I think most people live in the sticks because they have interests they cant indulge in the city or suburbia.
Not necessarily. I was told to find a place in the sticks and build my dream shop but to be honest, I don't want to live in the sticks. Suburban living appeals to me for some reason. I like things like curb and gutter in front of my home. Something about the nice clean lines to mow up to that appeal to my OCD.
Unless you own 63' worth of same. But I've also seen some property with "RV Storage" that would not accept anything but a small Class C or B because they put in cross beams too low in the space.
IMHO, if you want your RV/5th covered - then do it and don't worry about payback. Same as a pool - build, enjoy. Next owner may fill it with dirt.
Exactly. Don't worry about resale, you won't add much anyways. Just build what suits you and enjoy it.
Most large detached garages like us GJers like to have do not add a lot of value, or at best maybe 50% if done to match the house materials and styling. So anything you can do that may add appeal to the detached garage is worthwhile considering. RV or boat storage is a big deal for many buyers. That could be what sells your house over one that does not have it. Whether you recoup **% of the build cost is a different question. Certainly the more potential use of the detached garage, the more it can help broaden appeal.
Terry nailed it. While detached garages don't do much to add value to the property here, they may attract a certain type of buyer. However, for every one potential buyer who wants a large detached garage, there seems to be 10 that want less property. The trend here seems to be large house on small property so there is less yard maintenance. There is a rather large new housing development that is going up to the east of our subdivision and the lots are all less than 1/4 acre with 4k plus square foot rambler style homes on them. Many even have a large concrete RV pad alongside the garage and have large 5th wheel trailers and/or boats on them but not much in the amount of grass or landscaping compared to in the past. Seems to be a new trend in housing.
Ogden UT was a good thing to google. Keller Williams is specifically marketing homes with RV storage. There are a lot of them in the $7 million and up segment. They are most definately echoing the main houses design elements and materials. Many actually look like multiple residences instead of a detatched garage.
Thanks for the lead. I NEVER would have googled that.
I live in a suburb of Ogden, UT and to be honest, RV garages were hard to find when we were looking last year. The home we sold had a two car attached garage and a 34'x34'x14 detached garage and the detached garage added very little value to the property. My realtor told my wife and I that we would be money ahead to find a property with a detached garage already existing as we would be able to get it cheaper than building our own. It made perfect sense until after many months of looking and not finding anything we liked with the detached garage for under $1M.
It's funny, there were real estate ads that even mentioned "bring your biggest RV" and "RV parking for even the biggest of RV's" right in the ad. They didn't mention the size but when we would pull up I would tell our realtor it's not big enough. He said you haven't even gone inside the garage yet, I said no need, I can tell from here our coach won't fit. One we looked at the owner got pissy because he told our realtor his motorhome fits and therefore anything else should fit. When we walked in I said what is that a 38' coach. The guy said YEP, all smug until I said it won't work. Then the realtor started scheming to tell me how to knock out the back wall or add on another section. Finally I just told our realtor to quit looking for the detached garage, just find us the house we want on 3/4 of an acre and I will take care of the garage because obviously it doesn't exist anywhere except in my head.
There is a very large subdivision just north of our new home by a couple of miles that my wife and I kept a close eye on because the lots are in the .5-1 acre range and it seems like every other or every third house had a large detached pole building out back. My wife and I jokingly referred to it as "pole building central" when we were looking. A house went up for sale in that neighborhood but neither the wife nor I liked the house at all, even though it had a 40x60 detached garage that would house our coach and provide a decent sized workshop. Our realtor really wanted to get us into that one but he could tell we hated the house. I wasn't going to buy a place JUST for the garage even though my wife would have settled for it.
I would suggest not settling for anything. Buy/build what you want and enjoy it. IF or when you decide to sell, you will find a buyer. I am sure ours would sell quite easily even in this market because there are people who would want a large RV garage just like I did. I know I put more money into mine than I would get out of the detached garage, but I am almost giddy now every time I walk into my shop/RV garage and know I didn't settle for someone else's hodge podge of a garage.
Good luck.