octanefam
Well-known member
I will tell you in the Puget Sound area in Washington State garage lust is still happening. Any house with a detached garage sells with a couple days and will have multiple offers.
Are the Zillow 'estimates' very accurate at all?![]()
Scary and unfortunately true..........
Maybe rethink ( I know thats (rethinking) never done ) but the high density and virus are bad combo.
Holly **** ........California allows outdoor grills..........think for the harm to the environment!!!!!!

Your post got me thinking.
I’ve lived in my house for 8+ years, and used the yard for enjoyment less than 5 times. Ever. Wow!
Unless it was for mowing, weeding, fertilizing, planting, trimming, edging or pruning, I just plain don’t go out there. I have a small wooded lot with a decent sized deck and a grill, but I never use the yard. There’s space for ********/horseshoes/quarters but we never do. Kind of amazing now that I think about it.
So in essence, I’m paying (and a good deal of paying) to work. On something I don’t really use. Ever. Why?
*most HOA’s don’t allow boats or RV’s.
It's just a matter of percentages. If car guys who want a big separate shop only number say 3% of the population, then most of the houses it will not be an amenity or increase value. The Hoosier Anderson Hall example you show is a planned unit development where they mix uses and styles. The piece you show is rear garage on an alley to promote porch socialization. But a couple blocks away is a cul-de-sac where all 8 of the owners can eventually build/expand a garage on their lot. Rounding up percentages maybe 1 car guy lives there and will choose to build one. I think I can already tell which house is his by the driveway size.
Zillow accurate? No, not even close.
They’ve admitted to being off as much as 10%, in either direction. Answer this question...when was the last time Zillow was in your home to make your estimate?

It’s completely a matter of percentages, and those same percentages drive value. I’d say given my knowledge of the situation, your 3% is optimistic, but for the sake of this discussion, let’s go with it. Anderson Hall is a planned development by Estridge, and everything in the community is well above the median home price in Indiana. Interestingly enough the patio areas are on the sides of the houses, not by the rear driveways. Additionally the single family homes on the cul-de-sac’s can’t have any outbuildings as they are prohibited by the HOA. That may or may not include sheds, can’t remember. I know boats and RV’s are prohibited.


When we sold it and bought the new place I immediately started construction of an even larger shop and my realtor, who is also a friend of ours, mentioned that I was making a real estate mistake for resale value.
My house insurance appears to be tied to the Zillow estimate![]()
My biggest beef with "agents", as they're looking not at what's best for you, but hoping they can get you into a place, then get you to flip it through them to keep the income coming in. I've seen VERY few who care about what YOUR wants and needs are... they're more worried about making your new house a perpetual and increasing source of income.
They WANT you to flip every few years. They hate people like me who bought the place not to flip but to live in, to most of them that's a horrendous waste of a chance to make them money.
One (or both) of my sons want to buy my house when they graduate college and are a year or two into their jobs. They are unusual- 12 year-old-twin boys who have wanted to own our home forever.
I think it is a combination of them having had a great upbringing here, and that our home is unique- a 1790 historic landmark with a very large garage- lift, second floor, woodworking shop in the rear, etc.
I am incredibly grateful that my boys (and my wife, for that matter) appreciate the same things I do. They are very much into the old car hobby, and either would be thrilled to own the home they are growing up in...and I suspect would build their own large garage if they didn't end up with mine.
Having said all of that, I see in my students that very few are interested in using their hands for much more than texting. People are just generally less interested in doing manual labor for themselves...but they are missing out on the pride and satisfaction that comes from it.
In my experience, pride and satisfaction comes from a job well done, good craftsmanship or quality work. Not from ignorant labor.
A trench dug from a backhoe is just as good as one dug with a shovel. Except one took minutes and one took hours. I know I’d rather pay a good backhoe operator and be done in an hour vs slaving in the hot sun for a whole day for the same result.
Manual labor for the sake of manual labor isn’t really all it’s cracked up to be.
I look forward to going to my shop everyday. I sure don't do it for the money. Like you I keep working at the shop everyday to keep my sanity.My workshop is MY WORKSHOP, and it is of no concern to me or my spouse whether we (or she) ever recover any of the cost of building it, operating it, or maintaining it, or what the next owner might store inside it. They can raise pigs in there, grow pot in there, keep their umpteen dozen children in there, I really don't care. The value of it is in my time of using it.
It has surely been a blessing now that we are sheltered at home, and our only time apart is when I am in the shop. Curiously, I get far fewer drop-in visits from the dear wife these days . . .
I consider the cost to have been an investment in my sanity, and in the health of my marriage, as both are better off when I have space to do my thing, and she has time alone in the (her) house.
I am 10 years older than you and live in the deep south. Wouldn't have it any other way. Things here are cheap compared to other parts of the US but I like it that way. Except for the four years I served in the military I have lived here all my life and will die here.For probably most of us here, the garage is also a refuge, a place to hang out. Maybe I'm sick but I like tunes on the shop stereo and just looking at my cycles and rummaging ideas in my head. The garage is my hobby zone, happy zone, therapy in a way. If that all adds to my sanity then it has great value to me. Maybe its a regional thing too, because around here in east central Wisconsin extra garages and out buildings are very common on homes in the $150,000 and up range. Housing costs here are not bad really. Though I am still floored that a common new house around here these days is in the $250,000 range, like this: https://www.trulia.com/p/wi/kaukaun...auna-wi-54130--2054558091?mid=28#lil-mediaTab
I have always felt if I ever moved to another state it would be NE Arizona or SW Colorado. Well, forget that, the house costs are friggin ridiculous!! At my age (62) I will not accept a new mortgage, so anything I'd buy would have to be cash. In a small town similar to east central Wisconsin a damned mobile home on a tiny lot with no driveway or garage (looks more like a meth house) is selling for $165,000. This past year I did a lot of work in Louisville MS, nice little town halfway between Jackson and Memphis. House costs down there are very reasonable, but I could not stand the heat.
Nope, staying in Wisconsin until I am part of the dirt here.

Same here. 900 home subdivision and you can count the car guys on one hand. Doesn't help that most of the garages are 19.5 x 19.5.There is one guy that lives up the street from me who built a garage and he has some older cars he works on. Other than him I don't think I have ever seen anyone working on a car in my whole neighborhood.
The problem is "who can work on todays cars?" Most people just take them to a repair shop/dealer. And, to buy old cars today...who has the money?
"BING, Bing, Bing!! And the winner is,,
Newer cars are nearly impossible to work on. 10 year old cars are nearly impossible to work on. 20 year old cars are a royal pain in the *** to work on.
30 year old cars are now classics and bring major money.
40 year old cars are museum pieces for the rich and famous.
And all these newer cars (0-20 years old),, require an endless collection of specialized tools."
I still work on all of my cars - from 70's all the way to my 2017 Super Duty. I don't need any "specialized tools" to work on them. It's all in what you know, want to know, or even care to know - or what you want to do as opposed to paying someone else to do.
I am not doing the roof on my house, because I would rather pay a pro to do so. Yard work, I do myself. Anything to do with fixing, repairing, or maintaining mechanical things I do myself because I can (and I also enjoy it).
My shop is for me - no one else. It will certainly take a specific buyer when we sell, but I am willing to wait to find that person (or persons) when the time comes. And when it does, I will be looking for a "retirement" property with a nice large shop for me to tinker until the end.....
My 1st car when I was 16 was a 1970 390/4spd Javelin. (1980, paid $350, 70k miles, spotless)
I had a basic craftsman socket set and beam torque wrench, a bottle jack and other odds and ends. as a 16 year old I rebuilt the engine a few times, swaped trans, etc, etc.
BING, Bing, Bing!! And the winner is,,
Newer cars are nearly impossible to work on............


This is the GJ .....Stop whining and go fix or build something
Winner ????????
No think we have too many losers that make excuses, refuse to learn, can’t read.
So they make excuses........won’t or can’t install a water heater, add an outlet, fix the HVAC, replace the brakes, change the oil, operate a chain saw, own a table saw, weld a bracket, tape drywall, build a shed, wash the car, cut the lawn, fix the toaster, replace bath faucet etc etc
So maybe their garage/shop has a sofa and big screen
This is the GJ .....Stop whining and go fix or build something
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