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Alright,1: I'm a realtor, real estate investor, and home builder. 2: The house is a 1.5 story home and the media room is located above the main living area, it is cheap footage to build. We call them bonus rooms because of this.3: Bonus rooms above main living areas cost a fraction of what the actual main living area square footage costs to build. 4: Bonus rooms are typically worth less than what actual living area is worth.5: A finished media room makes a bonus rooms value on par or above normal living footage value.By my estimates having the room finished with a projector, screen, seating, etc the room as a working media room is probably worth to the right buyer about 60 dollars PSF more than if it were just bonus footage.The room is roughly 750 SF which means about a 45,000 difference.All that being said I have spoken with Dennis and I'm getting some of his affordable accuracy speakers for up there, I believe they will do perfect.
Great choice, Grant.
If you want to dress up the room, frankly I'd go for popular glitz as most buyers don't have a discerning ear. Keep in mind who you'd be buying this for (an average joe, his kids, and his party buddies).Big speakers could turn off disinterested females, but bells and whistles should sell. Consider leaving just a sound bar (they're popular), minimal/matching rear channels, and something like a BIC F12 sub would be reasonable impressive. Again, you buying for an unknown customer, don't over do it.
I love how I ask people for speaker advice in a speaker forum and then all the sudden this turns into Love it or List it on HGTV.....
Focus on the task at hand - selling the house, not a sound system. Most advise to de-personalize the house, keep it (and as mentioned above the deal) as clean as possible.You could list with the system as an appliance option, but few would be interested in your gear unless you practically give it away. I used to live in a town with lots of engineers (the highest per capita in the U.S. at that time) and a co-worker's wife sold real-estate. Her #1 compliant of engineers was all the quirky/inventive stuff they'd done to the house that turned off most potential buyers.