the wall, but I am so glad that it’s all over with and I’m back to being a renter, I have no regrets! I didn’t even go 30 days late, so my credit was not damaged either. π I lucked out, I know, selling a 650 square foot house for $350k, but I obviously did the right upgrades and improvements that made that “emotional” connection with the buyer, he even put in the offer that he wanted to make sure I was leaving the pendant lights in the dining room and the track lighting in the kitchen. π
So, lesson learned, and now I’m waiting for the prices to fall down to reasonable levels again before jumping back in… π
March 24, 2008 at 1:00 PM #175949djrobsdParticipantHaha, I posted a thread on here when I sold it, but I think a lot of people missed it since it was over the weekend. I sold it for $350,000. I had to bring $20,000 to close, and give the buyer the plasma TV on the wall, but I am so glad that it’s all over with and I’m back to being a renter, I have no regrets! I didn’t even go 30 days late, so my credit was not damaged either. π I lucked out, I know, selling a 650 square foot house for $350k, but I obviously did the right upgrades and improvements that made that “emotional” connection with the buyer, he even put in the offer that he wanted to make sure I was leaving the pendant lights in the dining room and the track lighting in the kitchen. π
So, lesson learned, and now I’m waiting for the prices to fall down to reasonable levels again before jumping back in… π
March 24, 2008 at 1:00 PM #175859djrobsdParticipantHaha, I posted a thread on here when I sold it, but I think a lot of people missed it since it was over the weekend. I sold it for $350,000. I had to bring $20,000 to close, and give the buyer the plasma TV on the wall, but I am so glad that it’s all over with and I’m back to being a renter, I have no regrets! I didn’t even go 30 days late, so my credit was not damaged either. π I lucked out, I know, selling a 650 square foot house for $350k, but I obviously did the right upgrades and improvements that made that “emotional” connection with the buyer, he even put in the offer that he wanted to make sure I was leaving the pendant lights in the dining room and the track lighting in the kitchen. π
So, lesson learned, and now I’m waiting for the prices to fall down to reasonable levels again before jumping back in… π
March 24, 2008 at 1:00 PM #175857djrobsdParticipantHaha, I posted a thread on here when I sold it, but I think a lot of people missed it since it was over the weekend. I sold it for $350,000. I had to bring $20,000 to close, and give the buyer the plasma TV on the wall, but I am so glad that it’s all over with and I’m back to being a renter, I have no regrets! I didn’t even go 30 days late, so my credit was not damaged either. π I lucked out, I know, selling a 650 square foot house for $350k, but I obviously did the right upgrades and improvements that made that “emotional” connection with the buyer, he even put in the offer that he wanted to make sure I was leaving the pendant lights in the dining room and the track lighting in the kitchen. π
So, lesson learned, and now I’m waiting for the prices to fall down to reasonable levels again before jumping back in… π
-
AuthorPosts
- The forum ‘Properties or Areas’ is closed to new topics and replies.