apartment therapy changing the world, one room at a time


Best Places to Buy an Old House
This Old House

6-27-albany.jpgFlatbush, Brooklyn, may be one of the dozen places that This Old House picked as one of the Best Places to Buy an Old House, but there were two West Coast picks...

 
 
6-27-centralia.jpg
Albany, Oregon, and Centralia, Washington, made the magazine's list.


The article about all 12 places is here. Read more about Albany here and Centralia here.

Images: Albany Visitors Association and Tom Jones, Coldwell Banker Kline and Associates via This Old House

Tags

real estate, Blogging Media

Related Links

Share

Comments (9)

As a native Oregonian remembering all times driving through Albany ,rolling up the car windows and plugging my nose, I cannot imagine anyone wanting to live there!
It is home to one of the stinkiest paper mills on the planet!
Maybe that is why buying a nice old house there is easy .

Centrailia is one of the rainiest ,wettest ,muddiest places .
Pretty because of all the rain ,but it rains like a muther there!

posted by polychrome1 on June 27th 2008 at 7:16pm
view polychrome1's profile

Wow. Never thought I'd see my hometown mentioned on Apartment Therapy. Centralia is a beautiful little place, with loads of turn of the century homes. A great spot to have spent my formative years. Thanks for blogging it, Leslie.

And for the record: Centralia isn't any rainier than other places in Western Washington; it's simply located on a flood plain (for the most part).

posted by allisonlindsay on June 27th 2008 at 7:33pm
view allisonlindsay's profile

I want to visit! :)

posted by Lizzykewl on June 27th 2008 at 9:07pm
view Lizzykewl's profile

I'd question the suggestions on this list if I were you. I grew up in Reading, PA and it's nothing like their description. True, there is a beautiful historic district where you can cheaply buy a house, but "home to top-notch schools, four universities"? Not exactly. My high school had a gang problem (my locker was owned by the Latin Street Kings) and is probably going to be taken over by the state, and there's not a university to be found...unless you count the satellite campus of Penn State on the outskirts of town. Also, it's more like an hour and a half from Philadelphia, not the advertised 30 minutes. I do have pride in my hometown, but it's not the nice-to-live-in place that the website claims it to be.

posted by alidet on June 28th 2008 at 5:02am
view alidet's profile

millersburg, OR is the stinky place--adjacent albany is fine.

as former albany resident, the smell is mostly by the freeway, the historic district, by the river west of the stink.

posted by amygdaloides on June 28th 2008 at 5:26am
view amygdaloides's profile

I know that the homes are a little newer, but highland park IL is a suburb north of Chicago, and has a LOT of unremodeled architecturally significant Mid-Century Modern Homes. Mostly ranch style, but some other variations including split levels, the homes around there are really great.

posted by mozmun20 on June 28th 2008 at 8:21pm
view mozmun20's profile

A bedroom community to Dubuque?

And a historic split level ranch? This I gotta see...

posted by Palmetto on June 30th 2008 at 8:38am
view Palmetto's profile

Hit submit rather than preview.

One big problem with their list is that most of these places are cheap because their local economy sucks. A suburb of Detroit? Great for a cheap old house, bad for a job with a real wage. Flatbush is indeed a treasure trove of old houses, but it's not cheap (only by NYC standards).

posted by Palmetto on June 30th 2008 at 8:42am
view Palmetto's profile

Centralia has a really excellent old bowling alley that hadn't been remodeled in a lonnnnngg time. It's a real gem.

posted by vespabelle on June 30th 2008 at 9:52pm
view vespabelle's profile