Location: Hollywood Hills, Calif. Price: $7,825,000 The Skinny: Here’s a sleek Hollywood Hills house that is definitely not for the technophobic: with self-closing kitchen cabinets, an automated Neorest toilet in the master bathroom, and a sound system that’s controlled via a Smarthome system, this place might very well be among the first to throw off the shackles of human domination when the A.I. singularity occurs. Until that unhappy moment arrives, though, the Jay Vanos design provides everything an early-20th-century free-range human could want in modern luxury. Inside there are Miele appliances in the kitchen (including a built-in coffee system and wine refrigerator) and heated bathroom floors; outside there’s an infinity pool with a swim-up bar and spa, all with panoramic city views. The 5,200-square-foot home has three bedrooms and four bathrooms (one full, three partial) that are served by an elevator which, hopefully, is not powered by a semi-autonomous computer chip nurturing a murderous rage toward the people who make it go up and down all day, every day. The listing is asking $7.825M, regardless of whether Skynet is about to awaken or not.
Category Archives: Chappaqua
Armonk, Chappaqua Lead in Highest Ask Price | #RobReportBlog
| Armonk, Chappaqua Lead in Highest Ask Price | #RobReportBlog | ||
| Katonah | $18,995,000.00 | |
| Pound Ridge | $5,700,000.00 | |
| South Salem | $12,200,000.00 | |
| Mt Kisco | $3,950,000.00 | |
| Chappaqua | $24,750,000.00 | |
| North Salem | $18,500,000.00 | |
| Armonk | $24,900,000.00 | |
| Bedford | $14,500,000.00 | |
| Bedford Hills | $10,995,000.00 | |
| Bedford Corners | $12,000,000.00 |
Black Ice, Slick Conditions Likely In Chappaqua | Chappaqua Real Estate
The snowstorm that dropped 2-4 inches of snow throughout Westchester County has passed, but the National Weather Service has just issued a Special Weather Statement warning of black ice and slick conditions Tuesday night and into Wednesday.
Those conditions are especially likely on walkways and untreated roads, where many are either wet or covered with snow and ice.
Temperatures are expected to fall into the 20s Tuesday night with any slush or standing water refreezing.
Icy conditions could continue Wednesday, which will be mostly sunny but with a high of only around 30 degrees.
Thursday and Friday should also be dry, but temperatures are not expected to climb past the freezing mark.
The next chance of snow is Saturday, with a 70 percent chance and a high temperature of 35.
http://chappaqua.dailyvoice.com/news/black-ice-slick-conditions-likely-westchester
Art Dealer’s Mott Schmidt Georgian Manor Asks $9.8M | Chappaqua Real Estate

Location: Briarcliff Manor, N.Y. Price: $9,800,000 The Skinny: Built in 1929 for New York banker William S. Lambie, this Georgian manor was designed by architect-to-the-moneyed Mott Schmidt, whose work came into vogue when the tastes of the rich swung from Gilded Age opulence to something (relatively) more restrained. Despite its lack of garish flourishes, with eight bedrooms and 10 bathrooms spread out over 13,242 square feet the property still manages to announce the original owner’s wealth very effectively. Located on a 16-acre wooded lot not far from the Hudson River, it’s adjacent to the Sleepy Hollow Country Club, and actually sits on the road that inspired Washington Irving’s tale of the headless horseman. Schmidt, whose client list reads like a list of Who’s Who in early 20th-century New York, also designed homes in the town and country for the Vanderbilts, the Rockefellers, and the Astors. This home is currently owned by the art dealer Warren Adelson and asking $9.8M, a slight drop from the original $10.9M it asked was listed earlier this year.
· 842 Sleepy Hollow Road [Zillow] · 842 Sleepy Hollow Road [Coldwell Banker]
Are foreclosure laws to blame for patchy US price gains? | Chappaqua NY Homes
Why have many of the local housing markets that were hit hardest during the bust — especially in California — bounced back so vigorously and quickly, with prices close to or exceeding where they were in 2005 and 2006?
And why have many others along the East Coast and in the Midwest had a slower move toward recovery, with sluggish sales and gradual increases in values?
Though multiple economic factors are at work, appraisal industry experts believe they have isolated a crucial and perhaps surprising answer: Real estate markets rebound much faster in areas where state law permits foreclosures to proceed quickly, moving homes with defaulted loans into new owners’ hands expeditiously, rather than allowing them to sit and deteriorate, tied up in court procedures for years. Prices of foreclosed homes in such areas typically are depressed and negatively affect values of neighboring properties, but they don’t remain so for lengthy periods because investors and other buyers swoop in and return them to residential use rapidly.
By contrast, in states where laws allow large numbers of homes in the process of foreclosure to remain in legal limbo, often empty and unsold, home-price recoveries are hindered because lenders are prevented from recovering and reselling the units to buyers who’ll fix them up and add value.
Pro Teck Valuation Services, a national appraisal firm based in Waltham, Mass., recently completed research in 30 major metropolitan areas that dramatically illustrates the point. All the fastest-rebounding markets in October — those with strong sales, price increases and low inventories of unsold houses — were located in so-called non-judicial states, where foreclosures can proceed without the intervention of courts.
All the worst-performing markets — where prices and sales have been less robust and there are excessive numbers of houses available but unsold — were located in judicial states, where post-default proceedings can stall foreclosure completions for two to three years or even more in some cases.
http://therealdeal.com/blog/2013/12/06/are-foreclosure-laws-to-blame-for-patchy-us-price-gains/



























