Tuesday, March 31, 2015

115 ARBORLON, Oakland, TN

 
Wonderful 4BR (or 3+Bonus) Home in Oakland~Open Floor Plan Features Huge Great Room w/ Fireplace and Formal Dining Room~Nice Eat-In Kitchen w/ New Tile Backsplash~Spacious Master Bedroom w/ On-Suite Luxury Master Bath & Walk-In Closet~Split Bedroom Floor Plan~Large 4th Bedroom or Bonus Room Upstairs~Gorgeous Backyard w/ Custom Arbor & New Fence is Perfect for Entertaining & Relaxing~New Exterior Paint~New Garage Door~New HVAC~AND MORE!!
 
 
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Jennifer Carstensen
RE/MAX Real Estate Experts
901-410-8818
jensellsmemphis@gmail.com
 

Monday, March 30, 2015

1566 N PISGAH, Unincorporated, TN

 
Don't Miss This Gorgeous 6BR Home on 4 Acre Lot w/ In-Ground Pool~Two-Story Entryway~Open Floor Plan Features Huge Great Room w/ Fireplace & Built-Ins and Formal Dining Room~Recently Updated Kitchen Features Stainless Steel Appliances & Granite Counters~Breakfast Area & Hearth Room w/ Fireplace off Kitchen~Large Master Bedroom Down w/ On-Suite Bath Features Claw Foot Tub, Separate Shower & Walk-In Closet~Loft Features Built-In Office Desk & Shelves~4 Bedrooms (or 3+Bonus) Up~AND MORE!!
 
 
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Avoid Foreclosure

What is Your Home Worth?

Jennifer Carstensen
RE/MAX Real Estate Experts
901-410-8818
jensellsmemphis@gmail.com
 

Friday, March 27, 2015

3640 CEDELL, Memphis, TN

3640 CEDELL, Memphis, TN

Get Directions Click Here

 
Description Photos Maps & Local Schools Virtual Tour
 
$ Click for current price

3 BEDROOMS

1 BATHROOMS (1 full)

 

Great Investment Property in Quiet Neighborhood~Huge Backyard with Deck

~Clear to Show~Contractors Box on Front Door~Code is 4730

 
Memphis Homes For Sale

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Jennifer Carstensen

RE/MAX Real Estate Experts

901-410-8818

jensellsmemphis@gmail.com

L2L

Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Amazing 8 Houses That Don’t Seem Real, But They Are!

1 House That Rocks

Credit: JSome1, photographer

A House that Rocks
If you’re looking for a rock-solid investment, how about this house in Portugal? Situated between two giant boulders, the house walls are formed of mortared masonry, and the living area is covered by concrete tile roofing. Fireproof, windproof, and impervious to insects, a house like this might qualify you for lower homeowners insurance rates.

2 airplane homeFrom www.AirplaneHome.com, republished with permission

It’s a Bird! It’s a Plane! It’s My Home!
Insect-proof, fireproof, and able to withstand 575 mph winds, this Boeing 727 features more than 1,000 square feet of living area, and there are plenty of storage solutions in the cargo hold and in the overhead compartments. The jet body cost about $100,000 (without engines). Moving the decommissioned jet to its final resting place and outfitting it for living cost another $100,000.

3 War Home

Credit: ColdWarMissileSilo.com

Make Homes, Not War!
Can your home survive nuclear winter? This one can. Made from a decommissioned missile silo in upstate New York, it’s one of the strongest structures ever built. The 2,300-sq.-ft., below-ground portion includes a full kitchen, entertainment center, and two private suites. Entrance is gained via an 1,800-sq.-ft. log home on the surface, and there’s a private runway. Buy-in price? About $750,000.

4 Shoe Home Credit: Katrina Williams of Katrina Krauss Photography

If the Shoe Fits, Live in It
This three-bedroom, two-bath home boots the idea that houses can’t be fun shapes. Built in 1948 as an advertising gimmick by a Pennsylvania shoe salesmen, the Shoe House endures today thanks to its tough stucco exterior finish — an environmentally friendly siding option.

5 Mud Home

Credit: Brian “Ziggy” Liloia and April Morales / photograph by Stephen Shapiro

A Mud Home That’s Dirt Cheap
With its green roof and rural flavor, this 200-square-foot cottage in Missouri has its, um, roots in the centuries-old art of cob construction—earthen walls formed of clay, sand, and straw. Cost of construction was about $4,000, or a modest $20 per square foot. Of course it includes a mudroom addition.

6 Field Home

Credit: Robert Elzey

A House Out Standing in Its Field
With its multiple balconies, twisting staircases, and oddly shaped rooms, this whimsical house in Wyoming is a local curiosity. Although it’s no longer occupied, the original owner/builder used locally harvested logs and plenty of salvaged building materials to produce a one-of-the-kind cowboy mansion that towers above the plains.

7 Glass House

Credit: Greg Borman

People in Glass Houses...
These home owners are obviously into self-reflection. Clad in pieces of glass and mirror, this enlightened folk art cottage in Florida requires a lot of window cleaning. For a more maintenance-free exterior, try vinyl or fiber-cement siding.

8 Steel House

Credit: Stephen Bender at MW Bender Architecture

This House is a Real Steel
Think twice before you bang your head against the walls of this Gainsville, Fla., house. Built from salvaged steel shipping containers ($2,500-$5,000 each), this 2,200-square-foot flight of fancy features three bedrooms and two and a half baths. It’s fireproof, sustainable (repurposed materials!), and you sure won’t have to worry about termites.

Source: John Riha /houselogic.com