| When you buy a
house, you also invest in the neighborhood that surrounds
it. The identity of a neighborhood may be as important to
property values as the
individual properties themselves. In a
planned community,
strictly controlled architecture governs a carefully crafted
identity block after block. In a rural town, tree-lined
streets and an old-fashioned town square preserve a
disappearing way of life. In a large city, an older
neighborhood's ethnic history has shaped its character and
often drives its rejuvenation. It's important to know where
a neighborhood has been—and where it's going—before you
decide to buy.
1. Start with Statistics
It's now possible to
get valuable neighborhood statistics online. Crime
statistics, school scores and demographic information are
all readily available. Want to feel right at home? Let MSN
House & Home show you
neighborhoods that are most like your current one. Or
you can
set your own criteria and search according to your
preferences, and find the right neighborhood for you.
This means that you don't have to depend on anecdotal
information to learn about crime or the quality of the
schools.
2. Check with City Hall
You can get any kind of town
planning document from your town or county's zoning and/or
planning authorities. If you want to be sure that the rural
hideaway you just bought stays rural, check with these
officials. They start planning large projects like major
road construction years from the actual start date.
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WARNING: Before you buy
If you can't investigate a neighborhood before you make
an offer, include an inspection
contingency in your purchase contract that covers
both neighborhood and house. It may state that the offer
is dependent upon the buyer's satisfactory inspection of
both the property and neighborhood. You can write more
specific contingencies into the contract, too. For
example, your offer may be contingent upon confirmation
that a restaurant cannot be built next door.
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3. Research the Resale
Potential
The quality of the
neighborhood will play a big role in your home's resale
value—whether you live in the least or most expensive house
on the block.
Check out the MSN House & Home neighborhood finder for
job growth and home appreciation numbers in the area you're
interested in. With this tool, you can also find and compare
any two neighborhoods against the regional average. Get a
list of homes for sale in the neighborhood from your agent
to determine how many days they've been on the market. If
properties haven't been selling quickly, find out whether
the market is slow or if there are neighborhood issues that
may make resale difficult.
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Finding Neighborhoods on the
Rise
Start looking for tomorrow's hot neighborhoods right on
the edge of today's most desirable, well-established
neighborhoods. These tangential neighborhoods are
frequently next in line to experience a surge in prices.
Look for these signs of increasing popularity:
- Multiple
offers on homes for sale
- An increase in the number of
buyers moving in from other areas
- An increase in the number of
local residents trading up
within the neighborhood
- A decrease in the percentage of
renters
- Signs of remodeling
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4. Get to Know the Community
It may sound like a clich,
but nobody knows a neighborhood like the people who live and
work there every day. Visit a neighborhood on your own at
different times of day and night. Talk to neighbors. Visit
nearby schools and local businesses. Subscribe to the local
paper. Small local papers can be chock-full of information
that gives you a feel for the neighborhood or community. If
you depend on public transportation, find out how accessible
it is in this area. Drive to and from the house from several
different directions, so you see both the scenic and
not-so-scenic routes. |