Audiofuzzy
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2005
- Messages
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It could still be fixable with good return for a lot of work if you could manage to further beat the price down.
Sometimes you can straighten up the house, fix the foundation and make it work. the big question is, can it be fixed?
If the foundation can be fixed, then the rest is how much the renovation would cost. how much the house would cost.
There is the roof. there is the chimney.
you already have a lot of new nice cabinets, nice floors that could be carefully removed, set aside and put back after.
new windows?, nice siding. the landscaping sucks.
If the house price will be low enough that after the renovation the selling point will bring profit, is still doable.
Lots of works, though, LOTS.
Of course, it is hard to say for sure from just looking at the pictures. I have no idea how deep the crack in foundation goes or why.
how is plumbing, wiring, ventilation system, heating etc etc
is everything up to the current code.
Fuzzy
Sometimes you can straighten up the house, fix the foundation and make it work. the big question is, can it be fixed?
If the foundation can be fixed, then the rest is how much the renovation would cost. how much the house would cost.
There is the roof. there is the chimney.
you already have a lot of new nice cabinets, nice floors that could be carefully removed, set aside and put back after.
new windows?, nice siding. the landscaping sucks.
If the house price will be low enough that after the renovation the selling point will bring profit, is still doable.
Lots of works, though, LOTS.
Of course, it is hard to say for sure from just looking at the pictures. I have no idea how deep the crack in foundation goes or why.
how is plumbing, wiring, ventilation system, heating etc etc
is everything up to the current code.
Fuzzy