Kris & I have lived in the same building (The Centennial Court) for longer than I've lived anywhere since I was a child. Our stacks of Stuff buildt up, especially in those storage spaces we rented to just temporarily hold the overflow and could sort through them. You can imagine how quickly that happened; a few years ago, I added a 2nd storage space. We were pretty settled. But ...
We like the Centennial; it's convenient and the staff is excellent. However, we needed to think of our future. We don't plan on working forever and, while retirement is a long ways off, we didn't want to be renting thereafter. The time to move was now, and waiting wasn't going to help. So we started looking around for a house, with the following characteristics.
- Money: We can pay it off by the time Kris retires, using as a down payment a chunk of the money I'd set aside for retirement. By converting part of my retirement money and the rent we would otherwise have paid into a decent house on an adequate piece of dirt, we will at retirement have to cover taxes, utilities and fixes on our pensions & social security, which should be doable.
- Size: Big enough for us (including the books), but not too big to clean easily. We don't need or want a dining room or a lot of the other stuff that seemed so important the first time either of us bought.
- Community: We are not just buying a house; we're making a commitment to a community. We must like it as it is, and have reason to anticipate that we'll like it 40 years from now. It must have easy access to transit, be walkable and bikeable, and so on.
- A Home Not A Condo: While many people love condos, we don't. To us, buying a condo is like marrying a building full of strangers. You just have to hope most of them are no crazier than you are. We think we'll stick with a small house even if it means giving up the "Luxury Condo" concept.
- Mother-In-Law Apartment: We'd like to be able to convert or to build a mother-in-law unit for Kris' mom. This makes a lot of sense both economically and in other ways. We are always sharing books, tools and her truck anyway. Kris has lived with her a long time, and we don't have any compatibility issues (that I know of; we must let Ginger speak for herself.)
- Upgrades: We would like something basically sound but with many opportunities for upgrades that we can do ourselves.
- Sustainability: Since we plan to be there until they carry us out feet-first, we will be able to experiment with sustainability initiatives that may take a while to pay off financially. For example, water management may require a lot of sweat equity (e.g. building a roof runoff cistern) but over decades should more than pay for itself, not to mention the fun of doing it and the interesting people we meet in the process.
- Parking for Larry's Motorcycle: Larry is Kris' Mom's boyfriend of 20 years. We want to encourage him to be here as much as possible!
Going month-to-month in Belltown is very expensive, yet we didn't want to sign a year-long rental agreement hoping that we'd break it partway through; that just didn't seem right. We tried a 3-month extension, which was well enough, but not really good enough.
One day, we decided to have a look at the home we're buying (subject to Freddie Mac) ostensibly to plan the first year's garden, but mostly because we enjoy looking and planning and, frankly, dreaming. I remembered that on an earlier trip around the neighborhood (confirming that it was a neighborhood we'd like now and for decades to come) I had seen a few "For Rent" signs. We thought perhaps we'd see what was available in the area. So we drove to the house, looked around a bit, and then thought, "Where have we seen a For Rent sign?"
How about 1 block north? On the same street?
It hadn't been there before that very morning. Ron and Claudia, the couple who owned the place, were almost finished renovating it and were looking to get it rented. We promptly called, talked, met, discussed and ... long story short ... committed to a 3-month rental with month-to-month thereafter. This has numerous advantages:
- The rate is sufficiently less than in Belltown to more than make up for transit costs; we'll be saving money, which we sure can use!
- There's a little more space here, which makes life a lot easier
- We're getting to know the neighborhood; our immediate neighbors are very friendly and we love the Farmers' Market (see photo)
- We've accomplished the hard part of the move; now when our house comes through, we have only 1 block to move things in!
We like the house we're renting. However long we must stay, we'll be o.k. Ron and Claudia are really easy to get along with, and I think it'll be helpful to have friends who know as much about houses as they do. Plus, we're having the chance to experiment with house living before making the Irrevocable Commitment. So far, we love it, but we'll see.
We miss our friends at the Court, and will try to see them from time to time. But we're already exploring West Seattle (see photo above) and well content with the 1st half of our last move.
2 comments:
Congratulations on completing the Big Move. What a lovely story. So good to hear your commitment to stay in your new home when it comes through. Homes and property are for living in, not for creating wealth by flipping. It's good for you, it's important for building stable communities, vital for a healthy societal psyche and good for the earth, too. I'm so happy for you--you're doing it right--just the way it's meant to be.
You frightened me at first--I was afraid that you might be moving out of state, perhaps to sunnier climes. HOORAY! I can still look forward to your WSBA and Facebook comments!
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