By Jacqueline DupreeThursday, June 28, 2007; Page DZ03
Ballpark and Beyond is from Jacqueline Dupree's blog on development in Near Southeast Washington, an area between Capitol Hill and the Anacostia River that is being transformed by the construction of the Nationals baseball stadium.
On Tuesday, the D.C. Housing Authority had a ceremonial groundbreaking at Fourth and K streets SE to celebrate the redevelopment of the old Arthur Capper/Carrollsburg public housing project.
It was a pretty warm day, but the tent was air-conditioned. There was a bit of a revival feel as authority Executive Director Michael Kelly, D.C. Council member Tommy Wells (D-Ward 6) and other officials sang the praises of the federal-city-private partnership that has leveraged a $35 million U.S. Housing and Urban Development grant into a nearly $500 million revitalization project.
Kelly and others spoke with particular pride about how all 707 units of public housing at Capper/Carrollsburg will be replaced in the new development, which will include 525 affordable rental units and 330 market- and workforce-rate homes. The 23-acre project is a joint venture of Forest City Enterprises, Mid-City Urban and the authority.
The townhouse portion of the redevelopment, now named Capitol Quarter, will have about 121 market-rate and 91 workforce-rate ownership houses. An additional 65 townhouses will contain 111 subsidized rental units and Section 8 ownership units.
The market-rate houses are being made available for reservation in monthly blocks, with tents popping up at the sales center as hopeful homeowners stake their claims. There was a lottery in October for the first 20 workforce units. I imagine another will be coming before too long, although nothing's been announced.
Construction will begin on the first homes in early 2008, and infrastructure work at the site has begun.
Many former Capper residents were at the groundbreaking, clearly excited about what they will be returning to. Kivette Abraham, whose mother moved there when the complex opened in 1956, spoke of being one of the 55 Capper households participating in the community support services homeownership education and counseling program, which will help her to buy a home in the community where she's spent almost her entire life.
As for the rest of the project, 300 low-income rental units have been completed since December in two new buildings for senior citizens and low-income residents. Four mixed-income apartment buildings planned along the new Canal Park between Second and Third streets and I and M streets SE will eventually complete the residential component. Construction probably won't start before 2010. In the meantime, temporary surface parking lots will soon appear on those blocks to help ease the expected Nationals stadium parking crunch.
Office buildings totaling 700,000 square feet are also part of the long-range Capper plan, as are 50,000 square feet of retail. A new community center is on the boards as well, replacing the one demolished earlier this year.
Thursday, July 05, 2007
'Groundbreaking' Celebrates The Old and New
Thursday, June 28, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
Road to a Retail Makeover
By Ylan Q. MuiWashington Post Staff WriterMonday, June 25, 2007; D01
On H Street Northeast, there are hipster bars that draw weekend crowds large enough to rival those of U Street. There is a dance studio that teaches ballroom, ballet and Afro-Caribbean. A massive red-brick luxury condo building is rising on the western end, touting the slogan "DC's next great quarter."
The corridor once infamous for race riots and crime is in the midst of an urban revival. But one critical piece is missing: the shopping.
A few veteran mom-and-pop stores have survived the decades of neglect. A handful of national chains, such as Payless ShoeSource and Rite Aid, have staked out ground. But retail along H Street has not caught up with the rest of the development. Check-cashing stores, tax preparers and liquor stores dominate.
The District is looking at the street as one of the first places where it can influence the shopping landscape. Recently, Mayor Adrian M. Fenty (D) and Planning Director Harriet Tregoning said the District will develop a citywide plan to keep and attract retail, and stem the $1 billion in sales tax they say is leaked to surrounding jurisdictions. The plan will target 20 neighborhoods where stores have failed to take hold.
H Street is on the list, along with Georgia Avenue, Shaw, M Street SE, Nannie Helen Burroughs Avenue, East Capitol Street and Bladensburg Road. The other neighborhoods have not yet been identified.
Each faces its own challenges. Some require redevelopment from the ground up, others resemble suburbia. But H Street is perhaps the closest to a turnaround.
The community hopes the city's plan will create a better environment to attract retail. Among their requests are tax breaks for restoring old buildings, an expedited permitting process and cleaner streets.
"They talked about H Street in the theoretical and now we're here," said Joe Englert, who owns several popular bars in the neighborhood. "Now they've got to get in a different mind-set."
During a bumpy van ride through the corridor, Tregoning and Neil O. Albert, deputy mayor for planning and economic development, spoke about their visions of higher-quality stores on the street.
Over the next 10 years, the city thinks the neighborhood could support 300,000 square feet of retail. Through its Great Streets program, the city plans to spend $27 million sprucing up the corridor with wider sidewalks, more trees, flattering lighting, bike racks and signs for community attractions. There are plans for a trolley to ferry residents along the 1 1/2 -mile stretch.
Build it and they will come seems to be the prevailing philosophy. There are hopes for more apparel retailers, a jewelry store, book shop, pet store. The blocks from 7th to 12th streets are designated as the retail epicenter. To the west is the residential neighborhood that, with any luck, would feature a grocery store like Trader Joe's. To the east is the arts-and-entertainment zone, ending at Hechinger Mall.
"You can almost never begin with retail first, because retail wants customers," Tregoning said.
About 40 to 45 of the street's 300 buildings are vacant, according to Anwar Saleem, head of the city's Main Streets initiative on H Street, which aims to spur business. That's an improvement from the roughly 150 that were empty four years ago, he said. A slew of new businesses have moved to the area -- clothing boutique and salon Stella Bleu, coffee shop Sidamo, a gym called WillPower that advertises pilates classes. There's also a Subway, Rainbow clothing store and GameStop.
Retailers that can keep up with the $2 million condos going up down the street are still several years away by the most ambitious estimates. A strip shopping center called H Street Connection dominates the corridor's retail district -- not quite the historic feel that residents and city officials envision.
Henry Fonvielle, executive vice president of the Rappaport Cos., which owns the center, said he just now is starting to think about remodeling.
He would eventually like to raze the building and replace it with a mixed-use development with retail on the bottom floors and residences above. But rents have to rise substantially to make it worth the effort, he said.
Still, Fonvielle said he is excited by the changes underway. It's all a matter of timing.
"Every time a storefront turns over on H Street, it's going to be a turnover for the better," he said. "It's just an evolutionary process."
High Costs of Change
City officials say they envision a shopping district on H Street populated with lots of small, unique shops and a few national retailers. But independent businesses have struggled to gain footholds in the corridor because of the age and poor conditions of many of the buildings, as well as their small footprints.
Englert was one of H Street's pioneers, opening several trendy bars and restaurants in the past two years. Englert estimated that he spent $500,000 to get Rock and Roll Hotel off the ground -- nearly double the cost to open his businesses in more upscale neighborhoods such as Dupont Circle and Cleveland Park. Most of the money went to rehabilitating the building, with $85,000 for the heating and air-conditioning system.
"It's like you need an advanced degree or an incredibly astute permit person to get the littlest thing," he said. "In reality, you're not going to get a lot of breaks."
But Englert helped prove that people would make H Street a destination. Now he is planning a Belgian restaurant with mussels and frites in the 1200 block of H Street, and an indoor mini-golf place in the 1300 block.
"I know we're going to do well there when all's said and done," he said. "But you have to be a realist and say that's tough going. Really tough going."
Space is another issue. Many of the properties are small and narrow, with the tiniest at about 1,250 square feet -- too small for most national retailers to even consider. The average restaurant needs at least 2,000 square feet. A drug store such as CVS is generally 5,000 to 9,000 square feet. Even a small grocery store such as Trader Joe's claims about 40,000 square feet.
That means most property owners are searching for small, independent retailers to lease the space. But as property values rise, so do taxes -- and rent. And many merchants have found it difficult to sell enough merchandise in their small spaces to pay off the growing rents.
There have been several casualties as well. The pet shop. The bookstore. The women's specialty store, all felled by high rents and slow sales.
"What can you do about that?" Saleem said. "If they can't pay the rent, they aren't coming."
Smokey Maye has owned the building that houses his barbershop, at 1338 H St. NE, since 1999. It's been in business at the same location since 1966. People in the neighborhood know him by name.
In 2005, Maye said, his property taxes were $2,100. Last year, they more than doubled to $5,400. At this rate, he figures he will have to increase his prices by a few dollars just to stay in business.
Still, he said, he is glad that change is coming to H Street.
"It's bringing people down here," he said. "It's just been a few businesses down here for so long."
'I Don't Want to Evolve'
Developer Jim Abdo is building Senate Square, a luxury condo building on 3rd and H streets NE that will begin to deliver this fall. He said the corridor is strikingly similar to 14th Street NW.
Abdo watched change come slowly to the businesses on 14th Street, like the liquor stores that once sold 40-ounce beers and switched to stocking expensive wines instead. They adapted to the needs of the new residents.
"This is a whole new level of buying power that we're bringing you," he said. "Look at ways to respond to that to allow your business to grow, not leave the neighborhood."
But not everyone wants to change. One H Street merchant, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of jeopardizing his business, said his core clientele are low-income residents. He said it is easier to leave H Street and follow them than to rethink his business model.
As for the residents moving to H Street? They don't want to shop at the stores there now, he said, even though they might carry products they need. The new folks want stores that look fancy, he said. His is not among them. He figures he can last seven to 10 years.
"I don't want to evolve," he said. "It's the haves and the have-nots, and they would like the have-nots to please leave."
Saleem is trying to bridge that gap. He grew up in the neighborhood, and his parents, family and friends still live there. He doesn't want the moms-and-pops who stuck with H Street during the hard times to leave. But he also wants to see new life breathed into the corridor.
"You may not get what you want today. But they may morph into what you want tomorrow," he said. "It's a whole lot better than it was."
Thursday, June 21, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Ok, I know you're probably not planning on moving this very second, but here's this week's list of interesting-looking listings that have just come on the market. Mind you, they may not actually be my personal listings --- just intriguing properties I've come across that week.
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
Developers, Managers See Green Building Perks
The real estate industry — most notably the commercial side — is slowly but surely embracing sustainable business practices and green technologies, according to an analysis of the industry by Progressive Investor, monthly newsletter that’s focused on sustainable investments.
"The benefits will make green ubiquitous over the next two years," says George Caraghiaur, vice president for energy services at Simon Property Group, owner of 300 shopping malls.
Developers are using green construction in their projects, real estate consumers and tenants are showing a preference for sustainable buildings, and it’s becoming more affordable to make earth-friendly choices, the newsletter says. What’s driving the trend? Progressive Investor identified these factors:
Energy prices are rising. Developers and building owners are feeling the crunch of high energy and water costs, which, according to the Building Owners and Managers Association (BOMA), constitute 28 percent of operating costs for downtown office properties, and 30.4 percent for suburban properties. They see the quick payback and cost savings energy efficiency and other green building upgrades offer.Construction costs are coming down. Building green no longer costs more. Turner Construction's 2005 Green Building Market Barometer shows it costs a just 0.8 percent more for basic LEED certification, easily recouped through lower operating costs.
Tenants are demanding it. Increasingly, clients and tenants show a preference for green buildings, which have been proven to increase productivity, retain employees and lower absenteeism. The combination of reduced operating costs and more satisfied occupants translates into 3.5% higher occupancy rates, 3% higher rents, and a 7.5% increase in building value, says the McGraw-Hill 2006 SmartMarket Report.
Green gets visibility. Corporations with sustainable business policies are building highly visible green headquarters including Bank of America, Toyota, Goldman Sachs, Hearst, IBM, JPMorgan Chase and Herman Miller. The Freedom Tower, which replaces the World Trade Center, will be LEED-certified.
States are requiring it. Green building is increasingly being mandated. Nine states and 40+ municipalities have passed legislation mandating LEED-certified buildings. Six percent of commercial developments are LEED-certified, and it’s projected to jump to 10 percent of the market by 2010.
REITS Fill Demand for Green Investments
Because there are more green buildings, there also are more choices for investors who want to put there money into an environmentally friendly funds. Some 41 percent of the 300 U.S. real estate investment trusts (REITs) are actively pursuing energy efficiency and green building upgrades and another 27 percent plan to do so.
For now, U.S. investors can gain exposure to the sector through the Forward Progressive Real Estate Fund (FFREX), the first SRI REIT mutual fund, and through about two dozen individual securities, including Simon Property Group (NYSE:SPG) , Weingarten Realty Investors (NYSE:WRI) , Prologis (NYSE:PLD) and SL Green Realty (NYSE:SLG) .
Outside the U.S., leaders include Investa Property Group (IPG.AX), Australia's largest owner of prime grade office space, Lend Lease (LLC.AX), Land Securities (LAND.L), British Land (BLND.L) and SEGRO (SGRO.L), in the UK.
Progressive firms are increasingly focused on urban infill buildings rather than suburban greenfields and incorporating advanced energy efficiency measures, as well as recycled building materials, gray water systems, rainwater capture and green roofs, the report says.
— REALTOR® Magazine Online
Thursday, June 14, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
How Home Buyers Can Make Sure They Get the Best Mortgage
By Ruth Mantell, MarketWatch
RISMEDIA, June 14, 2007-(MarketWatch) - Think you're getting a good deal from your mortgage broker? Try looking at the fine print.Your mortgage broker could be getting paid by a lender to sell you a loan. The practice is perfectly legal.
It's also controversial. Critics complain that brokers looking for a fat check from a lender can lead consumers into unnecessarily pricey loans.
"One thing that consumers need to understand is that a broker's interest is not always aligned with theirs," said Ira Rheingold, general counsel with the National Association of Consumer Advocates. "You need to be very wary. Despite what the broker may say about getting the best loan for you."
Here's how mortgage brokers get paid: They can get a fee from you. Brokers can also collect a premium from a lender that is based on the rate of the loan — the higher the rate the more they make.And that's where the trouble begins, consumer advocates say. Brokers describe themselves as independent contractors, meaning that they provide services to consumers, as well as lenders. Critics charge that brokers sometimes push a pricey product to pocket higher fees.Borrowers don't need to despair, though. Experts say there are ways to make sure you're getting a good deal from your mortgage broker.
1. Do your homework
Some fees and rates are negotiable — so don't say yes to the first deal you hear.
"My first advice would be to shop around. Check with a variety of lenders," said L. Jean Noonan, a partner at law firm Hudson Cook and former associate director for credit practices in the Federal Trade Commission's consumer protection bureau.
Also, consumers should be wary if their broker is offering a nontraditional mortgage that doesn't require full documentation of income and assets.
"Those mortgages almost always carry a high interest rate, and the consumer should be very sure that that's the right mortgage for them," Noonan said. "If they are able to document their income and assets, it's almost always worth doing that and getting a more favorable rate.
"It's important to understand all of the fees, as well as the interest rate, associated with a loan."
An inexperienced or fast-talking broker may not explain it well. A good broker understands his business is largely referral business, and unhappy customers don't give referrals," Noonan said.
2. Bring a buddy
Get help from someone you trust — other than the broker.
"It's fine to bring someone with you who can help stand up for you if you're feeling pressured," Noonan said.
The key is to ask for help from someone who isn't getting paid. You can turn to a home-ownership counselor, or friends and family with professional expertise or at least experience in real estate."Consumers should not rely on brokers, when all is said and done, to find them the best loan to take. They ought to turn to experienced professionals who can give them candid and informed advice," said Allen Fishbein, director of housing and credit policy at the Consumer Federation of America.
3. Don't be shy
It's important to ask questions, experts agree.
"You want to look for the loans that best meet your needs and budget," said Carole Reynolds, a senior attorney with the Federal Trade Commission's financial practices division.
You need to know whether the loan has a fixed or adjustable interest rate, whether it includes a balloon payment, and how soon you could face an interest-rate adjustment.
"You should understand these points before you become obligated because otherwise you may end up in a mortgage that is not truly right for you and that can lead to a payment shock," Reynolds said.And, perhaps most important: Be wary of terms such as "no cost" and "no fees."
"You really need to look into the loan," Reynolds said. "You should be comfortable and understand the terms before you sign."
4. Don't sign under pressure
Take a deep breath, and remember that you are in charge of choosing the best mortgage for yourself.
"When brokers use high-pressure tactics, if a broker presses them to sign a contract, that should be a telltale sign that this broker is someone they should be wary of," Fishbein said.
Don't sign a contract you don't understand just to get the process over with.
"You are paying for settlement services and you shouldn't sign the papers and leave before you understand everything," Noonan said. "Don't rush to the settlement. When a purchase is hanging in the balance, they can still walk away but it is much harder to do. There's a time pressure to close by a certain date."
It's easy to be intimated at a closing. After all, there are many pages of loan documents to review, and some of the language is cryptic or in small type.
"They may feel that they are slowing things down, or they appear dumb if they ask questions," Noonan said. But don't let fear get the better of you when it comes time to choose a loan.
5. Know the score
Before you enter negotiations, look at your credit score. That way you can research loans ahead of time and find out what sort of rates you qualify for. You can get the information from an array of Web sites.
Also, credit scores can be wrong."If you see problems with your credit report, you need to get that fixed," Rheingold said.
Ruth Mantell is a MarketWatch reporter based in Washington.RISMedia welcomes your questions and comments. Send your e-mail to: realestatemagazinefeedback@rismedia.com.
Friday, June 08, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
The State of the Market
The Washington Post
Saturday, June 2, 2007; F23
Over the past two weeks, I have explained that the immediate cause of turmoil in the subprime market has been the halt in house price appreciation and that the underlying cause has been a myopic tendency by lenders to make loans that worked only if prices continually rose. What's the state of the market now?
The pain is uneven. The dozens of subprime lenders that have failed have garnered little sympathy. Put simply, they gambled and lost. Some borrowers fall in that category as well because they were trying to profit from house price appreciation. Instead, they face foreclosure.
Investors in securities issued against pools of subprime mortgages have also felt pain as the market value of these securities has declined. Lehman Brothers estimates the decline at $19 billion. Most of it is concentrated among the riskiest securities, which promised the highest yields. (Few tears are being shed for those investors, either.) Securities rated AAA, which are first in line to be repaid and last in line to take losses, have been hurt very little.
Mortgage brokers have not been significantly affected. A few have lost access to subprime lenders, but most have been able to replace defunct lenders with other lenders.
The big losers are those borrowers who, as unwitting victims of hype and deception, took out mortgages that were unworkable if house prices stopped rising. Now, with values stagnant, many of these borrowers are waiting for the next shoe to drop. They have adjustable-rate mortgages on which the rate will reset to a much higher level.
The subprime market remains open. This is the good news, and it should not be taken for granted. When the international banking crisis erupted in the early 1980s, the market adjustment stretched over a decade, during which there was almost no new lending.
The subprime lenders who remain are the more cautious ones. They are also more likely to be affiliated with other firms with deep pockets, which will help them ride out future market disturbances.
Of course, the profit potential in subprime lending is not what it was. Investors require a higher yield than before, especially on the riskiest securities. This has caused tightening of underwriting requirements, which has effectively lopped off the riskiest segment of the market.
Underwriting requirements are more restrictive. Underwriting requirements are the conditions that borrowers must meet to be eligible for a loan. They are significantly more restrictive now than they were a year ago. One of the most important shifts is the near-disappearance of the 100 percent (no-down-payment) loan.
Periodically, I receive an advertisement from a subprime wholesale lender rep advertising what is available from his firm. (He thinks I am a mortgage broker.) One came to me on April 19, showing that a borrower with a credit score of 620 (which is low) could qualify for a loan of $650,000 with a down payment of 10 percent. In my records, I found a message from the same rep dated June 20, 2006. At that time, he was offering the borrower with a 620 score a loan of $1 million with nothing down.
The 2006 offer was insane, a product of the euphoria created by steadily rising real estate prices. The current rules are no longer based on the inevitability of rising prices.
The prospects for some are poor. If house prices begin to rise again this year, the problems of the subprime market will go away. In 1998 and 1999, we had a similar episode, in which as many as 20 subprime lenders failed. But in 2000, house prices took off, the problems disappeared and few people today even remember the episode.
This time, however, the prospects for a quick revival of house price appreciation are poor. A further weakening is much more likely. Under these conditions, there is an ominous cloud on the horizon: Subprime borrowers who took out 2/28 ARMs in 2005 and 2006 will have their interest rates and payments reset to much higher levels this year and next. A significant number will not be able to make the new payments and won't be able to refinance because the equity in their houses is not sufficient to meet the new underwriting requirements. They will face foreclosure.
Next Saturday, I will discuss what if anything should be done about that.
Jack Guttentag is professor of finance emeritus at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. He can be contacted through his Web site, http://www.mtgprofessor.com.
Copyright 2007, Jack Guttentag
Distributed by Inman News Features
Thursday, May 31, 2007
Area Home Price Appreciation Ahead of National Average
by Jeff Clabaugh
Staff Reporter
The latest report on housing prices comes from the federal government, and it shows that price gains in Maryland, Virginia and D.C. have outpaced the national average.
The Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight says prices in the first quarter were up an average of 4.3 percent from a year earlier, the slowest pace in 10 years.
But Maryland posted average price increases of 6.37 percent from a year ago and 0.46 percent from the previous quarter. The District had an annual gain of 5.91 percent and a quarterly gain of 0.5 percent. Virginia's increases were 5.42 percent and 0.68 percent.
Compared with other states, Maryland had the 18th strongest gain. The District ranked 20th and Virginia 24th.
The OFHEO does not include actual prices in its quarterly report, only percent changes.
"As always, real estate prices are local with seven states showing double-digit annual appreciation rates and seven with rates of less than 2 percent," said OFHEO director James Lockhart. "Seven states, including California and Florida, also showed home price depreciation in the first quarter."
When price appreciation is measured by metropolitan area, Washington records a 3.65 percent rise in the past year.
Two separate reports this month paint different pictures of Washington-area home prices. An S&P/Case-Shiller report released earlier this week said median prices in Washington are down 4.8 percent in the last year. The National Association of Realtors said earlier this month that Washington-area home prices were 1.2 percent above year-ago levels in the first quarter.
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
Friday, May 25, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
Thursday, May 17, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Ok, I know you're probably not planning on moving this very second, but here's this week's list of interesting-looking listings that have just come on the market. Mind you, they may not actually be my personal listings --- just intriguing properties I've come across that week.
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
District Home Sales Jump in First Quarter
Washington Business JournalTuesday, May 15, 2007
by Jeff Clabaugh Staff Reporter
Home sales in the first quarter were down 6.6 percent from a year ago nationally, but sales of existing homes in the District jumped 9.3 percent, the second biggest increase in the country.
A quarterly report from the National Association of Realtors also says Washington-area home prices rose a modest 1.2 percent from year-ago levels, while nationally, median home prices fell 1.8 percent to a two-year low. Prices fell in almost half the U.S. cities listed in the NAR report.
The median price of an existing home in the Washington area was $427,800 last quarter, compared with $422,800 a year ago.
The biggest gain in year-over-year median prices was in Cumberland, Md., up 17.1 percent, to $100,000.
Sales in the District were outpaced only by a 20 percent gain in Wyoming, but sales were down 5.7 percent from a year ago in Virginia and down 10 percent in Maryland.
While the numbers look better locally than they do nationally, the National Association of Realtors said the report shows a broad stabilization in the housing market.
"It appears the worst of the price correction is behind us," said NAR President Pat Combs. "More stable home prices and declining mortgage interest rates are increasing buying power, which should encourage potential buyers who've been on the sidelines."
The most expensive market in the nation last quarter was San Jose, Calif., with a median home price of $788,000. The cheapest market was Elmira, N.Y., at $75,300.
Thursday, May 10, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
Military Moves Swell Populations in 11 States
Eleven states are getting additional troops — Alabama, Colorado, Georgia, Kansas, Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Texas, and Virginia. The population boost will create a need for everything from housing, roads, and schools to services like pizza parlors and dry cleaners.
The Fort Meade area of Maryland expects the troop shifts to generate 22,000 federal and private-sector jobs. Fayetteville, N.C., home of Fort Bragg, expects up to 25,000 new residents.
Columbus, Ga., Mayor Jim Wetherington met recently with the City Council to discuss a bond issue for roads and other needs, such as water and sewers, as Fort Benning anticipates possibly doubling its population.
"This is going to be a pretty big deal for us," Wetherington says. "We think we're going to be ready, but we've got a lot of work to do."
Source: USA Today, Larry Copeland (05/08/07)
Thursday, May 03, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
Tuesday, May 01, 2007
Noise a Top Consideration for Condominium Buyers
For condo buyers, particularly those exchanging suburban quiet for urban hubbub, what they hear or don’t hear can make a difference in quality of life after they move in, says Mike Komula, an acoustician with Dudek, a California environmental consulting firm that helps builders assess the acoustic qualities of new buildings.
To help buyers learn what living there will be like before they sign a contract, Komula offers the following tips:
Make some noise in an adjacent unit. Have a companion turn on a radio, flush toilets, walk along the floors, and turn on bath and sink taps. Plumbing noise can be an issue when pipes are too small or transmit vibrations through the walls, he says. Check the layout of the floors in multistory buildings. See if compatible rooms are stacked. For example, rather than a kitchen or bath you want another bedroom above your bedroom. Look for dual-paned windows. Dual panes absorb more sounds. “Thicker panes and a wider air gap between the panes will increase sound reduction,” he says. Swap hollow interior doors for solid-core doors.
Quiet Construction
Builders are becoming increasingly cognizant of noise, and they know that “managing noise makes their multifamily projects more attractive to buyers,” says Komula. He recommends asking the builder, if possible, about construction details that enhance noise reduction.
Are the shared walls double walls? Two, rather than one 2 x 4 foot stud wall absorbs more noise by creating an air gap and separating the walls.
How many layers of drywall are on each side? Two layers absorb more noise than one.Do walls and ceilings use resilient metal channels that act as shock absorbers? Does the floor have a lightweight layer of concrete on the top? This adds mass, reducing the transmission of airborne and impact noise.
Additionally, Komula suggests buyers ask about the Sound Transmission Class rating for walls between units and levels, floor-ceiling construction, between units. Most states include a rating in their building codes. California’s minimum is 50. An STC rating of 65 indicates a very high quality in terms of noise reduction.
— By Camilla McLaughlin for REALTOR Magazine Online, April 27, 2007
Friday, April 27, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
Top 10 List of Defects Found During Home Inspections
Recently, we've had a lot of home inspecions that have uncovered problems many of our buyers have never even considered. We often reccomend using US Inspect (www.USInspect.com) and they have a TOP 10 List of Defects commonly found during home inspections, here they are:
Top 10 Defects
Knowing what some of the usual situations our consultants discover during an inspection allows you to be a well-informed buyer. Over the years, and borrowing on over a half million inspections, here’s what we’ve discovered as the top 10 defects in most homes. Repair and replacement costs for such items could cost you thousands of dollars!
1. Roof leaks due to flashing and valley problems
2. Water penetration in the basement or crawlspace due to the surface water conditions
3. Electrical safety issues due to age of home
4. Deterioration of the wall material or substrate behind ceramic tile in shower and tub areas
5. Roof material failure due to age and deterioration
6. Heating unit and distribution system inequities due to age and workmanship or system compromises
7. Structural issues due to improper construction and/or alterations, or excessive unbalanced load (ie. Failing concrete block foundation wall)
8. Fire safety issues related to fireplace chimneys
9. Termite and other wood destroying organisms due the local environment and conducive conditions
10. On-site waste (septic) system failures usually due to lack of maintenance
U.S. Inspect strongly encourages home buyers to attend the inspection with our consultants. In our 2 to 3-hour walking consultation, you’ll learn all about your new home—first-hand information about the condition of the property, how the house operates, where the main shut-off valves to the utilities are located, and much more. And if defects are discovered during the inspection, we’ll explain the possible cause as well as your options to have those defects corrected.
Thursday, April 19, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
Buyers in Charge: 4 Strategies
By George Mannes, Money Magazine senior writer
April 12 2007: 8:54 AM EDT
NEW YORK (Money Magazine) -- You'll find no better experts on the real estate boom and bust than Joyce and Louis Bertulfo.
Between 2004 and 2006 the couple successfully navigated a hot San Jose housing market, buying and selling two homes for a profit.
By the time they relocated to Tampa with their three children this January, however, the winds had shifted. The pace of home sales in the area had fallen by 40 percent from a year earlier. Prices were already softening.
So Joyce, 32, and Louis, 33, spent weeks looking for just what they wanted (four bedrooms, three full baths and a three-car garage), adopting a decidedly more philosophical mind-set.
"We said, 'If this one doesn't work out, we'll find another house,'" says Joyce. When they saw the ideal home, they bargained hard. The house they finally bought, originally listed at $539,000, had been marked down to $479,000.
Still, the couple offered $410,000, 14 percent below the asking price. The sellers countered with $465,000. A few rounds later they met at $430,000.
"Now that we've settled in, we're just ecstatic," says Joyce.
Welcome to real estate's new reality, where prices are down, foreclosures are up, experts are jittery, and a lot of for sale signs are getting weather-beaten.
That may be bad news for homeowners, sellers and investors. Buyers on the other hand, have a rare point of advantage.
"We don't often have a buyer's market like we have now," says Ned Marrs, a longtime broker in Colorado Springs. "Every decade it happens for a year if we're lucky. Then it's a seller's market for another nine years."
Gene Trinks, 35, moved to the San Francisco Bay area in 2002, but the engineer couldn't bring himself to buy a house in that frenzied atmosphere. "People were just overbidding wildly," he says. "There was a danger of paying too much without regard for what a house is really worth."
In January, though, he and his girlfriend closed on a four-bedroom home in Oakland, paying $880,000 for a house originally listed at $979,000.
"We were the only offer, we bid below ask, and they accepted without any counters, which is a great position to be in as a buyer," says Trinks. "We could be a little bit more in control of the process."
As a buyer, you now have plenty of choice, as well as the upper hand in negotiations. You also still have the benefit of low interest rates. If you're tempted to upgrade yet worry that your home isn't worth what it was six months ago, keep in mind that the home you want to buy is worth less too.
Moreover, if prices have fallen at the same rate on all homes in your market, the discount, measured in dollars, will be bigger for a more expensive house.
Say you're in a $200,000 home and want to move up to a $500,000 home. Your cost of upgrading will be $300,000.
But if prices drop 10 percent, your current house is worth $180,000; the one you've got your eye on is worth $450,000. Cost to upgrade: $270,000.
Last fall Vinse and Kathryn Sullivan, 29 and 28, of Charleston, S.C., decided they wanted to move from their 2,000 square-foot home in the western part of the city to a larger one on the north side, putting them closer to Vinse's pharmaceutical-sales territory and giving them more space for their son Carter, 2, and daughter Kate, now nine months old. They listed their home, which they bought in 2003 for $215,000, for $358,000, and they expect to spend as much as $500,000 for a four-bedroom house with a home office.
Once they sell, the Sullivans are confident they can trade up. "I know I can pay the bills on a bigger house," says Vinse, "and at the end of the day, that's all that matters."
Vinse has that right. You can't be sure that a house you buy today won't lose more value before prices recover, but if you can pay well below what sellers were getting last year, you've already built in a comfortable cushion against price drops.
For extra protection, buy only if you can make a 10 percent to 20 percent down payment and heed the lessons from the current mortgage madness: Adjustable rates do adjust, and when you're paying interest-only, eventually you will have to pay the principal as well.
Can't afford to buy the home you want at today's fixed rates? Keep renting or look at cheaper homes. Once you jump into the market, follow these tips to make the most of your powerful position.
Free yourself to act fast Buying may be easy, but selling isn't, so you have to guard against getting stuck with two mortgages. The best way to avoid that trap is simply to sell first.
That's what Veronica and Maxwell Green, both 28, did last year after the birth of their baby. Realizing they were outgrowing their two-bedroom Tampa condo, they were desperate to find a bigger place. But they held off on house hunting until they had a sales contract on their condo.
"We didn't look. We didn't research. We didn't do anything," says Veronica. "We didn't want to find something we loved and not be able to sell our house."
Freed of their condo, they bid $275,000 for a four-bedroom home listed for $289,900. Two weeks later the seller took the offer.
Another option is to include a contingency clause in your purchase contract, which lets you exit the deal on your new home if you can't sell your old one. Shortly after the Sullivans put their home up for sale, they signed a contract to buy a newly built one but added a clause that they could bail on the deal if their home didn't sell by the time the new house was finished.
It didn't, but their only loss was $800 they paid for upgrades to the new house, which the developer subsequently sold. "Lesson learned," says Vinse. "I'm not losing sleep over it."
Know how strong you are The longer a house has been for sale, the more powerful your position as a bidder. "Time on market is a good indication that someone is likely to be really hungry," says Gary Eldred, author of "The 106 Common Mistakes Homebuyers Make (and How to Avoid Them)."
If you're browsing a public multiple-listing service, don't trust the date of that listing; sellers can game the system by briefly taking a home off the market, then re-listing it.
Ask your broker to look at the privileged MLS data, which details a home's full listing history, complete with time on market and any asking-price changes.
Pick allies carefully You can often hire an agent who works exclusively on your behalf. Typically, these buyer's brokers earn a 3% commission, usually paid by the seller (though if you buy from a seller using a discount broker, you may have to make up the difference).
Keep in mind that buyer's brokers, who theoretically work just for you, may have a financial incentive to push certain homes. In some markets builders and even individual sellers are offering higher-than-usual commissions to buyer's brokers, which can tempt your pro to skimp on negotiations or steer you to more costly houses.
Hire a broker who will work for a set fee or will sign a contract stipulating that his or her cut will be the same for any home you buy.
Wield your power If you see a house you like, chances are you can find another one that is similar. Exploit that advantage. Make demands you never would have dared ask for in crazier times, such as requiring the seller to make repairs or the builder to throw in free upgrades.
Sellers may be trying to make what their neighbors made two years ago, but they're too late, says broker Marrs.
Don't be afraid to start with an offer that's 15 percent below asking price.
In February, Joyce and Louis Bertulfo passed on a house over a $5,000 difference between their offer and the seller's. Where is it now? Still on the market, with the advertised asking price cut from $475,000 to $440,000, just $5,000 above their best offer.
Joyce's expert advice to sellers: "Buyers are scarce these days, so when you find some, don't let them go - especially over $5,000."
Thursday, April 12, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
Monday, April 09, 2007
Looser Lending Had Upside: New Homeowners
But at the same time, looser lending standards for more traditional kinds of loans permitted millions of Americans to buy homes in recent years ... and keep them. Some economists see that as a major achievement.
To hear this entire report, please visit: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=9469959
by Chris Arnold
Thursday, April 05, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Ok, I know you're probably not planning on moving this very second, but here's this week's list of interesting-looking listings that have just come on the market. Mind you, they may not actually be my personal listings --- just intriguing properties I've come across that week.
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
Friday, March 30, 2007
Growing Number of U.S. States Mull Mortgage Refinance By Gilbert Le Gras
A growing number of state housing agencies are developing or considering issuing bonds to assist subprime mortgage holders to refinance their obligations at fixed rates, officials at housing agencies said on Tuesday.
The Ohio Housing Finance Agency intends to launch a refinance program on April 2 to accept applications from lenders. That program would be funded by taxable bonds issued probably later that same month in an amount likely around $100 million, said Bob Connell, director of debt management for the agency.
The aim is to allow low- to moderate-income mortgage holders who have not entered the foreclosure process to refinance their mortgages at a fixed rate likely around 6.75 percent, Connell said.
A U.S. Treasury official said the tax code places limits on such issuances through a series of "volume cap" rules.
Other states are implementing, drafting or considering similar measures.
"Maryland has had a similar refinancing program for subprime mortgages for the last few months," said Garth Rieman, director of housing advocacy at the National Council of State Housing Agencies.
Officials at Maryland's Department of Housing and Community Development were not immediately available for comment.
In recent weeks, financial markets have been shaken by increasing delinquencies among subprime mortgages offered to borrowers with damaged credit. This has triggered concerns that the fallout may spread to mainstream lenders and damage the U.S. economy. For more on subprime mortgage markets, please see:
Rhode Island, Massachusetts and Virginia are now "running or developing similar programs and are further along than other states," Rieman added.
Colorado, California, Washington and Wisconsin, meanwhile, have been inquiring about the details of such refinancing programs, Rieman said.
Indiana, meanwhile, is about to open a hotline to help homeowners facing foreclosure and is offering referrals to advisors who are able to assist with loss mitigation, while the state legislature is considering a bill that includes a public awareness campaign.
"We are not currently offering such a (refinancing) program," Indiana Housing and Community Development Authority spokeswoman Amber Seidler said.
"Tax exempt bonds are, pursuant to the IRS (U.S. Internal Revenue Service) Code, limited to being used to fund new mortgages, not refinancings," she added.
"A couple of other states have set up pilot programs utilizing taxable bonds to target subprime borrowers, but they are very new and we have not reached that stage of having a program ready to offer," Seidler said.
Copyright © 2007 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.
Thursday, March 29, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
Major Changes to the Seller’s Disclosures in DC
New Requirements Govern Seller's Disclosure in the District
By Benny L. Kass
Saturday, March 24, 2007; F07
Q: I am a real estate broker in the District. I understand that effective Feb. 9, we have been required to provide potential home buyers with a new Seller's Disclosure Statement, and that once a buyer gets that statement, they have the right to cancel their sales contract by giving written notice to the seller no later than five days after receipt of the form.
Here's my problem: On Jan. 20, I obtained a listing agreement from a seller and was fortunate to get a full-price contract on Feb. 4. The contract purchaser was provided with the Seller Disclosure Statement then in existence.
The buyer has not gone to settlement yet. Must I provide the new form to that purchaser? I am concerned that the purchaser may get buyer's remorse and use the new form as an excuse to terminate the contract.
A On Feb. 9, the D.C. Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs published a revised Seller's Disclosure Statement in the D.C. Register, which means that the requirement to provide the new form became effective that day.
First, I have to correct one of your statements. According to the regulations promulgated by the District (17 DCMR Chapter 27, ?2708.13), "the Seller, not the broker and not the management company, condominium, cooperative or homeowners association" is required to complete the form.
If the property in question consists of one to four residential units and the transaction involves a sale, exchange, installment land sale, a lease with an option to purchase or any other option to purchase, the disclosure form must be provided to a potential buyer. The purchaser must express an interest, in writing, in residing in the property in question. This requirement will normally be met in the sales contract itself.
The disclosure requirement does not apply in the following situations:
Court-ordered transfer.
Foreclosure sale.
Transfer by a fiduciary (such as a personal representative, guardian or conservator) if the person conveying the property was not personally occupying it.
Transfer between parents and children, or from one spouse to another.
Sale of a newly constructed property that has never been lived in.
Generally, the disclosure statement must be provided to a potential purchaser in all other circumstances.
Although the new form contains more detailed information about the property, it is easier to read than the previous one and is more logical. It consists of many subtopics broken down in four general areas: structural condition, operating condition of property systems, appliances and fixtures, and exterior and environmental issues. For all practical purposes, however, the substance is the same.
What rights does a potential buyer have under the law?
When the buyer is given the disclosure statement, he has five calendar days in which to terminate the sales contract by giving written notice to the seller. However, this right to terminate is waived if not exercised before:
The buyer applies for a mortgage loan and the lender discloses in writing that the right to rescind will terminate when the loan application is made.
Settlement on the property takes place.
The person with a lease with an option to purchase begins to occupy the property.
The seller of a condominium unit, cooperative apartment or a house in a homeowners association is obligated to disclose information as to the unit or house only, not the common elements or areas outside of the property being sold.
Can a buyer rely on the disclosures provided by the seller? That's a legal question that the courts in the District have not yet addressed. The form specifically states, "This statement is not a warranty of any kind by the seller or by any agent representing the seller in this transaction, and is not a substitute for any inspections or warranties the buyer may wish to obtain."
Nevertheless, the statement is a disclosure by the seller of the defects or information actually known by the seller. Thus, while all buyers should obtain an independent home inspection and make their sales contract contingent upon receiving a favorable inspection report, the fact remains that if the seller makes material misstatements or omissions in the disclosure form, the buyer may have a legal case.
You asked whether the new disclosure form should be provided to contract purchasers, even though they have already received the old form. Connie Maffin, who heads the D.C. Real Estate Board, told me that she is "encouraging everyone to immediately use the new form on new and existing listings."
According to Maffin, the law is in effect, and although the board will not immediately enforce violations in the immediate future, sellers are required to honor the law.
Does this mean that a buyer who receives a second form has another chance to terminate the contract? That is another legal issue that has no definitive answer. Because the new disclosure statement is substantially similar in content to the old form, and because the potential buyer already had the opportunity to cancel when he received the older form, a strong argument could be made that the court will not permit the termination. Sellers and buyers should consult their own counsel for more specific legal advice.
Benny L. Kass is a Washington lawyer. For a free copy of the booklet "A Guide to Settlement on Your New Home," send a self-addressed stamped envelope to Benny L. Kass, Suite 1100, 1050 17th St. NW, Washington, D.C. 20036. Readers may also send questions to him at that address or contact him through his Web site, http://www.kmklawyers.com
Friday, March 23, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
Thursday, March 15, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Ok, I know you're probably not planning on moving this very second, but here's this week's list of interesting-looking listings that have just come on the market. Mind you, they may not actually be my personal listings --- just intriguing properties I've come across that week.
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
D.C. Officials Look To Help Homeowners Keep Homes
Inday Williams said an inflated mortgage led to $8,000 in missed payments on his home, leading to a threatened foreclosure if he did not come up with the money in 30 days.
Williams said that's when he turned to someone that had contacted him, promising to loan him the $8,000 and allowing Williams to keep his home.
Williams said it wasn't until he tried to repay the loan that he realized that he had been the victim of a bait-and-switch scam and he no longer owned his house.
Experts said foreclosures are at their highest rate in 40 years. Last year, the District had 2,900 foreclosures, officials said. By February of this year, the city already had 700, experts said, on pace to a record.
As property appreciates and increasing numbers of subprime loans go to unqualified buyers, experts said, foreclosures will continue to rise and scam artists will find fertile ground to snatch equity or property.
District officials said they are now looking to create legislation that would tighten protection for homeowners.
source: nbc4.com
Thursday, March 08, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
Don't Forget to 'Spring Forward' One Hour this Weekend!
Check your PC and other systems to make sure they update properly on Sunday due to the above change.
The legislative change also modifies when Daylight Savings ends. It will now end on the first Sunday in November (November 4th) instead of October 28th.
Thursday, March 01, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
Tuesday, February 27, 2007
What You Should Know about Homeowner's Insurance
By Mesha Pittman, Long & Foster Insurance Sales Agent
Q: Is there more than one type of homeowner's insurance policy?
A: There are different types of insurance policies that provide different levels of coverage offered by a variety of companies. Some policies only cover your assets at an "Actual Cash Value" which is depreciated over time. Other's provide "Replacement Cost", based on today's cost. While others may provide an "Extended Replacement Cost" which will give you additional coverage as the value of your assets appreciate over time. To assure you are protected, talk to a professional insurance agent to discuss your specific coverage needs.
Q: How much coverage do I need for my home?
A: The amount of coverage you need is based on the amount it would cost the insurance company to repair or rebuild your home should it suffer a covered loss. This amount may differ from the purchase price as it is based on materials and labor, not current market value.
Q: Does my homeowner's policy cover my personal property outside of the home?
A: Personal property owned or used by an insured is covered while it is anywhere in the world; however, certain classes of property are specifically excluded or have special limits of liability that are lower than the overall policy limits for certain types of losses such as theft.
Q: What procedures are used to process a homeowner's insurance claim?
A: Once a claim is filed, a claim adjustor or representative will inspect the loss, determine if there is coverage for the loss, estimate what it would cost to indemnify the claimant, then pay for the loss as it is covered by the policy.
For more information about Long and Foster Insurance, Click Here.
Thursday, February 22, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
Tuesday, February 20, 2007
The Good Enough House
By Dan Rafter
Special to The Washington Post
Saturday, February 17, 2007; F01
Jeff Wynne looked at more than 30 houses before he finally purchased his Colonial in Chevy Chase.
And even that one had not been an instant hit. Wynne toured the house at least five times -- with so many houses, his memory is a bit fuzzy -- before making an offer in late 2004.
Why so much debate? Two factors about his new home bothered him so much that he was almost willing to forgo all the positives, which included a great neighborhood, dream kitchen, 10-foot ceilings, stellar floor plan and loads of amenities. The problems? The house had no garage and barely any back yard.
Few people are fortunate enough to find their ideal home, that one residence that has everything they want and nothing they don't.
More often, buyers find a house that is perfect in many ways. It may sit in an ideal neighborhood, be close to good schools and boast the right number of rooms. But there might be an in-ground swimming pool in the back yard and the buyers don't swim and don't want the hassles of maintenance. Maybe there's a huge wet bar in the basement and the buyers haven't had a drink in years. Maybe there's a mother-in-law suite that serves no purpose.
In such cases, buyers face a decision: Do they purchase the house anyway and ignore the items they don't like, remove them or find another use for them? Or do they continue their search?
The answer depends on whether buyers are willing to overlook one negative for all the positives. And it's what Wynne had to ask himself: Did the good things about the house outweigh the two problems?
He struggled to picture his three children squeezing all their outdoor fun into the sliver of a yard. He struggled, too, to imagine himself happily scraping ice off a car parked in a driveway instead of tucked inside a garage.
But after seeing so many houses, Wynne realized one thing: No place is perfect. This house, despite its problems, was a far better value than any of the others he had toured.
So Wynne decided to live with a small back yard and no garage.
"I'm very happy here," he said. "It's a great place for my kids to be, too. The neighborhood is wonderful. Yes, I had to sacrifice something I thought I wanted. But, as it turns out, that hasn't been too much of a sacrifice at all." After all, winters here aren't all that long, and modern kids spend more time in supervised activities than they do running around the back yard.
Other buyers, though, might have passed on the house. The key, agents say, is for buyers to understand which negatives they can live with and which they cannot.
"There is almost always something about the house that isn't 100 percent what you want," said Melinda Estridge, a real estate agent with the Bethesda office of Long & Foster. "When you're dealing with couples, very few times will both buyers absolutely love it. There is always something they'll have to give on, one way or the other. For some, it's storage space. Others, it's the kitchen. To please everyone, there are always going to be compromises."
Sellers can make the process easier by providing potential buyers with the information they need to make an informed decision. If a buyer loves a house but hates its in-ground pool, the seller may provide the buyers with the names of contractors who fill in unwanted pools.
The buyer then has an idea of what such a project would cost and can plan to fill in the pool after buying the residence, request that the sellers handle it before the sale or simply pass on the home and continue searching.
Buyers may also conclude that a home is a bargain even with problems. "They might decide that the home is a good enough value that they'd be willing to overlook or work to change those features they don't really like," said Ethel Mayer, a real estate agent with the Bethesda Gateway office of Long & Foster.
There are certain features of a house that can't ever be changed. These are mostly location issues: A house sits on a busy street. Railroad tracks run past the back yard. But many other features can be changed easily. That bar in the basement can disappear with a call or two to a contractor, for instance.
If a house offers enough positive features and is priced reasonably, buyers rarely allow a curable defect to prevent them from making an offer, said Reid Butterfield, a real estate agent with the Bethesda office of Re/Max Realty Services.
But negatives can make a difference when buyers are debating between two similar homes. Here's an example from Butterfield: Buyers find a house they like in all ways except for one. They want a master bedroom on the main level, and all the bedrooms are on the second floor.
Say these buyers then find a house that does have a bedroom on the first floor. The home's other amenities, its kitchen, bathrooms and finishes, aren't quite as nice as those of the first house. But because of the ground-floor bedroom, the buyers decide to sink their money into this residence instead of the other.
"Most of the people buying houses in this area, especially, are a pretty savvy bunch," Butterfield said. "They know what they want when they see it. There are certain features that they won't like, and will influence them to look elsewhere."
One such feature may be a pool. There are a lot of buyers who have absolutely no desire to deal with one.
"I've found that it's much better to have a friend or neighbor with a pool than to have one yourself, especially when you're selling your house," Butterfield said. "There are people who won't even look at a house with a pool."
Charlotte Peyton has been dealing with this issue for a few weeks.
Peyton put her home in McLean on the market early this month. She's confident that the house has enough strengths, and is priced well enough, to attract interest. However, it does have a pool, and that may be a problem.
The pool, which drops to six feet deep, was there when Peyton bought the house a little more than three years ago. At the time she didn't want it, but she, her husband and her children have since learned to love it. Maintenance hasn't been much of a burden, she said.
But she is aware that many buyers have no interest in a pool. She has obtained an estimate for how much it would cost to fill in -- about $6,500 -- and is now debating whether she should simply pay to fill it in herself or provide the estimate during showings so that would-be buyers can have the information.
"I don't want people to think it will cost $40,000 to fill it in," Peyton said. "If they find out it's under $10,000, maybe they'll be more willing to deal with it. Or maybe we'll just find a buyer who really does want a pool. You never know. It'd be a shame to fill in the pool. It's really a nice pool."
Harry Brubaker, a real estate agent with ZipRealty in McLean, recently worked with a couple who toured several houses around the region. They finally found a house in Arlington that they liked -- mostly.
The home was in a nice neighborhood, was close to good schools, had nice features and was near both of the buyers' jobs.
There was only one problem: an extensive mother-in-law suite with a separate kitchen and its own entrance. The buyers had no interest in a separate suite and could think of it only as wasted space.
After much thought, the couple decided to buy the house -- its upside outweighed its one negative. Instead they will renovate to turn the mother-in-law suite into a play area and recreation room for themselves and their children.
In many cases, Brubaker said, buyers will overcome an objection if the rest of the house works. Inevitably, he said, people are creative enough to envision the home without the objectionable feature.
"We basically looked at the pros and cons of all the houses we had seen that day," Brubaker said of his clients. "They decided that the mother-in-law suite was something they could overlook for the time being. They could work with it in the future, they decided. And, not more than a couple of months after they bought the house, that's exactly what they decided to do."
Thursday, February 15, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
Thursday, February 08, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Ok, I know you're probably not planning on moving this very second, but here's this week's list of interesting-looking listings that have just come on the market. Mind you, they may not actually be my personal listings --- just intriguing properties I've come across that week.
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
Thursday, February 01, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
Thursday, January 25, 2007
Instant home alarm!
having one installed and worry about our safety, there's a very
inexpensive alternative! We forget about a very simple device that most
of us already own and could save our lives. Keep your car key chain next
to your bed at night. If you have a thief or other person breaking in,
click the panic button on your key chain setting off your car honking
loudly outside your house or in your garage. Everyone in the
neighborhood will be alerted. Either the person breaking in will be
scared off or the car will keep honking until you shut it off or the
neighbors call the police and come to your aid.
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
Tuesday, January 23, 2007
And you thought prices in DC were too high!
By RAPHAEL G. SATTER, Associated Press
Location, location, location. Almost anywhere else, the tiny dilapidated studio wouldn't attract much more than mice. But this is London and the 77-square-foot former storage room — slightly bigger than a prison cell and without electricity — is going for $335,000.
The closet-sized space in the exclusive Knightsbridge neighborhood may be only "about the size of a ship's galley, said real estate agent Andrew Scott, who's handling the sale. "But it's permanently anchored to one of the wealthiest neighborhoods in the world."
At more than $4,340 a square foot, the mortgage buys a spot within walking distance of tony stores like Harrods and London's iconic Hyde Park. Originally conceived as a maid's room, the apartment at 18 Cadogan Place hasn't been used for years and is littered with trash bags and crumbling paint.
A coffin-sized shower is en suite, and storage is provided by a shallow closet and 10-inch-deep shelves cut into the wall. Two hot plates and a small sink make up the kitchen. Two dirty windows allow light to filter into the basement room, and the fire escape could conceivably double as a shared patio.
With no electricity or heating, Scott said it would cost an additional $59,000 to make the room habitable.
"It is an investment," he said, as he stretched his arms the width of the room, laying his palms flat on opposite sides of the wall.
The sale of this dark, mildewy room illustrates the astronomical rise in property values across London, which in the past year has seen average residential property prices increase 22.4 percent, to about $703,000, according to figures released Monday by Rightmove, which tracks the British property market.
Prices in London's most desirable neighborhoods have grown even faster, with average house prices in the borough of Kensington and Chelsea — where Cadogan Place is located — rising 61.8 percent over the past year to a jaw-dropping $2.2 million.
Ultra high-end property prices in London are the most expensive in the world, with some recent sales hitting $5,900 per square foot — making the Cadogan Place studio a bargain by comparison, according to research published last year by CB Richard Ellis Group Inc.
Similar properties in New York can go for about $5,300 per square foot, while those in Hong Kong sell at around $3,950 per square foot.
Scott said he already had three offers on the property, which might go to auction. Size, he added, is in the "eye of the beholder."
"If you thought of this as the cabin on a boat, you'd say, 'It's pretty spacious,' " Scott said.
Judge: Seinfeld to Pay Realtor Fee
"NEW YORK - A New York judge has ruled against comedian Jerry Seinfeld in a dispute over a commission on a real estate transaction. Seinfeld was ordered to pay real estate broker Tamara Cohen $98,000 after allegedly trying to avoid giving her a sales commission by buying directly from the owner of an Upper West Side townhouse, the New York Post reported Sunday. Seinfeld tried to avoid paying the commission because Cohen, a Jew who observes the Sabbath, was not available when Seinfeld wanted to view the house, the Post said. In accordance with Jewish law, Cohen's phone was turned off on the particular Saturday when Seinfeld and his wife wanted to view the house. The only real issue here ... is whether the broker's fee was 5 or 6 percent, the judge said in the ruling. Cohen could get as much as $118,500 if the fee is found to be 6 percent."
Thursday, January 18, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
Thursday, January 11, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Ok, I know you're probably not planning on moving this very second, but here's this week's list of interesting-looking listings that have just come on the market. Mind you, they may not actually be my personal listings --- just intriguing properties I've come across that week.
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!
Monday, January 08, 2007
NAR’s Pending Home Sales Index Suggests the Housing Market is Stabilizing
The trade association said there was a smaller decrease in home sales from year-ago levels as a sign that the troubled U.S. housing market was stabilizing.
"The index is pointing toward fairly stable home sales in the near future," David Lereah, chief economist for the trade association said in a statement. "That is another indicator that home sales likely bottomed-out in September."
Home sales climbed the two months after September.
The index covers pending sales of existing single-family units, condominiums and co-ops. A home sale is pending when a contract has been signed but the transaction has not closed.
Pending sales typically close within one or two months of contract signing.
Thursday, January 04, 2007
Feeling Nosy about DC? MD? VA?
Feeling nosy about the District of Columbia?
Feeling nosy about Virginia?
Feeling nosy about Maryland?
If you know someone who might be interested in this list, please forward it on to him or her. And if there's a listing that you're curious about yourself, just let me know ... and I'll show it to you ... just for the hell of it ... no obligation ... *I promise*. Really. (One of the perks of being the friend of a real estate agent ought to be that you get to freely snoop around other peoples' homes!