Renovated 3LDK House in Kanazawa's Historic Honmachi District
This property is a two-story wooden house built in November 1962, currently undergoing a comprehensive renovation scheduled for completion in March 2026. The renovation plan includes a complete overhaul of the interior and exterior. Key features include a new Lixil system kitchen, a new HausTech unit bath, and two new Janis washlet toilets. All rooms will receive new wallpaper, cushioned flooring, lighting fixtures, and fittings. The second floor will be reconfigured into three Western-style rooms: a 4.5-tatami room perfect for a child's bedroom, a spacious 10-tatami room suitable for a master bedroom with a new closet, and a 6-tatami room also with a new closet. The staircase will be tiled and fitted with a new handrail for safety.
The property includes a carport that can accommodate one regular car and one kei car side-by-side, with space for one additional car parked in front, allowing for a total of three parking spaces—a valuable feature in a city location. The approximately 21-tatami LDK (Living-Dining-Kitchen) area will be refreshed. The entrance door, replaced around 2012, will be cleaned, and the entrance area will get a new shoe box, cleaned washbasin, new wallpaper, and lighting. The property comes with a 2-year warranty covering the three major risks of used homes: roof leaks, defects/corrosion of major structural parts, and water leakage/failure of water supply and drainage pipes. A termite prevention treatment with a 5-year guarantee is also included. The hot water heater requires installation at the buyer's expense.
Located in Kanazawa's Honmachi 2-chome, the area is steeped in the history of the Kaga Domain's samurai residences. The property is within a 6-minute walk (approx. 450m) of a FamilyMart convenience store and a 9-minute walk from the Honmachi bus stop, accessible via bus from the Hokuriku Shinkansen's Kanazawa Station. A notable nearby landmark is the iconic Kenrokuen Garden, one of Japan's Three Great Gardens, located approximately 3 kilometers away, offering a stunning example of traditional Japanese landscape design throughout the seasons.