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Berm Home Or Not?

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JR1972

Freshman Member
Joined
Oct 31, 2014
Professional Status
Certified Residential Appraiser
State
Wisconsin
Just curious as to how the community would do this one. Appraisal is for a purchase and it is an in-house loan. The subject is a bermed home with a small second floor. The second floor is 600 sf and the first floor/basement is 1800 sf that is all completely finished and what I would call Q3/C3. Would you call it a bermed home with a second story or a 600 sf house with an 1800 sf basement? If bermed would you then include the first level as GLA and then adjust for design? My training stated that a bermed home did not have any GLA. So, I am just wondering how you would tackle this one? Thanks.
 
In-house loan?

Bermed house with 600 SF upper level.
Include the 1800 s.f. as GLA.
If no berm comps (laughing) I'd adjust for design/appeal.

Your trainer that stated no GLA for bermed houses must have been a F/F form filler. In-house loans allow you to call it what it is, not what some guideline dictates; you actually get to use common sense.
 
earth contact, 2400sf, 0sf basement
 
I agree with what Mark and Andrew said. The function of the home is a 1.5 story home on slab. 2,400 sf GLA and adjust for any ground level variances for the comps.
If you find a comp that is completely underground, adjust for the extra cost to mow the roof. :alcoholic:
 
I agree with what Mark and Andrew said. The function of the home is a 1.5 story home on slab. 2,400 sf GLA and adjust for any ground level variances for the comps.

C'mon, Man! Where's your consistency?

Didn't you say that its possible to have a basement that's completely above grade and now you say that you can have GLA below grade.

Make up your mind! :)
 
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It's hard to make chicken soup out of chicken poop. It is what it is. I wouldn't call the main level as basement with a good explanation of what you are dealing with.
 
Must be a REAL nice berm home.....

Back in the day when 'everyone' was saying the world was running out of oil (Jimmy Carter days) some people built some VERY nice earth-bermed homes. There's 3 or 4 within about 10 miles of my office that I know of. I've gone thru 2 of them on realtor open houses; good quality, usually built into the side of a hill.

Whenever I'm presented with an offer to appraise one, I'm always too busy.

They generally sell for about the same, maybe a bit less, $/sf as conventional construction but take 2-3X longer to sell. Part of the problem selling is the buyers need an in-house lender.

About the same market appeal as a dome home; there a couple of those around here too.
 
C'mon, Man! Where's your consistency?

Didn't you say that its possible to have a basement that's completely above grade and now you say that you can have GLA below grade.

Make up your mind! :)
I'm consistently going against ANSI :LOL:

Again, take away the dirt...what type of house does it function like? By ANSI standards, homes built on mountains are all below grade. That's just plain idiotic.
 
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