
A house renovated by the Property Brothers in 2014 has discovered a purchaser only one week after it hit the market.
HGTV
A Georgia dwelling renovated by the Property Brothers again in 2014 was available on the market for barely every week earlier than discovering a purchaser in file time.
Featured within the fashionable HGTV present’s sixth-season episode “Edith and Fred,” the home was first listed on Jan. 9. It went beneath contract on Jan. 16.
Situated within the city of Conyers, 25 miles from Atlanta, the five-bedroom, five-bathroom dwelling was briefly listed again in 2018 for $585,000 earlier than the couple determined to take it off the market. This month the homeowners, Edith and Fred Wallace, lastly determined to promote the home for the primary time because the renovations by Jonathan and Drew Scott have been accomplished.
Spanning over 5,900 sq. toes, the house opens with an 18-foot-long lobby with coffered ceilings and lighting, in accordance with Realtor.com.
Options embrace an workplace, three fireplaces, an eat-in kitchen with chrome steel double ovens and two sinks.



Located on 1.68 acres, facilities embrace a health room and a pool.
The first bed room encompasses a sitting space with a fire, and a rest room with a jetted tub and a two-person bathe. It additionally comes with twin closets and French doorways that result in the patio, the itemizing notes.
There's additionally a poolhouse that's outfitted with a pool desk, a second mini kitchen and a full lavatory.
When the vigorous couple had bought the brick modern fixer-upper, it wanted some main updates.








On the time they bought the house, it was available on the market for $399,000, however was later negotiated all the way down to $357,000 by Drew. The brothers poured an estimated $80,000 right into a five-week rework.
Because the episode confirmed, the renovations largely targeted on the yard pool and guesthouse.
As soon as the renovations have been accomplished, Edith and Fred had spent $437,000 in whole. They're now set for a large revenue if the deal closes on the worth they're asking.
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