Daily Archives: November 14, 2013

House Prices and the One-Armed Policymaker’s Dilemma | Armonk Homes

I just got back from London, where I ran into a senior British official I hadn’t seen in some time. I asked him what was going on. “Another housing bubble,” he said, only half-jokingly. After being depressed for a few years, house prices in the English capital are rising at an annual rate of about ten per cent, and in some trendy areas the rate of increase is much higher than that. In the British media, there is already talk of the Bank of England raising interest rates sometime soon to head off another boom-bust cycle.

At least we don’t have that problem in the United States, I thought to myself. Or do we? At breakfast this morning, my wife informed me that our home, which we purchased a decade ago, in a gentrifying section of Brooklyn, has risen in value by another hundred thousand dollars. Over the past twelve months or so, prices on our once-modest street have jumped by about a third. And it’s not just brownstone Brooklyn. Listening to the radio the other day, I heard that in parts of Hoboken, across the Hudson in New Jersey, prices have jumped by forty per cent in a year.

Of course, the Brooklyn bubble—if that’s what it is—is a very localized phenomenon, and it’s partly a product of demographic shifts: sections of Brooklyn are turning into extensions of Manhattan. The further you go into the borough, though, the fewer signs you see of froth. In Bay Ridge and East New York, prices are rising at an annual rate of about five to ten per cent, according to the real-estate “heat map” on trulia.com. In Bensonhurst, Brighton Beach, and several other outlying neighborhoods, prices are falling. And for the New York metropolitan area as a whole, according to the widely watched S&P/Case-Shiller home-price indices, prices are rising at an annualized rate of less than five per cent.

Still, the fact is that real-estate inflation has returned to many parts of the country. According to the S&P/Case-Shiller index for twenty major cities, home prices rose by about thirteen per cent this year to August, which is a very rapid rate of increase, and one somewhat reminiscent of the bubble years—as the chart below shows. But, as in New York, there is wide variation. In Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Las Vegas, prices are rising at an annual rate of more than twenty per cent. In places like Boston, Charlotte, and Washington, the rate of appreciation is still below ten per cent.

 

 

 

http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/johncassidy/2013/11/house-prices-and-the-one-armed-policymakers-dilemma.html

After Fukushima, Japan Finds Beauty in Solar Power | Bedford Corners Homes

The Kagoshima Nanatsujima Mega Solar Power Plant, built by the electronics manufacturer Kyocera, boasts postcard views of Kagoshima Bay and Sakurajima volcano. It’s also Japan’s largest, with a capacity of 70 megawatts. That’s enough to power some 22,000 Japanese homes. The $280 million project is part of a national effort to invest in clean, renewable energy as the country continues to grapple with the fallout of the Fukushima nuclear disaster. The country’s new feed-in tariffs have made it one of the world’s fastest-growing solar markets.

This sort of sprawling solar-panel farm is hardly the most efficient form of power generation in terms of either cost or the amount of land required. Still, it makes more sense when you consider that Japan has been dealing with soaring energy prices in the wake of a disaster that threw into question its entire nuclear-power program. While solar is clearly more expensive than nuclear power, the Washington Post noted in June:

Most consumers think that sacrifice is worthwhile, and they say nuclear power has hidden cleanup and compensation costs that emerge only after an accident. Fossil fuels, meanwhile, release harmful greenhouse gases and must be imported from Australia, Russia, Indonesia and the Middle East.

In other words, this gorgeous solar plant is what happens when a country comes face-to-face with the full societal costs of more traditional power sources.

To promote the project’s beauty, Kyocera has opened it to the public, offering tours and building a circular viewing room with sweeping vistas and science exhibits. As Cnet’s Tim Hornyak notes, it isn’t the country’s first solar-themed attraction: There’s also Panasonic’s Solar Ark, which turned recalled Sanyo solar cells into a stunning display of how photovoltaics could be incorporated into a building’s design.

The United States, meanwhile, is building some impressive solar projects of its own. Brightsource’s Ivanpah plant may not be quite as aesthetically pleasing as the Kagoshima project, but at 377 megawatts  it’s more than five times as powerful. And while there’s no public viewing platform, you can take a virtual tour of the Ivanpah solar power plant here.

 

 

 

http://www.slate.com/blogs/future_tense/2013/11/12/kyocera_solar_power_plant_after_fukushima_japan_finds_beauty_in_renewable.html

Armonk NY Real Estate Weekly Report | #Robreportblog

Armonk   NY Weekly Real Estate Report11/14/2013
Homes for sale85
Median Ask Price$1,999,000.00
Low Price$499,000.00
High Price$24,900,000.00
Average Size5800
Average Price/foot$456.00
Average DOM166
Average Ask Price$2,953,827.00

Talking a Big Game About Energy Efficiency | Chappaqua NY Homes

American homeowners may say that they prioritize energy-efficient home improvements, but their actions show otherwise, according to a new Shelton Group survey. The company’s annual Energy Pulse study finds that while homeowners say energy efficiency has a huge effect on their investments, they consistently prioritize more aesthetically focused improvements, such as a kitchen or bathroom remodel.

 

Is it true, as a Time magazine senior editor recently asserted, that we just don’t care about climate change? Or is it that we’re just not aware of the gulf that seems to exist between our intentions and our actions?

It seems we think we’re doing well in terms of prioritizing energy efficiency. After all, the Energy Pulse study found that 81 percent of respondents said energy efficiency would have somewhat to very much of an impact on their selection between two homes. This seems in line with other industry studies, such at the NAHB’s “What Buyers Want” study released earlier this year, which found that homeowners are more likely to pay 2-3 percent more for a home with energy-efficient features, and research from the University of California, Berkeley, that found homes sold with Energy Star, LEED, or GreenPoint rated labels commanded an average price premium of 9 percent. Sounds great, right?

Yet, the Energy Pulse survey reports that when hypothetically given money for a home improvement project, homeowners consistently prioritized a kitchen or bathroom remodel. On the upside, replacing windows came in second, and HVAC or furnace replacements came in third in terms of priority. But still: 55 percent of respondents were likely (with 19 percent of those saying “very likely”) to make non-energy efficiency improvements to their homes in the near future. In contrast, the overall average likelihood for energy efficiency improvements in the same time period dropped to 12 percent.

Does income play a role in this? Perhaps. Energy Pulse reports that higher income homeowners (defined as those earning more than $100,000) were 13 percent less likely to prioritize energy efficiency than those earning less than $25,000. That seems like a no-brainer: paying your electricity and gas bills hits your wallet a lot harder when it’s not as full.

Tapping into another can of worms, there seems to still be a misconception on the issue of cost in general: 44 percent of survey respondents said energy efficiency improvements are “too expensive.” This raises a slew of other questions, such as whether respondents are calculating payback periods and if they are, how they are doing so; and whether the challenge of properly valuing green home improvements is impairing investment. For more on these financial challenges, click here to read an essay from Robert Sahadi of the Institute for Market Transformation on how the home building industry must change its financial mechanisms, including those used for valuation, for green building in the years ahead.

 

 

http://www.ecobuildingpulse.com/energy-efficiency/talking-a-big-game-about-energy-efficiency.aspx?printerfriendly=true

Spike Lee Wants $32M For UES Home With Celeb-Studded Past | Pound Ridge Real Estate

Spike-Lee-and-the-Hatch-House.jpg [Photo via Flickr/Emilio Guerra.]

Though filmmaker Spike Lee is best known for his Brooklyn presence—the house where Crooklyn was shot sold for $400,000 over ask and the Fort Greene brownstone he inhabited in the 90s sold to that controversial dung artist—he actually owns an even more significant property on the Upper East Side. He just put the 8,292-square-foot, 2BR/2BA at 153 East 63rd Street on the market for $32 million, the Post reports, which he originally bought from artist Jasper Johns in 1998 for $16,624,999. (Though the formal deed lists the transaction as being worth nothing, and the rest of public records for the plot are hazy.)

Daytonian in Manhattan has chronicled the long history of the so-called Hatch House, named for the husband of Barbara Rutherford, who married Cyril Hatch in the nineteen-teens. Rutherford’s mother bought the property (formerly two horse stables) as a wedding gift for the Hatches.

Architect Frederick Sterner, who at one point had converted or designed essentially all of 63rd Street, is behind the “three-story Spanish renaissance fancy” with “a stucco facade and red-tile roof.” Though many of the residences he worked on are no longer in their original condition, notes the Times‘ Christopher Gray, Lee’s is

 

 

 

http://ny.curbed.com/archives/2013/11/13/spike_lee_wants_32m_for_ues_home_with_celebstudded_past.php

Miami’s “Most Expensive Non-Waterfront” Listing Comes Complete with Gold Marble Bathtub | Bedford Real Estate

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A manse with a hand-painted Trompe l’oiel, stained-glass windows and more than a half-acre of land on La Gorce Island has hit the market for $7.9 million, according to listing agents Danny Hertzberg, his mom Jill Hertzberg and Jill Eber, all of Coldwell Banker. The six-bedroom property at 6650 Roxbury Lane was built in 2002 and also features gold marble baths and TVs embedded in mirrors. (Sadly, there are no photos of the golden tubs.) The listing is described in brokerbabble as Miami’s “most expensive non-waterfront” property, which is an inventive superlative but not one that provides any information on why it’s priced the way it is. Sigh.

· 6650 Roxbury Ln [Trulia]

 

 

 

http://miami.curbed.com/archives/2013/11/11/miamis-priciest-listing-boasts-gold-baths.php

Movie Palaces Of The 1940s: The Miami Theatre On Flagler St. | Bedford Hills Real Estate

At first glance, 777 International Mall in Downtown Miami at 145 East Flagler Street seems as ordinary as any mini shopping mall in the area. There are various mom and pop type of stores, a two-story Payless ShoeSource, jewelry and perfume vendors, and a Peruvian restaurant in the main courtyard. However the building dates back to 1948 when it was built as the Miami Theatre, a major movie theater of the famed Wometco theater chain.

Wometco Enterprises, Inc. undeniably launched the popularity of the moviegoing experience in South Florida. Brothers-in-law Mitchell Wolfson—the same Wolfson family that brought the Wolfsonian museum, the Florida Moving Image Archives, and the Downtown Miami Study Centre to South Florida—and Sidney Meyer founded the Wolfson-Meyer Theatre Company  (“Wometco”) in 1925 in Miami. During the first two decades of its existence, Wometco’s objective was to provide affordable entertainment venues in Florida for the general public. The film industry skyrocketed in the 1920s and there was a high demand for venues to screen these innovative moving pictures. The company launched the largest theatre chain in South Florida that included the Capitol Theatre-later the future home of WTVJ; Miami’s first television station-the Lincoln Theatre designed by Thomas W. Lamb; and the theatre-turned-nightclub Cameo designed by Robert E. Collins; both built in 1936, among many others.

  • The old 777 International Mall. Photo Courtesy: Javier Zayas-Bazan
  • The 777 International Mall today. Photo by Marvin Aguilar
  • The original foyer entrance, 1946-47, of the Miami Theatre. Photo Courtesy: S. Charles Lee Collection, UCLA Library Special Collections Department.
  • Stair to Balcony, 1946-47. Photo Courtesy: S. Charles Lee Collection, UCLA Library Special Collections Department.
  • Rendering, Foyer Stair, 1946-47. Photo Courtesy: S. Charles Lee Collection, UCLA Library Special Collections Department.
  • Mural, 1946-47. Photo Courtesy: S. Charles Lee Collection, UCLA Library Special Collections Department.
  • The interior of the 777 International Mall. Photo by Marvin Aguilar
  • Mezzanine Bar, 1946-47, Miami Theatre. Photo Courtesy: S. Charles Lee Collection, UCLA Library Special Collections Department.
  • Mezzanine Bar today. Photo by Marvin Aguilar
  • Huyler’s Sweet Shop, 1946-47. Photo Courtesy: S. Charles Lee Collection, UCLA Library Special Collections Department.
  • Huyler’s Resturant, 1946-47. Photo Courtesy: S. Charles Lee Collection, UCLA Library Special Collections Department.

 

 

 

http://miami.curbed.com/archives/2013/11/13/the-history-of-s-charles-lees-miami-theatre.php

Overheated’ San Francisco market cools off | Katonah NY Real Estate

The number of homes and condos sold in the nine-county San Francisco Bay Area fell 3.9 percent in October from a year ago, a level that’s 11.2 percent below the historic average for the month.

The San Francisco Chronicle said despite the decrease in sales, to 7,595 homes and condos, price appreciation has continued in the “overheated” market.

 

 

Source: sfgate.com. – See more at: http://www.inman.com/wire/overheated-san-francisco-market-cools-off/#sthash.wedGnhiY.dpuf

More properties going to the auction block as judicial foreclosure states clear backlogs | South Salem Real Estate

Foreclosure backlogs continue to ease in states where courts handle the process as the number of properties headed to the auction block climbed for the 16th month in a row in October, according to the latest report from foreclosure data aggregator RealtyTrac.

Overall U.S. foreclosure activity — filings of default notices, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions — rose 2 percent from September to October, but was down 28 percent year over year. Filings came in on 133,919 U.S. properties, or 1 in every 978 units. Florida, Nevada, Maryland, Ohio and Illinois posted the nation’s highest foreclosure rates among states.

But the total number of scheduled judicial foreclosure auctions, or “notices of foreclosure sale,” increased 7 percent on an annual basis last month and 10 percent on a monthly basis to 30,023. Judicial foreclosure states with the biggest annual spikes in auctions included Maryland (up 177 percent), Delaware (up 142 percent), New York (up 98 percent), New Jersey (up 97 percent), Pennsylvania (up 58 percent), Connecticut (up 35 percent), and Florida (up 32 percent), RealtyTrac said.

“The backlog of delayed judicial foreclosures continues to make its way through the pipeline, with many of these properties now being scheduled for the public auction after starting the foreclosure process last year or earlier this year,” said Daren Blomquist, vice president at RealtyTrac, in a statement.

“Lenders are likely moving these properties more rapidly to the public auction given that there is strong demand from institutional buy-to-rent investors at the auction and that rising home prices mean more of the loan losses can be recouped, either by selling to an investor at the auction or by repossessing the property and reselling as bank owned.”

 

 

 

 

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/2013/11/13/more-properties-going-to-the-auction-block-as-judicial-foreclosure-states-clear-backlogs/#sthash.O8QuuyEh.dpuf

Realogy and Trulia might make a nice couple, but are they really headed to the altar? | Cross River Real Estate

Rumors that real estate behemoth Realogy may be in talks to acquire Trulia pushed the price of the listing portal’s shares up 10 percent before markets closed today, but analysts who follow the companies didn’t think much of all the talk.

Realogy — which runs some of the biggest brands in real estate including Coldwell Banker Real Estate, Century 21 Real Estate and Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate — declined to comment. So did Trulia.

Stock analysts who follow the companies said the merger chatter — which put a $52-per-share price target on Trulia, implying a deal in the $2 billion range — was probably just that.

“To me, it feels like a bogus rumor because someone needed to get out of a position,” said Bradley Safalow, founder and CEO of stock analysis firm PAA Research.

Zachary Prensky, managing partner of Little Bear Investments, said he thought the rumor was a “complete fabrication.”

Still, suggestions that an established real estate company like Realogy would (or should) make a play for a listing portal like  Zillow or Trulia have been in play this year.

 

 

 

 

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/2013/11/13/realogy-and-trulia-might-make-a-nice-couple-but-are-they-really-headed-to-the-altar/#sthash.0v2xongA.dpuf