The house was built in 1899. Seven rooms, high ceilings, a new kitchen. It had a view of the river and the old bridge in Heidelberg. It sounded perfect for us. I would finally have my own room and the view would inspire great works of literature. As soon as I saw the photos on the estate agent’s website, I wanted an appointment. But why was one room empty? And was that a bed in the living room? And why was the price – 417,000 euros — so low?
If I had known before moving to Germany that I would never live in a four bedroom home with a two-car garage, I might never have been so eager to move here. The housing market and the education system – those are the two items I wish I had researched better. Not really house hunters, my husband and I are that species that estate agents hate - real estate tourists. Ten years ago we bought our current house, which by Canadian or American standards would be considered a cottage, a starter home. It was a Schnäppchen, a bargain, and it was a happy coincidence that we found it.
The house described above turned out to be located on a steep incline on the sunless side of the river, and accessible only by a footbridge that rises high above the railway tracks. One would have a view not of a peaceful river, but of high voltage cables. Imagine moving into that place: Every single chair and every single box of books would have to be carried up the stairs and over the bridge. Not much wonder it is currently rented to students. Location, location, location.
My idea of a nice family home is, for example, my grandmother’s house:



These photographs were taken in 1974, but the house hasn’t changed much since my father grew up there in the 1920s and ’30s with his many siblings when his father, a medical doctor, was one of the local medical practitioners. My brothers and sisters called it the Ice Palace. As my Grandmother aged, she refused to move into a nursing home, but wanted company in her cavernous, lonely house at night. We had our choice of bedrooms, the brass bedroom being our favorite. But in January or February, it was like sleeping in a deep freeze. When my grandmother died, her wake was held in her parlour, a candle glowing in the window.
In my first year in Germany, my husband and I shared a two-room apartment with a friend of his. We had one room and the friend had the other. The only common room was the kitchen. The neighbourhood was attractive, but apartments were hard to come by. It was the early 1990s and German reunification put the squeeze on the housing market, with many “Ossies” also looking. Eventually we had to move out when the landlady’s granddaughter decided to leave her home in the former East Germany and move to Heidelberg. We moved out and around the corner into a furnished apartment, vacated by a woman who entered a nursing home. It was a temporary solution. Her flat was outfitted with plush green carpet, swag curtains, and wood panelling. We bought the Saturday paper early and trawled the ads, hopeful of finding a big, beautiful apartment. Maybe like the ones I had rented in Montreal. Estate agents wanted to see ID when we looked at apartments; hundreds of other hopeful couples lined up to inspect the flats too. It was never clear how the selection was made but I suspect handsome “incentives” were paid. Desperate, and afraid of living in Frau Schlecter’s digs for the rest of my life, we did what any normal young couple where I come from would have done anyway — we decided to buy.
We had saved a bit of money. But estate agents laughed when we revealed our budget to them. We bought the first apartment we saw that we could afford. In hindsight, it was a mistake. Luckily, we were able to sell it when we bought our little blue Scandanavian house:

We also happen to live in one of the most expensive areas of Germany, the Rhein-Main area, an area blessed by a mild climate, early springs, short winters, and favored by well-educated, high-paid professionals who work at any number of companies established here. So cheap four-bedroom homes, even if there were plenty of them, are hard to come by.
Until last year, when I found a house that I would have bought on the spot. If it were not located janz weit draussen. Cut off from the civilized world in a tiny village with only one bus to-ing and fro-ing to a beaded necklace of similarly cut off villages along the path to the nearest train station, several miles distant. A fabulous house with Mediterranean flair. Four bedrooms, a den, a fireplace, rose trellises in the expansive garden – and the payoff – a walk-in closet in the master bedroom. I am ready to make compromises, like doing without an en suite bath, or a large kitchen, or local transport. The house was located conveniently to my place of work. But my kids said, forget it mom, how are we going to get to school, who is going to drive me to hockey practice, and how are my friends supposed to visit me here? Which quickly put an end to that dream.
This weekend we have an appointment to look at another house. To be continued…