A Favorites List is an electronic list where properties information are saved (residentials, condos, farms, land,...). Favorites Lists can be used to help sort search results for you, your clients, your partners... You can create as many Favorites Lists as you want and share them easily. All Favorite Lists can be created and managed here.
Why Search Lists
Create as many Search Lists integrating different filters. Search results are automatically updated based on properties added to Homendo's databases. Search Lists can have multiple functions and be used in your automatic emails, in your landing websites, in your communications with your clients,... All Search Lists can be created and managed here.
No public note tag yet... Log in to enter new private note tag
Video Tags
No public video tag yet... Log in to record new video tag
Listing Source
With courtesy of Coldwell Banker Realty-Boulder Posted by REcolorado (Denver)
The content relating to real estate for sale in this Web site comes in part from the Internet Data eXchange ('IDX') program of RECOLORADO®, Real estate listings held by brokers other than RE/MAX Professionals are marked with the IDX Logo. This information is being provided for the consumers' personal, non-commercial use and may not be used for any other purpose. All information subject to change and should be independently verified.
1701 Short Place
Longmont, CO 80501
— Boulder
County — R & S Resub Neighborhood
Back on the market, baby-refitted, recharged, reborn! The wires hum with fresh juice, the sewer runs clean and true. This house has had its tune-up, its second coming-ready now for the next believer to step inside and feel the current. Three bedrooms! One bath! Nineteen forty-six, baby, right there in Old West Longmont, rising up out of the dust of the war years, a little stucco sentinel of survival and grit, a house built not just to stand but to last. Nothing fancy, no baroque curlicues of design-no, no-this is strength, plain and unadorned, the kind of strength you can lean your whole back against. That stucco skin, that sloping roofline-straight out of the farm fields, echoing barns and silos and wheat-stalk silhouettes.Step inside-ah!-the 1940s sensibility practically hums through the floorboards. Redwood, pine, the old-growth kind, hard as history, polished by decades of footfalls. Trim that still gleams with a certain golden warmth, no polyurethane veneer, no hollow-core fakery-real wood, real work. The rooms are laid out in that no-nonsense, don't-waste-a-foot manner, functional, tight, as if the architect had been schooled in thrift and clarity, which of course he had-wartime rationing stamped right into the blueprints.And then the attic! Oh, the attic-insulated, quiet, a retreat tucked away under the eaves. A hideout! A den! A secret room for sleep or study or something entirely your own. And below-listen-an unfinished walk-out basement, pipes already snaking, primed for two more bathrooms. Just waiting. Waiting for someone with a hammer, a vision, a little sweat equity.Of course, of course, there's the little technicality: two of the bedrooms are non-conforming. No closets. A bureaucratic hiccup. The public record hasn't caught up, but what does paper know about possibility? Out back, the gardens stretch, irrigated, designed with a certain StoneLeaf elegance, ordered beds, intentional growth, all of it giving the place a finishing grace.