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Good Neighborhoods
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Good neighborhoods, like beauty, are in the eyes of the beholder.
For example, being near excellent schools is important if you have
young children. If, conversely, you're ready to retire, buying in a
peaceful area with outdoor activities may appeal to you, and being
next to a noisy junior high school is your nightmare! Personal
preferences aside, all good neighborhoods have the following
characteristics:
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Amenities: Amenities are special features of a
neighborhood that make it an attractive, desirable place to
live. Wide streets bordered by stately oak trees, lush green
parks, ocean views, quiet cul-de-sacs, parking, and proximity to
schools, churches, shopping, restaurants, transportation,
playgrounds, and beaches are prime examples of amenities that
add value to a neighborhood. The more of these perks a
neighborhood has, the better from the perspective of most
homebuyers.
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Quality schools: You may not care how good or bad the
local schools are if you don't have school-age children.
However, unless you're buying in a remote retirement or
vacation-type community, you had better believe that when you're
ready to sell your house most prospective buyers with kids will
be deeply concerned about the school system.
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Low crime rates: Most folks today are concerned with
crime. As with schools, don't rely on hearsay or isolated news
reports. Communities compile crime statistics, generally by
neighborhood.
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Stability: Some communities are in a constant state of
flux. Imagine what would happen to property values if a junk
yard were replaced by a beautiful park. How about the reverse --
an ugly, multi-story, concrete parking garage appears where
there was once a beautiful park?
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Pride of ownership: A home's cost has no bearing on the
amount of pride its owners take in it. Drive through any
neighborhood, posh or modest, and you see in a flash whether the
folks who live there are proud of their homes.
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Property values sag when homeowners no longer take pride in
their property. Avoid declining neighborhoods which display the
red flags of dispirited owners -- poorly kept houses,
junk-filled yards, abandoned cars on the street, many absentee
owners renting houses, high rates of vandalism and crime, and so
on.
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