It's a feeling. What's outside your home is just as important as what's inside your front door. A backyard, big or small, is another world on its own — a sanctuary for reflection, relaxation and play. When looking for homes for sale, searching homes by their backyards can give you an idea of what the neighborhood is like.
The neighborhood is part of the house
Seeing what's around that amazing modern home (and all the homes nearby) fills an important question: what would it be like to live there and live like that? In an ideal world, you'd be able to visit and experience the backyards and neighborhoods of every home that interests you.
But the reality is, current physical restrictions make it nearly impossible to explore every property you're interested in. COVID-19 has made the logistics of showing properties more complicated. Time constraints are harder to control. All of this has led to unusually long times on the market, despite an abundance of homes for sale, high demand, and cheap mortgages. In fact, the very real fear of finding the perfect property after it's sold or closed still looms large.
Purlin's StyleExplorer lets you virtually start your home search from your backyard. Using a combination of computer vision and machine learning, our AI also learns which backyard designs you like best. This allows you to instantly get a “feel” for the property, increasing the likelihood of finding and purchasing it in person.
Reality, not hypothesis
This powerful tool has a less obvious benefit beyond searching for homes in your backyard: the power of peeks. And that applies whether you're looking to buy or remodel (for yourself or a prospective buyer). StyleExplorer reveals the actual exterior and interior features of homes in the actual neighborhoods you want to live in. This is crucial, because your home is in the context of “location, location, location,” not on a designer's website.
Take a peek into the backyards of your future (and current) neighbors in California
The post “Location, location, location” is not an address appeared first on Practical information and thought-provoking insight.