I've been casually looking around at property in the Atlanta area as I'm contemplating a move back to the area next year sometime.
I stumbled upon this little cottage in a very cool in-town neighborhood. Walking distance to many cool parks and restaurants. I've rented in the area before and enjoyed it. It is definitley a "shotgun" house, much deeper than it is wide. There are many older homes in this area, and many are small as they used to house workers for the nearby cotton mill. This area is one of the few where you still see 1/1 homes, as most of the others have been destroyed and rebuilt.
A 2/1 loft conversion (in the aforementioned cotton mill) runs in the same price range, maybe closer to $200k. Very cool building with exposed brick and beam ceilings.
a 2/2 or 2/1 home is probably well out of my pricing comfort zone.
So, if you were a young twenty-something, no kids on the horizon what would you go for? My biggest reservation with a 1/1 home would be the much smaller buyer pool when it's time to sell. But, this isn't really a family neighborhood so it may not be an issue (lots of younger couples, artists, etc). Having a HOME and avoiding assoc. fees is a definite perk.
I stumbled upon this little cottage in a very cool in-town neighborhood. Walking distance to many cool parks and restaurants. I've rented in the area before and enjoyed it. It is definitley a "shotgun" house, much deeper than it is wide. There are many older homes in this area, and many are small as they used to house workers for the nearby cotton mill. This area is one of the few where you still see 1/1 homes, as most of the others have been destroyed and rebuilt.
A 2/1 loft conversion (in the aforementioned cotton mill) runs in the same price range, maybe closer to $200k. Very cool building with exposed brick and beam ceilings.
a 2/2 or 2/1 home is probably well out of my pricing comfort zone.
So, if you were a young twenty-something, no kids on the horizon what would you go for? My biggest reservation with a 1/1 home would be the much smaller buyer pool when it's time to sell. But, this isn't really a family neighborhood so it may not be an issue (lots of younger couples, artists, etc). Having a HOME and avoiding assoc. fees is a definite perk.
Comment