The lay of the land
I'm nervous about sharing, because theres always a chance this venture will end in disappointment. However, in that case I can share that as well.
When we were in Las Vegas, Sophia and Ivan were watching the house and animals. She texted that our renter neighbors were moving out. She added "Now's the time to make an offer on that house, before new renters move in". We've spent plenty of time dreaming of buying the house and property and extending our backyard.
Here is a google earth image of the layout. Our house is at the top, currently with 2 less trees 😃 than shown. The fire lane path to the left of us, the rental property behind our home (also next to the firelane).
Now, in real time -I am standing at the corner where the fire lane meets the dead grass/2 cars parked spot as shown in the google earth photo. When we got home, we decided why not give it a shot? I had the property manager's info, years ago we had split the cost with the owner of trimming their trees overhanging our yard -pepper, olive, pomegranate. Then Ivan took over that job, thank you Ivan!Here is a view of the front of the house (from the fire lane). It is a petite home 900 sq. feet, built in 1886. *The data is conflicting, I also see the year 1900. Although it looks very cute, it is in terrible condition. There has been no proper maintenance of any kind.
When I got in contact with the property manager, he informed me the house would be going on the market. One informal offer had already been rejected. During the week, I watched as things were happening over there. An old chicken coop and scary shed that leaned on our fence was removed from the property. Along with some exterior painting and "lipstick on a pig" kind of clean-up.
I apologize for all the photos, just trying to show the layout in case anyone is interested. Now back to our side. I'm standing in the backyard by the pool. We have 2 homes directly behind us. The gazebo belongs to our neighbors, no change there. I'm pointing to the property line division between the other 2 homes.
Then I had the bright idea to go upstairs for a bigger picture. You can see part of that gazebo roof to the upper left. The rental house in clear view.So, we talked and talked about all the possible scenarios. An investor tear down, townhomes go in? Squatters? Heavy smokers in the backyard?! We decided to make an offer with a 24 hour deadline before it went on the market. The seller counter offered with a 10 am deadline, which we accepted at 9:45 a.m. We are currently in appraisal phase.
The house inspection report is baaaaaad. Dry rot, termite infestations (there are more than one kind), electrical not even close to being up to code, foundation issues - a big crack, and everything else you can think of could happen to a house built in 1886 that hasn't been cared for.
I'll end with a few photos of the inside, Vincent and Olivia went over with me. What the photos don't adequately show is how weird the layout is. You enter into a hallway with 2 of the tiniest bedrooms I've ever seen on each side. Surprisingly the kitchen and living room aren't horrible. Other than the huge hump in the middle of the living room floor. Entrance. Straight shot to the back of the house.
I'm not bothering showing the bedrooms, imagine tiny square rooms. Living room, I like that floor to ceiling window. So do termites!But I thought the windows were so cute. This really reminded me of the mudroom in our old house on SE 40th & Francis St. in Portland. Creepy and cute.
And finally, the main bathroom at the back of the house. The bathroom was super narrow, as you can see by Vincent's feet just inside the door frame. The tub was very deep!
The only thing to do now is wait and see what happens. I won't make you guess, if this whole deal goes through -the first thing I will do is tear down the fence between the properties.
Are you planning to renovate the house or tear it completely down? It sounds like it needs to be torn down (other than the historical aspect of it).
ReplyDeleteI did check to see if it was on the list of historical homes, it is not. This all happened so fast, we aren't 100% on plans. Sadly, I do think it is a tear down.
DeleteOh my!!! Wow. Wouldn't it be lovely if the house was livable and you'd just be able to annex the garden and rent out the house? Although I guess with the narrow back garden that might not be all that much space. How accessible is the lot from your place? I look forward to further developments. Oh, never feel the need to apologize for too many photos. The more the better!
ReplyDeleteYes, that was our first thought. So many ideas. I'm tearing that fence out the second the deed is in my hands. I think a set of stairs in our slope (maybe move the golden barrels?) I'd be able to go up and down easily. Our slope is not very deep or steep, so this feels doable. My feeling now is to combine both lots it into one big garden - lol. The house decisions/$ are on the back burner for 2 years.
DeleteI've got my fingers crossed for you!!!
ReplyDeleteThank you Kris!
DeleteWow. Exciting stuff! Those (I'm guessing) original windows are fabulous. I do love a mullion.
ReplyDeleteYes, me too. I admit I had to look up "mullion". :)
DeleteYou’ll keep us posted.
ReplyDeleteWill do!
DeleteThis is so exciting!!! You just finished re-doing the front garden and a whole new space may open up to your creative imagination. I hope it all comes to fruition!
ReplyDeleteChavli
Thank you Chavli, I'm in a state of disbelief right now. Fingers crossed.
DeleteVery exciting news! The little house would make a great garden hut/conservatory/hangout -- or a desert garden airbnb for plant people...so many possibilities. Best of luck on the deal!
ReplyDeleteI love that idea, I'd be happy with a big yurt up there. The rest garden! That's probably not the right investment tho.
DeleteBeautiful kitchen! I just got a cabinet painting and they look similar to yours.
ReplyDeleteThis is really exciting! I am so happy for you. Quite the house, it seems to deserve being put out of its misery, sadly. Good luck.
ReplyDeleteI take no joy in leveling a house, but with the condition we really don't have a choice. Thank you Jenn!
DeleteOh gosh, I hope you'll get it! I was thinking like Denise--that either you could convert the little house to a new type of use, or a fixed-up rental. The land will be wonderful for expanding your amazing garden!
ReplyDeleteThank you Beth! Garden and house what to do ideas are all over the place. Both you and Denise's idea have sparked something though.
DeleteI hope you can get it Tracy, that will be fun. More garden space and who knows what with the house.
ReplyDeleteGood Luck and keep us posted.
Carla
Thank you for the good vibes Carla!
DeleteGood luck, Tracy.
ReplyDeleteThank you Susie!
DeleteLooks good to me: cute, charmingly old, and has a DEEP tub! (soy hot bath aficionado)
ReplyDeleteNow I need to look up soy hot bath!!
DeleteHa ha! soy = "I am". For some reason I thought you spoke Spanish.
DeleteHollis, hahaha! There are endless ways for me to embarrass myself. :) I thought you were heating soy milk for a bath.
DeleteLOL, you want even more work? I feel sad that a house from 1886 needs to be torn down but I don't see anything historically redeeming about that house and it is in bad shape. Some things just aren't worth the time and money to make right, and do you really want to be a landlord? Especially in California? I doubt seriously that it's on any historic register and that Tree of Heaven (I grew up in New York City and am familiar with that tree - ugh ugh and triple ugh) might have scared me off but do let us know if you get the property or not. P.S. we had squatters living next door to us for months - in New York State it's almost impossible for a landlord to evict them.
ReplyDeleteHa ha Alana, I guess I do. Prior to buying I made sure it wasn't on the historical homes registrar (nope). Ugh, that tree! Squatters tick me off, particularly the clever ones who are taking every advantage they can.
DeleteWhoa. I don't even know what to say. This is crazy. Crazy cool wonderful. Fingers crossed.
ReplyDeleteThanks Gerhard!
DeleteFingers crossed it all goes through for you. Exciting times and a lot more land to home plants
ReplyDelete