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February 25, 2011 at 8:49 PM #672521February 26, 2011 at 9:20 AM #671477briansd1Guest
[quote=Diego Mamani][quote=briansd1][quote=UCGal]
Argentina has some great architecture.[/quote]
Talking about great architecture, look at what you can buy in Buenos Aires.[/quote] “That spring, they bought the 8,000-square-foot house, built in the early 1900s by an English railroad executive, for about $300,000 (…) Not surprisingly, it needed a complete makeover. The house had been uninhabited for a decade, and at some point in its history had been converted into an elementary school, so it was a warren of ugly partitions with lots of tiny bathrooms (…) Six months and $200,000 later…”[/quote]Still not a bad price.
Where can you get a house like that in USA? In Washington, DC, that house would cost many multiples.
Seems like there was a window of opportunity following the economic crisis in Argentina.
February 26, 2011 at 9:20 AM #671538briansd1Guest[quote=Diego Mamani][quote=briansd1][quote=UCGal]
Argentina has some great architecture.[/quote]
Talking about great architecture, look at what you can buy in Buenos Aires.[/quote] “That spring, they bought the 8,000-square-foot house, built in the early 1900s by an English railroad executive, for about $300,000 (…) Not surprisingly, it needed a complete makeover. The house had been uninhabited for a decade, and at some point in its history had been converted into an elementary school, so it was a warren of ugly partitions with lots of tiny bathrooms (…) Six months and $200,000 later…”[/quote]Still not a bad price.
Where can you get a house like that in USA? In Washington, DC, that house would cost many multiples.
Seems like there was a window of opportunity following the economic crisis in Argentina.
February 26, 2011 at 9:20 AM #672148briansd1Guest[quote=Diego Mamani][quote=briansd1][quote=UCGal]
Argentina has some great architecture.[/quote]
Talking about great architecture, look at what you can buy in Buenos Aires.[/quote] “That spring, they bought the 8,000-square-foot house, built in the early 1900s by an English railroad executive, for about $300,000 (…) Not surprisingly, it needed a complete makeover. The house had been uninhabited for a decade, and at some point in its history had been converted into an elementary school, so it was a warren of ugly partitions with lots of tiny bathrooms (…) Six months and $200,000 later…”[/quote]Still not a bad price.
Where can you get a house like that in USA? In Washington, DC, that house would cost many multiples.
Seems like there was a window of opportunity following the economic crisis in Argentina.
February 26, 2011 at 9:20 AM #672287briansd1Guest[quote=Diego Mamani][quote=briansd1][quote=UCGal]
Argentina has some great architecture.[/quote]
Talking about great architecture, look at what you can buy in Buenos Aires.[/quote] “That spring, they bought the 8,000-square-foot house, built in the early 1900s by an English railroad executive, for about $300,000 (…) Not surprisingly, it needed a complete makeover. The house had been uninhabited for a decade, and at some point in its history had been converted into an elementary school, so it was a warren of ugly partitions with lots of tiny bathrooms (…) Six months and $200,000 later…”[/quote]Still not a bad price.
Where can you get a house like that in USA? In Washington, DC, that house would cost many multiples.
Seems like there was a window of opportunity following the economic crisis in Argentina.
February 26, 2011 at 9:20 AM #672631briansd1Guest[quote=Diego Mamani][quote=briansd1][quote=UCGal]
Argentina has some great architecture.[/quote]
Talking about great architecture, look at what you can buy in Buenos Aires.[/quote] “That spring, they bought the 8,000-square-foot house, built in the early 1900s by an English railroad executive, for about $300,000 (…) Not surprisingly, it needed a complete makeover. The house had been uninhabited for a decade, and at some point in its history had been converted into an elementary school, so it was a warren of ugly partitions with lots of tiny bathrooms (…) Six months and $200,000 later…”[/quote]Still not a bad price.
Where can you get a house like that in USA? In Washington, DC, that house would cost many multiples.
Seems like there was a window of opportunity following the economic crisis in Argentina.
February 26, 2011 at 9:50 AM #671487blahblahblahParticipant[quote=davelj]I’m pretty set on buying a place in Playas (the beach area of Tijuana) in the next two years – probably in Puesta del Sol. I don’t spend enough time in San Diego to justify paying California taxes anymore, but I’ll keep my condos here.[/quote]
Nice places – I was looking on craigslist and I’d guess you could rent that for $600-750/mo pretty easily. Not a bad return if the price is actually just $100K. Something like that in Encinitas would be 8 times the price.
It would be interesting to see a historical comparison of property prices on both sides of the border. Things are rough in TJ these days, but is that going to last forever?
February 26, 2011 at 9:50 AM #671547blahblahblahParticipant[quote=davelj]I’m pretty set on buying a place in Playas (the beach area of Tijuana) in the next two years – probably in Puesta del Sol. I don’t spend enough time in San Diego to justify paying California taxes anymore, but I’ll keep my condos here.[/quote]
Nice places – I was looking on craigslist and I’d guess you could rent that for $600-750/mo pretty easily. Not a bad return if the price is actually just $100K. Something like that in Encinitas would be 8 times the price.
It would be interesting to see a historical comparison of property prices on both sides of the border. Things are rough in TJ these days, but is that going to last forever?
February 26, 2011 at 9:50 AM #672158blahblahblahParticipant[quote=davelj]I’m pretty set on buying a place in Playas (the beach area of Tijuana) in the next two years – probably in Puesta del Sol. I don’t spend enough time in San Diego to justify paying California taxes anymore, but I’ll keep my condos here.[/quote]
Nice places – I was looking on craigslist and I’d guess you could rent that for $600-750/mo pretty easily. Not a bad return if the price is actually just $100K. Something like that in Encinitas would be 8 times the price.
It would be interesting to see a historical comparison of property prices on both sides of the border. Things are rough in TJ these days, but is that going to last forever?
February 26, 2011 at 9:50 AM #672297blahblahblahParticipant[quote=davelj]I’m pretty set on buying a place in Playas (the beach area of Tijuana) in the next two years – probably in Puesta del Sol. I don’t spend enough time in San Diego to justify paying California taxes anymore, but I’ll keep my condos here.[/quote]
Nice places – I was looking on craigslist and I’d guess you could rent that for $600-750/mo pretty easily. Not a bad return if the price is actually just $100K. Something like that in Encinitas would be 8 times the price.
It would be interesting to see a historical comparison of property prices on both sides of the border. Things are rough in TJ these days, but is that going to last forever?
February 26, 2011 at 9:50 AM #672641blahblahblahParticipant[quote=davelj]I’m pretty set on buying a place in Playas (the beach area of Tijuana) in the next two years – probably in Puesta del Sol. I don’t spend enough time in San Diego to justify paying California taxes anymore, but I’ll keep my condos here.[/quote]
Nice places – I was looking on craigslist and I’d guess you could rent that for $600-750/mo pretty easily. Not a bad return if the price is actually just $100K. Something like that in Encinitas would be 8 times the price.
It would be interesting to see a historical comparison of property prices on both sides of the border. Things are rough in TJ these days, but is that going to last forever?
February 26, 2011 at 10:40 AM #671517daveljParticipant[quote=CONCHO][quote=davelj]I’m pretty set on buying a place in Playas (the beach area of Tijuana) in the next two years – probably in Puesta del Sol. I don’t spend enough time in San Diego to justify paying California taxes anymore, but I’ll keep my condos here.[/quote]
Nice places – I was looking on craigslist and I’d guess you could rent that for $600-750/mo pretty easily. Not a bad return if the price is actually just $100K. Something like that in Encinitas would be 8 times the price.
It would be interesting to see a historical comparison of property prices on both sides of the border. Things are rough in TJ these days, but is that going to last forever?[/quote]
I would say that the coastal strip between Playas and Puerto Nuevo got even more overbuilt than anywhere in California – it’s probably more comparable to Phoenix or Las Vegas in that regard. There are a few projects still under construction, but there are also several that got stopped mid-build. If you drive down the carretera you’ll see several large condo projects that got stopped mid-stream and nothing’s been done to the structure in a couple of years – they’re just empty shells. The only good news is that most folks who bought down there either paid all cash or put at least 30% down (and most of the condos aren’t that expensive relative to CA prices). And the builders weren’t as leveraged as they are here either. So while there are a TON of units for sale there haven’t been many actual foreclosures. But, it’s ugly.
One of the problems is there’s no really reliable MLS data down there. I don’t think there will be meaningful building in that neck of the woods for at least five years… and maybe longer.
My rule of thumb is simple: If you’re going to buy a new-ish condo or townhome down there, don’t pay more than $120/sq ft.
And you better plan on using it a lot and/or having a tax angle, otherwise you’re going to have buyer’s remorse. Just my 2 cents.
February 26, 2011 at 10:40 AM #671578daveljParticipant[quote=CONCHO][quote=davelj]I’m pretty set on buying a place in Playas (the beach area of Tijuana) in the next two years – probably in Puesta del Sol. I don’t spend enough time in San Diego to justify paying California taxes anymore, but I’ll keep my condos here.[/quote]
Nice places – I was looking on craigslist and I’d guess you could rent that for $600-750/mo pretty easily. Not a bad return if the price is actually just $100K. Something like that in Encinitas would be 8 times the price.
It would be interesting to see a historical comparison of property prices on both sides of the border. Things are rough in TJ these days, but is that going to last forever?[/quote]
I would say that the coastal strip between Playas and Puerto Nuevo got even more overbuilt than anywhere in California – it’s probably more comparable to Phoenix or Las Vegas in that regard. There are a few projects still under construction, but there are also several that got stopped mid-build. If you drive down the carretera you’ll see several large condo projects that got stopped mid-stream and nothing’s been done to the structure in a couple of years – they’re just empty shells. The only good news is that most folks who bought down there either paid all cash or put at least 30% down (and most of the condos aren’t that expensive relative to CA prices). And the builders weren’t as leveraged as they are here either. So while there are a TON of units for sale there haven’t been many actual foreclosures. But, it’s ugly.
One of the problems is there’s no really reliable MLS data down there. I don’t think there will be meaningful building in that neck of the woods for at least five years… and maybe longer.
My rule of thumb is simple: If you’re going to buy a new-ish condo or townhome down there, don’t pay more than $120/sq ft.
And you better plan on using it a lot and/or having a tax angle, otherwise you’re going to have buyer’s remorse. Just my 2 cents.
February 26, 2011 at 10:40 AM #672188daveljParticipant[quote=CONCHO][quote=davelj]I’m pretty set on buying a place in Playas (the beach area of Tijuana) in the next two years – probably in Puesta del Sol. I don’t spend enough time in San Diego to justify paying California taxes anymore, but I’ll keep my condos here.[/quote]
Nice places – I was looking on craigslist and I’d guess you could rent that for $600-750/mo pretty easily. Not a bad return if the price is actually just $100K. Something like that in Encinitas would be 8 times the price.
It would be interesting to see a historical comparison of property prices on both sides of the border. Things are rough in TJ these days, but is that going to last forever?[/quote]
I would say that the coastal strip between Playas and Puerto Nuevo got even more overbuilt than anywhere in California – it’s probably more comparable to Phoenix or Las Vegas in that regard. There are a few projects still under construction, but there are also several that got stopped mid-build. If you drive down the carretera you’ll see several large condo projects that got stopped mid-stream and nothing’s been done to the structure in a couple of years – they’re just empty shells. The only good news is that most folks who bought down there either paid all cash or put at least 30% down (and most of the condos aren’t that expensive relative to CA prices). And the builders weren’t as leveraged as they are here either. So while there are a TON of units for sale there haven’t been many actual foreclosures. But, it’s ugly.
One of the problems is there’s no really reliable MLS data down there. I don’t think there will be meaningful building in that neck of the woods for at least five years… and maybe longer.
My rule of thumb is simple: If you’re going to buy a new-ish condo or townhome down there, don’t pay more than $120/sq ft.
And you better plan on using it a lot and/or having a tax angle, otherwise you’re going to have buyer’s remorse. Just my 2 cents.
February 26, 2011 at 10:40 AM #672327daveljParticipant[quote=CONCHO][quote=davelj]I’m pretty set on buying a place in Playas (the beach area of Tijuana) in the next two years – probably in Puesta del Sol. I don’t spend enough time in San Diego to justify paying California taxes anymore, but I’ll keep my condos here.[/quote]
Nice places – I was looking on craigslist and I’d guess you could rent that for $600-750/mo pretty easily. Not a bad return if the price is actually just $100K. Something like that in Encinitas would be 8 times the price.
It would be interesting to see a historical comparison of property prices on both sides of the border. Things are rough in TJ these days, but is that going to last forever?[/quote]
I would say that the coastal strip between Playas and Puerto Nuevo got even more overbuilt than anywhere in California – it’s probably more comparable to Phoenix or Las Vegas in that regard. There are a few projects still under construction, but there are also several that got stopped mid-build. If you drive down the carretera you’ll see several large condo projects that got stopped mid-stream and nothing’s been done to the structure in a couple of years – they’re just empty shells. The only good news is that most folks who bought down there either paid all cash or put at least 30% down (and most of the condos aren’t that expensive relative to CA prices). And the builders weren’t as leveraged as they are here either. So while there are a TON of units for sale there haven’t been many actual foreclosures. But, it’s ugly.
One of the problems is there’s no really reliable MLS data down there. I don’t think there will be meaningful building in that neck of the woods for at least five years… and maybe longer.
My rule of thumb is simple: If you’re going to buy a new-ish condo or townhome down there, don’t pay more than $120/sq ft.
And you better plan on using it a lot and/or having a tax angle, otherwise you’re going to have buyer’s remorse. Just my 2 cents.
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