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Shadrieka S.
I almost purchased a gorgeous complete rehab in my dream neighborhood. Four bed; four and a half bath. Flipper bought it for 86k. I was under contract for 260. My inspector found sooooooo many things wrong with the house. It needed a new roof immediately and the foundation was cracked, but the basement was fully finished and we couldn't see the walls from the inside. He still found moisture coming in from one back wall. None of the simple cosmetic fixes were done properly. It broke my heart, but as a first time homebuyer, the inspector saved me years worth of future heartache with a bad house flip.
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donnatu

Yikes, when Shadra's comment I shivered because I just bought an older house that needs a lot of work. In fact, after the inspection I canceled the contract because it seemed like too much work. But I couldn't get the house out of my head and it was priced somewhat low for this neighborhood and one of the few homes there that were not in a bidding war. It's scary and exciting at the same time. I have an opportunity to make it exactly what I want, but at the same time, it's going 2 be a lot of work and I'm praying they won't find more work once the repairs start.

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Surya Suresh M

Hi, I am the first time home buyer and I have a question: We are planning to buy a new home and it has all 4 bed rooms in the 2nd floor and all bed rooms are carpeted. We would like to remove the carpet and go with hard wood floor. My question is: Is this a correct thing to do? Would it increase/decrease my home resale value? The reasons for going for the hard wood floor are:

1. The carpets are always attracting the dust and making our kids sick

2. Easy to clean

3. Increases the resale value (???)

We are puzzled when we went to a flooring store near by to learn that hardwood floors are very uncomfortable during the winters with cold surfaces. Also some of the friends that I spoke to actually didn't go for the hard wood floor in their bed rooms. Please suggest.

   

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