Real
Estate News
Top Ten Ways to Maximize Your Property's Curb Appeal
by Karen
Rauch Carter
I've done it, and I'm sure Realtors experience it all the time:
When a potential buyer says "There's no need to get out" when
you drive up to a property that you intended to show them. The buyer
has already made up their mind based upon the curb appeal of the
home.
As a feng shui consultant (and licensed landscape architect,) I
help buyers find the most suitable property for them, and I help
sellers get homes and properties in their best shape to sell. This
article is a compilation of items that I find to be the top subliminal "deal-breakers" from
a curb appeal standpoint. Some are common sense and some require
a little feng shui boost - like using a mirror or a chime - to get
the job done. If your listing passes this checklist - I'm confident
that you'll at least get the potential buyers in the house!
There are two main goals to maximizing a home's curb appeal:
1. Remove or reduce the quantity of "red flags" in
view from the curb.
2. Create the most enjoyable trip from the curb to the
front door as possible.
Here are some ideas to consider:
1. A Visible Address is a Must
Make sure the address is clearly visible from the street. Preferably,
the numbers should be in a horizontal line versus vertically, or
on a diagonal line and be lit at night - at least while the home
is listed.
2. Maximize the Front Door Appeal
The front door equals the mouth of that home's body. Energy must
be able to find it easily and then enter. The trip from the street
to the threshold should be easy to navigate; ie: no "trips" in
sidewalk, no thorns grabbing you along the way, no cob webs to go
through, no dead plants in pots along the way.
The actual front door should be clean and fresh. If there is a
screen door, it must be in tip-top shape and dust-free. If the door
is in shadow because of solar orientation, keep the porch light on.
Add color and fresh items such as foliage to attract energy towards
the door.
If the door is not visible from the street, hang a metal chime
somewhere near the door on the non-hinged side of the door. The actual
door should be able to open fully, and not stick or squeak. A welcome
mat is always welcomed here.
If there is a doorbell - it must work. If there is no doorbell,
consider adding a knocker to the door.
3. Make the Plants Work for You
Nothing says "creepy" like ill-maintained plants. Their
weak and droopy energy tells the story of how life will be if you
buy this home! Plants should be clean, and their droppings picked
up.
Plants can be up against the walls and foundation, but not "touching
them." Trees touching the eaves and roof, and vines clinging
to the walls takes away health energy from those living within the
home. There should be no white flowers touching the building - long
story - it's just a traditional feng shui thing. Happy, healthy,
and colorful and well maintained plants say "someone cares," and "this
home is capable of taking care of you."
If there are sick, weak, or poorly trimmed plants (I'm thinking
of trees that have been "topped" and look like a big trunk
with a few sprigs growing out of the top) they are distractions to
buyers as well as weak energy and should be removed. In this case,
less is definitely more.
If there is a tree, shrub, boulder or any other landscape item
directly in line with the front door (say, within at least 50 feet
or so,) it's best to have it removed. This subconsciously creates
blocks with the home, as if it is hiding from the very people who
want to buy it! It also makes the home struggle to hold health energy
for those who live there. A gate is the exception here.
4. Have a Clearly Defined Edge Between Lawn and Planting
Beds. This Boundary Mirrors Boundaries in Life
Grass growing into the planting beds not only create a maintenance
problem, but it also shows up as lack of boundaries in life. Clearly
define planting beds with mow strips (any material is fine) and you
will help buyers subconsciously understand this home's front yard.
They will subconsciously "feel safe."
5. Use Color to Your Advantage
Color can be an easy way to add energy to a home's curb appeal.
Red attracts - use it when the door is out of view or the home seems "lost," or
people have a hard time finding the home. Yellow evokes friendly
and clear communication, green is simply the color of life, and blues
are more introverted and quiet - perhaps what a home on a busy street
needs. Orange is subjective, but can create boundaries and a healthy
appetite! I would not usually recommend a lot of white.
6. Balance Offensive Neighboring Buildings and Landscape
Issues
If there is a church, cemetery, funeral home, school, commercial
building within the visual "neighborhood" of the home,
try adding landscape screening to block these views. You may want
to hide a mirror in the landscape facing the negative item in question
with the intention of deflecting its energy away from your home.
(No one has to see your secret cures to make them work!)
If the offensive building (or even a tree, or "T" of
the street) is directly in line with your front door, hang a mirror
above the door facing the item with the intention of pushing it away
if you can't do anything about it (like removing the tree.)
If you have significantly taller buildings next to your home and
your home is "in its shadow," apply a mirror on that side
of the house and face it towards the taller building with the same "pushing
away" intentions.
7. Clear the Clutter
Clutter is one of the more obvious "red flags" and should
be removed immediately. Extra cars, pots full of dead plants, the
kids bikes, garden tools, old holiday decorations (get the lights
down!) all need to go. The trash cans should not be visible from
the street. Basically, any "personal affects" other than
a fresh plant-filled pot or a working water fountain should go.
8. Check Lighting Levels Both Day and Night
Landscape, security, and aesthetic lighting should be in good working
order to put the home "in it's best light" for a potential
buyer. If the home sits lower than the street, consider placing an
uplight on each corner of the home, with the light pointing up at
the eave. Keep this light on at all times (at least while the home
is for sale.)
9. Attend to General Maintenance Issues
Peeling paint, dead spots in the yard, broken pickets in the fence,
etc. will not give you that warm and fuzzy feeling as a buyer! Dripping
hose bibs and broken irrigation heads won't either. The front facade
and front yard MUST appear in good working order.
Also, take the five senses into consideration: If you can smell
a compost pile - it has to go. If you can hear the train next door
- cure it or any other offensive noise by hanging a chime between
the house and the noise.
10. If You Have the Chance To Design the Front Yard From
Scratch, Consider Shape and Element-balancing Characteristics of
Walkways, Planting, and Other Front Yard Amenities
Now is the time to put all your feng shui knowledge to work.
1. Consider free-form and undulating shapes (like sidewalks) and
water element items in the front yard.
2. Make a "transition space" (like a porch) between the
walk and the threshold to "slow down" the chi before entering
the home.
3. Use color to your draw attention towards your door.
4. The sidewalk should connect the street and the door - not just
the driveway and the door.
5. Create strong mow strips shape and lines within the landscape.
6. Appeal to all five senses.
7. New sod goes a long way to make the home look fresh.
8. A moving object like a flag, whirligig, chime, water fountain
in the front yard can attract new buyers!
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