Posts Tagged ‘Shopping’

Home energy audits open door to big savings

By Rick Daysog
rdaysog@sacbee.com
Published: Sunday, May. 22, 2011 – 12:00 am | Page 1D
Last Modified: Sunday, May. 22, 2011 – 3:07 pm

For Michelle Vogt, it’s as if her hot water heater leaked dollar bills.

The 40-year-old Woodland resident said her monthly energy tab soars to as much as $1,200 every summer, and she believes that her 7-year-old water tank is one of the main causes.

Complete article found at: http://www.sacbee.com/2011/05/22/3642620/home-energy-audits-open-door-to.html 

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Tips To Help You Sell A Vacant House

 

The ad looks too good to be true — a home with all the prerequisites you want is on the market in a fabulous neighborhood. The community is near work, the schools are great, there are lots of activities nearby — and the asking price is competitive.

When the prospective buyers approach the newly listed home, hopes plummet — the place is vacant. Unfortunately, a home which is merely “lived-in” when furnished and occupied may look bare and blemished when empty. But the good news is that selling a vacant home isn’t an impossible task, especially if you follow these pointers:

  • Remember first impressions. Regardless of whether your home is vacant or not, its appeal from the street is crucial in making a positive impact with potential buyers. 
  • Paint or fix up the front entrance as required. 
  • If you have a lawn, keep it mowed. Hire a neighborhood teen or local landscape service to keep it maintained. If you have an automated irrigation or sprinkler system, you’ll want to leave it on, or ask a neighbor to water for you. This is especially crucial in regions with scorching summers. 
  • If your house is on the market in fall, be sure you or someone you hire keeps leaves cleaned up. Likewise, if it’s winter and you live in a snowy area, be sure driveways and entrances are cleared. 
  • Spruce up landscaping before you leave. Plant some new shrubs, lay down some fresh ground cover, or brighten it up with some colorful annuals. 
  • Go through every room of your house, paintbrush in hand, and touch up any walls that have been scuffed or marked up. After moving furniture out, you’re sure to find a slew of such marks. 
  • Walls painted in bold, bright colors are wonderful attention-getters when complemented by furniture, rugs, and accessories. However, in an empty room, these bold colors may put buyers off. You may want to consider painting neutral colors throughout the house before you sell. 
  • Get carpets professionally cleaned once everything is moved out. If the floors aren’t taken care of, the prospective home buyer may wonder what else isn’t? 
  • Clean your house thoroughly in every nook and cranny — including windows and fireplaces — before you let potential buyers look at it. 
  • If at all possible, try to leave some furniture in the house. This will give prospective buyers a sense of size and proportion — and a place to sit down. Empty rooms tend to look smaller than they actually are. 
  • Don’t set your deserted house up for potential break-ins. You may want to invest in exterior sensor lights that automatically turn on when it gets dark and turn off at sunrise. Make sure you cancel your newspaper subscription and forward your mail. 
  • If you have a security alarm, use it — just be sure you leave your entrance code with your real estate broker. 
  • Be sure you review the provisions of your homeowners insurance. Many companies have a cap on how long coverage will last while the property is vacant.As you prepare a vacant home for sale, also consider this idea: Some buyers like the flexibility that comes with buying a vacant house. They can move in as soon or as late as they’d like, and they don’t have to worry about floors getting soiled and walls getting banged up when you move out.

    Written by Michele Dawson

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    Love The Ranch-style House

     

    Eighty percent of existing housing was built before 1980. Most of those houses are ranch-style. You know — the shoe-box house with the living and dining rooms on the front, the kitchen on the back and the bedrooms all together down the same hallway.

    If you’re a homebuyer, you either love ranch-style homes or they bore you. Either way, here are a few things you didn’t know that will help you appreciate them more.

    Housing is like the rings of a tree that show the age of a community. As you move further away from your town’s center, you have neighborhoods of Victorian homes, then Tudor cottages, and then ranch-style homes.

    All housing reflects the culture of the day. Designed for economy and functionality, ranch-style homes were mass-produced to serve post World War II families and they stayed popular while 78 million baby boomers matured into homebuyers. The 1950s through the ’70s were also the age of the automobile. Ranch-style homes were built in sprawling communities, away from town centers, and mostly accessed by highways. Land was plentiful, so most of these single story or split-level homes are situated on fairly large lots.

    But ranch-style homes have their downsides. They lack charm and they’re so ubiquitous, they seem less than special.

    But let’s rethink that. These were homes designed as machines for living. They’re modern, part of the design cycle of the jet age. The only thing these mid-century homes need is a little 21st century flair.

    Ranch homes are easy to remodel or expand. Most load-bearing walls are on the perimeter, which makes knocking out or moving interior walls easy.

    Take the kitchen, for example. In the family-centered ’50s, the kitchen was the mother’s magic kingdom. She would work her magic and emerge wearing her pearls and high-heels with dinner on a tray like there’s nothing to it.

    Fast forward 50 years, and you have frantic, two-income families. Time together is precious. Instead of being walled off, the kitchen has become part of the family room now.

    When you preview a ranch-style home, don’t think about what’s out of date. Think about how this home can serve your needs today. These homes were built to last. Just replace those Jetson-era Formica countertops with polished concrete, hammered copper or honed granite. Install elegant French doors in place of the sliding glass patio doors. Raise the 8-foot ceilings to nine or ten feet.

    Have fun decorating with the latest furniture. Open any furniture catalog and you’ll see a trend toward retro low-slung modern designs, with an emphasis on machines (flat-panel TVs, computers), and family-gathering places like dens, just like the 1950s.

    Retro is in because it works, and maybe you’ll find the ranch-style home can work for you.

    Written by Blanche Evans

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