@MilanMilan I'm not sure if you removed your comment, but it is a valid question. This property is in a very desirable area of Atlanta and although the price point may be on the higher side, the buyer likely won't pay more than the appriased value. Homes near the Eastside Beltline tend to command a higher price and even though the homes in camera view may seem to be of lesser value, there are comps in the neighborhood that support the asking price +/- . Thank you for your comment and I appreciate that you enjoy the content!
Inner-city neighborhoods of Atlanta, or any US city for that matter, that just two decades ago were considered areas of concentrated poverty and thus high crime and low property value areas are now, and have been for a long while, here in Atlanta as well as in all major US cities, undergoing a gentrification process. Remnants of the older neighborhood prior to gentrification remain in the form of homes that have not been sold and then renovated. So much of the time on real estate videos which feature inner-city homes, commentators express concern over the quality or lack thereof of the zoned public schools, the crime rate, the condition of non-renovated homes located next to the renovated house or on the sane street and/or on surrounding streets in the neighborhood. Many ccomments attached to videos featuring these tyoes of properties express misgivings in living in these areas for the aforementioned reasons. My counterargument would be that people can rebuild their neighborhoods through a collective effort of the residents. The keyword is "collective". That's where the problem begins. There is no collective or cooperative effort made to rebuild these areas by the residents. It takes cooperative economics to pull it off. That's another keyword, "cooperative". In the absence of a collective, cooperative effort bound together by a cohesive group, these neighborhoods are incrementally taken from the group that failed to work together and then transfered to a cohesive group that does practice cooperative, collective work/economics. When the new group is finished, they've built $700,000 - $1 million plus homes where much less valued homes used to be.
@@ItitiObidahThe whole argument about high crime, poorly performing schools, and real estate properties being of low value as the reason to not want to live in these areas as homeowners is old. People are supposed to take over their zoned public schools through community engagement and parental involvement with the school from the district office down to the individual classrooms at the schools themselves. Furthermore, as I have previously stated, the community has to cooperatively and collectively work to rebuild the neighborhood. We used to have communities that did that. We abandoned that way of living for various reasons. Every group has to build, maintain, and keep safe it's community. It's difficult work, indeed, but necessary work nevertheless.
Absolutely beautiful STUNNINGGGGG 😮❤❤❤❤
@MilanMilan I'm not sure if you removed your comment, but it is a valid question. This property is in a very desirable area of Atlanta and although the price point may be on the higher side, the buyer likely won't pay more than the appriased value. Homes near the Eastside Beltline tend to command a higher price and even though the homes in camera view may seem to be of lesser value, there are comps in the neighborhood that support the asking price +/- . Thank you for your comment and I appreciate that you enjoy the content!
Perfect Ititi, just Perfect 💚💯💚💯
I’m glad you like it 💕
Beautiful home. I would have loved to see the side driveway heading to the detached garage. Just to see the width.
I dropped the ball on that one. I will make sure to get the full view in future videos.
The house is banging😊
Absolutely beautiful
Yes, one of my favorites.
Love this home, absolutely stunning!
Indeed it is.
❤❤❤
Can u show some two bedrooms & 2 to 3 bathrooms in the upper price from 300,000 up
Indeed.
For a mill, it looks like it's still in the Hood
😂. It’s in a good area. East Atlanta.
Inner-city neighborhoods of Atlanta, or any US city for that matter, that just two decades ago were considered areas of concentrated poverty and thus high crime and low property value areas are now, and have been for a long while, here in Atlanta as well as in all major US cities, undergoing a gentrification process. Remnants of the older neighborhood prior to gentrification remain in the form of homes that have not been sold and then renovated.
So much of the time on real estate videos which feature inner-city homes, commentators express concern over the quality or lack thereof of the zoned public schools, the crime rate, the condition of non-renovated homes located next to the renovated house or on the sane street and/or on surrounding streets in the neighborhood.
Many ccomments attached to videos featuring these tyoes of properties express misgivings in living in these areas for the aforementioned reasons.
My counterargument would be that people can rebuild their neighborhoods through a collective effort of the residents. The keyword is "collective". That's where the problem begins. There is no collective or cooperative effort made to rebuild these areas by the residents.
It takes cooperative economics to pull it off. That's another keyword, "cooperative".
In the absence of a collective, cooperative effort bound together by a cohesive group, these neighborhoods are incrementally taken from the group that failed to work together and then transfered to a cohesive group that does practice cooperative, collective work/economics.
When the new group is finished, they've built $700,000 - $1 million plus homes where much less valued homes used to be.
Well said my friend.❤️
@@ItitiObidahThe whole argument about high crime, poorly performing schools, and real estate properties being of low value as the reason to not want to live in these areas as homeowners is old. People are supposed to take over their zoned public schools through community engagement and parental involvement with the school from the district office down to the individual classrooms at the schools themselves.
Furthermore, as I have previously stated, the community has to cooperatively and collectively work to rebuild the neighborhood.
We used to have communities that did that. We abandoned that way of living for various reasons.
Every group has to build, maintain, and keep safe it's community. It's difficult work, indeed, but necessary work nevertheless.