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Drive around.
That can tell you more than an address. Does it look like a place where
you'd like to live.
Drive further
out. Is it near places you'd like to go? Is it too near places
you'd rather avoid?
Drive through the neighborhood during commuting
time. Is the neighborhood a throughway?
Drive through the neighborhood at night.
Is it quiet? Too quiet? (This may be a safety concern if it's a mixed
business and residential area and the streets are deserted after 5.)
Look at growth patterns. Check census
data and newspaper archives. Does it look like it'll be bigger and busier
than you'd like it to be? This is easier to gauge with an older neighborhood
than a new one.
Check titles and geographical surveys, especially
if this is a new development. What did the area used to be?
Swamp? Landfill? Farmland? If the area used to be flat, find out what
the hills were built out of. Is the topsoil still there, or was it scraped
off and sold to landscapers?
Being near a school is no good if you don't have
children.
Being too near a school is no good if
your kids are expected to walk every day, regardless of the weather.
Being near a hospital is comforting. Being on
the ambulance route is not. The same goes for fire engines.
A strong neighborhood association is good if
it still allows you to paint your house the way you want to paint it.
You don't have to love your neighbors,
but you should be able to live with them.
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Ron McDougall
1st
London Real Estate Services
1069 Wellington Road South
London, Ontario N6E 2H6
(519) 685-4190 * Fax (519) 660-1813
ronmcdougall@rogers.com
www.ronmcdougall.com
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