Building cheaply - this is how it can be done too!

  • Erstellt am 2017-10-21 14:00:29

Nordlys

2017-10-23 10:28:12
  • #1
I don't know any Illuminati, only some urban socialized show-offs who absolutize their loft house world. Resale is such a killer argument. Believe me, I am not completely inexperienced with real estate. And the sale price depends on the condition /Renostau or okay ---and especially! on the location. Expensive tiles, cool faucets, even the type of heating barely matter. And if a house cost 280 instead of 480, it can also be cheaper on resale, right? Never forget: we have an absolute boom in the REAL estate and construction industry, with overheating. We have banks that ask: Wouldn't you prefer 100k more? Then it's quickly said, to increase the profit per house even more: You have to take this and that with it. You will never get money cheaper again. Don't let yourselves be driven crazy. Karsten
 

Farilo

2017-10-23 10:53:15
  • #2
Yes, the "sell better" argument is annoying... Especially because everyone knows that "special," no matter how valuable and great it is for the one who "built" it, can be total rubbish for others. Like with cars... there’s no value in modifications
 

11ant

2017-10-23 13:07:08
  • #3
Whether something you don’t install is standard today doesn’t necessarily have to bother you: if you can be quite sure (because you also saved solidly this way) to pass your house on as an inheritance, it’s not important. The question of whether the house corresponds to the current trend has high relevance at the moment you have to put it on the market unexpectedly. And exactly that tends to happen to those who got carried away during the specification process. In this respect, one does not necessarily have to be shot for stupidity if one feels comfortable heating-wise in the 90s. Comfort is, as it were, the first duty of a heating system (after all, you heat for the residents, not for the thermometers).

Yes, that was really fascinating – especially for me as an actually rather tame driver: when I was first at the traffic light, the gap behind me was always big when it turned green. The thing was simply fast, completely without spurs. And looked better (to return to the topic, hehe) for less money than the Polo. By the way, also in resale value, at least as SX.

By people with opinions that can also differ from mine without being paid by the insulation industry. The relatively biggest religious wars here are about combining or separating the utility room and pantry, the number and location of dressing room doors, and the direction of staircases. So about things that are of no importance to sponsors.
 

Farilo

2017-10-23 14:02:32
  • #4


The magic word is "also". Not only, but also.

And as for most of the belief wars here, that may be true. However, it is the small things that make the difference

But as I said, this is no witchcraft or any conspiracy theory. You just have to look at the sponsors (advertising banners) here.

The motto is: You don't bite the hand that feeds you
 

haydee

2017-10-23 14:08:52
  • #5
What is being discussed here is somehow "is a FIAT 500 a fully-fledged car?". What I would personally find nice is a list where money can really be saved without switching from a high-priced to a cheaper provider or having to do a lot of work yourself. Roof shape, floor plan, etc. Few people have a plot with a development plan on which an offer/sample house simply fits.
 

Nordlys

2017-10-23 14:16:18
  • #6
Savings potential. Windows in standard widths. Gives around 85 square centimeters of glass surfaces. Voila, ready-made pleated blinds and such from Ikea, Lidl, etc. Gable roof. Cheaper than hip roof. Braas Harzer pan tile instead of clay tile. Rectangle instead of bay window or corner. Prefabricated garage instead of masonry. Please continue. K.
 
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