Meet the Other Phone. Only the apps you allow.

Meet the Other Phone.
Only the apps you allow.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Property/DIY

Join our Property forum for renovation, DIY, and house selling advice.

Which house would you choose?

58 replies

CanaHouse · 27/02/2023 20:12

Hi all, name changed for this as probably a touch outing.

Currently trying to decide between 2 houses in a fairly stagnant Canadian market, we are desperate to get out of our very expensive rental but have a limited budget as new residents with minimal Canadian credit history (we’re both English expats, plenty of cash flow but not much borrowing power).
Just the 2 of us but might like a baby in the next year or two.

House A is currently under offer to someone else but we’ve had a heads up that it may fall through due to financing. Offers here are binding once accepted (subject to financing) so once we make a decision we can’t pull out.

House A: 50s detached bungalow, “5 beds” but really a 3 bed with 2 additional basement rooms. Popular area close to good schools (which we don’t need just yet) but a fair walk from town centre.
Pros

  • 2 car driveway
  • large, private rear garden
  • Quiet, family friendly area with good resale potential if we decide to head back home
  • French doors to deck and garden
  • 3 good sized rooms in converted basement with decent headroom (husband will use one as a music room and one as a workshop space)
Cons
  • Original 50s kitchen and all appliances will need to be replaced
  • 1 main floor open plan reception room/kitchen combo, no separate living space.
  • No porch/boot room, front door opens straight into living space. Bear in mind we have long winters here that get to between -20 and -40C!
  • All stair rails, architrave and skirting missing on stairs and in basement
  • 20-30k pricier than House B, realtor thinks it’s overpriced by about 20k but owner very fixed on the price

House B: Edwardian detached 2 story (minimal period features remaining), 3 beds plus office room and finished basement in a good area surrounded by similar properties, easy walk to town and friends. 5-10 mins to primary schools by car.
Pros

  • Good sized enclosed porch/boot room leading to a spacious hallway with good storage
  • Large living/dining room with separate (new) kitchen with good quality appliances (included in purchase price)
  • Possibility of adding a garage and a main floor WC which would improve resale value

Cons

  • No driveway, though has parking spaces at rear of house accessed via an alley (standard in this part of town)
  • Smallish garden, especially once the parking spaces are taken into consideration
  • Small, grotty upstairs bathroom (but located right next to the small office space so potential to expand and create a grand family bathroom in time)
  • Smaller basement with less headroom than house A (fine for me, husband has to duck at the threshold but can stand up once he’s in the room itself). Room is large enough for our purposes and has a small adjoining workspace.

Writing this down my gut feeling is B is the better buy but would love some unbiased opinions.

OP posts:
Sprig1 · 27/02/2023 20:15

B does sound the better of the 2 but neither are great. Can you keep looking?

Londongent · 27/02/2023 20:30

When you are asked the question which one do you prefer? Which one did you think of first?

Kentlassie · 27/02/2023 20:30

B

CrystalMaisie · 27/02/2023 20:35

Going back to your point about the winter temps, would I be right in thinking the 50’s bungalow is solid floors, cavity walls, cheaper to heat? Edwardian suspended floors, solid walls, draughty and more expensive to heat?

CanaHouse · 27/02/2023 20:50

@Londongent We instinctively preferred the bungalow when we viewed, the garden and driveway were the big swings for us, but i wonder if the lack of porch would become a serious nuisance.

@Sprig1 Yes we can keep looking but judging by what’s on the market I think we will be making similar compromises no matter what. This is probably the sensible option though.

@CrystalMaisie Good point, I’m honestly not sure as I’m not overly familiar with property construction here (most things are timber frame not brick and block) - worth looking into, thanks for bringing it up!

OP posts:
Londongent · 27/02/2023 22:15

CanaHouse · 27/02/2023 20:50

@Londongent We instinctively preferred the bungalow when we viewed, the garden and driveway were the big swings for us, but i wonder if the lack of porch would become a serious nuisance.

@Sprig1 Yes we can keep looking but judging by what’s on the market I think we will be making similar compromises no matter what. This is probably the sensible option though.

@CrystalMaisie Good point, I’m honestly not sure as I’m not overly familiar with property construction here (most things are timber frame not brick and block) - worth looking into, thanks for bringing it up!

Could you add a porch/boot room? The way you wrote I thought you had a preference for A. On paper though B does sound like it may fit better.
Any weblinks?

sqirrelfriends · 27/02/2023 22:24

B sounds great for now but long term A sounds like the better option. I also wonder if a porch could be added.

I would be concerned about it being overpriced though.

CanaHouse · 28/02/2023 04:42

For anyone wanting a nosy at some not very exciting Canadian houses:

House A www.realtor.ca/real-estate/25142095/1144-13th-avenue-nw-moose-jaw-palliser

House B www.realtor.ca/real-estate/25109891/1131-4th-avenue-nw-moose-jaw-central-mj

OP posts:
Josette77 · 28/02/2023 04:52

House A is so much cuter!

ZeldaWillTellYourFortune · 28/02/2023 04:52

Of the two I'd take B.

Threee · 28/02/2023 05:07

Love house A BUT you’d need to have agreed finances in place first to offer. I can see this is a good forever home.

House B would need decorating to make it more appealing to the eye BUT being able to walk to friends and town is a real positive.

personally I’d get finances in place first and then offer on house A. If you missed out on house A I’d look for a mid century house near friends and town or in another fab area.

CanaHouse · 28/02/2023 05:36

Thanks for all the opinions so far, I genuinely thought everyone would say house B so quite pleased some of you like the little bungalow! Mortgage broker is giving me a call tomorrow, might be pointless if the original buyer pulls a rabbit out of the hat but we’ll see.

There is another area that has a few sweet 50s bungalows available, leafier and further from town. I may cast my eye over those too.

OP posts:
ZeldaWillTellYourFortune · 28/02/2023 05:44

I don't like the door directly into the front room.

Maybe you could build an enclosed porch.

MotorwayDiva · 28/02/2023 06:00

House A you could build a enclosed porch, footprint of where that black rug is. Don't think it would take a huge amount off living space.
House B I think the garden is a good size.
Both are lovely, if you can get house A for £20k less that would be the winner for me.

Coffeesnob11 · 28/02/2023 06:22

I much prefer house a, it has more sq footage too. Could you either build a small glass inner porch or is there anything you could do with the back to create a boot room?

CobraChicken · 28/02/2023 06:38

How about this one? www.realtor.ca/real-estate/25312713/1374-manitou-crescent-moose-jaw-westmountelsom

Itsonlyagame · 28/02/2023 06:42

Love house A!

screamingj · 28/02/2023 06:46

House A if you can afford to run it. You'll make adjustments one way or another to living without a built porch.

DibbleDooDah · 28/02/2023 06:50

I personally would keep on looking. You really do need a boot room / porch (I have friends who live in Nunavut) and I can’t see anywhere obvious to build one in house A. I am also not a fan of this massive step in the kitchen and would be concerned about the structural support in the basement- It literally looks like a temporary support. It definitely is the “better” house though.

I think House B could be beautiful but it’s a total money pit.

Which house would you choose?
CobraChicken · 28/02/2023 06:54

CobraChicken · 28/02/2023 06:38

Actually, looking more closely, I'm not keen on that one I posted, LOL.

Out of the two you posted, definitely A.

pinkdelight · 28/02/2023 06:58

B, no question. I don't mind a bungalow but that style feels more like a chalet and feels very cookie cutter. The house sounded better on paper and looks more like a home that would suit your situation.

thegirlyupnorth · 28/02/2023 07:03

I'd say B. I don't like the steps into A or the steps up into the kitchen. Personal preference though. But with snow like that you really need a boot room.

CatherinedeBourgh · 28/02/2023 07:07

I much prefer A. I think it would be quite easy to enclose an entrance area, you may even be able to close off the kitchen if you wanted to.

The outside space swings it for me every time.

Ylvamoon · 28/02/2023 07:16

House A if you want a "forever" family home
But would try and negotiate on price to reflect luck of porch and new kitchen.
I would also look into various ways of adding a porch!

House B is lovely but the luck of front parking would put me off. It's not really an issue right now. But if you have children during the baby & toddler years you'll be better off with easy acess to your car! I'd see it as a stepping stone.
Then there is the basement ceiling higt you've mentioned and potentially loosing a room to get a bigger bathroom.

maddiemookins16mum · 28/02/2023 07:23

Loving the fact we’re doing Canadian property porn.

Swipe left for the next trending thread