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Articles: Real Estate - Is an Old Home for
You?
By Raynor
James
So you think you might like to buy an old home? Perhaps
even something old enough to be historic? It’s a good idea to
carefully evaluate the pros and cons before you decide. There are
plenty of both. Will the pros be valuable enough for you to be
willing to cope with the cons? Where shall we start? With a
cautionary tale, I think.
In 1972, my husband and I bought a house built in about
1825. We moved in on August 15th. My husband had an out of town
business meeting and left about 5 AM the next day. (What makes him
so smart?) About an hour later, I started downstairs and flipped the
switch to turn on the chandelier in the downstairs hall. Boy did I
get light. There was a flash, and then what looked like lightening
ran up the cord. I turned the switch off, but the fireworks
continued. I ran and yelled for our sons (10 and 11 years old at the
time). We got out a door off another hall and ran to our next door
neighbor’s house to call the fire department. (This is a very
exciting way to meet one’s new neighbors.) The fire department was
really fast and got to our home before we got back
ourselves.
By the time my husband returned late that evening, we
had been visited by not just the fire department, but also an
electrician (old wiring needed to be reworked and a fuse box
replaced with circuit breakers), a painter (to get a price on fixing
water and fire damage), and a floor refinisher (same reason as the
painter), and both our sons had been offered marijuana. (Did I
mention that beautiful old houses are often located in intercity
areas and sometimes the whole neighborhood has not yet been
completely restored to its original state of gentility?) We were
asking ourselves, “What have we
done?”
Well, we had the wiring fixed, put off having the
floors worked on and did the painting ourselves. We also paid
tuition and fees to keep the boys in their old school
district.
You have to be flexible to happily live in an old
house. Nothing is a standard size. Right angles are purely
coincidental. (The water damage mentioned above had showed us that
the floor on the outside edge of the front hall is about six inches
higher than floor on the far side of the living room.) Go to Lowes
or Home Depot to buy a standard replacement this or that? Forget it.
You’re probably going to have to fabricate it yourself or have it
done. You need to either have a large home maintenance budget, be
prepared to invest a lot of “sweat equity” or
both.
We’ve lived in this same old house for over thirty
years now. Items we’ve had adventures with
include:
1. Plumbing, 2.
Bringing in more electricity, 3. Replacing the heating system, 4. Repointing the chimneys, 5. Having dampers made for the chimneys so heat
doesn’t escape from them when they’re not in use (did I mention we
have four working fireplaces?), 6. Increasing the insulation, and 7. Painting many,
many times.
Our house is real wood, not vinyl, and the roof is
standing seam tin – the original roof. That, of course, means there
is a lot of surface to paint, and, since the house is two stories
and has high ceilings, some of the surfaces are pretty high. (Did I
mention that my husband has fallen off the roof twice?) We’re in the
process of having our home painted (not a do it yourself project
this time) yet again. The bids we got ranged from $15,000 to
$20,000. (Did I mention you need a larger maintenance budget with an
old house?)
Whew! I think the cons are clear, don’t you? Owning an
old home is wonderful. Just make sure you understand what you are
getting into.
Raynor James is with http://www.fsboamerica.org - an online site providing
national exposure for sellers listing properties and a database of
properties for buyers.
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