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ocrenter
Participantagree about the bare floor. I doubt the builder or the lender is going to say yes to bare showers and bare counters.
bottom line is this:
there are thousands of hungry contractors hoping to get your business.
there’s a single builder with a single design center with a single contractor for each type of upgrade.
who do you think is going to offer a better price?
ocrenter
Participantpropsearchaddiction is right, generally most contractors are now willing to do work at 50% peak pricing. if the one you are talking to is unwilling, just move on to the next one.
a good rule of thumb is simply get the cost the builder quotes you, and aim for 50-60% of that price for after-market work.
ocrenter
Participantpropsearchaddiction is right, generally most contractors are now willing to do work at 50% peak pricing. if the one you are talking to is unwilling, just move on to the next one.
a good rule of thumb is simply get the cost the builder quotes you, and aim for 50-60% of that price for after-market work.
ocrenter
Participantpropsearchaddiction is right, generally most contractors are now willing to do work at 50% peak pricing. if the one you are talking to is unwilling, just move on to the next one.
a good rule of thumb is simply get the cost the builder quotes you, and aim for 50-60% of that price for after-market work.
ocrenter
Participantpropsearchaddiction is right, generally most contractors are now willing to do work at 50% peak pricing. if the one you are talking to is unwilling, just move on to the next one.
a good rule of thumb is simply get the cost the builder quotes you, and aim for 50-60% of that price for after-market work.
ocrenter
Participantpropsearchaddiction is right, generally most contractors are now willing to do work at 50% peak pricing. if the one you are talking to is unwilling, just move on to the next one.
a good rule of thumb is simply get the cost the builder quotes you, and aim for 50-60% of that price for after-market work.
ocrenter
Participant[quote=jpinpb]
Third, are there not pulmonologists out there that smoke?[/quote]actually, respiratory therapists are the worst. most of those guys are chain smokers.
ocrenter
Participant[quote=jpinpb]
Third, are there not pulmonologists out there that smoke?[/quote]actually, respiratory therapists are the worst. most of those guys are chain smokers.
ocrenter
Participant[quote=jpinpb]
Third, are there not pulmonologists out there that smoke?[/quote]actually, respiratory therapists are the worst. most of those guys are chain smokers.
ocrenter
Participant[quote=jpinpb]
Third, are there not pulmonologists out there that smoke?[/quote]actually, respiratory therapists are the worst. most of those guys are chain smokers.
ocrenter
Participant[quote=jpinpb]
Third, are there not pulmonologists out there that smoke?[/quote]actually, respiratory therapists are the worst. most of those guys are chain smokers.
ocrenter
Participanthere we are again, eventually we get into the same old debate about CV vs RB. Why oh why is CV so much pricier? It isn’t the schools, they are the same caliber! so I guess it must be the weather and the proximity to the coast???
Let’s take a look at a couple of recent closings:
3789 Torrey View Ct, San Diego, Ca 92130
–2414 sqft, 3 bed/3 bath on 4181 sqft lot
–07/10/2009: $750,000
–08/08/2003: $669,000
–10/28/1997: $329,00011308 Monticook Ct, San Diego, CA 92127
–2414 sqft, 4 bed/3 bath on 9300 sqft lot
–05/20/2009: $627,000
–08/20/1997: $315,000
–11/12/1993: $289,075hmmm, turns out back in 1997 these same sqft homes were virtually the same price. But now in 2009 they are $123,000 apart.
I did hear CV became MORE coastal over the last decade.
ocrenter
Participanthere we are again, eventually we get into the same old debate about CV vs RB. Why oh why is CV so much pricier? It isn’t the schools, they are the same caliber! so I guess it must be the weather and the proximity to the coast???
Let’s take a look at a couple of recent closings:
3789 Torrey View Ct, San Diego, Ca 92130
–2414 sqft, 3 bed/3 bath on 4181 sqft lot
–07/10/2009: $750,000
–08/08/2003: $669,000
–10/28/1997: $329,00011308 Monticook Ct, San Diego, CA 92127
–2414 sqft, 4 bed/3 bath on 9300 sqft lot
–05/20/2009: $627,000
–08/20/1997: $315,000
–11/12/1993: $289,075hmmm, turns out back in 1997 these same sqft homes were virtually the same price. But now in 2009 they are $123,000 apart.
I did hear CV became MORE coastal over the last decade.
ocrenter
Participanthere we are again, eventually we get into the same old debate about CV vs RB. Why oh why is CV so much pricier? It isn’t the schools, they are the same caliber! so I guess it must be the weather and the proximity to the coast???
Let’s take a look at a couple of recent closings:
3789 Torrey View Ct, San Diego, Ca 92130
–2414 sqft, 3 bed/3 bath on 4181 sqft lot
–07/10/2009: $750,000
–08/08/2003: $669,000
–10/28/1997: $329,00011308 Monticook Ct, San Diego, CA 92127
–2414 sqft, 4 bed/3 bath on 9300 sqft lot
–05/20/2009: $627,000
–08/20/1997: $315,000
–11/12/1993: $289,075hmmm, turns out back in 1997 these same sqft homes were virtually the same price. But now in 2009 they are $123,000 apart.
I did hear CV became MORE coastal over the last decade.
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