THERE'S a new obsession threatening to take over our airwaves: property porn and we can't get enough.
Switch on free-to-air or pay television and you’ll find countless shows about real estate (not forgetting websites, sections in print media and apps). It doesn’t even matter if the program is set overseas, we’re eager to consume content centred on people’s efforts to build, secure, fix, invest in or off-load their homes.
From Escape to the Country to reruns of Hot Property; from Relocation, Relocation Australia to Selling Houses Australia and the British originals; from Grand Designs to Property Ladder, The Block and Restoration Home, we love to watch all things domicile.
Featuring good-looking, articulate and friendly hosts, images of either perfect buildings or those on the brink of collapse, the tortured expressions of prospective buyers, anxious vendors and ignorant renovators who don’t know a budget from a budgie as well as the many faces of agents, these shows rely on our complicated and highly emotional comprehensions of "home" to work.
Close-ups of buyers’ and owners’ tears and frowns and scenes that capture explosive tempers and despair are property porn’s money shots.
Building up to a climax, the shows seduce us into becoming voyeurs of something that’s usually a private affair.
We’re given glimpses of paint that doesn’t quite match, chipped tiles, leaking taps, roofs on the verge of collapse, rotting timbers, mould-stained walls, unhinged doors and, to top it off, wild bushes for gardens. Alternately, we’re invited to gaze upon homes of such sparkling perfection they’re beyond our wildest dreams.
We’re invited to project ourselves in and out of those four walls and let our imaginations run wild.
They promise a satisfaction of Eden-like proportions.
I tell you, these shows are addictive. And there’s a good reason for that.
In Australia particularly, we’ve been fed the notion that home is where the heart and everything else lives. Owning a quarter of an acre is what everyone should aspire to, only that’s becoming increasingly difficult as the average housing block shrinks.
Regardless, this is simply a metaphor for being able to call a piece of Australia, some bricks, mortar, weatherboard, glass, steel, concrete and solar panels, your own.
It’s an idea that buys into our sense of self and national identity as well.
Buying a home (or equivalent) is not only a financial investment, it’s an emotional and even patriotic one that has a great deal of psychological baggage attached.
Real estate agents become more like matchmakers than brokers.
Property porn relies on all this to be effective, to suck us in and take us on a "journey" with the person, couple or family who are buying. It reduces decision-making and stress to a superficial narrative with a "they-all-lived-happily-ever-after" ending.
In watching others risk the buying, selling or renovating and surrendering to their passions for a piece of real estate action, like pornography, we experience the highs and lows vicariously but without the attendant risks.
This has never been more evident than throughout the current property downturn.
These shows are rating very well as, from the safety of our homes (rented or otherwise), we can watch others take the risky plunge.
That’s because, while property is hot in television land, in real life, it’s a different story, one where the finale is not so certain.
According to Australian Property Monitors senior economist Dr Andrew Wilson, the latest data shows Brisbane is becoming established as the cheapest capital city.
While median house prices have dropped (especially in Paddington, where prices fell 31.9 per cent), sales are up by 13 per cent in Brisbane and 11 per cent on the Gold Coast.
Last quarter, Gladstone saw a growth of 50 per cent.
We keep hearing "it’s a buyer’s market" and, apparently, some people are "buying" this. But more are not.
When you have agents talking up what’s clearly going down and vendors refusing to meet the market, while buyers keep their wallets shut, nothing moves not unless, like Goldilocks, we meet in the middle.
Until that occurs, we have property porn.
At least there, our lust for real estate can be temporarily and safely sated.
Dr Karen Brooks is an associate professor of media studies at Southern Cross University.
Monthly Archives: November 2011
Real Estate Mogul Charged With Shoplifting | Katonah NY Real Estate
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Paperlit: A Digital Alternative for Print Publiations | Pound Ridge Real Estate
Rhode Island hit with ‘perfect storm’ of housing problems | Bedford Corners Real Estate
Rhode Island hit with ‘perfect storm’ of housing problems
Rents climb as foreclosures hit multifamily buildings
New England weathered the recession fairly well, except for one state — Rhode Island — which, according to affordable housing group HousingWorks RI, has the highest rate of foreclosures and serious delinquencies in the whole region.
In the fourth quarter of last year, the country’s tiniest state boasted 13,300 mortgages either in the foreclosure process or more than 90 days delinquent. That meant the state’s foreclosures and delinquencies were 20 percent higher than neighboring Massachusetts; 17 percent greater than western neighbor Connecticut; 34 percent more elevated than New Hampshire; 7 percent bigger than weak-economy Maine; and double Vermont’s rate.
What happened to Rhode Island was a perfect storm of economic and housing problems, pretty much unique from anywhere else in the country.
“We have a different foreclosure crisis than other parts of the United States,” said Nellie Gorbea, executive director of HousingWorks RI, whose members include banks, builders, Realtors, chambers of commerce, and community-based agencies and advocates.
Probably the biggest underlying problem with Rhode Island was that coming into the recession the state experienced a severe undersupply of affordable homes.
Although the state is mostly known for its ritzy enclaves like Newport and fine coastline, a large portion of the state population consists of blue-collar workers who need moderate housing.
However, between the first quarters of 2000 and 2006, home prices increased at the steepest rate in the state’s history, peaking at a median price of $283,500. Conversely, during the same period of time, Rhode Islanders experienced a decline in median wage. The rapid rise in home prices, up to twice the increase in other New England states, combined with declining wages, contributed to a situation of “severe housing unaffordability,” Gorbea said.
None of that stopped Rhode Islanders from buying homes because we had the mortgage bubble going on. Despite the loss of wages, Rhode Island homebuyers could borrow buckets of dollars for those ever-increasing prices on homes, which, of course, pushed prices even higher.
That all seemed to work until the housing bubble deflated. Rhode Island housing prices dropped like a red brick falling off the roof of an old Pawtucket house. Over a three-year period, home prices dropped from $283,500 to $199,000 before recovering a bit to $210,000. Still, that meant a lot of Rhode Islanders faced a mortgage crisis.
About 1 in 5 Rhode Island homeowners are underwater with their mortgages, according to HousingWorks RI.
The recovery in prices hasn’t been solid. At the end of second-quarter 2011, median home prices declined again to $205,000, said Stephen Antoni, president of the Rhode Island Association of Realtors and a broker associate with RE/MAX Professionals in East Greenwich.
“The recession has made people unsure as to which direction to move. They are used to looking at the house as being the No. 1 investment in their lives and in some cases the homes have been devalued by as much as 50 percent,” Antoni said.
That’s not Rhode Island’s only problem. The state is dotted with small, multifamily buildings, most of which are older, three-unit flats. During the bubble, these were the target of small investors, and median prices for multifamily homes shot up from $96,000 in 1999 to $290,000 in 2005, reported HousingWorks RI. When the bubble burst, so did prices of the multifamily buildings, falling all the way to $90,000 in 2009, before seeing a recovery to $121,900.
That didn’t help those investors who bought at or near the top of the bubble. More than 35 percent of all Rhode Island foreclosures between 2009 and 2010 were multifamily homes that form the bulk of the rental housing in many communities.
That’s been a rental disaster because multifamily properties in foreclosure usually means tenants have to move. “During the first six months of 2011, 28 percent of foreclosures were in multifamily homes,” Gorbea said. “We estimate that 908 rental units were lost due to 317 multifamily closures in the first six months of this year.”
Basic economics says when you have less supply, prices rise, and that’s what happened in Rhode Island. “The average rent for a two-bedroom apartment was $1,165 in 2010 and that’s 50 percent higher than in 2001,” Gorbea said. “One in four working families in Rhode Island spent more than half of their income on housing-related expenses in 2008 and 2009. We have the highest percentage of cost-burdened people in New England in regard to wages versus housing expense.”
To make matters even worse, Rhode Island is not replacing its housing or even adding much in the way of new housing.
Looking over the data from this past summer, Leonard Lardaro, professor of economics at the University of Rhode Island, shakes in wonderment. “The last summer month that we have data for, we had just 53 building permits for the whole state. That’s been typical in recent months. On an annualized basis, we are looking at between 600 and 700 permits a year. That’s incredible.”
Could things get any worse for Rhode Island? The answer is yes, because the state’s unemployment numbers have been awful. Recently, Rhode Island was the fifth-worst state for unemployment with a rate of 10.8 percent, which is at least better than in 2009, when the state was No. 1 for unemployment with a rate close to 13 percent.
Although Rhode Island is a major location for defense contractors, a large percentage of jobs are service-related.
“Our employment peaked in December 2006,” Lardaro said. “That’s what happens when you don’t have technology or other growth-oriented industries. We didn’t have the insulation that a Massachusetts or Connecticut had, where the growth industries propelled the economy longer going into the recession. We went into recession well before the other states.”
For the short term, Lardaro is not optimistic. “To some extent, the lack of new-home construction will help the healing, but it doesn’t generate the construction employment and multipliers that thrive when you are in recovery.”
Zillow releases Android tablet app | Chappaqua NY Real Estate
Zillow releases Android tablet app
Company now offers eight mobile apps
By Inman News, Monday, November 28, 2011.
Image: Zillow
Adding to its lineup of free mobile applications, property search and valuation site Zillow has launched an app for tablet computers powered by Google’s Android platform.
In an announcement, Zillow said its Android tablet app is unique in allowing users to compare multiple homes side by side. On the comparison screen, users can view photos and sort properties by home details such as price and number of bedrooms and bathrooms.
Other features of the app include map-based search of for-sale, for-rent, and recently sold homes; Google Street View; full-screen photos; a home screen widget to browse nearby homes; and voice-based property search. Users can also save listings and share properties through email, Facebook or Twitter.
This is Zillow’s eighth mobile app. Earlier this month, Zillow released an app for Amazon’s Kindle Fire tablet. The site also has apps that run on Android smartphones, iPhones, iPads, BlackBerrys and Windows 7 smartphones.
Combined, users accessed Zillow on a mobile device more than 11 million times in September, viewing 2.4 million homes daily, Zillow said.
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Bedford-Katonah Patch Daily Sports Digest, Nov. 28 | Bedford NY Real Estate
Welcome to Patch’s daily snapshot of sports in Bedford and Katonah.
Grasso to play at Monclair
Fox Lane senior Nick Grasso will be playing men’s lacrosse at Monclair State next season. Read more here.
John Jay ice-hockey wins opener
John Jay defeated Horace Greeley 4-2 in the Conference 1 Thanksgiving Face-Off at the Brewster Ice Arena on Nov. 25.
TCBL roster deadline
The deadline for Tri-County Basketball League teams to get their complete roster in is Dec. 2.
See the league’s website for additional information.
Fox Lane H.S. and John Jay H.S.:
No games scheduled.
___
The Daily Sports Digest is designed for you to add your best photo and/or video to share. If you’d like to send in an update or see anything that requires updating, please email HVsportsdigest@gmail.com. Thanks!
Parents, coaches and boosters are invited to share scores, standings and other news to this column, as well as upload photos and videos directly to this article. Here are complete step-by-step instructions.
Zynga Could Help 10 Silicon Valley IPOs | Armonk NY Real Estate
Home sales slip, but up over ’10 | Waccabuc NY Realtor
National and regional home sales slipped predictably in September as the peak summer sales period waned, according to an index by the National Association of Realtors that measures pending sales.
The group’s pending home sales index fell 4.6 percent nationally in September, and 6.2 percent in the Midwest, the NAR said. However, pending sales remain 6.4 percent higher nationally and 12.3 percent higher regionally than in September 2010.
Lawrence Yun, the NAR’s chief economist, said in a statement that the housing market is being constrained.
“A combination of weak consumer confidence and continued tight lending criteria held back home buyers, even though the private sector added nearly 2 million net new jobs in the past 12 months,” he said.
The national trend fits September sales figures from the Wichita Area Association of Realtors, where sales tailed off but remain ahead of last year’s pace.
A total of 693 new and existing homes were sold in September, down from 752 in August but still about 15 percent ahead of the 606 sold in September 2010 as sales slumped after the end of the government’s second homebuyer tax credit program.
Nonetheless, Wichita brokers are happy with the beginning of the slow season.
“We always expect a slower period right now,” said Willie Kihle, president of Prudential Dinning-Beard Realtors in Wichita.
“And August was a very good month for us, so it’s not unusual here for a good month to be followed by a little slower month.”
Most sectors of the market are performing steadily, said Penny Johnson of Keller Williams Signature Partners in Wichita.
“We’re up over last year, and we’re very pleased to be holding our own,” Johnson said. “The market isn’t booming, but it’s not dead either.”
Johnson said business is spread among most sectors of the Wichita home market.
“I think people are always going to need to move,” she said. “Marriage, jobs, things like that.”
Nationally, Yun is calling for higher loan limits and urging banks to loan more money to stimulate the market.
“America’s monetary policy is contradictory and confusing, where some consumers with the best financial capacity and top-notch credit scores pay higher mortgage interest rates,” he said in his statement.
“Just leaving excessive cash to sit in banks and not work into the economy is a drag on the overall recovery,” he said. “We need a comprehensive approach to address housing issues — not additional impediments.”






