Currently home values nationwide hover around $149,300, and this week we’re looking at homes priced significantly above that. Here’s a rundown of what you can get for $475,000 across the country.
Scottsdale, AZ
14281 E Cheryl Dr, Scottsdale AZ
For sale: $474,000Measuring 2,350 square feet, this Scottsdale home for sale sits in the Saddleview community, a few doors down from a golf course. The split-level, 4-bedroom, 2-bath home has a large outdoor pool with waterfall and patio.
Bellevue, WA
6302 129th Ave SE, Bellevue WA
For sale: $475,000Located just across the lake from Seattle, Bellevue is home to a number of tech companies as well as a host of high-end real estate. This Bellevue home for sale is a suburban property with mature landscaping. Built in 1965, the home has new windows and exterior paint.
Houston, TX
13618 Blair Hill Ln, Houston TX
For sale: $479,900Spanning almost 5,000 square feet, this Houston home for sale has a gourmet kitchen overlooking the pool and large backyard. The 5-bedroom, 4.5-bath home also features french doors, a formal dining room and media room.
Daily Archives: August 12, 2012
Basic Home Construction Vocabulary | Armonk Real Estate
One of the smartest things residential architects have done in recent years is to stop talking to their clients like architects. We’ve gotten a lot better at conversing like regular people instead of like college professors.
Even so, we sometimes lapse into saying silly things like:
“Communicative inheritance, remembered as the true conveyance of cultural integrity, fosters an exchange of the sacred geometrical building blocks.”
Supposedly, that’s about “the future of residential architecture.” Mmm-hmm. (If you have any idea what that means, please let me know).
I don’t relate well to that kind of “archi-speak,” and I bet you don’t either. I do relate to quotes like this one:
“In the same way that music inspires us to certain feelings, space can do the same thing …”
That’s a simple truth from Sarah Susanka, author of “The Not So Big House” books. Refreshing, stimulating and understandable. Thanks, Sarah.
The “language” of architecture — especially when we’re talking about home design — doesn’t have to be difficult to understand; after all, if we’re not communicating clearly, how do we know when our designs are successful?
There are some things that can’t be simplified, however. The pieces and parts of a building have names, and we’ll all communicate better if we use the same terms to refer to them.
Some are a little arcane to be sure, but at the other end of the scale, you and I are both confused when you say you don’t like that “thingy” on the roof.
So while I promise to do all I can to talk (and write) in more or less plain English, may I ask you, Mr. and Mrs. Homeowner, to meet me halfway? If I show you a few proper terms for some basic house parts will you try to use them now and then? Just a few, really, and they’re pretty easy (plus, there are pictures).
I’ll cover a few “outside parts” here, and tackle “inside parts” in a future article.



