702 Pritchard Avenue – Property Summary
Key Characteristics and Buyer Profile
This 710 sqft home, built in 1903, sits on a 3,009 sqft lot in Winnipeg’s William Whyte neighbourhood. Its standout feature is affordability. The assessed value of $93,000 places it well below street, neighbourhood, and city averages, ranking in the bottom 6% on Pritchard Avenue alone. This is a property where low entry cost is the primary draw, not space or modern updates.
The home is compact. Its living area ranks below 87% of homes on the same street and 96% citywide. The land area is closer to neighbourhood norms but smaller than typical city lots. The age of the building (over 120 years) means buyers should expect an older structure with likely deferred maintenance.
This property would suit investors looking for a low-cost asset in a lower-priced area, or owner-occupiers who prioritize a small mortgage over square footage and are comfortable with an older home that may need work. It is less suited for anyone seeking turnkey condition, generous living space, or a lot suitable for redevelopment at citywide scale. The appeal is financial, not aesthetic or spatial.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Why is the assessed value so much lower than the averages shown?
The assessment reflects the market’s current view of the property relative to others in its class. This home is older, smaller in living area, and on a smaller lot than most comparable homes on the street and across the city. The $93,000 value means taxes and purchase price are likely low, but it also signals that the property has not kept pace with area appreciation.
2. What condition should I expect from a 1903-built home?
It depends on renovation history, but a property of this age typically has older electrical, plumbing, and foundation systems. Insulation and windows are often original or poorly upgraded. The ranking data (94th percentile of age on the street) suggests it is one of the oldest homes in a street that already skews old. A thorough home inspection is strongly recommended, with attention to structural integrity and mechanicals.
3. How does the neighbourhood, William Whyte, compare to the rest of Winnipeg?
William Whyte is an older, inner-city neighbourhood with a mix of century homes and infill. Its average living area (1,158 sqft) and assessed value ($149,000) are below citywide medians. This home is even smaller and lower-valued than its neighbours, putting it in the bottom tier locally. The area has seen some revitalization but remains a budget-focused market.
4. Could the lot be subdivided or developed?
The lot is 3,009 sqft, which is smaller than the neighbourhood average (3,277 sqft) and significantly smaller than the city average (6,570 sqft). While zoning would need to be checked, a lot this size is unlikely to support subdivision or major redevelopment. It is more suited to maintaining the existing single-family home or a modest addition, if lot coverage and setbacks allow.
5. How reliable are the rankings and benchmarks shown?
The rankings compare this home to “comparable homes” within the same street, neighbourhood, and city. The methodology uses a median benchmark, so the bars show rough percentile position. They are useful for understanding where the property sits relative to peers, but they do not account for specific conditions (renovations, layout, location within the street) or recent sales data. Use them as a general guide, not a precise valuation tool.