Re: ...Cohousing in existing neighborhood (Boston area) | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: Maren Leyla Cooke (maren![]() |
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Date: Thu, 13 Apr 95 18:17 CDT |
<Stuart Staniford-Chen <stanifor [at] cs.ucdavis.edu> replied to my inquiry about spreading our community into our existing neighborhood> >1) Do you (collectively) have enough equity in the existing co-op house >to borrow part of the purchase price of the new house against that? One of the things we're not trying to do is for the two of us who own this house to become Somerville Land Barons. We might compromise that somewhat if friends do buy it, by chipping in on the down payment or some such arrangement, or by buying some of the land (the other yard is significantly bigger than our yard, and by shifting the border we could both make that house more affordable and protect its yard as open space (making it impossible for a developer to build another house on it). But we don't want to go into this by ourselves -- the idea is to build more community, which doesn't make sense to do one-sidedly. >2) Is there any possibility of the owners renting the house to you with >you purchasing an option to buy in a year or two when you have things >more together? They need $$ for their next house... and we already have a place to live. Since it is a two-family, even if it is purchased by some random unknowns we might be able to hook up friends as potential tenants in whichever half the new owners aren't occupying. But opening up the yards, sharing gardening and meals etc. and closely linking the households (however many there are) will be trickier without community-oriented people in there from the start. >A final suggestion for the future - we have found it much better to make >a deal *before* a house actually goes on the market. That way the real >estate folks don't get a piece of the pie - which makes the remainder >bigger for the seller and buyer to share. They're starting out trying to market it themselves, so no realtors are involved yet. We talked about it at length before it went on the market, and have been talking with friends, etc. -- but the typical combination of good salaries with high-pressure, time-crunch jobs has gotten in our way (e.g., one person could probably income-qualify singlehandedly, but she just can't deal with it all right now). Thanks for your input! -- Maren.
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...Cohousing in existing neighborhood (Boston area) Maren Leyla Cooke, April 12 1995
- Re: ...Cohousing in existing neighborhood (Boston area) Stuart Staniford-Chen, April 13 1995
- Re: ...Cohousing in existing neighborhood (Boston area) Maren Leyla Cooke, April 13 1995
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