234 Cullen Drive – Property Summary
Key Characteristics & Buyer Profile
This 720 sqft home, built in 1973, sits on a 3,398 sqft lot in Winnipeg’s Westdale neighborhood. Its most distinctive feature is the year built: on its street, Cullen Drive, it ranks #1 out of 97 homes, meaning it’s the newest property on the block. That’s a meaningful advantage if you value modern construction standards and lower immediate maintenance risk compared to the street’s average home from 1971.
However, the property is consistently below average in living area, land area, and assessed value relative to its street, neighborhood, and city. The living area (720 sqft) is about 30% smaller than the typical home on Cullen Drive (1,006 sqft), and the lot is roughly 40% smaller than the street average (5,583 sqft). The assessed value of $262,000 sits well below both the street average ($331,100) and the citywide average for comparable homes ($390,100).
The appeal here is straightforward: you’re buying into a competitive, likely well-kept street at a lower price point than your neighbors paid. It would suit a first-time buyer or someone downsizing who prioritizes a newer shell and a smaller, more manageable footprint—trading square footage and yard space for a lower entry cost and a home that may need fewer updates than older stock on the same block. It’s less suited to a family needing generous indoor or outdoor space, or to a buyer looking for strong immediate resale value relative to area averages.
Five Possible FAQs
1. Why is the assessed value so much lower than the neighborhood and city averages?
The home’s smaller living area (720 sqft vs. Westdale’s average of 1,029 sqft) and smaller lot (3,398 sqft vs. the neighborhood average of 5,168 sqft) are the main drivers. Assessed value is heavily weighted by square footage and land size, so even though the house is newer, it’s simply a smaller property than most around it.
2. The year built ranks #1 on the street—does that really matter in practice?
It depends on your tolerance for repairs. Homes built in the early 1970s often share similar-era building codes and materials. Being the newest on a street of older homes (many from 1971) can mean you avoid some deferred maintenance typical of older structures (e.g., aging roofs, older electrical systems), but it’s still a 50-year-old house. The ranking is a relative advantage, not a guarantee of modern performance.
3. How does this property compare to entry-level homes citywide?
Citywide, the average living area for comparable homes is 1,342 sqft, and the average assessed value is $390,100. This property is about 46% smaller in living area and 33% lower in value, placing it well below the typical entry-level detached home in Winnipeg. It’s more aligned with compact bungalows or small postwar houses than with what most buyers would consider a “starter home” in terms of size.
4. Is the small lot a dealbreaker for resale?
Not necessarily, but it does narrow the buyer pool. Smaller lots appeal to those who want less yard maintenance and lower property taxes. However, on Cullen Drive, where lots average 5,583 sqft, a 3,398 sqft lot is significantly smaller—close to townhouse-sized land. This could limit appeal to families who want garden space, but it could also be a plus for empty nesters or investors focusing on lower upkeep.
5. What’s the most overlooked detail about this property?
The fact that it ranks #1 for newness on its street but #91 for assessed value means you’re not paying a premium for that novelty. Most newer homes command a price bump relative to older neighbors, but here the value is suppressed by size. That mismatch can be an opportunity: you get the newest house on the block at a price that reflects the smallest footprint, not the latest year.