While it’s easy to imagine Walt Disney simply living in Disneyland, perhaps in one of the houses that dot Disneyland’s Main Street, the man behind Mickey Mouse actually built a custom estate in Los Angeles, about a half-hour drive from the “Happiest Place on Earth.”
Walt Disney’s home is listed for sale for $3,650,000. The French-Mediterranean style house was built in 1932 on a double lot in prestigious Los Feliz. Median Los Feliz home values are currently $835,900. “Wizard of Oz” actress Judy Garland once called Los Feliz home and currently, Natalie Portman as well as Jack Black. also reside there. According to property records, the home was last sold in 1977 for $207,002.
A gifted cartoonist and entrepreneur, Disney moved to Hollywood in 1923 to start a Hollywood studio with his brother. Within 10 years, Disney was famous for the creation of his new character, Mickey Mouse, and was working on a full-length animated film called “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.” He was also beginning to dream up an elaborate amusement park.
Disney’s gated home in Los Feliz was home to the cartoonist, his wife, Lillian, and two daughters Diane and Sharon until 1945, when he moved into another home in Holmby Hills. The home features a Mediterranean-style entry in a circular rotunda and painted ceilings in the foyer and dining room as well as vaulted beamed ceilings throughout the rest of the house. According to a listing photo, the Disney home was featured in the January 1940 issue of Better Homes and Gardens.
Additionally, the 4-bedroom, 5-bath home has 6,388 square feet of living space with views of downtown L.A. throughout. Other original aspects of the home include stained leaded glass windows, a Juliet balcony, billiards room with sleeping porch, and a projection and screening room where Disney used to watch productions. Outside, the property still has the playhouse built for Disney’s daughters.
The listing is held by Patricia Ruben of Sotheby’s International Realty.
Daily Archives: July 27, 2011
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South Salem NY Real Estate | Seller’s Guide to Understanding Today’s Buyer
That’s right— it’s not 2006 anymore.
Five years ago, it was a seller’s market in many metro areas. Buyers would go to extraordinary lengths to get the home they wanted and a real estate purchase was top priority. They’d constantly monitor new homes for sale. They’d tirelessly tour open houses. Bid well over the asking price. Swallow the roof repair costs. Allow the seller to continue living in the home for two months after closing. All of that was no problem — it was all part of getting into the market.
After the real estate market upheaval of the past few years, those buyers are long gone. Some became renters. Many who would be ready to “trade up” to a larger or renovated home have decided to make appropriate fixes to their current home instead. Some are stuck in their homes due to poor equity. Others are on the sidelines waiting for home prices to bottom, or the economy to rebound.
Who does that leave in the pool of buyers today? The Home Stealer, the Market Feeler, and the Real Dealer. Unlike buyers five years ago, they’re far more cautious — sometimes to the point of inaction. Knowing the type of buyer you’re dealing with can help you avoid a lot of pain and wasted time and might help you get a better deal.
The Home Stealer
In the game of baseball, a Home Stealer scores points for his team. In the game of real estate, a Home Stealer is a strikeout, at least for the seller.
A seasoned Realtor can usually spot Home Stealers. They’re not terribly experienced in the local real estate market and in most cases, they have little or no relationship with a real estate agent. They’re likely not pre-approved for a mortgage but will say that they are. They’ll withhold information, thinking that staying coy helps them in negotiations. Finally, without solid knowledge of the offer-writing process, local market customs, or the advice of a local Realtor, they may make outrageous requests from the seller. I’ve seen Home Stealers ask the seller to make major modifications to a room or ask a neighbor to cut down a tree.
In short, they’re not real buyers. They may be in a few years. For now, they like the attention. By writing offers and acting important, they get their egos stroked while wasting everyone else’s time. Their goal is to “steal” a home by making a really low offer and/or squeezing as many concessions out of the seller as possible, sometimes after having only visited the property once.
Advice to sellers: If the buyer can’t or won’t answer legitimate questions about themselves, their finances or experience in the market, they’re not serious. Don’t waste your time; Home Stealers are opportunists. Ultimately, your property represents just another opportunity to them, rather than the home of their dreams. If you’re inclined to take less than your list price, say no to the Home Stealer, reduce your price and give the rest of the market a shot at it. You might end up with a Real Dealer (more on them in a minute).
The Market Feeler
Market Feelers have just entered the market and are “feelingit out. There’s no urgency for them, and buying a new home might actually be optional. They may fall in love with your home, but they want to take their time deciding. They might come across as a Home Stealer by the type of offer they make or as a Real Dealer by their interest in the property. They’re tough to spot, but a good listing agent will ask all the right questions.
Because they’ve just jumped into the fray, Market Feelers may give you a low-ball offer. It’s not because they’re trying to “steal” your home. It’s usually because psychologically, they’re not quite ready to dive in. Low-balling is a comfortable way of sticking a toe into the water.
Unlike Home Stealers, Market Feelers are more likely to disclose their financial situation to their seasoned agent. They probably have a pre-approval letter from a lender, too. They’re likely represented by a local agent and seem to be well-versed on local market and conditions. They may even come for multiple showings. But when it comes down to it, their offer is too low.
Advice for sellers: Try to work with them at first. Respectfully move on from the low-ball offer but with the realization that the buyer might return with a reasonable offer later. Market Feelers are often on their way toward becoming Real Dealers, once they can get beyond their inexperience and overly cautious approach. Unfortunately, that transformation might take months.
The Real Dealer
These buyers are “the real deal.” They’re working with experienced agents and brokers, with whom they have good relationships. They’re experienced in your local real estate market. They’ll spend a lot of time in your home. They ask a lot of questions because they’re seriously interested and want to know as much as possible. Don’t be insulted or bothered by their questions; be sure to answer them. Once they’ve visited a few times, they bring friends, co-workers, family members, a trusted contractor, and probably a tape measure on return visits. They might ask your Realtor to see the attic or the sub-basement.
When it’s time to write an offer, the contract comes with a local bank or mortgage broker pre-approval letter. Real Dealers (through their agents) will often submit a letter of introduction to the sellers, giving information about themselves while also spelling out the terms of the offer. Their offers are usually within striking distance of the asking price.
Advice to sellers: This is what you’ve been waiting for. Be responsive, act quickly, and make yourself available to Real Dealers.
How to Spot The Buyer
These days, the listing agent has such an important role in negotiating the transaction. They are the only ones that interact with all parties of the transaction. With your agent’s help and bird’s-eye view of the deal, find out everything you can about potential buyers. Why are they buying? What do they do for work? Where is their office? What is their motivation for purchasing? Did they just get a new job or have a new baby? How long have they been looking at real estate? How many offers have they already written? You can understand a lot about who you are dealing with, which will ultimately help you in your negotiations.
Depending on your area of the country, it’s still a buyer’s market and will continue to be for some time. Knowing as much as you can about potential buyers helps to tip the balance of power a little bit back in your favor. At a minimum, by being well informed, you’ll avoid wasting time with Home Stealers and early-stage Market Feelers.
Buying a home? See Buyer’s Guide to Understanding Today’s Seller.
Brendon DeSimone is a Realtor and real estate expert based in San Francisco and New York. He is a contributor to Zillow Blog, has collaborated on multiple real estate books and is often quoted by major media outlets.
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Pound Ridge NY Real Estate | How to Make a Worm Bin – DIY
How to Make a Worm Bin
Make a worm bin for a great small-space composting setup that will yield free, nutrient-rich compost for your garden.
The following is an excerpt from Making It: Radical Home Ec for a Post-Consumer World by Kelly Coyne and Erik Knutzen (Rodale, 2010). In this ultimate guidebook for living a homemade life, Kelly Coyne and Erik Knutzen take back home ec and restore it to its original, noble form, in which the household is a self-sustaining agent of production at the center of your life. With projects ranging from the simple to the ambitious, you’ll build all the skills you need to do everything from making your own laundry soap to becoming a backyard beekeeper. This excerpt is from Chapter 61, “Worm Farming.”
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Worms eat kitchen scraps and create worm castings, which are a valuable soil amendment and plant tonic. Though castings are often called fertilizer, they’re actually not very high in nitrogen, but they are full of plant-supporting nutrients.
Sprinkle castings on potted plants and over garden beds. A little goes a long way. A handful can go into the bottom of a planting hole to get a plant off to a good start. Unlike nitrogen-rich fertilizers, worm castings won’t burn the plant’s roots. They can also be mixed with potting soil, in concentrations of up to 20 percent castings, to make an extra-rich growing medium.
Here’s what you should know before you start: A worm bin is a supplement to a compost pile, not a replacement for one. Worms don’t consume indiscriminately the way a compost pile does, and they can only eat so much at a time. But, as we said above, castings are a fantastic resource, so it’s well worth keeping both a worm bin and a compost bin. That said, a worm bin makes a fine green-waste disposal system for an apartment dweller. If you don’t have yard trimmings to worry about, worms can handle a good deal of your day-to-day food waste — such as coffee grounds, wilted lettuce, stale bread and so on — and give you castings in return that you can apply to container plants.
Worm bins are best kept indoors. Worms thrive in temperatures between 50 and 75 degrees Fahrenheit, and those conditions are usually found in the cool parts of a house instead of outdoors. During hot summers, worms dig down deep to keep cool. They can’t do that in a worm bin, which will heat up to ambient summer temperatures. In winter, freezing cold will kill them, too. Of course, it all depends on your climate and situation. If you have cold winters and mild summers, the worms could spend the summer outdoors and the winter indoors. Or in the opposite situation, they could come in for hot summers and stay out for mild winters. You can also take steps to keep the bin’s temperatures reasonable, such as insulating it. Just remember that when temperatures are extreme, worms are unhappy.







