Renovated Single-Story Home in Rikuzentakata, Iwate
This property is a single-story, 2LDK house located in Rikuzentakata City, Iwate Prefecture, offered for sale at 11,490,000 yen. The price includes consumption tax and all renovation costs. The home, built in June 1997, sits on a generous 166.67 sqm plot of land with a building area of 65.41 sqm. It is currently undergoing a comprehensive renovation scheduled for completion in May 2026, and viewings can be arranged even while work is in progress.
The renovation plan is extensive. The exterior and parking area will be expanded. Internally, the entire water system is being replaced, including a new system kitchen, a new unit bath, a new toilet, and a new washbasin/vanity. The interior layout will be altered, with some interior doors replaced, flooring overlaid, a shoe cabinet replaced, and all wallpaper refreshed. Additional equipment installations include a new intercom, fire alarms, and new lighting fixtures. Standard termite prevention work is also part of the package. The living room and two 7-tatami Japanese-style rooms will be converted to Western-style rooms, complete with new open closets. The property comes with a defect warranty covering roof leaks, major structural defects, corrosion, and failures or leaks in water supply and drainage pipes for two years after delivery.
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The home is situated in a quiet residential area on a regular-shaped, flat lot with a road over 6 meters wide to the northeast. Parking space for three cars is being created. The property is eligible for housing loan tax deductions depending on the buyer's conditions. The nearest major station is Mori Station on the Sanriku Railway Rias Line, approximately 15.6km away by car.
Rikuzentakata is a city in the scenic Sanriku region, known for its dramatic coastline. The area is part of the Rikuchu Kaigan National Park, offering stunning coastal views, hiking trails, and the poignant landmark of the "Miracle Pine," the sole surviving tree from a forest of 70,000 pines destroyed by the 2011 tsunami, now symbolizing hope and resilience.