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All Forum Posts by: Harman N.

Harman N. has started 40 posts and replied 124 times.

Post: Value add from open floor plan?

Harman N.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • San Francisco, CA
  • Posts 126
  • Votes 74

Hi all,

I'm currently living in a duplex that I'm rehabbing, and hoping to use the increase in equity to fund more REI (see my intro post here). The place is 3 levels: a garage with 2 units above it, each unit is 2BR/1BA, about 1200 square feet, and I'm living on the 2nd level. 

I wanted to create an open floor plan by (a) knocking down the non load bearing wall between the kitchen and dining room, and (b) knocking down the load bearing wall between the dining room and living room.

I got plans from a structural engineer to knock down the load bearing wall, and estimates from 2 different contractors came in at ~$12K. 

I'm trying to decide if this is worth it or not. I already paid for the structural plans, but that's a sunk cost. 

What makes it difficult is that it's not purely an investment property - I love the neighborhood and plan on living in the place for some years...

Any advice would be welcome!

- Harman

P.S. I'm sure things will go in cycles, and in a generation people will want closed floor plans again :-<

Post: HELOC appraisal: how does it compare to FMV?

Harman N.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • San Francisco, CA
  • Posts 126
  • Votes 74

Hi all,

I'm currently living in a duplex that I'm rehabbing, and hoping to use the increase in equity to fund more REI (see my intro post here). 

How conservative have you found the HELOC appraisal compared to your estimate of FMV?

Post: Starting my REI adventure with a duplex in San Francisco Bay Area

Harman N.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • San Francisco, CA
  • Posts 126
  • Votes 74

@Account Closed - my goal is primarily cash flow. What states have you invested in?

Post: Starting my REI adventure with a duplex in San Francisco Bay Area

Harman N.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • San Francisco, CA
  • Posts 126
  • Votes 74

Howdy everyone!

Long time lurker, first time poster here! For the past year, whenever I Googled something about REI BP would inevitably come up, but I finally made an account!

Since last spring '15 I was looking to buy a place to live in SF. The plan was to buy a house for myself, and then in a year or two look for an investment property in a cheaper city. In March, after 90+ open houses, I closed on a duplex in the Inner Sunset -- I figured why not get both the house to live in and an investment property in one shot!

I had this REI master plan to, every few years for the next 15 years, save money for a down payment, get bank financing, and then buy an investment property.

Well, the duplex I bought needed some work, as it had "deferred maintenance". And that rehab is taking longer (ie, still not done!) and costing more than I anticipated (ie, cutting into those future investment funds). I was getting bummed out.

In the meantime, having finally bought my first place, I was now hungry for more. I started learning as much as I could. I read about the 10x rule in one of @Brandon Turner's books, and it was a lightbulb moment for me! No longer was I content to follow the conservative 'save, save, save for years --> conventional financing' route. I was going to look at the renovations not as an expense, but as value creation, as future equity that I could tap into.

My current plan is:

  1. (a) Finish the rehab, increase value of the house
  2. (b) Tap into the equity from (a) to help finance the addition of a legal unit in the garage
  3. (c) Tap into the equity from (b) to help finance more real estate investments

Not sure exactly what (c) will be. I'm leaning towards small multi-family. But I have some time to figure that out! Until then, I'm here to read, listen, network, catch up on BP podcasts, go to @J. Martin's meetups (went to my first one on Thursday!), go to Johnson H's meetups, and just talk shop with all of y'all! 

- Harman