Can I get two closed loop water coolers?

Hey guys

Looking to build a new PC, calculated that getting another closed loop cooler for my GPU would bring me to just a little above my planned amount I was gonna spend but that's okay.

My friend told me a few things I gotta look for tho ;
1. Can my case fit another water cooler
(Although, this is closed loop and it would attach to the GPU, right?)(EDIT : Realized the Radiator had to go somewhere, oops)
2. Can my motherboard control two closed loop water coolers?
(Forget if that's that part that does it)
3. Make sure the rest has ample fan cooling for other components that need it

http://pcpartpicker.com/list/JNtWbj

I was made aware as I was looking up reviews for the card I was gonna get (Was gonna be a GeForce GTX 950) that the newer one would run hot. I didn't wanna have fans droning on and on while playing games because the GPU was overheating or anything, so I figured water cool might be best.

Thanks :)
 
So long as you have the room for it and sort out how to power both pumps, factor in additional cooling needed for the vram and things. A gpu cooler cools more than just the graphics processor. I don't think either a gtx 950 or r9 480 runs hot enough to really warrant a water cooler. Guess it depends on what the pc is going to be used for but rather than go into a bunch of overpriced aio cooling for mid range parts, just put it into better components?

Between the fx 6xxx cpu, mobo, 2x h60's (assuming you were going to water cool the gpu with the same cooler) and ram you're looking at around $317.
For $322 you could go with a skylake i5 6500, h170 mobo with usb 3.1 and 8gb of ddr4 2400 ram. Use the stock cooler and the cooler that comes with the 480, then the extra $120 or so could go into giving you better gaming performance. (Assuming by the gpu choice). Just another way to go with it.
 
I would not build using a FX processor today. The individual cores are simply too weak.
Spend your cooling money on more efficient parts that do not need any exotic cooling.
A I3-6100 would be a superior performer in most games.
A lga1151 motherboard will give you upgrade cpu options.

 
I forgot to mention the CPU and RAM were free, haha. I'm already thinking of ditching this mobo because the CPU that I got from my Uncle's PC totally lost the silicon lottery - only gets a couple extra ghz before the voltage gets to like 1.375 or something like that...(to be stable, fyi) I forgot the exact numbers.

Also I don't even think Polaris water blocks are out. Either way I can live with the noise. I thought the GPU would jack up the speed of my system fans but even those are quiet on high, so I'm all good.

Since I only really spent $50 on the configuration, I decided it wouldn't hurt to upgrade the mobo and sell the current one for what I really got it for (or a little more) on eBay, with some luck.