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-- What is the most important thing to you in a new house?
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Posted by FuzzQi on Jan-28-2011 08:49:

What is the most important thing to you in a new house?

For me it's practical stuff like how much sun it gets in winter and if all the rooms have got electricity sockets. I also think about how easy it will be to wash and dry my clothes. And stuff like how well insulated it is.

What about you?


Posted by jenga on Jan-28-2011 08:55:

A panic room.


Posted by Sushipunk on Jan-28-2011 09:29:

Deck/verandah.

Can't survive without a good outdoor area attached to the house. I love to have some space around me, even if I'm semi-indoors.


Posted by Teezdalien on Jan-28-2011 09:31:

The smell.


Posted by Ian on Jan-28-2011 09:34:

After renting an old building with absolute shit insulation and dodgy electrics/gas work, I like the look of nice new hot water boilers & radiators, and insulated walls... Good really that we're now in a brand new building with awesome insulation and properly serviced appliances.


Posted by Yohan on Jan-28-2011 09:35:

a sturdy stripper pole


Posted by FuzzQi on Jan-28-2011 09:43:

quote:
Originally posted by Ian
After renting an old building with absolute shit insulation and dodgy electrics/gas work, I like the look of nice new hot water boilers & radiators, and insulated walls... Good really that we're now in a brand new building with awesome insulation and properly serviced appliances.


+1 new stuff that actually works outdoes old world charm any day


Posted by Lilith on Jan-28-2011 09:45:

Appreciation and how much I can hack out of people monthly for rent


Posted by Sushipunk on Jan-28-2011 10:10:

quote:
Originally posted by Ian
After renting an old building with absolute shit insulation and dodgy electrics/gas work, I like the look of nice new hot water boilers & radiators, and insulated walls... Good really that we're now in a brand new building with awesome insulation and properly serviced appliances.


My first dodgy rental was when I was 18. At least you had some age on you

Mind you, we had no chance of freezing in the winter


Posted by Ian on Jan-28-2011 10:17:

quote:
Originally posted by Sushipunk
My first dodgy rental was when I was 18. At least you had some age on you

Mind you, we had no chance of freezing in the winter


heh. I'd been in 2 days when the boiler packed up in -8c and snowstorms. The ******s took nearly 2 weeks to fix it. I wouldn't spit on the landlady if she was on fire, lying bitch that she was.


Posted by FuzzQi on Jan-28-2011 10:19:

quote:
Originally posted by Sushipunk
Flotation


Posted by pkcRAISTLIN on Jan-28-2011 10:44:

quote:
Originally posted by Lilith
Appreciation and how much I can hack out of people monthly for rent


haha beat me to it.


Posted by Joss Weatherby on Jan-28-2011 11:35:

Big trees in the yard or a view. Since I don't go outside much I like to be able to see something nice when I do look out, or go out.

The house I grew up in had 4 or 5 100ft+ douglas firs in the back...

Then again I had many restless nights during windstorms since my room was on the back of the house, second floor...


Posted by Halcyon+On+On on Jan-28-2011 15:34:

Water pressure is something you don't appreciate until you've lived in a place where it's horrible.

Sunlight is really, really nice to have as well, but I have an appreciation for most every phase of the day, so it's not terribly important to me.

There is a great, big tree that practically hangs over my deck, so lots of birds collect up there in the morning sun. The other day, a lone raven was perched right above my bedroom window, just cawwing periodically. I got up, got some coffee and a smoke and went on the deck to wake up, it was still there. We acknowledged one another for a while, but then, on the street below, a fat lady came by, and I hesitate to say she was jogging, but she was breathing extremely loud; the raven went nuts. I think it could tell she was on the verge of death, because it started squawking at her and hopping around in little circles, as though it was doing some sort of little victory dance.

So yeah, birds are important to me. And corpulent joggers.


Posted by wienerschnitzel on Jan-28-2011 15:42:

The foundation has to be in good shape.. and it would be nice to have a good recent furnace, the one in our house now is from the '60's i don't know how it is still running.. Newer windows are important to me now after buying a house built in 1923 with half original windows and half shitty broken windows from the 50's. I think a house like this would suit me just fine...

http://www.realtor.ca/propertyDetai...dKey=1785325728
comox is on vancouver island... we've often thought about moving there but we don't want to leave my parents behind.


Posted by Moral Hazard on Jan-28-2011 15:47:

I'm big on energy costs. I also look for hazards (from the insurance standpoint; age/condition of foundation, roof, electrical system, materials used in construction, etc). Since I'm a big do-it-yourselfer I also need to assess the potential for renovations and the expected complexity of same. Also, always think in terms of long term maintenance costs... that art deco place with the flat roof may look fantastic; however, it's going to run you 10-15K to replace that roof membrain every 10 years as opposed to 5K to replace asphalt shingles every 25 on a house with a traditional gable or hip roof.


Posted by Halcyon+On+On on Jan-28-2011 15:59:

I used to live in a house in South Dakota that was 120+ years old. Our furnace was actually a cast-iron coal-furnace located in the basement, right next to a large, dank, coal pit. The basement would flood every summer - I'm talking 6 inches of water would just hang out there all the time. We once found a 13-inch long salamander down there. Not to mention all manner of frogs, cats, and other miscellaneous beasties.

The house was supposedly haunted by its builder, Mr. Waterbury. They had in fact never found his body, and I recall seeing his headstone during my Great Grandmother's funeral with just the date he was born, a hyphen, and a blank slate where the year of his death should have been. My room was the draftiest, with the attic access and the north-facing window. The wind would howl all night in the winter, and I recall several fever dreams beneath a heating blanket startling me in the wee hours of the morning.

We went exploring in the attic once and found all manner of ancient religious items from around the time the house was built, nestled inside of the very insulation. There is a gilded picture frame of the Madonna carrying the christ-child that my dad still has, and I look forward to having it myself some day.

That's what I look for in a house.


Posted by infiniteJEST on Jan-28-2011 16:18:

This explains a lot about you, you fearful Jesuit you.


Posted by Ian on Jan-28-2011 16:19:

quote:
Originally posted by wienerschnitzel
The foundation has to be in good shape.. and it would be nice to have a good recent furnace, the one in our house now is from the '60's i don't know how it is still running.. Newer windows are important to me now after buying a house built in 1923 with half original windows and half shitty broken windows from the 50's. I think a house like this would suit me just fine...

http://www.realtor.ca/propertyDetai...dKey=1785325728
comox is on vancouver island... we've often thought about moving there but we don't want to leave my parents behind.


that looks ace. I can't really find anything that I'd describe as y dream though. Saw some lovely stuff in Niagara-on-the-lake though.


Posted by Echo of Silence on Jan-28-2011 16:37:

I think the main reason I bought my home is because of the view. When I'm playing piano or sitting on my porch, I look out over my garden to the sea, big sky.

The house also has a huge kitchen. It's older so I've had to paint, replace windows and the heater but I anticipated the extra work and expenses before I bought it.

Ian, did you go to Niagara Falls?


Posted by Ian on Jan-28-2011 16:46:

yes I did it's ace. I'm so jumping off there one day


Posted by wienerschnitzel on Jan-28-2011 16:50:

lol Niagara is nice but as awesome as it is out there i don't think i could live out east! The humidity is pretty crazy! I'll always travel back to see my family though.


Posted by Ian on Jan-28-2011 16:52:

well it was humid in alberta in aug/sept. Hoping May/June is nicer And we've got to sort out some dates for Banff


Posted by Echo of Silence on Jan-28-2011 16:55:

quote:
Originally posted by Ian
yes I did it's ace. I'm so jumping off there one day


Did I tell you about the time we (older sister, her bf, Jerkin, and I) hiked like 8 miles (most of it steep incline) in the middle of summer (46 degrees C which is about 115 degrees F), I had that burn on my bum, to see a water fall that was 200m long (I think) named Rainbow Falls...

Ha, we hiked all the way up to the point where you look across at the water fall, and there was no fall; because of a drought, it had all dried up.

To this day, I remember us standing there looking silently, miserably hot, sweating, looking... at nothing.




Posted by Ian on Jan-28-2011 17:02:

Sillys.


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