Tag Archives: san diego

Use Your Remodeling Dollars Wisely

Time was, and not all that long ago, that putting money into your house before putting it on the market paid off at resale.

Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com for your questions if remodeling project will add value to your home.

But the “sluggish housing market continues to push down remodeling return on investment,” Sal Alfano writes in the most recent Cost vs. Value Report issued by Remodeling magazine, with the overall average cost-to-value ratio dropping to 57.7 percent from its peak in 2005 of 86.7 percent.

Even though the cost of remodeling itself has continued to fall, that’s effectively counteracted by a drop in resale values, Alfano said.

Bottom line: There is no guarantee that any improvement will boost the sale price of a house, especially in a real estate market in which even multiple offers typically result only in an amount near or slightly above asking price.

Yes, doing the necessary improvements to a house will help it compete. If two houses are for sale on the same street for the same price and one has a new roof while the other needs one, it’s not hard to figure out which might sell first. But “might” is the operative word in an era when little about the real estate market is a certainty.

New roof or not, a house’s list price must be appropriate for the market to attract buyers, who likely will not only expect leak-free conditions, but also a furnace and air conditioning that work properly.

Read more at: http://www.chicagotribune.com/classified/realestate/home/sc-cons-0628-resale-remodel-20120628,0,964470.story

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More Shipping Container Homes!!

FROM the second floor of the modern home that Andrew Anderson built on a sandy lot here, expansive views of Napeague Harbor are visible to the north, and a sliver of the Atlantic Ocean sparkles beyond the dunes to the south. But in this land of ocean-liner-sized waterfront mansions, the most surprising feature of his four-bedroom two-and-a-half-bath “Beach Box” is what it’s made of: six repurposed steel shipping containers — the kind usually found stacked 8 to 10 high on cargo ships.

Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com for valuation on unique properties.

“You are giving them a second life,” said Mr. Anderson, the owner of beachboxit.com, who explained that the 8-by-40-foot crates, usually retired after 20 years, are costly to melt down. Repurposing is an environmentally friendly way to build something “10 times stronger” than a traditional home, he said.

The containers are engineered to withstand saltwater and storms at sea. In this chic Hamptons setting, they also fuse luxury with a way to save the planet. On June 15, Mr. Anderson listed the 2,000-square-foot modular home for $1.395 million. The house, three blocks from the shore, is clad in hardy fiberboard; it has 1,300 square feet of decks on two levels and sits on a property landscaped with indigenous beach grasses. The white rubber roof reduces energy costs by reflecting solar energy.

Read more at:http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/01/realestate/long-island-in-the-region-built-green-or-red-white-and-blue.html?_r=1&ref=realestate

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What not to DIY with plumbing and electrical

With DIY electrical and plumbing work, it’s more about what you can’t do than what you can.

The law is black and white when it comes to working on the electrical and plumbing systems in your home.

If it’s much beyond changing a light bulb or a tap washer, you will probably need to get the relevant licensed tradesperson onto it, if in doubt call a tradie.

The following information is a general overview of just some of the laws and regulations you must be aware of before attempting any work on the electrical and plumbing systems in and around your home.

Read more at: http://smh.domain.com.au/diy/what-not-to-diy-with-plumbing-and-electrical-20120619-20ld9.html

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes