OK ... THIS is the house! :-)
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@Piano-Dad Yea, that was my understanding of what turnkey constitutes. It's about usability, not conformation to someone's personal tastes.
I think if you're either moving way across country or buying a second/vacation home, it makes a lot of sense. Way cheaper than trying to outfit a whole new house at once. You can make it your own over time. Or not.
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We bought the Huron house with everything in it - dishes, linens, the works.
Ended up throwing out a lot of it, but it was an easy way to get started.
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Our "turnkey" place had recently been remodeled by a couple for their daughter's use. She was injured in an accident and never lived in the house. As part of the remodel, they used a designer to completely furnish the place with high end Spanish Colonial stuff. It all coordinates. This wasn't someone's beat up leftovers!
We were thrilled not to have to furnish a house quickly, which would have forced us to do a fairly slapdash job on the cheap. And we don't have any particular attachment to the furniture, so we're comfortable renting the place out. I can only imagine what the original cost would have been.
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@wtg said in OK ... THIS is the house! :
Yea, that was my understanding of what turnkey constitutes. It's about usability, not conformation to someone's personal tastes.
I think maybe I was actually just thinking "move in ready"??
As @wtg mentions personal tastes, 99% of what we did to this house (painting) was just about taste. The roof and the banister were not about taste, but the house was 100% "usable" -- it's just that it was completely empty before we moved our stuff in. So, asyou say, not turnkey.
I wonder if "turnkey," in the sense of buying a house with all the furnishings in it, used to be more common.... Or maybe it's more of a big city/swanky area thing? I don't really recall seeing houses being sold with all their furnishings while house hunting here, or in our previous city.
No idea, just thinking out loud.
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I had not seen th\is "turnkey" stuff either. When we expressed interest in the house and started negotiating I think we asked something like, "is this house staged" and found out that, no, this was the owners' stuff that they would be happy to sell along with the house. They had prepared an itemized list based on consignment guesses and we just made an offer for the whole thing, which they quickly took.
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It's pretty common up in Door County where a lot of the homes are vacation properties. I loved a lot of the furniture we had up there but had no place to put it in our Chicago house. We were thrilled to sell the Wisconsin house fully furnished. It would have been a pain to find ways to empty it out.
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@Piano-Dad said in OK ... THIS is the house! :
They had prepared an itemized list based on consignment guesses and we just made an offer for the whole thing, which they quickly took.
Nice!
@wtg yes, that makes a lot of sense! And fits with why I wouldn't have those kinds of listings where I was looking.
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Are you sure “turnkey” isn’t a misspelling of “turkey?”
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Arrrrhh, arrrrrrh, arrrrrrh.
In the case of this pirates' nest, yep!
Just an additional comment on the term: our real estate agent introduced me to the word when she used it after telling us about the fire sale price of the interior accoutrements. "You can have it turnkey ..."