“If you hit a wrong note once, then shame on you, but if you hit it twice then you’re playing Jazz.”

–old joke amongst musicians

As the parent of a 9 year-old boy, I’ve observed how one (slightly) nerdy kid can be a lonely island, but two is suddenly . . . a club! (It’s funny how in the Realtor business, two Realtors — or sometimes just one Realtor and their cat — automatically become a “group” or “team”).

So, too, one distinctive home in a high-profile location can stick out like a sore thumb. But two can play off each other and look . . . cool.

A great example of that is the two home “combination” at 26th and Huntington, overlooking Minneapolis’ Cedar Lake.

After sitting twenty years as an empty lot (the previous home burned down in the mid-’80’s), a developer bought the land about five years ago and promptly subdivided it into 3 parcels.

The first of what were to have been three homes, 2545 Huntington (pictured on the left in the photo above) broke ground in 2005, close to the peak of the housing market. After almost two years on the market, it finally sold for $2.1M — surprisingly close to the original asking price of $2.2M.

Due to its unique, contemporary look, the home has inspired a wide range of comments, mostly negative. I’ve heard people call it a post office, an office building, “vaguely institutional” — or simply throw up their hands trying to describe it.

For what you’d guess were economic reasons, the developer scrapped its plan to build two more homes. Instead, it is now finishing a second building, very much like the first, alongside it (it’s on the right in the picture above).

So will it fetch anywhere close to the $2.1 million that its architectural sibling did?

We’ll never know: the buyer is the owner of the first house. Apparently, he intends to use it as a pool/guest house (the pool is in between the two).

About the author

Ross Kaplan has 19+ years experience selling real estate all over the Twin Cities. He is also a 12-time consecutive "Super Real Estate Agent," as determined by Mpls. - St. Paul Magazine and Twin Cities Business Magazine. Prior to becoming a Realtor, Ross was an attorney (corporate law), CPA, and entrepreneur. He holds an economics degree from Stanford.

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