Welcome to San Diego, a city known for its stunning coastline, year-round sunshine, and vibrant lifestyle. If you’re in the market to buy a luxury home in this captivating city, you’re in for a treat. San Diego’s luxury real estate market offers an array of remarkable features and amenities that cater to the discerning tastes of potential homebuyers.
From breathtaking oceanfront properties with panoramic views to state-of-the-art smart home technologies and exquisite outdoor living spaces, this Redfin article explores the extraordinary features that make luxury homes in San Diego truly stand out. Whether you seek a serene retreat overlooking the Pacific or a modern oasis with the latest in luxury living, join us as we dive into the world of luxury home features in the San Diego housing market, where your dream residence awaits.
Top neighborhoods with luxury home features in San Diego
There are several neighborhoods renowned for their luxury homes and exceptional features in San Diego where homebuyers are willing to pay premium prices. With a median sale price of $4.2 million in May 2023, Rancho Santa Fe offers exclusive estates and sprawling properties, and is highly regarded for its privacy, elegance, and upscale amenities. Del Mar, known for its stunning coastal location, offers luxurious properties that provide breathtaking ocean views and beach access, and a vibrant lifestyle. Homes in Del Mar are also set at premium prices, with a median sale price of nearly $3 million. Lastly, homes in the La Jolla neighborhood, a prestigious coastal community, saw a median sale price of almost $2 million in May 2023. This neighborhood is celebrated for its cliffside estates, panoramic ocean vistas, and proximity to upscale dining and shopping.
6 popular luxury home features in San Diego
1. Seamless indoor-outdoor living spaces
You can expect a seamless fusion of indoor and outdoor spaces in luxury homes in San Diego, creating a harmonious connection with the picturesque surroundings. These homes often feature expansive walls of glass, retractable doors, or large sliders that effortlessly blend interior and exterior areas.
The inviting outdoor spaces are thoughtfully designed with spacious patios, lush landscaping, and resort-style amenities such as swimming pools, outdoor kitchens, and fire pits. Homeowners can enjoy the year-round pleasant climate, hosting gatherings that flow seamlessly from the indoor living areas to the outdoor oasis. Breathtaking views of the Pacific Ocean, rolling hills, or manicured gardens provide a captivating backdrop, further enhancing the indoor-outdoor living experience. These homes redefine luxury living in San Diego, embracing the region’s natural beauty and offering an unparalleled lifestyle that seamlessly integrates with the outdoors.
2. Luxury living on expansive property
Homebuyers exploring expansive properties in San Diego can expect to find an array of luxurious amenities that elevate the living experience to new heights. These properties often boast meticulously landscaped grounds, including sprawling gardens, lush lawns, and serene water features such as fountains or ponds.
Outdoor living spaces are a common highlight, featuring resort-style swimming pools, expansive patios for al fresco dining, and fully equipped outdoor kitchens for entertaining guests. Sports enthusiasts may discover private tennis or basketball courts, while those seeking relaxation might find tranquil spa areas or meditation gardens. Additionally, expansive properties often offer ample space for guesthouses, home gyms, or home offices, providing versatility and room to customize the living space according to individual needs. With their abundant amenities and room for personalization, these properties exemplify the epitome of luxury living in San Diego.
3. Exquisite touches in the primary suite
An updated bathroom is an essential luxury home feature in San Diego, particularly the primary bath, where meticulous attention is paid to luxurious finishes and impeccable details to create a spa-like experience. Spacious walk-in showers with multiple shower heads, soaking tubs, heated floors, and smart technology for lighting and temperature control are common features that enhance the overall bathing experience. In the primary bathroom, it’s common to find both a soaking tub and a shower, providing residents with a serene spa-like experience to unwind and indulge in relaxation.
Separate walk-in closets in the primary suite have become an increasingly sought-after addition in luxury homes. Designed with meticulous attention to detail, these closets are tailored to maximize personal space and organization, offering an abundance of storage for clothing, accessories, and personal belongings. With dedicated sections for each partner, these closets go beyond functionality, creating a sense of luxury and harmony in the home. They provide convenience and ease during daily routines, eliminating the need to share or compromise on storage space. These thoughtfully designed closets often feature built-in shelving, specialized compartments, and ample hanging space, ensuring that every item has its designated place.
4. Sustainable features to minimize carbon footprint
Luxury homes today have evolved to encompass not only opulence and comfort but also sustainability and self-sufficiency to help minimize carbon footprint. These modern residences prioritize eco-conscious living by integrating features like solar panels, energy-efficient appliances, and systems.
By harnessing solar power, homeowners can reduce their reliance on traditional energy sources, and with energy-efficient appliances, including water heaters and HVAC systems, optimize energy usage while maintaining a comfortable living environment. Luxury homes also cater to the growing popularity of electric vehicles by offering car chargers for convenient at-home charging. This integration of self-sufficiency and sustainability has become a highly sought-after feature among potential homebuyers in San Diego, reflecting their increasing awareness and desire for residences that align with their eco-conscious values.
5. Picturesque view of San Diego’s beautiful landscape
Luxury properties in San Diego are often strategically positioned to maximize the beauty of the natural landscape, boasting breathtaking views that encompass the picturesque surroundings of the ocean, mountains, canyons, and open spaces. With expansive windows and thoughtfully designed floor plans, these homes ensure that the captivating scenery is always in view, creating a seamless connection between indoor and outdoor spaces.
6. Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs)
In the luxury market of San Diego, Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs) have become a sought-after home feature due to their versatility and investment potential. ADUs offer flexibility for guest accommodations, home offices, or rental income opportunities, enhancing a property’s appeal. They maximize land usage while preserving privacy and independence, contributing to the trend of sustainable living. This additional space can also significantly impact the sale price of a listing in San Diego, reflecting high demand. For example, a recent Redfin Premier listing showcased a captivating compound-like setting, including a main residence, ADU, studio, pool, deck, and manicured garden. Buyers were drawn to the potential for multi-generational living, guest accommodations, home offices, and entertainment, creating a resort-like lifestyle within a private retreat.
As you embark on your search for the perfect home in San Diego, working with a Redfin Premier agent is essential. They’re equipped with the expertise and knowledge to guide you through the process, navigate the San Diego housing market, and buy your dream home.
As the pandemic shut down office life in Los Angeles’ downtown financial district, Claude Cognian tried to keep his gastropub Public School 213 open. But the evacuation of white-collar workers made way for an influx of homeless people and drug users — and more than a few troublemakers striding in the front door.
“It was hard to keep hostesses at the door, because they got scared,” said Cognian, chief executive of the restaurant’s parent company, Grill Concepts Inc.
Three break-ins cost as much as $12,000 each time just to repair the windows, all while the bottom line was cratering in the absence of the office employees who used to gather for lunch and after-work drinks. With sales down 75% from pre-pandemic days, his company closed the downtown gastropub in August and is not planning to return.
“Our bet was that downtown was going to come back, and it hasn’t,” Cognian said.
For decades the Los Angeles financial district was the beating heart of downtown, the corporate muscle that gave the city of sprawl a soaring glass skyline. But the pandemic and the wave of remote work hollowed out its skyscrapers and helped shut many restaurants and businesses that relied on crowds of workers. Though the neighborhood shows signs of recovery, few expect it to return to being the bustling hive of suits and ties that it was.
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To many insiders — the urban planners, real estate developers and business owners with interests in it — the area will recover only if its identity grows more textured than a zone of white-collar office space.
Desirable office addresses were already spreading beyond the financial district before the pandemic, as downtown experienced a renaissance in housing, art and entertainment on blocks previously shunned by investors and residents.
To the south, billions of dollars were spent improving the blocks around Crypto.com Arena with hotels, housing and entertainment venues. Obsolete century-old commercial and industrial buildings to the east were renovated into desirable housing and fashionably unconventional offices. Billions more were spent north on Bunker Hill where the Music Center including Walt Disney Concert Hall and office skyscrapers have been joined by museums, apartments and a high-rise hotel.
The housing boom drew residents to the financial district as well, and that has kept it from turning into a ghost town.
But for the area to truly come back to life, many say it will need to follow the path of Lower Manhattan. The financial capital of New York faced an exodus after 9/11, but city officials and investors staved it off by making it a place of more diverse uses. It is still an office district but is far more lively than it used to be since it also became a residential neighborhood with more shops, restaurants, parks and hotels than it had before the attacks. A performing arts center will open in September.
“Cities evolve. That’s what they do,” said downtown L.A. business representative Nick Griffin. “From natural disasters, wars and pandemics. They evolve with market changes, customer preferences and cultural shifts. Downtown has evolved pretty dramatically over the last 20 years and the next five or so are going to be very interesting.”
Many companies have returned to their offices, but on a limited basis as their employees work some days from home. “For Lease” signs clutter building fronts, tacked over restaurants and bars that once served lively hordes of office workers. Graffiti marks windows.
At Public School 213, the chairs are stacked neatly on tables as if it just closed for the night. Other former restaurants have been gutted by their landlords. Sidewalks are quiet, sometimes eerily so.
Downtown’s centers of gravity have shifted numerous times since its days as a remote Spanish pueblo.
The plaza by Olvera Street near the Los Angeles River was el centro until the late 19th century. When the railroads arrived in the American era, the business elite shifted the commercial district south from the plaza toward 1st Street in the Anglo section of the racially divided city, said Greg Fischer, an expert on the history of downtown who worked on planning matters for former City Councilwoman Jan Perry. Main, Spring, Broadway and Hill streets became the business hub.
In the early 20th century, elite social clubs such as the Jonathan Club, the California Club and the Los Angeles Athletic Club erected new buildings on the west side of downtown where property was relatively cheap. Soon the rooming houses, small apartment buildings and ramshackle Victorian homes there gave way. Richfield and other oil companies headquartered there, the seeds of today’s financial district.
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In “the Jetsons era,” as Fischer described the 1960s, corporate leaders viewed the Spring Street-centered office district as increasingly obsolete and passé and moved to newer buildings in the financial district. Downtown lost a lot of itslifeblood during that time, he said.
“In the years after World War II, downtown was a shopping, office and entertainment area,” Fischer said. “By the 1960s the office component had shifted west, most entertainment went to suburbs and housing just evaporated.”
Among the big businesses with offices in the west were the Richfield, Union, Signal, National and Superior oil companies. Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co. was headquartered there and Bank of America had a big presence.
The boundaries of the financial district are not officially outlined, but property brokerage CBRE defines it as the office center south of Bunker Hill and 4th Street, flanked on the west by the 110 Freeway and on the east by Hill Street and extending south to 8th Street.
By the 1980s, much of downtown was moribund; buildings that once thrummed with commerce were dilapidated and vacant or underused. There were pockets of vibrancy, notably the Jewelry District and a Latino-centric shopping zone that emerged among aging buildings along Broadway in the Historic Core. The Civic Center around City Hallremained one of the largest concentrations of public administrative buildings in the country, employing thousands of workers.
But the financial district was the shinythriving part of the city, a high-rise office park for lawyers, bankers and accountants who piled into their cars for a mass exodus at the end of each workday.
To many, the neighborhood felt like a corporate fortress, invisibly walled off from the rest of downtown. Business leaders were painfully aware that downtown L.A. lacked the vibrancy of other big cities because it had so few residents, but was stuck in a chicken-and-egg dilemma: People didn’t want to live there because it lacked restaurants, grocery stores and other typical city-life amenities, but merchants didn’t want to set up shop because few lived there.
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The stalemate began to break around 2000 with an ordinance that made it easier to redevelop obsolete office buildings into housing. The relocation of the Lakers, Clippers and Kings pro sports teams to the new downtown arena then known as Staples Center brought thousands of sports and music fans and led a wave of development south of the financial district.
Decades of efforts to add rail service and thousands of apartments and condominiums helped create a more vibrant downtown that was taking on the flavor of other big cities before the pandemic.
“All of a sudden people were walking dogs and pushing baby carriages,” architect Martha Welborne said. “New restaurants came in, even destination restaurants that weren’t just for the people who worked downtown or lived there.”
Fortunately for downtown’s future prospects, its apartment towers remain nearly fully occupied. More than 35,000 units were built after 1999, when so few people lived there that downtown didn’t even have a big-chain grocery store.
Three new hotels have recently opened and a 42-story apartment tower will start leasing later this year. Bottega Louie, one of the region’s top-grossing restaurants before it shut down during the pandemic, reopened in 2021. A few blocks away, legendary Beverly Hills steakhouse Mastro’s also opened a seafood restaurant last year near Crypto.com Arena.
And last week, Metro opened its new Regional Connector, a 1.9-mile underground downtown track adding three stations and linking different lines to make travel more seamless.
Though some business owners have abandoned the financial district, others see an opportunity to get in at an affordable price during what they hope is a temporary economic dip.
Restaurateur Prince Riley recently leased a spot on Grand Avenue that was last home to the Red Herring restaurant. He grabbed it because he liked the location and it was already built-out for upscale dining.
“You can see all the love and care that went into this space,” he said. “They were a casualty of COVID.”
Riley and his wife plan to open their restaurant, named Joyce, in July, featuring a raw bar and Southern-style seafood such as crudo and ceviche. They moved into the apartment building upstairs to be close to it.
The couple like being near Bottega Louie, a popular Whole Foods grocery store and the recently opened Hotel Per La, which took over a lavishly refurbished 1920s building last occupied by another hotel that closed early in the pandemic.
“I can see business picking up,” Riley said. “This is an opportunity from a terrible tragedy like COVID. We wouldn’t have had this otherwise.”
A key factor keeping downtown teetering between recovery and a further downward slide appears to be discomfort with the streets and the sense that they are not as safe as they were before the pandemic.
The blocks close to Metro’s underground 7th Street/Metro Center station, where multiple light and heavy rail train lines meet, are among those that have changed the most since the pandemic as the Metro system struggles to combat rampant drug use and serious crimes such as robbery, rape and aggravated assault on its lines.
Thegrowing number of homeless people on the streets has been an issue in other cities too, said Cognian of Public School 213. His company also closed restaurants in Seattle and San Francisco because customers at their urban locations trickled away as unhoused people commandeered the sidewalks.
“Hopefully, we as a city, as a state, find a solution for the homeless,” he said. “If the homeless situation doesn’t get solved in some fashion that allows tourists, office workers and businesses to operate, it’s just going to bring down the area.”
Real estate broker Derrick Moore of CBRE, who specializes in matching restaurant and shop operators with landlords, said leasing of retail space downtown has improved in recent months, especially compared to the dark days of the 2020pandemic shutdown when downtown fell silent.
“It seems like ancient history,” Moore said, “but it was very devastating to one’s psyche.” And to downtown businesses.
In the wake of the COVID shutdown, downtown overall lost more than 100 food and beverage establishments with a combined footprint of more than 1 million square feet, Moore said.
“That’s restaurants, bars and lounges, juice bars, boutique coffee operators and even national brands,” Moore said. “A good portion of those remain vacant.”
Replacement tenants like Joyce restaurant are starting to come in, he said, with leasing and property showings picking up in the first quarter at a “resoundingly” busier pace than early 2022. Moore has taken potential tenants to the empty Public School space, where across the street the failed Standard Hotel just reopened under new management as the Delphi.
Faced with a challenging market, retail landlords have cut their asking rents as much as 50% from pre-COVID prices, Moore said, and more than doubled the amount they are willing to spend on tenant upgrades such as installing restaurant kitchens and restrooms, and providing periods of free rent.
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The financial district also faces a struggle of changing tastes, with many firms bypassing the gleaming skyscrapers that were the height of prestige in the late 20th century in favor of campus-style offices anda more laid-back vibe.
Even legal firms, long a stalwart in the financial district, are turning elsewhere in some cases. One firm established in February recently opted out of putting its office there.
“When we started to look at space it became very clear to us that locating in the financial district was a very different proposition than it used to be,” said Matt Umhofer, a partner at Umhofer, Mitchell & King. “Downtown has changed dramatically, and we wanted to rethink what it means to be a law firm in Los Angeles and let go of preconceived notions of needing to be in the financial district in order to be relevant.”
The fledgling firm opted instead for an office in Row DTLA, a campus of shops, restaurants and offices created out of century-old warehouses near the Arts District, east of the financial center, even though office rents in the Arts District are often higher than they are in the glitzy skyscrapers.
“The short version is, being in the financial district isn’t as cool as maybe it was in the past,” Umhofer said.
The spotty attendance of office workers has changed the character of business centers across the country, said Mark Grinis, leader of consulting firm EY‘s real estate, hospitality and construction practice.
An analysis by EY found that offices are being used at only 25% to 50% of the level they were before the pandemic.
“In some locations, three-quarters of the people that normally would have gone in, didn’t,” Grinis said. “People are not on the subway, ordering sandwiches at lunch or having a drink after work.”
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Vacant offices and storefronts can hinder recovery, he said, because people shy away from empty spaces.
“Three blocks of vacant houses in a residential neighborhood ultimately becomes a negative,” he said. “An office center is not that different.”
The physical appearance of vacancy becomes more alarming when graffiti, litter and grime follow and create a bad “multiplier effect,” Grinis said.
Stopping the spiral starts with making the streets safe and getting homeless residents into better housing, but there are also public policy decisions that could help landlords convert office buildings to housing if they are no longer competitive on the office leasing market.
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And the market has been brutal. Owners of some of downtown’s office high-rises have faced defaults, foreclosures and rushed sales in the face of falling demand, real estate data provider CoStar said.
The owner of two of the financial district’s premier office towers, 777 Tower and Gas Company Tower, said in February that it defaulted on loans tied to the buildings. Other high-rise owners are in similar straits.
In the face of rising vacancy rates, “those defaults could signal pain to come for the 69-million-square-foot downtown L.A. office market,” CoStar said.
Owners of buildings facing foreclosure sometimes don’t have enough money to build out new tenants’ offices, as is customary, which hinders strapped landlords from recovering financially.
Commercial landlords are getting hit on multiple fronts, said Jessica Lall, managing director of the downtown office of CBRE.
“What we’re seeing is a perfect storm when it comes to the office distress in downtown L.A.,” she said.
Loans on large-scale properties are maturing at a time when interest rates are high, making refinancing a challenge, Lall said. There is widespread uncertainty among tenants about how much space they will need to rent in the future if employees work remotely at least some of the time.
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Those issues are compounded by “the general perception around downtown being unsafe,” she said. “All urban centers are grappling with that issue right now.”
The downtown office vacancy rate — the share of total space that is unleased — climbed to 24% in the first quarter, up from 21.1% a year ago, according to CBRE. More empty space is coming, the brokerage said, pushing estimated availability to a daunting 30% as some companies shrink their offices or move away from downtown.
Law firm Skadden, for example, a large longtime tenant in downtown’s Bunker Hill district, has decided to move its offices to Century City .
The landlord of the U.S. Bank Tower, downtown’s tallest office tower at 72 stories, remains bullish on the market in spite of its troubles and recently spent $60 million to make the building more attractive to tenants by adding hotel-like amenities.
“People need offices,” said Marty Burger, chief executive of Silverstein Properties, which owns the tower. “Not every company in every industry needs an office, but the majority of them do.”
Among the reasons for offices are collaboration and education, he said. “How do you mentor the young folks who are coming up in your industry if the older people aren’t in the office for younger people to learn from? There is a whole ecosystem where you need people in an office now.”
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Companies may end up using their offices fewer days of the week than they used to as remote work and shortened schedules grow in popularity, he acknowledged: “Fridays may never be Fridays again.”
Burger says his optimism about downtown L.A.’s potential for improvement has a foundation in New York, where Silverstein built One World Trade Center on the site of the Twin Towers.
“After 9/11, everyone said that no one would ever live there or work there again,” Burger said.
In 2001, the neighborhood had about 20,000 residents and saw little activity after office hours. Now rebuilt, the neighborhood has about 75,000 residents and a greater mix of office tenants including businesses in tech and advertising in what was mostly a banking center before, Burger said.
“It’s a vibrant 24/7 community,” he said.
Many see this as the best future for L.A.’s financial district.
The city’s tight housing market combined with the downturn in office rentals opens the possibility to convert some office buildings into housing or hotels.
More residents and visitors would make the neighborhood more dynamic and better able to support restaurants, shops and nightlife, said Griffin, executive director of the privately funded Downtown Center Business Improvement District, a nonprofit coalition of more than 2,000 property owners.
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“If we trade some office for residential, that’s a good thing.”
The pandemic’s blow to the office market “is an opportunity that none of us ever imagined happening,” Welborne said, “transforming office buildings into residential buildings and reimagining our entire downtown.”
When shopping for an apartment, you may not know if you can you see your apartment before signing a lease. Maybe your specific unit is still occupied or undergoing renovations. Or, perhaps you’re searching for an apartment in another city or state and can’t see it before you move. Regardless, you may not see your actual apartment before you sign the rental contract. But, there are steps you can take to ensure you get the apartment you want.
Can you see your apartment before signing a lease?
You may wonder if a landlord is legally required to show you the specific apartment you will rent before you sign the lease. The short answer is no. You can request the landlord show you a similar apartment, such as the model apartment, so you know what your unit would look like. However, because you voluntarily sign the renter’s contract, you’re agreeing to the lease terms, whether you see the actual unit or not.
How to proceed with an apartment sight unseen
If you intend to sign a lease without seeing an apartment beforehand, there are steps you should take to ensure you, hopefully, have an apartment you can live with — and in.
1. Check out the apartment community
Even if you can’t see your actual apartment, you can still check out the apartment community. Take a walk through the building or community to see the amenities, talk with other tenants to find out the good and bad of living there, and see how quiet or loud the area is. This also provides a look at how well-kept the grounds and buildings are.
For a gated complex, the landlord should provide access so you can look around. If he or she is unwilling to let you scout the property, that could be a red flag, one you should take into consideration before signing a lease.
If you can’t get to the apartment complex, review information online, such as photos and, if possible, reviews. Use Google StreetView on Google Earth to see the community.
2. Check out the surrounding neighborhood
Review online maps or take a drive down the streets surrounding the apartment complex. What type of neighbors would you have? Restaurants, business services, industrial warehouses or residential subdivisions? Is there a lot of traffic, making it difficult to get in and out of the apartment complex? If there are restaurants or industrial businesses nearby, are there smells in the air? Spend some time in the area to evaluate what it’s like to live there.
3. Outline specifics in the apartment lease
If your actual apartment is significantly different in reality than what the landlord agreed to provide in the tenant contract, the rental agreement could be rendered void. Therefore, be as specific in the lease as possible when including apartment details.
For instance, make sure it states you’re renting a two-bedroom unit. If your landlord says you will have an apartment with a balcony, at the end of the hall or on the first floor, make sure the renter’s contract includes those details. If the landlord says the rental unit will be freshly painted, include granite countertops and have new carpet, spell that out in the lease agreement.
Including the most specific details provides protection for you given you haven’t seen the apartment before you sign the lease agreement.
4. Ask to delay signing the lease agreement until after the walk-through
Although a landlord is not legally required to show you the specific apartment you will live in before you sign a tenant contract, he or she must do a walk-through of the unit with you on move-in day. During this walk-through, examine every corner of the apartment. Do you see signs of water damage? Are there any broken locks on doors or windows? Do you actually have granite countertops, fresh paint and a new carpet?
If you find issues with the apartment, make a list and take photos and/or videos to document what the landlord needs to repair. Have the landlord sign the list, acknowledging the issues. This protects you from being responsible for any damages and provides possible evidence if you have to sue the property management company for failure to repair or address these problems.
5. Don’t hesitate to walk away
If you don’t feel comfortable enough to sign the tenancy agreement without seeing your specific apartment first, don’t. It’s that simple. Signing is voluntary, so don’t feel pressured to sign a legally binding agreement if you don’t think it’s the right path for you to take.
Once you do sign, you’re legally obligated to adhere to the terms of the legally binding contract, including paying a security deposit, the first month’s rent and any fees to terminate the lease early.
Feel confident before signing your lease
The bottom line is this: Don’t sign on the bottom line of a lease agreement for an apartment you haven’t seen yet until you’re confident this will be a good home for your foreseeable future.
Committing to a lease agreement is no easy decision. Review all your options and check out the apartment complex and surrounding neighborhood. If possible, have an attorney review the lease before signing it. These precautions can go a long way in making sure you’re happy with the apartment you will call home.
The information contained in this article is for educational purposes only and does not, and is not intended to, constitute legal or financial advice. Readers are encouraged to seek professional legal or financial advice as they may deem it necessary.
An experienced freelance writer, Karon Warren has covered home and real estate topics for more than 20 years for such outlets as Curbed Atlanta, Apartment Therapy, RealTrends and HotPads.com. She is a member of the American Society of Journalists & Authors.
You know a design style is truly a classic when it inspires incredible, new work for decades beyond its origin.
That’s exactly what Los Angeles restaurateur Beau Laughlin and his actress wife, Lindsey Gort, achieved in Palm Springs. The pair built a brand-new, midcentury modern-style masterpiece from the ground up, with the help of prominent Palm Springs architect Sean Lockyer, of Studio AR+D.
After entering the market in early June for $5.1 million, the five-bedroom, five-bath home caught a buyer’s eye and is in contingent sale status.
Desert modern design
The home features the traditional single-story, clean lines, and organic materials prescribed by the original masters of classic desert modernism. But this beauty also boasts the most current technology for a thoroughly modern dwelling.
Laughlin and Gort employed a timeless design technique before building began—they spent hours on the property, observing where the best light fell at different times of day and considering the views from each room.
They situated the structure on the nearly half-acre lot, so the sweeping mountain and desert vistas could be enjoyed at all times.
One example of the view-centric design includes Fleetwood glass, pocket sliders that face the iconic San Jacinto Mountains.
The guest suite, dubbed “The Mountain Room,” faces a small mountain where the famous Palm Springs bighorn sheep can occasionally be seen.
To maximize the landscape views, the building team constructed the home with two wings connected to the main living space by a double-sided, glass breezeway. This striking feature overlooks the pool, surrounding desert, and outdoor entertainment spaces.
The home is built primarily of durable and sustainable materials, including concrete, wood, stone, and steel. Natural stone is particularly prominent in the kitchen and bathrooms.
Built with ecology in mind, the home is kept cool in the summer and warm in the winter by high-density, eco-spray, foam insulation. In addition, solar panels offset approximately 80% of the home’s energy needs. Tankless water heaters also conserve one of the desert’s most precious elements.
Luxe outdoor amenities include a resort-sized pool and spa, a fully outfitted outdoor kitchen, a conversation area surrounding a fire pit, tasteful desert landscaping, wood decking, and a cantilevered pergola.
Ideal for the privacy-minded buyer, the 4,185-square-foot home is situated on a corner lot in the upscale Parc Andreas neighborhood and has just one adjacent neighbor. A six-foot privacy wall surrounds the property, and a double gate opens to the front motor court.
Laughlin designed and served as general contractor on a number of award-winning Los Angeles restaurants, including The Hudson, The Churchill, Clover, and Fifty Seven.
Gort is perhaps best known for playing Samantha Jones in “The Carrie Diaries” but has also had prominent roles in TV series such as “Impastor” and “All Rise.”
Watch about Zillow…your Zestimate now has company.
Today, Redfin announced the availability of the so-called “Redfin Estimate,” which is the online real estate brokerage’s answer to the Zestimate.
Similar to the Zestimate, the Redfin Estimate is an automated home-value estimate that is displayed on home listing pages throughout Redfin, both those for sale and those off the market.
When viewing homes on Redfin, it will be listed next to the last-sold price for homes not on the market and below the list price for those currently on the market.
Redfin Estimate Has Lowest Error Rate
The Redfin Estimate is apparently more accurate
Or at least yields a lower error rate relative to its competitors
Thanks to the large amount of data that backs it up
So you might find that the estimated value is more on point
Redfin claims its new home value estimate has the lowest published error rate of any of its competitors because it’s driven by more data.
That error rate is 1.96% for homes that are currently for sale and 6.23% for off-market homes.
In other words, the Redfin Estimate will be within 1.96% of the actual sales price half of the time for a listed home and within 6.23% of the eventual sales price of non-listed homes.
It’s more accurate for homes that are listed because more data is available on such homes.
And while it might be the lowest, it can still be way off, as their own error rates above clearly show.
The Redfin Estimate factors in more than 500 data points about the property, the neighborhood, and the real estate market to come up with the end result.
Additionally, because Redfin has 100% access to Multiple Listing Services (MLSs), it can dig a little deeper into the property and determine things like if the property is located on a busy street, or if it has a water view.
This, combined with “today’s best cloud technology,” gives users a better home estimate, though still no substitute for a proper home appraisal.
Redfin Estimate Shows You Comps
The estimate will show you the comparable sales used
So you can determine if the price they came up with makes sense
If the homes they used don’t seem like good matches
You can adjust the price in your head either up or down depending on whether you feel the comps they used were too good/bad
While the estimates are still fishy at best, based on my own searches, they do provide the comps used to come up with the estimate, which is nice.
At the top of any property page on Redfin that contains a Redfin Estimate (more than 40 million homes in 35 markets), you can click on the newly added Redfin Estimate tab.
It will take you to a page dedicated to the property’s estimated value that displays six comparable properties that sold nearby recently.
This will give you real insight into how they actually come up with your home’s value. However, I’ve seen some outliers in the comps so it’s still powered by a machine susceptible to making mistakes.
In other words, take the estimates with a grain of salt as you would other automated estimates. If you have concerns about their estimate, there’s also a link to a feedback form below the comps.
The comps are apparently chosen using a blend of proximity, similarity, and how recently they sold.
Redfin Estimates are updated daily for homes that are currently listed for sale, and weekly for off-market properties.
Changes will likely be more frequent in fast-paced markets where new comp sales are generated more quickly.
Don’t See a Redfin Estimate?
It’s possible you won’t have a Redfin Estimate
Assuming your property lacks recent sales comps
Or is too unique to properly appraise
Real estate agents can also remove it if/when they list a property to avoid any disputes
In some cases, you may not see a Redfin Estimate on the property page. This could be due to limited data for the property in question, or if the city itself isn’t covered.
For example, if not enough similar properties sold next to yours in the past year, an estimate might not be generated.
Perhaps more interesting is the fact that Redfin agents can remove Redfin Estimates for properties on the market at the owner’s request.
So if an owner doesn’t want the public to see it, maybe it’s lower than they’d like, they can opt out of displaying valuations for the home.
The agent simply deselects the “Allow Automated Valuations” option within the Multiple Listing Service.
The Redfin Estimate recently went live in Dallas, Detroit, and Minneapolis.
Is It Accurate?
Like most of these automated valuation tools
Your results may vary (widely)
In some cases the price might be spot on
But it others it could be far off, with listed homes generally more accurate
Now the million-dollar question. Is the Redfin Estimate accurate?
While they say they have the lowest published error rate, they also admit that, “there will always be estimates for individual homes that are not accurate.”
I took the new tool for a spin and compared it to Zestimates for the same properties.
What I found in my initial testing was that the Redfin Estimate was sometimes higher and sometimes lower than Zillow’s Zestimate.
And often by a significant amount; we’re talking more than $100,000 on a sub-million dollar home. In fact, I couldn’t find any properties that had similar estimated values between the two websites.
If anything, this might just lead to more confusion from both prospective home buyers and home sellers. But what can you do.
My guess is home sellers will point to whichever estimate is higher, while home buyers will point out the lower estimate. Fun times ensue.
My Experience with the Redfin Estimate
I think they still have a lot of work to do
To make it more consistent across like properties
Overall it’s the probably the best free estimate around because it’s the most up-to-date
But not everyone will be satisfied due to disparity among very similar homes
Now that it has been around for a while, I figured I’d check back in to let you know my thoughts. In general, Redfin Estimates tend to be higher than Zestimates, at least in my personal experience.
This could have to do with the fact that Redfin data seems to be more up-to-date. But I’ve also come across some pretty glaring disparities, especially for condos in the same complex with the near-exact same square footage.
That doesn’t sit well with me, and really doesn’t make any sense. I actually reached out to Redfin about this issue and aside from a boilerplate response about them being “just estimates” and based on a number of factors, was told that if you list your home, their system will update to display the new listing information and the Redfin Estimate will automatically update, typically within a day.
I don’t know if that means some sort of special data refresh, but as I noted above, Redfin Estimates are updated daily for currently listed properties, and weekly for off-market properties.
Anyway, it appears that in some cases homes sold recently have higher Redfin Estimates, or perhaps “more updated” ones than homes that haven’t sold in years. This seems like a pretty big discrepancy or algorithmic problem that may need to be resolved in the future.
For me, the estimate shouldn’t depend on when it was last sold. That should have zero bearing.
Update: An updated version of the Redfin Estimate released on October 2st, 2016 is apparently 9.7% more accurate for on-market homes and 7.8% more accurate for off-market homes compared to the original version.
Homes for sale will be within 1.8% of their expected sales price half of the time, while off-market homes will be within 6.28% of the sales price (if listed) half the time.
For some reason, they seem to have more trouble with off-market homes…
If P-22,the late mountain lion, was the unofficial mascot of L.A., then Pinky the papier-mâché bird was the decidedly less majestic mascot of Eagle Rock, the small, hilly neighborhood tucked on the city’s northeast boundary.
No one’s quite sure how Pinky popped up. Around 2014, the bird appeared in a nest atop “Pillarhenge,” a famous (or infamous) series of columns built as the foundation of a would-be Great Recession-era housing development on Colorado Boulevard.
The development was never finished. Abandoned since the 2008 housing crisis, the property has served at times as a homeless encampment, dumping ground and playground for graffiti artists.
The pillars became a white elephant of the recession, an eyesore that locals have come to love, hate or begrudgingly accept. While Stonehenge evokes mysticism and Wiccans, Pillarhenge evokes confusion and dysfunction, serving as a concrete reminder of L.A.’s inability to deal with its housing woes.
The bird had a deeper fan base, becoming an Eagle Rock celebrity with a line of T-shirts and tapestries. For the last eight years, Pinky watched over a city that couldn’t quite figure out how to house itself.
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Then in April, Pinky was gone, stripped from its pillar-top nest. A sign perhaps? Was Pillarhenge coming down too?
Residents wondered what would rise in its place on 1332 Colorado Blvd., a long, narrow property that has never been developed.
Before the pillars, the property was known among locals as the place where an LAPD officer shot 18-year-old Mark Moser to death in 1978 after Moser’s pickup truck collided with an undercover police car at the end of a stakeout and subsequent car chase.
Resident Kevin Grace, Moser’s classmate at Eagle Rock High School, said the property has carried a bizarre mystique since the killing.
In March 2015, Grace co-founded “Friends of Pillarhenge Park,” a Facebook group tracking the property’s development and advocating for its potential use as a park. To date, the group has 824 members.
Developers have attempted to build something on the property over the last two decades, but never a park. Jay Vanos of Vanos Architects has been involved with the site since 2003, when he worked with a developer envisioning a 17-unit live-work space there.
It didn’t come to fruition and sold to another developer, who erected the now-famous pillars before going bankrupt. The lender took control for a few years before the property was sold to Imad Boukai for $1.9 million in 2016.
Boukai, chairman of Anaheim-based company General Procurement Inc., envisioned a four-story mixed-use development with 31 apartments above two levels of parking and commercial space.
He tapped Vanos, who planned a structure that would take up the vast majority of the relatively small lot, which covers just over half an acre. The plans became public in 2017, and due to its ship-like look, residents started calling it the Love Boat, a nod to the 1970s sitcom set on a cruise.
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“Let their imaginations take them where they will,” Vanos said.
As with most small towns subsumed by a big city, Eagle Rock residents felt protective of the community and wary of potential developers. They voiced strong opinions. Months of discourse and meetings with council members ensued, with some locals jeering at the nautical design and others expressing relief that the site would finally be developed.
“I’d rather suck it up and see it developed into a functional property,” said Grace, who was born in Eagle Rock. “Right now, it looks like something from a forgotten town. That’s worst-case scenario.”
The Eagle Rock Assn., a volunteer group founded in the 1980s aiming to guide the community’s growth in a sustainable way, published a letter in 2017 pointing out the significance of the site’s location. The property parallels a freeway offramp leading into Eagle Rock, so the Love Boat would be the first thing people see when entering the neighborhood.
The letter said the board was split on the design, but members support the development because the property had been “blighted and abandoned for so many years.”
Progress stalled again, and Boukai sold the unfinished property in 2022. He declined a request for comment. A source familiar with the deal suggested that building costs became too expensive since the lot is on a steep hill that requires significant grading and maintenance.
Next up was Ara Tchaghlassian, founder of American Tire Depot, a Vernon-based retailer with more than 100 locations. Tchaghlassian sold the tire company in 2021 and bought the Pillarhenge lot from Boukai months later for $2.765 million, real estate records show.
It appears the Love Boat will set sail after all,as Tchaghlassian is picking up where Boukai left off. He declined a request for comment, but a construction permit posted at the site shows the same plans mapped out by Boukai: a four-story development with 31 apartments, including three extremely low-income units, above two levels of parking and commercial space.
Grading began late last year, and Pinky was removed in the spring. The source said the complex will probably be completed in roughly two years.
“I’m sick of looking at it,” said Diane Lopez, who walks past Pillarhenge on her daily stroll. “Just build something. Anything.”
The pillars will remain, though they won’t be visible once the structure is completed, Vanos said.
As for why a developer would take on the headache of Pillarhenge, the answer is simple: the Transit-Oriented Communities Incentive Program.
L.A. has a housing shortage, and it needs a multifaceted approach to address it. As part of its housing element plan, the city is required to zone for a quarter-million homes by 2024.
To reach that goal, the city has introduced various incentives to encourage multifamily development as part of its Housing Element Rezoning Program, and the Transit-Oriented Communities incentive has been one its most successful tools.
The program encourages the development of affordable housing near bus and train stations by offering developers more density and less parking requirements for their projects if they build near transit centers.
According to the city’s planning department, over the last six years, 36% of new multifamily developments have taken advantage of the incentives, and the Pillarhenge project is one of them. It qualifies for the second tier of incentives, meaning it gets a 60% increase in the maximum number of units, an increase in floor-area ratio and a reduction in the number of required parking spaces.
“We need responsible, robust development that’s affordable and successful for Angelenos. Right now, we don’t have enough,” said Greg Good, a senior advisor on policy and external affairs for the Los Angeles Housing Department. “The Housing Department and the rest of the city are working relentlessly to facilitate and expedite that process, and we do that by creating programs that work.”
There are myriad reasons why developers abandon a project: running out of money, permitting problems, pandemics. During a housing crisis, it’s the city’s job to make multifamily housing a viable option for developers.
For Pillarhenge’s latest developer, the incentives may be enough to bring housing to the long-abandoned lot. For now, residents wait to see whether a Love Boat will be better than a Pillarhenge.
Some may joke that “Atlanta is full,” but that’s due to the recent influx of transplants around the country. Recently, Money named Atlanta the best place to live in the U.S. in 2022, so it’s not hard to understand why everyone flew south.
People are starting to notice the Georgia capital as a gem in the region. Steady job growth? You got it. Excellent live music and food? Yes, of course. There are many reasons why you’ll love living in Atlanta. The city knows how to capture the hearts of every visitor since the city is as versatile as it is beautiful. There’s a place for everyone here.
Here are 15 reasons to move to Atlanta.
1. There are plenty of green spaces
Atlanta is a city in a forest, no doubt. The tree canopy around the city will take you by surprise. It’s not just tree-lined streets. There are parks around every corner, shaded sidewalks and the trees embrace even the highway.
Nature is always nearby, with Piedmont Park being smack dab in the middle of Midtown Atlanta. Around the city, you can find walking trails like the Morningside Nature Preserve and Westside Park, or if you’re into kayaking, the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area.
2. The mild weather is glorious
Winters in Atlanta are very mild, with infrequent snowfall. Bundling up, you can enjoy walks around the city and beat those winter blues without freezing. Additionally, on average, Atlanta gets 217 sunny days a year, and a lot of those are in winter.
Spring is unpredictable, with a few storms. But, the resulting blooms around town are worth the sneeze. The summers get hot and humid (its nickname is “Hotlanta” after all), but there are plenty of patios and spots to cool off, like city pools, the Chattahoochee River and Lake Lanier.
3. It’s truly one of the best food cities
Another reason to love Atlanta is the diversity of dining options within the city. Emerging chefs have set up pop-ups around the city to deliver creative offerings. Restaurants like Georgia Boy, Little Bear and Talat Market are pushing the envelope in the fine dining scene.
You can also find delicious seafood fare at Tio Lucho’s, Atlanta Fishmonger and Kimball House. The bar scene is growing, as well. Food halls, including Ponce City Market, have many options, from Szechuan to Italian to Cuban, all under one roof.
4. Southern hospitality is alive and well
Locals in Atlanta are incredibly warm and inviting. Atlanta is a big city with a small-town heart. Everyone truly knows each other, and you’ll get introduced to a handful of people anywhere you go. It’s easy to make friends and network for work.
The Southern hospitality shows up in friendly hellos everywhere you go and during parties and bars around town. You won’t encounter a stranger here.
5. Arts and culture are everywhere in the city
From the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra to the High Museum of Art to MODA, Atlanta has a thriving arts culture. Local art nonprofits create programs for families and children to boast their knowledge of the arts, music and more. Nonprofits like Living Walls beautify the city by bringing local and abroad artists to create murals around the city.
Other attractions in Atlanta that bring unexpected doses of culture are the Georgia Aquarium, the Center for Puppetry Arts and Zoo Atlanta.
6. Neighborhoods with different personalities
Every neighborhood in Atlanta has its own personality. Family-friendly Candler Park has beautiful tree-lined streets, playgrounds and family restaurants. While Little Five Points reaches a younger demographic with vintage stores, metal bars and new-age stores.
In East Atlanta, you can find nightlife and more millennial-leaning restaurants like Argosy and Banshee. On the Westside, you can find a higher concentration of rooftop bars, fine dining and spots like Ormby’s and The Painted Pin that offer games with food.
7. Access to food from many countries
Buford Highway, a state highway in Atlanta, is a place that just doesn’t exist anywhere else. Immigrant populations started settling along Buford Highway decades ago. Now, there are shopping centers filled with food from all over the world, from Korean to Mexican, Colombian, Chinese and more.
Cultural events also occur in one of the many event spaces in the area. It’s a great place to learn about other cultures and enjoy delicious food.
8. Live music and concerts 24/7
The city that gave you Usher, TLC, Outkast and the Indigo Girls — you can’t go wrong here. The Tabernacle, Variety Playhouse, Coca-Cola Roxy, Buckhead Theatre and The Earl bring all the popular acts to the stage and offer different levels of intimacy for the audience.
You’ll find free concerts at parks around the city and, of course, the world’s biggest stars rocking out at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. An obvious reason to fall in love with Atlanta.
9. Biking the Atlanta BeltLine
The Atlanta BeltLine, a network of multi-use trails, connects the city’s 45 in-town neighborhoods. You’ll find shops, restaurants, breweries and more along the BeltLine.
Each stretch also has a different feel depending on the neighborhood you’re passing. Get a bike or walk it with coffee in hand to enjoy Atlanta’s weather. It’s a great way to explore the city and how it has changed.
10. A mountain escape is just 90 minutes away
Sometimes, you need a break, right? Luckily, the Blue Ridge mountains are just 90 minutes from Atlanta. You can visit Ellijay and Blue Ridge for a quick 48-hour rejuvenating trip to the mountains.
Go apple picking, hike waterfalls, make a fire at your cabin or enjoy the view from a hot tub. The small town also has kitschy shops that are fun to visit and, of course, very good barbecue.
11. A thriving sports culture
Pick your sport — baseball, soccer, basketball or football. Atlanta’s got a fierce fan club for the Atlanta Braves (MLB), the Atlanta Falcons (NFL), the Atlanta Hawks (NBA) and Atlanta United (MLS).
If you’re into college football, both Georgia State University and Georgia Tech have excellent football teams that make home games an enjoyable time.
12. Atlanta is incredibly diverse
More than half of the city’s population identifies as Black, making it one of the largest majority-Black metro areas. It also takes the prize for the second friendliest city for those in the LGBTQ+ community, with an annual Pride Festival in October.
The city also hosts a large immigrant population from Latin America, Asia and Europe, about 14 percent of the total population. Between 2000 and 2010, metro Atlanta’s Latino population doubled.
13. Growing tech scene and job market
There’s a growing number of accelerators, incubators, venture capital firms and events like Atlanta Innovation Week and Venture Atlanta that together fuel a thriving start-up culture.
Headquarters for Microsoft, NCR, Alphabet’s Google and others have cemented their footprint in the city with new offices. The Atlanta Tech Village in Buckhead houses more than 600 startups and continues to nurture emerging founders through networking.
And, don’t forget that it’s home to Fortune 500 companies like Coca-Cola, UPS, Home Depot and Delta Air Lines.
14. There’s rich history around every corner
The Historic Auburn district, the National Center for Civil and Human Rights and the Martin Luther King, Jr. National Historic site offer insights into Atlanta’s robust history and key role during the Civil Rights era.
At the Atlanta History Center, you can learn more about Atlanta’s role in the Civil War through its exhibitions and the Cyclorama, one of the only ones left in the country. Markers around the city also show important battles. In Oakland Cemetery, you can see those fallen during past times.
15. The airport puts the world at your fingertips
The hype around the Atlanta airport is real. Busiest? Definitely. But, as an Atlanta local, you’ll also see it’s one of the most efficient in the world. The airport sees more than 100 million passengers a year.
As a Delta hub, you have the world at your fingertips with a direct flight to many destinations around the world. Don’t miss the many art installations by local artists in the terminals, including a crowd-favorite on Concourse C.
Thinking of moving to Atlanta?
You’ll undoubtedly love Atlanta as much as the locals do once you spend some time in town. From its food and history to its culture and sports teams, there are truly so many reasons to love Atlanta with something for everyone in one of its 45 in-town neighborhoods. Are you ready to make a move to Atlanta?
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Discover Spacious Living in Quiet, Charming Brightwood:
If you’re looking for a spacious apartment in a peaceful and welcoming neighborhood, 1400 Van Buren in Brightwood, Washington DC is the place to be. Nestled in this charming community, the one-bedroom apartments here offer a generous 1000 square feet of living space – a rare find in the city.
These thoughtfully designed apartments feature classic hardwood flooring, ceiling fans, central air conditioning, and a generously sized floor plan. With large windows and plenty of natural light, the one-bedroom apartments create a warm and inviting atmosphere.
Residents of 1400 Van Buren benefit from convenient amenities such as controlled access, on-site maintenance, on-site management, and on-site laundry facilities. Plus, the property is cat-friendly, so your furry friend can join you in your new home.
The best part? One-bedroom apartments at 1400 Van Buren start at just $1705 per month, making them an affordable option for anyone looking for a spacious apartment in DC. Plus, WC Smith, the property management company, is known for its exceptional customer service. Their dedicated service teams are available around the clock to ensure that your needs are promptly addressed, and you can easily manage your resident account online at any time.
If you’re ready to discover spacious living in charming Brightwood, schedule a visit to the 1000-square-foot one-bedroom apartment at 1400 Van Buren today. You won’t be disappointed!
Click here to take a virtual tour
Amazon and the Amazon logo are trademarks of Amazon.com, Inc, or its affiliates. Rental providers will not refuse to rent a rental unit to a person because the person will provide the rental payment, in whole or in part, through a voucher for rental housing assistance provided by the District or federal government.
I’m a huge advocate of calling your utilities to ask for rate reductions. But some people are uncomfortable making these sorts of calls. It would be helpful if these folks had a way of using the internet to find better deals. allconnect is a web-based service that allows users to do just that. From the about page:
WhiteFence is a free service that helps people who are moving or looking to find the best deals on phone, internet, television, electricity, natural gas and other home services. By simply entering a street address into the secure site, people looking to save money or start new service can find the most comprehensive list of plans available for their specific address from over 400 nationally recognized partners.
WhiteFence targets two types of users:
Those who are moving from one address to another. WhiteFence bills itself as a one-stop source for connecting utilities. (And even promises that you can keep your existing phone number after a move.)
Those who are shopping around for a better deal.
WhiteFence also offers a price guarantee: “Our Best Price Guarantee means that you will receive the best price that each of our participating service providers offers (online or otherwise) for a product or service at your particular location.”
I was intrigued by the idea of WhiteFence, but it didn’t have a lot of info for the Portland area. I plugged in our address, and the only deal it suggested was bundled internet/phone/television from Qwest. None of the price-points worked for me. Out of curiosity, I contacted a WhiteFence spokesperson to find out more about the service:
J.D.: Are there particular regions or cities for which WhiteFence is best suited? Who is most likely to benefit from the service?
Spokesperson: Some cities have a broader array of services available than others, depending on what the local service providers decide to offer through allconnect.com. That being said, WhiteFence does offer the most comprehensive online service for comparison shopping of home services nationwide. In some states, WhiteFence has added value. For example, in Texas people can search for energy prices which changes frequently due to the de-regulated energy market in that state.
J.D.: What does WhiteFence have planned for the future? Are there features coming that would be of interest to Get Rich Slowly readers?
Spokesperson: WhiteFence is planning to add a “deal of the week” feature on its site, which will point customers to the best current promotions available. Additionally, WhiteFence is planning to add local community information so if you are moving and looking to switch your utilities, you’ll also be able to look up neighborhood amenities, school and crime information for example.
I’m intrigued. Though WhiteFence can’t save me any money right now, I’ve bookmarked it for future use. It cannot hurt to check back every few months, right? Perhaps they’ll come up with some additional deals for my neighborhood.
Have you used allconnect (or a similar service) before? Does it offer a variety of suggestions for your location? Are the prices better than what you’re currently paying? Or would you rather get your rate reductions the old-fashioned way: by calling and asking?
Mike Holmes knows that all home renovations begin with the best of intentions. But if there’s one thing that can send things off the rails, it’s a contractor who isn’t up to snuff.
That’s why Holmes has made it his mission to teach homeowners how to keep projects on track on his show, “Holmes Family Rescue,” which recently premiered Season 2.
On the show, the Toronto-based builder and two of his children, Michael Holmes Jr. and Sherry Holmes, join forces to fix and finish remodels for families who’ve been left high and dry by the workers they originally hired for the jobs.
It’s a situation Mike himself has been in before when he paid someone to redo his driveway.
“It was nothing but a piece of crap, and I never heard from the guy again,” he admits to Realtor.com.
Hoping to help homeowners avoid a battle with a bad builder, Mike and Michael Jr. shared their tried-and-true blueprint for vetting contractors, as well as their personal renovation plans to accommodate the expanding Holmes family, which includes Mike’s newest granddaughter, born just earlier this month. If renovations are anywhere in your future, read on to learn a whole lot about what it takes to get the job done.
What went down with your own bad experience with a contractor?
Mike: I hired who I thought was a great paving guy in the neighborhood. I have a very large driveway, and it was good for the first couple of months, and then after that, it literally fell apart. He did not do what he said he was going to do, and of course, he never came back.
Michael Jr.: Oh, I remember. That was a big job. It had to be completely redone. [My dad] had to bring in a crew of a lot of machines to get that all done.
What is your advice for hiring a reliable contractor, and what are some red flags?
Mike: You need to learn to trust your instincts, because your instincts are almost never wrong.
I have three rules: One, slow down and take your time, because doing any construction on your home is going to take way more work for you than you could imagine. Two, educate yourself. What type of permits do I need? And No. 3, check out your contractor. I mean, we test-drive every single car that we buy in our lives.
Go check out the work that he has given you references for and ask the homeowners 101 questions: Did they start on time? Did they finish on time? Were they courteous? Were they clean? Did they charge you more money at the end of the job?
This is a job for you, and if you don’t do it that way, odds are you’re not going to be in a good position.
What are the most common issues or poor practices that you get called to fix?
Michael Jr.: Electrical is a very common one that we see. You have a handyman or you have a framer, and they’re like, “I can do your electrical as well.” And you end up seeing a ton of fire hazards at almost every job.
Mike: Once you see one thing wrong, odds are there are many things wrong. It’s very rare that it’s just going to be a bad electrician. It just doesn’t usually happen that way. It’s usually a contractor that’s brought in a plumber, or he’s done it himself. The electrical, he’s done it himself. The structural, he’s done it himself. So it tends to be not just one thing, but many things wrong.
A lot of money is inevitably involved in these transactions. How can homeowners protect their investments?
Mike: You should never put more than 10% down because, upon signing a contract, all you’re starting with is tying up their time. In other words, scheduling them.
Everyone needs to pay in milestones. Don’t give them half the money upfront, and then you’re hoping to hell that they come in and do the first half right. In milestones, at least you’re paying upon roughing of carpentry, roughing of plumbing, roughing of electrical.
Once passed by a building inspector, give your money up. That’s what we should be doing.
What rights and recourse do homeowners have if things go south?
Mike: There truly is no recourse. You’re never going to win hiring a lawyer. This is why your instincts need to be very clear. These red flags, start watching them from Day One and know when to stop the job and tell the contractor to leave your home.
What ends up happening is, much like this wonderful family [this season], they’re out their $400,000 and then they’re hoping that he’s going to come back and finish.
“Please, it’s almost done, just finish it, we need to get back in our home!” That is the worst trap you could ever get yourself into. And I wish—because if you stole a pack of gum, you could go to jail—contractors should be going to jail if they’re taking that much money from people and leaving them high and dry. That’s just not right.
What’s the worst state you’ve seen a contractor leave a job?
Michael Jr.: There’s one we did years ago. I was just joining the crew at this time, and this contractor came in, built a new house for these homeowners, and the structure was wrong, the electrical was wrong. Everything this contractor did was wrong, so much so that this house had to be torn down, rebuilt from scratch.
Thinking back to your first personal renovation, what lesson did you learn from that?
Mike: I did my first basement when I was 12! My first personal renovation was probably when [my oldest daughter] Amanda [Holmes] was born. It was the house that I purchased. Soon as I bought it and started renovating—yes, I was living in it, and I tell everyone don’t do that—the recession came and it kicked my butt. That was a whole new learning curve for me.
When it comes to construction, I’m not worried about it—there’s really nothing I can’t do. But I didn’t expect a recession to come in and smack me sideways.
Michael Jr.: Sherry and I, we bought a house together, and one of the biggest lessons I learned was that you need to be organized and you need to have a plan. Without a plan, I ended up turning two rooms into one bigger bedroom. I didn’t have a greater vision of this house and was just doing things off the top of my head, and I ended up having to fix this bedroom multiple times because there was a leak. We bit off a lot more than we could chew.
Speaking of a volatile time in the market, do you have any advice for homeowners taking on a renovation right now?
Mike: Well, now is a different game. It’s just because of interest rates rising, and especially because of the costs of construction materials. You’ve got to be really careful. This is a time that you can really lose a lot of money if you’re not careful. Take your time, and check out your contractor. You can still do things, but be a little more realistic in the times that you’re playing with.
Michael Jr.: And not trying to spread yourself too thin. Prioritize your renovations. Try and work from the outside in. Life in general is just costing more money, and then hiring a contractor, they’re more expensive because there’s a shortage in skilled trade, materials cost more.
When it comes to your own homes, what upgrade have you done that makes you most happy?
Mike: I just finally, after all these years, fixed my house up, the whole first floor—kitchen, bathroom, mudroom, laundry room, new furnace, new ductwork, new electrical, new plumbing, new structure—and I think it was about time.
[My longtime partner] Anna [Zappia] deserved a new kitchen, and she finally got it. And it’s completely open concept, so every window on the first floor sees out to nothing but beautiful nature, trees, bushes, gardens. I love it, I really do.
Michael Jr.: My wife and I, two years ago now, we bought a building in downtown Meaford, Ontario. We opened her business in there, and then we did a major renovation on the second story and put in a yoga, Pilates, and fitness studio, a couple of practitioner rooms, a bathroom—completely redid it.
From the before and after, it was like a nightmare and [now] it’s stunning. There’s herringbone white oak flooring. Everything’s new, brand-new electrical, proper panel, so, pretty happy with that.
What still needs to be rescued or made right in your homes?
Michael Jr.: What you need is a spare bedroom for when your son and daughter and new granddaughter come and visit!
Mike: What we’re doing next is a sunroom off the house, and it’s something we’ve always wanted. And with that sunroom, Michael, I’m going to set up the rooms upstairs as a bedroom so you guys can come over and visit me.
Michael Jr.: There we go!
“Holmes Family Rescue” airs Wednesdays at 9 p.m. on HGTV and streams on Max and HGTV GO.