When do you know a house is "the one"? In today's market many buyers are reluctant to make a long-term commitment, but some buyers do make a love connection the minute they walk through the door. Here are tales of Twin Cities home buyers who experienced "love at first sight." Home Sweet Home: Jeff Bokelmann & Rachel Harvey
What was never on the wish list was buy-ing a house that had gone through foreclosure.
But when Harvey and her fiancé, Jeff Bokelmann, first stepped onto the open front porch of a bank-owned and vacant 1919 two-story farmhouse near Isanti, Minn., she knew it was special.
Bokelmann had low expecations, too, so he was elated when he stepped through the front door and was greeted by a pristine dark oak staircase and oak columns that separated the spacious foyer from the living room. They loved the three-season porch with knotty-pine paneling out back, too.
"It felt homey, like my grandma's house," said Bokelmann. "I told Rachel, 'This is it.'"
Harvey, of East Bethel, and Bokelmann, of Ham Lake, had toured four other houses, including a 1940s former cabin on Coon Lake and a new house in an East Bethel development. Not only did the three-bedroom farmhouse have rich character, but it included six acres of land, a couple of pole barns and a six-car garage where Bokelmann, a mechanic, could work on cars.
It was also priced right at $139,900, but with a 1960s kitchen, vintage floral wallpaper and wood paneling, the house needed some work. Harvey, an interior designer, was up for the challenge.
Love was clearly in the air. A few days after first looking at the house, Bokelmann proposed to Harvey at the bottom of the grand staircase that had first caught their attention. Harvey accepted and the two submitted an offer to the bank. They will close on the farmhouse in March and get married this summer.
"We knew it was the home where we could live and raise a family," Harvey said.