Sounds like you're just mad someone did a crappy job in the first place.
The astroturf they used in their front yard is ridiculousRed Pear Realty said:
Oh, and for giggles:
https://www.har.com/homedetail/1622-haverhill-dr-houston-tx-77008/3254103
not as much as the see through cabinetsE said:The astroturf they used in their front yard is ridiculousRed Pear Realty said:
Oh, and for giggles:
https://www.har.com/homedetail/1622-haverhill-dr-houston-tx-77008/3254103
I just noticed the grill in the living room!!sts7049 said:not as much as the see through cabinetsE said:The astroturf they used in their front yard is ridiculousRed Pear Realty said:
Oh, and for giggles:
https://www.har.com/homedetail/1622-haverhill-dr-houston-tx-77008/3254103
Thats Lazybrook!!!!htxag09 said:Red Pear Realty said:
Oh, and for giggles:
https://www.har.com/homedetail/1622-haverhill-dr-houston-tx-77008/3254103
That's the exact house I was thinking when I said timbergrove prices have gotten bat **** crazy lol.
1307 Guese? Solid opportunity to open your whole backyard up onto the high voltage powerline ROW like the guy at 1310 Jeannine...Red Pear Realty said:
I just closed on 1307 Guese Rd, 77008 yesterday
Bogey1996 said:
Oh, I agree on a flip I would not change to one garage door, I was just kind of wondering for a personal basis. I know I prefer 1 door but doubt that would be the deciding factor when I buy again in the future.
As Sea Speed mentioned, Bedroom 5 is likely going to be used as a nursery / play room / game room / media room. But we want to call it a bedroom for submittal and valuation purposes.Quote:
Are you stuck on 5BR? Seems like limited dining/living space for 5 beds?
I think turning that 5th bedroom into a den/game room/kids playroom would be good. Right off the kitchen and living.
I think we need to move the entry door a few feet to the left, and peel back the wall about four feet along the hallway (see below). This creates a walking path on the left side of the dining room as well as a nice big space for a formal dining table on the right side. A 10-seat dining table would be roughly 5x10 for the table, so this would leave plenty of room for a table (about 9x14 left over), and maybe a chair or coat rack on the right side behind the door.Quote:
Where do you envision the actual dining space?
Agreed. Overall the house is small, so I want the entry to feel big. I'm going to raise the ceilings in the dining room and living room to as high as I can get them (10' ?) to give the first impression as good as I can get it.Quote:
I feel like there's a lot of wasted space in the foyer..
We are going to lose the sink in the utility room, slide the W/D down a bit and make the pantry in that space. With a 6' width, we can also add open shelving along the wall closest to the kitchen for even more storage. We tossed around the idea of blowing out that wall and making the kitchen larger, but it just would not be worth it cost-wise, I think.Quote:
Is there a pantry? Can you move the kitchen wall farther north to make some in-kitchen dining?
Exactly. I'm going to stage bedroom 5 as a media room or play room.Quote:
I think he is calling it a bedroom for home value but almost any family is going to use one of those bedrooms as a play room or TV room or something like that. We have done that in our last 2 homes, 4 and 5 bedrooms respectively. Both homes have a large playroom area at the top of the stairs for a TV room as well.
I guess someone could, but that is not the likely buyer for this home.Quote:
I assumed it would be to cram a bunch of college students in and sell as a rental
First one answered above.Quote:
I'm trying to envision the flow of having a decent walkway through the house and still having furniture in the living spaces. Seems like it will be a challenge from that standpoint.
I'm also wondering how much natural light the living areas are going to get with that setup.
Yes, we have an architect who provided us with some options, but ultimately, we felt that this was the best of all of them. Ultimately it's a balance between cost and benefit. If money weren't an object, we would tear it down and start over with a floorplan that we 100% loved.Quote:
Do not know anything about this specific area or market, but have you looked at other plan options? To me, this plan, flow, and space of areas feels a little barracks like. I don't get an "executive" feel from the rooms or spaces. You Might be designing with a specific purpose in mind but that's my thoughts.
I think what I proposed above is a good compromise because of the nature of the load bearing walls and cost that it would add to blow that kitchen wall out. Definitely not perfect, but much closer!Quote:
Could you extend the kitchen wall with the sink to be flush with the wall of bedroom 5? Would that give you enough space to add a nice island that flows into the living space, which would also feel much bigger. That big kitchen / dining discs would probably feel pretty similar to a lot of the new builds up here in oak forest. You'd lose half the patio, but don't think that's a big deal
Fair enough. I don't have to sell to everyone...just one person. And remember, the house next door, with an almost identical floor plan, sold for $770,000 in the onset of Covid in 2020.Quote:
Unpopular opinion maybe, but the more I look at the floor plan the less I like it. Maybe for a college student rental because it has a bunch of bedrooms (echoing the barracks comment) but not someplace I'd want to own and live in because so many things don't make sense.
Fixed, I think!Quote:
As others have said the entire entrance just doesn't work. The flow is bad; 225sq ft that you really can't do a lot with because the path to the front door runs right through the middle.
I agree on the range. We are going to do a nice 36" or 42" gas range. Not sure where the cooktop came from.Quote:
Kitchen layout isn't great either. The fridge being at the end of a cabinet run isn't always bad but it doesn't work well here because it's directly adjacent to where people will gather. I'm assuming you would use some kind of panel so the side of it doesn't show, but it's still a big block right there. In a place with space constraints like this I'd relocate it to where the drawing shows the oven/microwave. Swap the cooktop for a range, and put in a microwave drawer at the end of the run to the left of the sink.
Unfortunately, we don't. And you aren't the only one to ask about this. I really wish we could. And I don't think we can nix the garage.Quote:
Do you have enough room on the side of the house for a driveway to get to a new garage in the back?
or just forego a garage and put a nice covered parking area in the back behind a gate... that would REALLY let you mix some things up if you converted the garage.
How would you re-arrange it?Quote:
But if that type of neighborhood is what OP is shooting for the floorplan is the biggest thing in need of work IMO.
edit: $1 million? Floorplan needs huge work. I'd go out on a limb and say that a local architect who would come on site and have a look would be highly value added here.