Real estate is an illusion of financing. While most people choose to buy a resale home instead of building a new one because of economic reasons, customizing isn’t that bad but rather advantageous in reality.
To start it off, the first would be, well, the image of your dream house. The artistic soul in every of us must have dreamed of designing its own home at least once, or even once in a while, and building a new home offers the ability of turning the poor soul’s dream into reality. Say, my dream house, for instance. I’ve always daydreamed about a modern one designed by Lotus Project Management ever since the idea of marrying my girl pops up in my mind. It must at least have a mini bar in the living room and a spacious kitchen on the first floor; the basement will be of storage for my wine and spirit collection as well as one of those elevated-hidden car garage, which instead of refusing my Porsche in a usual box, will be an elevator consists of only four pillars and a top made out of grass so that when the car “uses” the elevator to move underground, the garden remains a field of grass with no sight of any vehicle nearby. The second floor will be our bedrooms, needless to say. So, can you find a house like that in real estate? Possibly yes, if you run into a clone of mine who happens to own such property.
Second, a freshly built house doesn’t require much of repairing and maintaining. If, unfortunately, you encounter a house like one in the movie Are we done yet?, the repairing basically makes them build a new home on it instead because every single detail is rotten and damaged. On the other hand, the maintaining of an old house would be much more of a new one, obviously. The items and details of the one you hypothetically bought one way or another, need preservation in order to function correctly because they’ve been used for a long time.
Last but not least, it’s beneficial in financing. A Custom Home Builder in Victoria could use the advantages of location perks while choosing where to live. For example, a friend of mine has his family bought a house in the quiet zone of Bellingham, WA, USA. It appeared to be $350,000 by the time they purchased it, but within the next two years, Costco built another branch right in front of their back yard. Although it no longer remains “the quiet zone”, the value of its location only is estimated at $600,000. They knew Costco was planning on building another one there when they chose the house, though.
I know the idea of building one other than buying another sound costly; however, it is more beneficial than it seems.