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Posted about 10 years ago

Where the Journey Began

Like most people, I'm guessing, my first "investment" was my own home.  Having had the keen foresight to buy in  the frenzied, bubble-inflating, sketchy financing days of 2004 just before my then boyfriend and co-owner and I both became unemployed.  I got to learn some hard lessons right at home, but not necessarily the just the familiar ones. 

After nine months of bidding on a different place (invariably cute but with "issues" and in an "up-and-coming" location) every two weeks only to be outbid by other eager first-time nesters, I changed my strategy.  I started looking for the places that had been on the market for at least a month (a dead listing in Berkeley in 2004…and now), and that's how I found our funky home-sweet-home.

Normal 1410971718 House

She was a 700 square foot 2 Bed/2 Bath on the books (1 Bed/1 Bath by any reasonable use) with no driveway, a bad foundation, knob-and-tube electrical on a fusebox, rust-plugged plumbing, really smelly carpeting, hot pink sponge paint from floor to ceiling in the kitchen, and a bad floor plan, unless you see a second door opening directly from the bedroom into the kitchen as a "feature".  And all of this glory was ours for a mere $460K (which included the cost of the foundation replacement escrowed by the seller).

What lessons did I learn so far?   Similar places with iffy foundations and fresh paint that didn't smell bad were going for $550-600K.  Replacing the foundation on a tiny box on a flat lot was a cinch and cost $25K at the time for a 2-story foundation.  At this point, we're still congratulating ourselves on our clever purchase while our families looked (and smelled) on in horror.  What could go wrong?


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