Written by Jim the Realtor

February 7, 2010

29 Comments

  1. Locomotive Breath

    Eiffel Tower in your back yard…surprised Pardee hasn’t used that as spin…

    “Enjoy spectacular views of Tesla Tower…feel like you’re in Paris!”

  2. doughboy

    parlez-vous english?

    actual home description of a new listing in Vista today I read on sdlookup.com…but no view of Mssr. Eiffels work…

    “Very private location at the end of cul de suck. No HOA, no mello-roose! Not a short sale or REO. Vaulted ceilings in leaving and dining rooms.”

  3. The Blur

    What are you talking about? What power lines? I don’t see any. All I see is Torrey Pines High School.

  4. 3clicks from da beach

    Buying homes near power lines is akin to buying the least expensive model of a luxury car brand and thinking ‘you made it’.

  5. Downturn

    Jim, are you sliping subliminal messages into your videos? I had an overwheming desire to buy a house as I watched this one. I don’t know why, I just did.

  6. Tom Tarrant

    Years ago my boss bragged of buying a home in Poway that backed up to the power lines. Some reason he didnt see any problem with it and was so excitied he got “such a deal.” Then again, this is the same guy who couldnt even seem to implemenet a budget and basically destroyed everything he touched. Great being self employed isnt it Jim?? Who Dat!? Go Brees

  7. L. D.

    Isn’t there a movie where a family moved under power lines and they went crazy? Or was it they never needed hair gel?

    I can envision swimming in my new pool (never needs heating), BBQ fired up,(no charcoal needed) floating on a melted raft, looking up at the power lines with margarita(ice melted)in hand. Ahhhh, the good life!

    Interesting sales pitch. At one time we looked at a gorgeous home under power lines in our area. The RE agent told us the lines would eventually go underground. Didn’t really consider buying. That was 12 years ago, towers still there. Can’t prove she lied since she never gave us a date of when they would go underground.

  8. JAP

    People are out of their minds… paying 850K for a *condo* with high HOA and melloroos? Am I being irrational thinking this is totally absurd? This stucco Mcboxes are still WAAAAY overpriced.

    Totally insane.

  9. shadash

    JAP,

    A lot of us that feel the same way. There’s just no other alternatives available in SD.

    What do you do? Be a dirty renter and pay the landlord every month or buy a house, not pay the mortgage and live for free for several years (depending on how you play your cards).

  10. dejams

    The ones with power lines been on the market for several months. I bet the ones got sold were on the recent release by Carmel Mountain and Canter Heights, next to the Derby Hill.

  11. anon

    If powerlines are so dangerous, how come all us guys that work on them every day are still alive? I’m just saying.

  12. The Blur

    Probably because you can’t work on power lines every day if you’re already dead from them.

    Sorry, I couldn’t help myself. Actually, anon makes a fair point. We’re probably killing ourselves faster with cell phones and other stuff. Still, you can count me out for living underneath them.

  13. Nameless

    If you buy a house next to such a power line, you can produce free electricity. You just put a big coil of wire in your garage and add some electric equipment to stabilize the voltage.

  14. Rob Dawg

    Mommy. Why is Sparky… you know… “sparky?’

    The real danger of power lines is mostly resale value. But, man, they are so ugly. And be careful. A right-of-way is a slippery devil. SDG&E overheads today, high pressure gas tomorrow and monorail before you know it.

  15. tj & the bear

    Torrey Hills? Sounds like “CV Adjacent”. 😉

  16. LM

    You forgot to mention the jets screaming overhead from Miramar on their way out to the desert. They literally fly right over these houses.

    Lived in the area for 7 years and run the canyon that the powers overlook. I STILL am not used to the power lines…..one never gets desensitized to them

  17. Lyle

    If San Diego had many thunderstorms being right next to power lines give one a great lighting rod, with that top wire 80-100 feet above your roof to attract the lighting. (You want the angle of a line from the top to the ground to be greater than 45 degrees however.

  18. SR

    Bridle Ridge’s next Release is Feb 13. None of them are back to power tower. All five houses to be sold are at Carmel Mountain Road and Canter Heights Drive for $826K to $872K. There were seven house in previous release (Jan 16). Five of them are in the Carmel Mountain Road and Canter Heights Drive area. Four were sold within 10 minutes. There were 30-40 people there. Most are asian.

  19. Locomotive Breath

    We poke fun but it’s true there probably is no danger to living under power lines. It’s mostly the resale that is affected and if didn’t pay as much for the place to begin with, is it really that important?

    Everyone has to make choices on how to spend their cash in life…do what makes you happy…

  20. Jim the Realtor

    There isn’t any evidence or study that proves negative effects from living near power lines, but Rob is right, it is brutal trying to sell a house that backs to ’em.

  21. François Caron

    About doughboy’s “Very private location at the end of cul de suck” comment. “Cul” translates to English as “Ass”.

    “Ass de suck.” Almost sounds like a French wine. 🙂

    I’d never buy anything even remotely near power lines. I might get myself some radio receiving gear, and those lines will completely screw up the reception.

    Surprisingly, wind turbines don’t interfere with radio waves even when you’re standing below one. Had the opportunity to test that out with a car radio a couple of years ago. But you still wouldn’t want to be close to one if your area has normal winters. Ice build-up on the blades can easily break off and fly some 200 yards away.

  22. JordanT

    There isn’t any evidence or study that proves negative effects from living near power lines, but Rob is right, it is brutal trying to sell a house that backs to ‘em.

    That’s what I agree with, which is why I didn’t put an offer in on a house that backed to power lines that sold for pretty cheap. I don’t care if there’s no evidence that power lines have no impact on health, but since a significant proportion believes that I won’t buy them. Why buy a house that 30-40% of the population will write off immediately?

    The reason why it matters is that inferior properties seem to be the last to appreciate and the first to depreciate. I didn’t buy a house for the speculation, but I’d rather not have one more resale obstacle if I want/need to sell in the future. I also think they are ugly, and detract from the best part about San Diego living, being outside enjoying your yard.

  23. clearfund

    Jordan – “The reason why it matters is that inferior properties seem to be the last to appreciate and the first to depreciate.”

    You nailed it on the head…the experienced investors wait for quality at good prices but won’t touch inferior product at any price…

  24. UCGal

    I don’t know if there are risks of living close to high voltage power lines. We had them in the backyard of the house we lived in, in Clairemont, the first 5 years of my life. I don’t have cancer. Neither does my sister.

    … but my mom died of ovarian cancer. My brother had melanoma in his 20’s, full cure, then died 2 years ago of a second malignancy – neuroendocrine carcinoma. My dad had prostate cancer in his early 50’s, full cure, then died 2 years ago of a different cancer, multiple myeloma. Family of 5 – 2 survivors, 5 different cancers. I have no idea if it’s related.

    And – there are some studies that show risks. They just get poo-poo’d here in the US.

    http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE5146ZI20090205

    http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/13440.php

    I personally wouldn’t buy within 100 meters of a high voltage power line.

  25. JK

    Clearfund,

    Can you list the attributes of an inferior product when it comes to SFR / condos?

    You mentioned powerlines. What else?

    Thanks

  26. CA renter

    I’m with you, UCGal. There are enough stories out there WRT risks, but the energy companies (and the govt) keep trying to squash them (much like the risks from vaccinations — we personally know a few people who swear their kids became autistic **immediately** after being vaccinated). Not saying there IS a risk from EMF, just saying there are valid questions.

  27. ewhac

    If you buy a house next to such a power line, you can produce free electricity. You just put a big coil of wire in your garage and add some electric equipment to stabilize the voltage.

    The power company can detect that. High-tension power lines are essentially a tuned circuit. That trick places an inductive load on the lines where one is not supposed to exist, and de-tunes the system. After that, they can track down your EM leeching fairly easily.

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