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Technology

Virtual House Hunting Gets a Pandemic Boost (bbc.com) 8

Padraig Belton from the BBC writes about how house hunters are using virtual-reality headsets to tour homes in the age of coronavirus. From the report: It's not for everyone as, at the moment, house hunters have to use their own headsets. But Giles Milner, marketing director at estate agent Chestertons, says he will sometimes send buyers headsets for new-build properties, if a development has multiple near-identical apartments with some still being built. "Developers are often selling off-plan, and it's hard to sell a product just on a 2D floor plan," he says. "So developers these days have virtual tours budgeted in from the start." Once you have a headset, it's a fairly simple process to find a virtual property on the estate agent's website, using a hand controller to work a virtual keyboard.

It's still a fairly limited option, at the moment just 8% of Zoopla's listings have an option for a virtual tour. But Zoopla says there was a surge of activity during the first month of lockdown, when virtual reality (VR) viewings of new-build properties tripled. [...] Virtual reality offers greater detail than the traditional photos on a website. It also saves time for estate agents and is safer for everyone: "The last thing you want is for your staff members to get struck down with Covid-19," Mr Shipside says. Growing adoption of VR viewing also makes life easier for clients moving internationally, when travel back and forth is hard. Buyers from mainland China looking at homes in Singapore have to observe the country's strict fortnight quarantine on nearly all arrivals. So it makes sense to treat buying a house "just like online shopping," says Christopher Wang, founder of Imme VR, a Singaporean virtual-reality property company.

A coming use of all this technology is letting prospective sellers find their property's value without estate agents visiting. Another will be letting possible buyers see a property as if it had their furniture already installed in the home. Having this record of your property's contents and their condition is especially beneficial if you ever have to submit an insurance claim -- for something stolen, or fire or flood damage. Another use will be in getting quotes from builders. Instead of contractors measuring and taking photos, going away and coming back with bids, a digital twin could instead let more contractors bid on the work -- giving power to the homeowner.

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Virtual House Hunting Gets a Pandemic Boost

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  • by sjames ( 1099 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2020 @10:23PM (#60367789) Homepage Journal

    I initially mis-read that as HAUNTING and pictured a pair of bored astronauts making spooky noises into a satphone.

  • We should have learned from the housing bubble that home ownership is a game the banks and realtors play with consumers. None of us can win the game, regardless of what we tell ourselves. Unfortunately we consume too much of the spin on cable TV (how many networks now seem to show house hunting and house renovation shows almost 24x7?) that is designed to convince us this is a good thing and that we can somehow make money on this ourselves.

    Homeownership is - at best - just a gamble. Most people don't
    • If you're in real estate for short-term returns, you're rolling the dice. But if you're looking for an actual place to live that will also be an appreciable asset in the long haul, **personal** real estate purchases are hard to beat. When you consider both the (.us) tax breaks and that part of your 'rent' actually goes to equity, it's a decent long-term investment.

      It's not like they're making more land. . .(grin)

    • Generally once you take maintenance costs, interest, the fees involved in selling/buying a house into account, the price gains more than offset it. In the "good old days" the price gains would offset those costs eventually over 20 to 30 years - that's how long it took a house to double in value. Not anymore, housing is overpriced, why? Demand vs supply, there is not enough new housing being built period. Why? Not enough land is being freed up at reasonable prices, why? Maybe several things, government bur
  • If the VR headsets show the correct perspective they would be very informative and help to get a real idea of the property. It seems like all realtors use insanely wide-angle digital cameras for images on web sites (basically a fish-eye with digital distortion so that lines are straight) to make the rooms look as big as possible (and with strange almost-square doors and other distortions near the edges), and are almost useless for judging a house.

If all the world's economists were laid end to end, we wouldn't reach a conclusion. -- William Baumol

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