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I think it is still in the very very early stages, still working to approve the zoning with the city I think. If you're familiar with the area, essentially the cedar mill next to Rocky Point got bought and they're making that into a 5+ tower NewPort type area. At least that's the plan. edit: Flavelle Oceanfront http://www.flavelleoceanfront.ca edit2: Personal opinion is I think you'd be stupid not to try and get as many presales as possible. Oceanfront in one of the most desirable suburbs of the lower mainland... |
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From my experience, I suspect the 2 rows (of buildings) closest to the railway tracks will experience vibrations and such from the passing trains. Additionally, zoning and construction is going to take a long time. With the site at Clarke & Moody that I mentioned, the rumours I heard was that the developer was having a hard time finding enough workers to get started on the project. I'd also imagine some level of resistance from the local residents to slow the rezoning application. If Mayor Mike Clay continues at the mayoral office though, the projects will push through. He is very pro-development at the expense of residences. (Full disclosure: I had a few run ins with him in the past, and I did not like him at all. IMO, he is not there to protect the Port Moody residents' interests.) |
One thing to consider for your parents is if they get getting into a town home, the stairs. When I was still in the industry you’d be amazed how many older couples would sell their detached home, move into a townhome or row home that essentially consist of nothing but stairs, only to move out a few years later because the sheer volume up stairs you deal with on a daily basis is too much for older people |
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it's cleaned up a lot and I suspect Norquay may be similar |
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1. About 4-6 steps to our front door 2. About 15 steps from the front door into our main floor 3. About 15 steps from the main floor to our 2nd floor where the rooms are Ok so the first 2 we don't deal with a ton just when we come and go but the stairs between the 2 floors are a huge pain in the ass right now lol but I guess it's giving me a work out :badpokerface: |
Got an offer for my apartment $615k over asking. I listed as $608k. Not sure if I should accept the offer or wait for a higher one since I only listed for a week and only did a day for open house...... |
Gotta love Vancouver. Offers over asking... "I'll think about it." |
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The condo / apartment market seems to be thoroughly confusing to me at this point. Some places are really quiet, and others seem like there isn't a market slow down at all. A unit at my complex sold quite a bit above asking after a weekend's worth of open house, while 2 other ones in the same complex sat for 3+ and 5+ month, respectively. One important factor to consider is -- if your unit sits for more than "a few" weeks after it initially goes on the market, buyers and realtors are going to shy away from it. They'll either think there is something wrong with the unit, or they'll think the owner is a PITA to deal with and only fishing for a high price. IMO, the greatest amount of interest is almost always generated within the first 2 weeks of the apartment unit coming onto the market. After that, the level of interest kind of trails off and it becomes really easy for the sale to get stale. The tricky bit is, how long do you want to wait for your sale to gain exposure, versus how quickly interest drops off because the buyers think there is something wrong with your unit. |
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As per Sq is around $1200/sq ft/ I agree with you price is so weird with apartments now. Literally a few apartments away units were listing for mid 550k to 600k but a block away is 620k+. Size is almost the size everything is almost the same. |
^this is why I don't deal with realtors like this, sounds like she's not putting in the effort into selling ur place cause she's doing u a favor and she's making peanuts compared to what she usually makes off selling houses. For me the dead giveaway was having only 1 open house on Sunday, why not Saturday as well..... Anyways if ur at all happy with ur offer, I'd go back and make a counter offer, depending on how much more it is, I don't see them losing out on the sale for anything around 10k extra |
Both realtors I dealt with when we sold our appt gave me a stack of like 20 comparable sales in my building as well as others they printed off through MLX so I could see every single option and the sales history. Imo I kinda agree she isn’t doing her job if she hasn’t laid out every option to you. Is your unit the best example that’s come up for sale? Are there nicer units that have sold for more/less Imo you shouldn’t be just fishing for a number, you should know 100% whether to take a number or not. Just because she’s “big” doesn’t mean shit in terms of service. I dealt with two massive Burnaby realtors who sell hundreds of homes a year and they both put the time and effort in on my “small” listing and the realtor I ended up going with actually did all 3 open houses at my place herself. |
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Anyone else find it really odd how realtors didn't come out and say shit when the market was hot, but now that the market has slowed a bit, we're constantly being bombarded with 'news' of the market slowing down? I'd like to think that most of us in this thread are smart enough to do our own due diligence prior to buying, but this seems nothing more then trying to drum up more FOMO to get buyers back into the market. |
Realtors: - Market is HOT! Buy now or be forever priced out! - Market is slowing down! It's a great time to buy as you won't be involved in bidding wars! - Market is dead! Great time to buy and pick up some deals! - Asteroid crashing to the Earth! Great time to buy some new brownfield land! Cheap, cheap, cheap and hot, hot, hot!! |
Reality is starting to set in that the market is returning to a "normal" RE cycle where the gains are slow and steady and there's no multi offer, flip a house in a day and sell it for a crazy profit a few months later. In a way it might be good if the market stays this way because it'll get rid of all the useless and shady realtors. The OG realtors will survive like they always do but panic is setting in for the realtors who joined the game when the market was hot and were living way beyond their means and can't pay their bills now. Either you ride it out and be smart with your money or find a safe profession. |
The realtors who got all their friends and family to sell their homes and now have no clientele lol |
For all the realtors in here : Q: How much do buyers value a layout/size vs price? i.e. if a 1 bedroom has a better layout and is bigger by 100sq.ft. would they pay/favor that over a 1 bedroom that has a weird layout but is cheaper? |
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who cares if it is more sq ft if it's all hall way, or mechanical room |
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I thought the sq footage was good to either live in or rent out because of the proximity to Joyce Station and Kingsway. Saw this listing at the Wall Centre on the weekend because it was priced decently, but the layout is weird. The kitchen is right after the entrance and there's no windows, so it's really dark in there even with all the lights turned on. The only source of natural light coming in was from the living room area, but there's a small hallway that only allows minimal light. If the lights were off in the kitchen then it'd be pretty damn dark. The right of the kitchen has a den that is pitch black if the light wasn't on. The bedroom was quite small but the living room area was of a decent size and had a ton of natural light. It's a NE facing unit so you get a lot of natural sunlight in the living area and bedroom, but the entire den, kitchen, and entrance is walled off. Saw another listing in the building beside it that was about 50 sq ft smaller, but roughly the same price. If I had the choice between those two then I'd definitely go with the smaller place because the bedroom was bigger and the overall functional space was much more efficient. The fact that there's no dark spots in the condo makes the place also look a little more spacious |
1 Attachment(s) Expert or opinion wanted: I have a 1 bed + den and it’s got a fake electric heater fireplace that has never worked since I moved in, it’s housed in a large drywall enclosure where they basically force you to hang your TV up above it... it’s annoyingly high and too close to the couch I feel I’m always staring upwards, I got a quote for someone to come in and just tear out the whole box it would make the living room so much more spacious and I could put the TV at sitting level height... but my wife insists that it will destroy resale value to lose the fireplace. I disagree completely, they won’t even know it wasn’t there or likely won’t care and frankly I don’t care about that, I want to be able to watch TV in comfort lol... What do the professionals here think about the value going down from removing a useless fireplace? Massive structure in question: |
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