Ask HN: Why is there not a better way to search for houses and apts?
Why can't you search for apts and houses they way you want to?
For example I might want to know
1) which direction the house faces.
2) If it's an apt or townhouse, is it a corner unit.
3) if it have a dishwasher.
4) if it has an open floor plan.
5) if it has an attached garage.
And of course location.
Home searching is something LOTS of people do and right now there seems to be no real good way to do it.
10 comments
[ 5.5 ms ] story [ 23.4 ms ] threadThe information you're interested probably can't be easily/cost-effectively collected, validated or maintained.
Just ask yourself, where accurate, up-to-date, consistent information on 100M+ apartments and houses going to come from?
You can pan through the map of an entire county in under an hour.
http://i.imgur.com/IGqE2Zg.jpg -> http://i.imgur.com/o1CJbiv.jpg
This is the easiest and most enjoyable part of the home search IMO.
For example, http://www.city-data.com/city/West-Linn-Oregon.html http://www.city-data.com/forum/portland/37192-lake-oswego-vs...
Some governments have digitized their property registers, though. The most comprehensive one I've found is in Denmark, which has made the property register for the whole country searchable/browsable: http://www.ois.dk
Example: select "Københavns Kommune" from the dropdown box at top-right, type "Vesterbrogade" in the box labeled "Vejnavn", then click "Søg". You'll get a list of all buildings with street addresses on Vesterbrogade, one of the thoroughfares in Copenhagen. If you click on an individual address, you'll get information about the building and a listing of any subunits, e.g. that there are 5 floors, with 2 units on the 1st floor, 1 on the 2nd, etc. Click on any individual unit and you'll get information on everything from number of rooms, to when it was most recently renovated, to what materials are used in the construction.
In the U.S., some cities and counties are starting to provide at least some of this kind of information. For example, for Seattle, you can try the King County Parcel Viewer: http://www.kingcounty.gov/operations/GIS/PropResearch/Parcel...
We get much of our data from sources other than the MLS, so it's far more accurate than some of the descriptions from listing agents that national search portals query. We also have search pages (http://www.realscout.com/categories) that allow you to view all the photos of the features you're searching for. In other words, you can see all the backyards of Palo Alto listings on one page.
Our software is still in beta, but we're rolling out new functionality daily.