Also - deck appears to still be untreated. That "no gutter" situation will soon have negative effects on an untreated deck.
Realtors dont like people finding problems with a sale. And alot of them wouldn't understand things like that anyway. They are soccer moms with a used car salesman attitude.No prize. It was a house I was looking at. I put that picture on the HVAC forum asking about heat. Instead I got 3 guys commenting about how the deck should not be right at door level given the geographical location (northern MI). It was just another nail in the coffin. My realtor did not like my concerns so contacted the local building inspector who said so what, looks fine. I'm like, well, I already have 3 guys saying something wrong, and I google deck building and see recommendations to lower deck down in snow areas to prevent water issues so that's enough for me. Something about the addition there with 4 massive sliding glass doors gave me the heebie-jeebies. Homes are too expensive to mess with problems you could have avoided in the first place.
I wish it was Barrier free, wife is inHere it would be marketed as Barrier Free which is a huge deal when it comes to new construction...
A lot of slab homes have no step from garage to living spaces.
As a Property Manager... Barrier Free has become very important...
. Two steps into home and no attached garage. I could handle that but was worried about staying warm water damage.I understand, my negative sounding comment was more aimed at the OP saying: "My realtor did not like my concerns".Realtors aren’t allowed to say something is or isn’t a problem. Especially if they’re the listing and selling agent. That’s a home inspectors job. The agent can’t say the deck is a problem. Then the seller isn’t happy. They shouldn’t say the deck isn’t a problem. Then the buyer isn’t happy. That’s beside the point they’re real estate agents not contractors.