Making the modern home affordable

10May06

DSC_0001I mentioned last week how hard it was to find an affordable home to buy. We feel very lucky to have found ours. I was practically addicted to the MLS for a couple months, looking for anything that had some potential. We had narrowed it down to two general areas that we wanted to live, downtown, or Sugarhouse. Sugarhouse is a neighborhood about 10 minutes from downtown that has a hip and unique little shopping district and lots of trendy little tutor homes. Its not exactly the place to find a good deal on a home, but it is a great place to live. We ended up getting a home in what I call Sugarhood, which is just west a couple blocks of the nice Sugarhouse area. Its a transitional area that has a lot of potential. Our home was a total steal at $106,000. It was on the market for some time in the $120 range but not selling, so the owner changed it to for sale by owner and dropped the price. Of course there is a reason it was not selling (there always is). Our house is just under 700 square feet, small even by Sugarhouse standards, and situated on a 30′ wide lot that leaves both neighbors houses less than about 5′ from our side windows. The lot is a decent size however, around .11 acres with alley access to the back yard. Now that we knew we wanted it, we had to face our first obstacle, financing.


I work as a nurse, and make OK money, but have zero credit history. The logical thing to do in this situation is get a FHA loan. Unfortunately our house had an area where the wood siding came in direct contact with the soil, so FHA wouldn’t even touch us. My wife some good credit history from some school loans she had, but we found that if we were to use her credit score, we had to use her income, which was about half mine at the time. We had to claim me as the unemployed spouse in order to get the loan, and ended up with not the most favorable rates. Eventually after jumping through enough hoops we got approved and closed on the house almost a year ago from today. We knew we had a lot of work ahead of us to make the house what we wanted it to be, but it felt good to finally be homeowners. Now we just had to figure out how we could make it into something modern and affordable.

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Comments

5 Responses to “Making the modern home affordable”

  1. Billy on May 11th, 2006 6:55 am

    Congrats!

    Where do you live? wheres the pictures???

  2. creede on May 11th, 2006 9:38 am

    We live in Salt Lake City, UT. I mentioned it in the first post of this little series. Check out the categorie “our house” to follow all the posts. As far as pictures. I plan on doing a post a week to catch up to where we are now, and I will include lots of pics as well as blueprints of proposed and actual construction plans for our addidtion. Stay tuned.

  3. Eric on May 13th, 2006 8:05 am

    Love it. Here in Mpls. 106k might get you a garage in a bad neighborhood. But forget that, this blog just went from good to great. I can’t wait to see were you go with this.

  4. creede on May 13th, 2006 10:33 am

    Thanks for the kind words Eric. $106 usually doesn’t get you alot here either, but I am sure it goes a lot farther than in Mpls. The average resale for my neighborhood is $150-$250. We definately have the dump of the area.

  5. Joel on May 17th, 2006 3:13 pm

    700 sq ft is small but you still got a killer price per square foot if you ask me… Especially if the area is nice.
    -Very excited to keep logging in and to see the progression of your home-
    Great idea for a blog!
    I hope you end up expanding it a little…

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