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thread: Would you buy your childhood home?

  1. #1
    Registered User

    Apr 2007
    SE QLD
    2,321

    Cool Would you buy your childhood home?

    I've been daydreaming a fair bit lately about buying a house... Today i was thinking, "If I could buy my childhood home, would I?" i mean, given we had the money and in the position to move. When i tell dh about what i want when we buy, thats what comes to mind...

    So my question is: if you had the chance would you buy your childhood home?

  2. #2
    BellyBelly Member

    Feb 2007
    On the beautiful Gold Coast!
    1,930

    I love our first family home & our second one.

    Our first one I would buy if it was in a different position (its in a small country town that I was born in & I'm now a city girl LOL) but I do love the house itself.

    The second one my parents still own & rent it out. I would most definately buy this home if I won lotto (its worth around 900,000 so I could never buy it on my own ) Its in a great area & has sooo much potential! Also the great memories I have of growing up there are a bonus.

    hmmmmm so there's no chance I'll ever be buying either of my childhood homes

    I say if it suits your needs, you can afford it & if its what you want then go for it!!! You lucky thing!

  3. #3
    Registered User

    Dec 2008
    8,986

    I wouldn't becuase it's way too small and I don't like the area anymore. I much prefer where I live now.

  4. #4
    2013 BellyBelly RAK Recipient.

    May 2007
    Brisbane
    5,310

    LOL no... the houses were just terrible, all of them!! Plus the location, while very pretty and peaceful, 3 out of 4 were in the middle of nowhere!

  5. #5
    Registered User

    Jan 2008
    Country Victoria
    1,991

    I would buy our first family home which was the first home my parents ever bought. It is in a small-ish country town and I loved living there, it was on a big block, 3 bedrooms, 2 living areas, it seemed big at the time. I was 7 when I moved, we moved to another country town but I did not like this house at all. The first house is the only one that I would conside buying, I wonder if it was because I was so young and things seemed so simple back then?

  6. #6
    Registered User

    Jan 2009
    hiding under my desk!
    1,432

    No...
    but i will inherit it when they die(well half of it)
    although i will sell my half to my sister.
    then i wont have to deal with all the crap thats in it...
    my parents have been in the same house for over 30 yrs

  7. #7
    Registered User

    Mar 2007
    Paradise
    4,473

    I would. The house I spent most of my childhood in was a great house. Mum and Dad had it built when I was 4 and it has 4 decent bedrooms and 2 living areas, and no high cupboards!! The pantry is HUGE and I dont have any really bad memories there. Dad is a big fan of sheds, so there is a double garage, plus a 2 car shed, plus a garden shed, but there isn't much lawn area. It also has a lovely slow combustion fire which is mesmerising!! It is now owned by the SA government so it might take a fair while for it to come on the market again.

  8. #8
    Registered User

    Mar 2006
    soon to be somewhere exotic
    1,550

    I would buy the block of land we had in the blue mountains but I'd not buy any of my childhood homes

  9. #9
    Meo Guest

    The first home I ever lived in I don't remember, but I couldn't buy it because it was pulled down and turned into FOURTEEN units!!! OK, it was a 1 acre block, but still . . . I think that's a bit extreme!

  10. #10
    Registered User

    Jul 2004
    5,756

    I'm living in my childhood home!(inherited to me by my mum) Its a good house and if we could move it to a different location it'd be even better. Having said that though we are moving soon and will probably sell it for the first time which is kinda sad.

  11. #11
    Registered User

    Dec 2006
    In my own private paradise
    15,272

    we inherited DH's family home (and the mortgage that goes with it!) when DH's brother passed away just after we got engaged. his parents built it early 1980's - the old house on this block had been here for a couple of generations - so DH has only ever lived here in one of the two houses. it's hard trying to (still) clean out the crap that was accumulated, but i love it here!

  12. #12
    Registered User

    Feb 2006
    NSW Central Coast
    5,301

    No not our house, but I'd love to buy my nans house. It's an old war home and I would love to buy it and renovate it. It has such a homely feel to it and anyone who walks in there often say they feel instantly at home. Though the area leaves a bit to be desired....

  13. #13
    smiles4u Guest

    Red face

    My two sister's & i will inherit our childhood home & sadly we don't have many fond memories in it ... so therefore my sister's i have light heartly joked we would prefer to see it burnt to the ground ... i know it's is sad but it's true (but of course we would sell it)

  14. #14
    Registered User

    Dec 2007
    Taking a ride on my grdonkey :D
    2,716

    My parents were still renting when I came along, and the first house they ever bought is the one they live in now (we moved there when I was 6), so there are a few for me to choose from!! There is one house though, the last one we lived in before moving up here from Bundaberg, which I still count as my 'home' town - and yes, I would definitely consider buying that same house (my grandfather built it and my parents rented it from my grandparents, then it remained a private rental until my pop got sick and it was sold to help with the bills of going through chemo), I was only a little girl and we only lived there a couple of years but I have very vivid, fond memories of that house, and it's in a good, quiet area close to the CBD (lol if you could call Bourbong St the 'CBD'), in a decent neighbourhood. It's a very small house though, so that would be a worry, but relatively modern(ish lol, we're talking about 15 years ago) and suited our young family fine when my brother and I were kids. I could see myself raising my own kids there.

    The house my parents live in now, that I spent the vast majority of my childhood in... no. Probably not. It's too much 'my parents'' house, kwim? The majority of my childhood was spent here, but my fondest memories involve Bundy so I'd love to buy there, rather than here (plus, housing prices are grossly inflated here because of the industry, so it would really be a waste of money to buy here when we could get the same kind of house for $100k cheaper elsewhere).

  15. #15
    Registered User

    Jul 2007
    Over the rainbow
    1,509

    In a heartbeat .. that is if my parents ever move out I'll beg, borrow or steal money if I need too

  16. #16
    Registered User

    Jul 2005
    Perth Western Australia
    1,697

    We are- well DH's anyway. Dh's mum lives overseas and we are renting the house that they had built when DH was about 12, we are in the process of organising to buy it at the moment. It is not the 'perfect' house for us, but it is a great foot in the door as first home owners, and the best thing is we dont have to move.

    As for mine, probably not, I love it and the backyard, but it is simply to small for us all to fit in.

  17. #17

    Mar 2004
    Sparta
    12,662

    Not the house because I wouldn't want to live there but I would love maybe 100 or so acres.

  18. #18
    Registered User

    Jan 2006
    Melbourne
    2,732

    I DID!

    DH and I bought the house my parents built and which I lived in til I was 10, just after my dad died. We have substantially renovated and extended it so it is a wholly new place, but it is lovely being "home"!

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