Monday 24 February 2014

New Builds

Apparently, new builds were meant to ease the problem of housing all the people in the country. You know, by making more houses us lot who don't own houses can buy, thus we're then owning a house and are sorted. Tick. I draw all of your attention to this section of an ad for a resale of a recent new build in Cambridge;

"***investment opportunity*** Convenient for Cambridge Science Park and the City Centre, this four bedroom, 3 storey town house, in Orchard Park Cambridge, has four bedrooms, fitted kitchen with built in appliances with a further two reception rooms. Being sold with tenants in situ. Investor info £4611 pre tax income: 4.69% of £98, 300 capital used."

It was build in 2009, and already is being rented out (hence likely just bought up from new build by a landlord), and now is being resold... to another landlord. Great. Thanks guys!

Sigh.

The new new-builds in Cam at the moment are either tiny one/two bed flats, or 4+ bed detached houses costing £400k+ Who the heck was needing these houses to be built! Certainly not FTBs. Although, I've just noted, on a Trumpington new build (4 bed for £495k), there's a little illustration about how Help to Buy works! Because I'm totally only able to come up with a 5% deposit but magically be able to afford a £371k mortgage. Facepalm.
A single option of a 3-bed is available, for £385k, but on the ground floor you only get one room as a kitchen/sitting/dining room combo. Not a bad size... but well above the national average for a 3-bed semi, and even epically above the price of some 3-bed semis much closer to Cambridge.

Seriously, who is buying these places and why aren't they building affordable homes, by which I mean at or below the local (or ideally) national average?

Friday 21 February 2014

Open Houses

3-bed terraced house popped onto the market last night that looks interesting. Ooo let's phone up the agency (for anonymity we'll call these Luung) and book a viewing for tonight/this weekend. No. Don't do that because we're only allowed to see it in 8 days time at an open house because they can't be bothered to send someone out for a mere 15 minutes to show us around it on our own. 

Cram in the buyers, and forget the customer service. That's how they sell houses in Cambridge! 

That's them off my list for when we sell a place ourselves.

Thursday 20 February 2014

Mystery House!

"A great opportunity to purchase this 3 Bed Semi Detached House with Driveway parking and set on a generous plot offering: 2 Reception rooms, Kitchen, Family Bathroom, 3 Good sized bedrooms and huge potential to extend with the current owners having previously had planning permission apprived. A MUST SEE."

A must see!?

Some photos would be nice then estate agent! Just a picture of the outside at present, which may have just been grabbed from streetview.
Also, spell-checking wouldn't go amiss. 

Wednesday 19 February 2014

House-buying fun...

So, let me just set the scene for you; I'm trying to buy a house in Cambridge. To clarify, I'm trying to buy a house in Cambridge that I want to live in myself, that will be the only house I own, and I'm not rich. I bet you can imagine the fun I'm having right now.

For those of you who aren't aware, the market in Cambridge seems similar to London in its ruthlessness, however is thankfully not as expensive. Yet.

A typical viewing scenario goes like this:

1) See house online during the week.
2) Book viewing for the weekend.
3) Turn up along with a queue of other potential buyers.
4) Walk around bumping into other people, not having your questions answered by the agents.
5) Get a phone call on Monday (or earlier) asking you if you want to put in an offer, and by the way, the asking price has already been achieved by some number of other bidders. P.S are you a cash buyer?

Now I just want to make this clear; any old shit sells! We've seen nice places, and right wrecks and everything follows this pattern, because the wrecks are a bit cheaper, so for £10k cash, someone will do the place up and either rent it out or pop it back on the market for a profit quick as a flash. It's infuriating.

The best, and by best I mean worst, estate agency here (let's call them 'Shrub' for anonymity and all that) have got the system sorted to a tee. They post a picture of the outside of a house online, a location, and a number of bedrooms (typically 3). Everyone flocks to it with NO OTHER INFORMATION. A queue of people forms on Saturday traipsing around the place, which is inevitable rubbish, so many of us have wasted at least an hour of our lives. On top of it all, the agent who meets you at the property can't answer any questions about it because, hilariously, this is the first time they've seen it too! On Monday morning, chirpy as anything, I get a phone call asking "we're just wondering if you have any feedback about the house?" "Hi, thanks yes we won't be proceeding any further with this property", and in my head "because it's a pile of wank." But they have offers on it anyway so it doesn't really matter to them, they'd just like to have more to push up the price you see.

Let's just imagine for one moment that we've finally tracked down a nice house, in our price range, and we want to put an offer in on it. So we do. Woo! But also, eek; scary! But don't worry, because within two days you get told that the offer you put in, at the asking price, has been topped by someone offering £20k more. Do you want to increase your offer? No, fuck off, we've hit the limit of the potential mortgage a bank would lend us. Someone will battle it out though, I bet. 

Back to square one for us. It seems whatever we look at, will actually sell for at least £10k more than the guide price so we've got to start looking at lower initial value properties so we can eventually pay through the teeth for one and whatever price we end at is still within budget. Funtimes. Not.