I think I've accidentally trained the dog to respond quite obediently to the command "No leapins".

Sale pending after 2 weeks. The asking price is $1.9m. It was an ordinary-looking 3-bedroom early tract house (1942, so probably war workers' housing, and a contender for the first-ever California-method tract, which is somewhere around here) and last sold for $511,000 in 2009. It still has 3 bedrooms, but has gone from 1,216 sq ft to 1,799 and acquired a second bathroom and a powder room. Looking at the snapshots of it on Street View, it used have a slightly mansarded roof ridge where there is now a peaked roof showing, so I think they rearranged the interior as well as converting it into an open-plan ocean of white and extending the house back into the yard, and that the original 3rd bedroom has become the new kitchen. The loooong window in the front (which the buyers will block with a couch for privacy) was already present in 2008, with a protruding shade above it, but there are now also two sets of French doors, plus skylights on the extension roof, the side yard has been decked over, the back yard deck has a hot tub adjacent, and there are two elaborate varnished timber structures in what's left of the yard: a children's play structure and a huge pergola sheltering an outdoor kitchen. The rebuilding appears to have taken place in 2017, although who knows about the interior and the backyard structures. It was yellow siding with white trim and has become faux clapboard taupe with white trim (and lost its lawn, although this one had no white picket fence when Google first captured it). Pre-renovations, it was for sale by the bank in 2010 at $650,000.

Sale pending after 2 weeks. The asking price is $1.9m. It was an ordinary-looking 3-bedroom early tract house (1942, so probably war workers' housing, and a contender for the first-ever California-method tract, which is somewhere around here) and last sold for $511,000 in 2009. It still has 3 bedrooms, but has gone from 1,216 sq ft to 1,799 and acquired a second bathroom and a powder room. Looking at the snapshots of it on Street View, it used have a slightly mansarded roof ridge where there is now a peaked roof showing, so I think they rearranged the interior as well as converting it into an open-plan ocean of white and extending the house back into the yard, and that the original 3rd bedroom has become the new kitchen. The loooong window in the front (which the buyers will block with a couch for privacy) was already present in 2008, with a protruding shade above it, but there are now also two sets of French doors, plus skylights on the extension roof, the side yard has been decked over, the back yard deck has a hot tub adjacent, and there are two elaborate varnished timber structures in what's left of the yard: a children's play structure and a huge pergola sheltering an outdoor kitchen. The rebuilding appears to have taken place in 2017, although who knows about the interior and the backyard structures. It was yellow siding with white trim and has become faux clapboard taupe with white trim (and lost its lawn, although this one had no white picket fence when Google first captured it). Pre-renovations, it was for sale by the bank in 2010 at $650,000.