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San Francisco's housing crisis is so dire that one of the cheapest homes in the city is a 'fixer' that sold for $600,000. Take a look inside
San Francisco's housing crisis is so dire that one of the cheapest homes in the city is a 'fixer' that sold for $600,000. Take a look inside
Katie CanalesFeb 5, 2019, 18:30 IST
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A 480-square-foot home in San Francisco was sold in December for $600,000, making it one of the cheapest homes listed in the city's overheated real estate market.
The home at 66 Bishop St. is nothing glamorous. It was advertised as a "fixer," inviting developers and contractors to swoop in for an opportunity to renovate.
Still, in a region whose housing market is bursting at the seams in part from Silicon Valley's ever-growing tech bubble, it sold quickly after just a couple of months on the market.
The pink 480-square-foot home at 66 Bishop St. in San Francisco is one of the smallest in the city. It's also one of the cheapest with its whopping $600,000 price tag, as reported by SF Gate.
The home sold in late December 2018 after two months on the market and a $50,000 price cut. It was advertised as a "fixer," meaning whoever bought it basically paid over half a million dollars for the listing's location and space - it sits on a 2,500-square-foot lot with plans to potentially expand to 3,500 square feet of living space.
Even properties in less-than-perfect condition come with high price tags ...
... like a home in San Jose, just south of the city, that was pillaged by a fire and will need to be demolished — and still sold for almost $1 million.
However, a few blocks away sits a 1,605-square-foot shanty for $1 million, which is currently off the market, so the area isn't exempt from million-dollar homes.
Linda Ngo, the property's realtor, told Business Insider that the Visitacion Valley neighborhood is getting more attention these days.
"There's a shift of buyers looking into Visitacion Valley and Excelsior," Ngo said, the latter being an adjacent neighborhood.
The pink home was previously sold in June 2018 for $400,000. It was re-listed in October for $650,000, then for $589,900 10 days later. The listing was removed in November and officially sold in late December for $600,000.