Can't sell? Raise the price part 3--1192 Park Street, Alameda, CA
This is getting ridiculous.
A Victorian semi-wreck in a hideous location (if you're a single-family home), cozily nestled betwixt a laundromat and a tailor, standing directly across busy lower Park street from a party store and a stone's throw away from my favorite tire shop (perfect for those mid-afternoon nitrogen cravings), came back on the market for the third time in 18 months, and once again it is listed for more money that the last time around.
More money. Not less. And from walking past this property at least once a week, I can tell you its exterior looks haven't exactly improved with the passage of time. Here's what it looked like to Google's Street View van a little while ago:

Here's a handy summary; please refer to the previous post for details on the property.
It didn't sell then, for obvious reasons, and now it's back, with timing so perfect it seems to have been carefully chosen to completely miss the peak of the selling season. And it's listed for $1,400 more than last year.
The sale and listing history are amusing; I suspect the June, 2008 transaction is the bank taking it back:
A Victorian semi-wreck in a hideous location (if you're a single-family home), cozily nestled betwixt a laundromat and a tailor, standing directly across busy lower Park street from a party store and a stone's throw away from my favorite tire shop (perfect for those mid-afternoon nitrogen cravings), came back on the market for the third time in 18 months, and once again it is listed for more money that the last time around.
More money. Not less. And from walking past this property at least once a week, I can tell you its exterior looks haven't exactly improved with the passage of time. Here's what it looked like to Google's Street View van a little while ago:

Here's a handy summary; please refer to the previous post for details on the property.
- In May, 2008, 1192 Park Street hit the MLS(r) as #40340126, listed at a grotesque $925,000. It had been on Zillow prior to that for $898,000 or so, if memory serves, and failed to sell, so the seller raised the price in a bid to attract more potential buyers.
- Then, in October, 2008, the property came back, presumably bank-owned by then, listed at $708,500.
It didn't sell then, for obvious reasons, and now it's back, with timing so perfect it seems to have been carefully chosen to completely miss the peak of the selling season. And it's listed for $1,400 more than last year.
The sale and listing history are amusing; I suspect the June, 2008 transaction is the bank taking it back:
Property History for 1192 PARK St
Date |
Event |
Price |
|---|---|---|
Aug 26, 2009 |
Listed |
$709,900 |
Aug 16, 2009 |
Delisted |
* |
Jun 11, 2009 |
Price Changed |
* |
May 12, 2009 |
Listed |
* |
Apr 18, 2009 |
Delisted |
* |
Apr 17, 2009 |
Price Changed |
* |
Oct 18, 2008 |
Listed |
* |
Oct 01, 2008 |
Delisted |
* |
Jun 03, 2008 |
Sold |
$644,100 |
May 02, 2008 |
Listed |
* |
Dec 07, 2005 |
Sold |
$163,000 |
Apr 18, 2003 |
Sold |
$112,000 |
Jun 29, 1990 |
Sold |
$56,000 |
Some folks are crazy about big old Victorian wrecks. But even the most battle-hardened Victorian restorer knows better than to spend $709,900 on an ugly, run-down house whose environs have been rezoned to accommodate laundromats and tailors and tiremongers, with a concrete front-yard and no fence. This property is essentially unsellable as a primary residence, which is very sad, but c'est la vie.
The bank may as well do a good deed and just donate the building to someone who could use it to run a not-for-profit law practice, child care center, or custom t-shirt design shop. Anything but a house.
The bank may as well do a good deed and just donate the building to someone who could use it to run a not-for-profit law practice, child care center, or custom t-shirt design shop. Anything but a house.
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