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I get a quart chub reading other peoples success stories with real estate Half chub on ricescene because its actual local people |
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We managed to come up with $23K down payment for our first place in 2004. Sold that in 2008 and moved into a bigger unit. Once that place was paid off, we were living mortgage free before buying our current TH. After 2 years of owning the TH, we decided to upgrade to a house. Very similar story, only a high school degree and a few years at UBC before I dropped out and found full time work in sales. Wife has a university degree and works for the gov. |
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Past weekend in Whistler wife and I had some time so we drove around into a few neighborhoods to check out some real estate. Man..Whistler is kinda depressing knowing I’ll never even have a chance at owning anything in a place I’d love to..lol We stayed in an Airbnb, a nice little complex at the end of the lower village, a 500 sq ft studio apartment, the neighbouring unit in the same layout sold for 680 last year :( Anyways, some eye catchers we came across: This ski in-ski out beauty was located next to some weird 4 seasons townhome development which touches the runs down to creek side, this 3000 sq ft home is assessed at 12 million.. https://i.imgur.com/m27hZ11.jpg And the seemingly new trend of having your own elevator built into the rock so you don’t have to brave the weather in between your Cayenne Turbo and your couch: https://i.imgur.com/AXt7KRA.jpg https://i.imgur.com/wLP0td8.jpg |
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Best part about whistler investments, are the 3x strata fees in comparison to vancouver If i was ever buying up there, i would go 20 minutes north or south to avoid all the amenities and "village fees" |
Both of them are just east of creek side, the next road or so east of the highway. So across the Hwy from Nita lake Wouldn’t doubt this is the new style though as the two I posted were on the same block pretty much |
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Strata fees in Whistler are high, but that's driven primarily by heating, garbage and snow removal, a lack of local trades to handle things, amenities like hot tubs, and high insurance as a lot of places are typically older inventory. Not a lot of new multi-family developments are built in Whistler unfortunately. All I'm saying is if you go 20 mins north or south, none of those factors necessarily change. |
Snow removal is huge money. If you look at stratas in places like edmonton they are astronomical compared to here. Places that are mid 300s here would be 6-700+ Depending on what you’re looking at it also probably doesn’t exist 20mins North or south. Pemby real estate has gone nuts and the supply is next to nothing. Black tusk is just giant cabins that start at 3 million for the most part. |
been coming across some condos/townhouses that have 'geothermal heating & cooling'....is it really much more cost effective than regular hvac? and in terms of cooling - on par with traditional centralized AC? |
^^ what happened to your investment townhouse that went dark? |
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There's negligible difference in terms of efficiency between the two. The advantage of ground source systems is that you don't have noisy & unsightly condensing units on outside of the building. And if you size the system right it can handle weather extremes better (IE Air source heat pumps stop working well below and above certain ambient temperatures, whereas the ground stays relatively stable. This is a bigger factor in other parts of Canada, but the south coast has pretty much perfect air source heat pump weather year round) The disadvantages are that the system has greater complexity than air source, more points of failure. You have a whole additional hydronic system you need to maintain with water, glycol, circulation pumps etc |
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.... still on the hunt for a townhome.. and i run into this.... someone explain why a realtor would do this? went to see one listed/priced at $888k. wasn't too bad. saw it on 08/17. today, i get a notification on my realty app that the same property was relisted at $749k under a different mls number. i called my realtor to ask whats up - he mentioned they have offers at the higher price. so... what is up with this? if one of those offers goes through- will that property appear to have sold for much higher than asking? but its under a diff mls number but they can easily edit the offers with that. what would have been the point of doing this? |
It's possible it was listed too high and they didn't get enough offers. So by cancelling the original listing, they list it lower to solicit more attention and bids to drive up the final sale price. It's a normal sales strategy and nothing new. |
This is why I'm dreading to get back into the market. I know it is a normal tactic that many agents use, but nobody can defend it is absolutely ridiculous. It makes the buying process fucking terrible. |
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i'm tempted to call the realtor and ask him WTF? i mean i just saw the place yesterday - and bam, they relist at much lower. in this market, i guess realtors can get as dirty as they want. listing yesterday: https://i.imgur.com/r8Ck9kJ.jpg relisted today: https://i.imgur.com/A19Pwxq.jpg |
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Stay away. |
EXP realty with the 'X' discoloured? :seriously: so is the engineering firm gonna sue these guys? they trying to look like professional engineers from building science? |
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When this happens there may be an opportunity to play ball if you don’t mind doing so. You can shorten the expiry date of your offer to put the screws to the listing agent and seller if you think you have a strong or strongest offer. |
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Underpricing is merely a strategy and it's not foolproof. It's also as much about getting a clean(er) offer as it is getting the highest price. If the seller/listing agent feels the opportunity is there it's their privilege. It's amazing how buyers operate in today's market - a listing can sit for months on end and then sell with multiple offers well above any previously listed price on re-list. There are other similar units for sale in that complex, move on if you don't like what's happening - you might even have a better chance knocking the price down if they've been sitting stale. Lower Mainland is all about cookie-cutter homes as there's always the next one. You're the one to talk though - how many times did you re-list and de-list within a week at a higher price each time until you sold? |
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I remember this. His wife had a change of heart or something and delisted ASAP. |
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:pokerface::lawl::joy::joy: |
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