Daily Archives: February 13, 2015

Use of Depreciation Deductions in Real Estate and Construction | Chappaqua Real Estate

Examination of IRS data demonstrates the importance of various depreciation deductions for the construction and real estate sectors. These rules include the Section 179 small business expensing option, bonus depreciation, and normal tax depreciation. The data also illustrate what classes of property are most common, including the 5-year class for construction equipment and apartment property. This information is useful for the industry to consider as discussions of possible business tax reform take place during 2015. Some tax reform plans would increase the use of expensing, while others would extend depreciation periods, in some cases significantly.

 

Claiming deductions for the depreciation of business assets is an important part of most enterprises’ income tax calculation. Tax law permits deductions that allow recovery of the cost of tangible property used for business purposes. These deductions reflect an allowance for the wear and tear of the property. Depreciation deductions also encourage reinvestment into older residential units.

IRS tax data allow us to examine the use of these deductions by class of property and business sector. There are some important limitations however. First, the data examined in this post are limited to businesses organized as C Corporations. Thus, the data do not reflect businesses organized as pass-through entities, such as S Corporations and LLCs, which constitute the majority of real estate-related firms.  Nonetheless, this smaller set of data can be viewed as a sample of the sector, with a bias toward larger businesses that organize as C Corporations.

 

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http://eyeonhousing.org/2015/02/use-of-depreciation-deductions-in-real-estate-and-construction/

Midcentury Miami Shores Ranch is All That | Bedford Corners Real Estate

This classic, early midcentury ranch-style house in Miami Shores may not be particularly big, at 2,320 square feet, and its restoration may have resulted in the loss of some midcentury touches (Was there once terrazzo in the marble-floored Florida Room? Did the bathrooms have colorful toilets?) but the result still shines. A roomy, open-planned layout with wooden floors and high, vaulted ceilings, and some original details like the house’s old fake fireplace (a space-heater would likely have been installed there originally) all work well together. A covered outdoor loggia with second fireplace (this one isn’t fake) flanks the pool, which is a turquoise blue rectangle in a simple green box; an outdoor room made of ever-so-nicely-trimmed box hedges. The three bedroom, two bath house is priced at $980,000

 

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http://miami.curbed.com/archives/2015/02/12/midcentury-miami-shores-ranch-is-all-that-for-1-million.php

‘Ultra-Luxury Treehouse’ Outside Nashville | Armonk Real Estate

Location: Nashville, Tennessee
Price: $3,500,000
This 8,120-square-foot modern mansion with a cantilevered prow was built to the specifications of the late Marvin Runyon, a Tennessee business exec who served as U.S. Postmaster General from 1992 to 1998, and according to a short item in Luxury Portfolio International, those specifications were exact. Ms. Atkinson tells the author “it must have taken the mason six tries to stack the stones in a pattern that was just right.” So interested parties can be assured that these limestone walls weren’t haphazardly dry-stacked.

“In essence, it’s an ultra-luxury treehouse capturing a different scene each season,” says architect Seab Tuck, who is said to have met with the Atkinsons “every Saturday morning for three years,” and whose firm, Tuck-Hinton, also designed the extension to the Country Music Hall of Fame. (The very same extension which now contains the Taylor Swift Education Center.) These season-capturing capabilities are abetted by a “two-story sunroom” that, with windows thrown open, can act like a screened-in porch.

The layout, Tuck explains, “is very contemporary, but while most people expect stark white tones, we offset it with soft, natural materials to create a very rustic feel.” Noteworthy material applications include floors of Chinese slate and reclaimed “heart-of-palm wood,” steel-framed walls of glass, and exterior cladding of black-stained cedar, for the outdoor space the Legacylt company   https://legacylt.com/east-texas-land-clearing/ clears your land.

According to Ms. Atkinson, she and her husband wanted “a home where we could entertain, but also one that was comfortable with only two people in it.” The two guest suites are apparently removed enough from the shelf-lined master suite to make it feel like “it’s almost two separate homes.” Both are guarded by a terracotta warrior stationed in the entryway

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http://curbed.com/archives/2015/02/12/tuck-hinton-nashville-home-for-sale.php