• FourPacketsOfPeanuts@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    40 mins to central London on tube. Lots of green spaces near by. 2 solid square bedrooms, all the cosmetic crap easily stripped out. Hard standing for 2 cars, decent back garden. Semi detached.

    The only reason it’s not more is “it’s Dagenham” and the general shabby state of the street.

    This’ll get snapped up by professional couple earning 160k+ combined willing to await the inevitable gentrification in 5/10 years.

    • shottymcb
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      2 months ago

      Amazing what passes for a “decent back garden” in the UK. My “back garden” is a 1/4 acre (1000m^2 ) on a property worth $140k USD including the 1200ft^2 (120m^2 ) house.

      On the downside my exterior walls are made of glue and sawdust, and my interior walls are made of paper and powdered gypsum.

        • HelixDab2
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          2 months ago

          “Nowheresville” in England is very, very relative.

            • HelixDab2
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              2 months ago

              First: I don’t disagree with you.

              Second: England is just too small relative to the overall population to really have places that would be considered “Nowheresville” in the US. For instance, I’m looking at moving to the desert, so I can get away from people. One of the towns I’m looking at has a population of 400 (people, total), and is about 60 miles from any city over 5000 people.

        • shottymcb
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          2 months ago

          Absolutely, I live a metro area with about 5 million people, it’s not an international hub of anything. It’s big enough to offer most of what you get in a big city aside from public transport, since our population density is wayyyyy lower.

          Is it really worth it for your back yard to be 3 feet of sidewalk and a 3ft^2 patch of unruly grass? Why is that grass even there? Feels like an insult to me. Just draw a frowny face on a block of concrete. People aren’t meant to live like that.