Category Archives: Mount Kisco

Homes near cemeteries: Do they sell? | Mount Kisco Homes

With Halloween quickly approaching, Redfin was dying to know: Do homes near cemeteries sell for more or less than homes farther away from cemeteries? Would a drop-dead-gorgeous home take longer to sell if the view includes tombstones? Would a home shopper have grave concerns about a home near a cemetery, or would the quiet neighbors be a selling point? We dug into the data to find out.

 

Redfin analyzed the price of homes less than 50 feet from a cemetery and compared those to the price of homes less than 100, 200, 500 and 1,000 yards away. The numbers indicate that on average, homes near cemeteries are slightly smaller, but they sell for more per square foot. On average, homes closest to cemeteries sold for $162 dollars per square foot, whereas the homes located more than 500 yards away sold for $145 per square foot.

 

Redfin

“I have a current listing that backs up to a cemetery, and 10 to 15 people have toured the home. One potential buyer provided feedback that it was a deal breaker, but that is just one of many. In my opinion, cemeteries make very quiet neighbors,” said Blakely Minton, a Redfin real estate agent in Philadelphia.

 

“Like everything with homebuying, there are pros and cons to living near a cemetery. The pros are that most likely there would be no chance of future development on the site of a cemetery, there is usually well-maintained open space, it’s quiet and many cemeteries are picturesque. The cons would be that cemeteries give some people an uneasy feeling, as it represents mortality, and it might not be an area they want to ‘live’ next to everyday,” said Lynn Ikle, a Redfin real estate agent in Baltimore.

The analysis also reveals that homes adjacent to cemeteries take longer to sell on average. Those located less than 50 feet away took 48 days to sell, whereas those located more than 500 yards away took 39 days to sell. Based on the analysis, homes near cemeteries sell for more money, but it may take longer to find the right buyer.

 

“Having a home right next door to a cemetery may make it more difficult to sell. There will always be a group of people who might love all of the specifications of the house, but the ‘creepy’ factor may prevent them from even touring the home. Having fewer folks tour a home could lead to a home staying on the market longer,” said John Malandrino, a Redfin real estate agent in Chicago.

Not all cities are the same when it comes to the number of cemeteries located within city limits and the number of homes built around them. Redfin evaluated 90 metropolitan areas across the nation to find the five cities with the most homes for sale near cemeteries. The analysis looked at homes for sale as of Oct. 15 that were less than 100 yards from a cemetery. Some of the nation’s oldest cities topped the list:

 

1. Baltimore

Homes for sale near cemeteries: 172 Median list price of those homes: $101,950

“It doesn’t surprise me that Baltimore tops the list, because it was founded back in the early 1700s,” Ikle said. “Our neighborhoods here are very well-established, and cemeteries were part of the landscape during their development.”

 

2. Philadelphia

Homes for sale near cemeteries: 157 Median list price of those homes: $134,900

“Since Philadelphia was one of the first major settlements in the U.S., there are cemeteries scattered throughout the city,” Minton said. “I had one friend who moved into a home with a cemetery right behind it. One day, she came home with her hands full of groceries and nearly hit the floor with food flying when she heard a gun shot outside. It turns out that the cemetery was for veterans, and it was a military salute.

 

“The type and size of cemetery is something to consider when deciding on a home by a cemetery, but in my opinion, the reminder of how precious life can be is a positive, not a negative.”

3. Chicago

Homes for sale near cemeteries: 115 Median list price of those homes: $229,900

“With buildable land at a premium, especially in and around the downtown Chicago area, builders have built and will continue to build in close proximity to cemeteries,” Malandrino said.

 

4. Boston

Homes for sale near cemeteries: 50 Median list price of those homes: $711,809

“The main reason Boston has so many cemeteries is because it has so many churches. Nearly all of the older churches in the greater Boston area have large cemeteries attached to them. These churches are frequently located in residential neighborhoods, so people could walk to church events,” said Peter Phinney, a Redfin real estate agent in Boston. “Churches were not only the center of worship, as they continue to be, but also the center of cultural events and social gatherings. It was only natural for people to want to be buried in their neighborhood next to the church, so homebuyers in the Boston area have made their peace with having a cemetery nearby. In fact, many welcome having the green space.”

 

 

http://realestate.msn.com/blogs/listed-buy.aspx?post=5c37386d-9625-4935-974f-33ed9e917554

Want a Castle? There’s One Being Foreclosed in Virginia! | Mt Kisco Real Estate

24 images

Yes, there’s a castle facing foreclosure in Northern Virginia. Try finding that sentence anywhere else this year. But hey, for those who have always wanted to live in royal digs and missed out on this Dupont option, Melrose Castle in Warrenton, VA is asking a mere $1.5 million. To be fair, here are some of the amenities included in the lofty price: eight fireplaces, an inground pool, 50 acres of land, a tennis court and a barn with two paddocks. Most five bedroom “single family homes” do not come with all of that. Plus, it’s a castle! Check out the gallery to see photos of such fairy tale-esque things like the spiral staircases leading to the roof. · 8871 Rogues Road , Warrenton, VA 20187 [Colgan Real Estate]

Real estate sales skyrocket; on cusp of a seller’s market | Mt Kisco Real Estate

It just keeps getting better.

The September real estate figures for the Greater Lehigh Valley show a robust 19.8 percent increase in home sales over September 2012, another strong month in what has been a brisk year of activity.

“This year has been absolutely the best year we have had probably in the last eight years,” said Bill Sands, broker with Sands & Company, Wyo-missing, Berks County. “It has been very robust.

“That robust activity and sales volume we experienced I feel is a direct attribute to the confidence that the market has reached bottom and has stabilized. The interest rates were still at an all-time low, so that has propagated a lot of people to feel safe to venture back into the market.”

The numbers from across the region show that 1,260 homes were sold in September, an increase of 208 homes when compared to last September. And going back two years, this year’s September numbers show a 23.4 percent jump over September 2011’s figures.

Sands sees positive signs for the market, in part because of a reduction in the number of foreclosures.

“In the past, foreclosures were very much as-is,” he said. “With the banks and investors taking back these properties, going in and doing the basic cleanup, they are getting a higher price point, which is helping to raise the bar on the value. It’s a very positive sign.”

 

 

 

http://www.lvb.com/article/20131028/LVB01/310259996/Real-estate-sales-skyrocket;–on-cusp-of-a-seller%C3%ADs-market

 

 

The 10 Most Annoying Types of People on Facebook | Mt Kisco Realtor

Social media amplifies humanity.

Have you ever been to a barbecue and had to listen to someone prattle on  about themselves for hours? Attended a cocktail party and had the most  intriguing conversation with a tall dark stranger? Been invited to a friends  place and viewed so many baby photos that you felt compelled to have a  vasectomy!

Facebook, Twitter and social media take those conversations and multiply it  via the crowd. Facebook is insights, conversations and news on  steroids.

It  is a reflection of what makes us human, except that it is visible to  billions of people. We are different, fun and sometimes boring. It is a  kaleidoscope of emotions, events and the bizarre. That’s why we tune into  Facebook. Its a voyeur’s paradise. Never dull and often entertaining.

So what entices us to reveal our lives online? Is it narcissism, vanity or  just wanting to get something off our chest. Annoyance is noticed and often  shared.

Here are the results of a fun survey to find the 10 most annoying types of  people on Facebook.

The 10 most annoying people on facebook

Infographic source: Lovemyvouchers.co.uk

Who and what annoys you on Facebook?

 

 

 

Read more at http://www.jeffbullas.com/2013/10/15/the-10-most-annoying-types-of-people-on-facebook/#88WiemX4jwB425JI.99

Video Shows Alleged Newspaper Swap Incident In Mount Kisco | Mt Kisco Homes

A video released today appears to show a distributor of the Hudson Valley Reporter swapping copies of that newspaper with The Examiner in an alleged incident that occurred on Friday at the newspaper racks outside the Mount Kisco Coach Diner.

The video link was provided to The Daily Voice by Adam Stone, the publisher of The Examiner, and was compiled by Matt DiBiase, a private investigator hired by Stone from Mahopac-based Colonial Investigative Associates. (The alleged incident occurs at the beginning of the 31-minute, 45-second video, which later includes the arrival of a police officer to investigate at about the 20-minute mark.)

Jim Palmer, the Mount Kisco village manager, confirmed to The Daily Voice on Friday that Michael Espinoza was arrested at approximately 6 a.m. that day and charged with criminal tampering.

The arrest has attracted national attention. Gawker linked to The Daily Voice’s original story.

Hudson Valley Reporter publisher Faith Ann Butcher referred inquiries regarding the alleged incident to her Carmel-based attorney, Raymond Cote, when she was contacted by The Daily Voice on Friday. Cote said it was too early in the process to comment.

 

http://mtkisco.dailyvoice.com/news/video-shows-alleged-newspaper-swap-incident

 

NBA’s Paul Pierce nabs $35K per month Franklin Tower pad | Mt Kisco Real Estate

Paul Pierce and Franklin Tower

Paul Pierce and Franklin Tower at 90 Franklin Street

NBA All-Star Paul Pierce has moved into a full-floor Tribeca loft at the Franklin Tower. The Boston Celtics legend, who jumped this year to the Brooklyn Nets, will move into a 5,000-square-foot home at 90 Franklin Street that was on the rental market asking $35,000 per month.

Pierce’s pad was listed with CORE Group’s Oliver Brown, who declined to comment to the New York Post, which first reported the story. The apartment has four bedrooms and 28 windows and includes a wood-burning fireplace, according to the listing.

The 18-story building is also home to Mariah Carey, who owns the penthouse, the Post said. [NYP, 1st item]  – Hiten Samtani

 

 

 

http://therealdeal.com/blog/2013/10/17/nbas-paul-pierce-nabs-35k-per-month-franklin-tower-pad/

All Together Now: Tackle Home Projects With a DIY Co-op | Mt Kisco Real Estate

y sister Torey just moved. She and her husband are completely renovating their new house. They have accomplished so much in just a couple months, but the remaining to-do list is long. The underlying disorder is sending my Naturally Organized sister into a tailspin. My house is only a couple of years old, but I’m still working to make it home, so I have a list of things to do too.
Last week Torey mentioned she really needed to paint her front door. I intended to paint my back doors as soon as the weather cleared. “We should work together!” she said. And just like that, our DIY co-op was born. We’ve been in business a week, and both of us have crossed a task we were dreading off our list — and we’re looking forward to crossing off more.
Does this sound like a dream come true? Setting up your own DIY co-op may not be as simple as a quick phone call to your sister, but it may be easier than you think. When considering a possible DIY co-op partner, ask yourself a few things.
Is the candidate:
• Committed? You need someone who is going to show up when she says she will. Many of us have at least one of those friends — we love her to death — but our plans with her always have an imaginary asterisk beside them. If your friend isn’t reliable, no matter how wonderful and talented she is, forget about it. No flaky friends allowed.
Fun to be with? When you are tackling arduous projects, it’s incredibly draining. Being able to laugh with another person can be a lifesaver. Lacking a sense of humor may not be a deal breaker for you, but it is for me.

traditional kitchen by Crisp Architects

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Does the candidate:
Have projects? Obviously a co-op needs to be mutually beneficial. If you have a friend who’s rude enough to have her home perfectly up-to-date and beautifully in order, don’t bother asking her to be your DIY co-op partner.
Have equal or complementary skills, goals and energy levels? This simply means you want and are capable of achieving the same things. Torey and I aren’t DIY wonders, but we can paint and organize and clean. She’s Naturally Organized and I am not, and we each have areas where we shine and those where the fetal position seems our only option. As far as our goals go, we both want to have clean and organized homes that are havens for our family and friends. We want to create lovely environments where you feel good just walking through the door. Our differences bring more to the table, and our similarities keep us there. And our energy levels are close enough that we’re able to work together.
Once you’ve found your DIY co-op partner, you need to schedule work times. Be sure to limit them to one house a day. Because of the flexibility in our schedules, Torey and I have settled on Monday mornings at her house and Wednesday mornings at mine. If you work at a job full time, you may want to work in the evenings or on weekends, and only one DIY day a week may be best. You can decide what works for you.
traditional garage and shed by Flow Wall System

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Establish the Ground Rules
These may evolve, but talk a few things through in the beginning, and as with your schedule, adjust as you go. This is what Torey and I have agreed to:
1. The helper hauls the junk away. A big project will be tiring for both of you, but when it’s your house, the exhaustion is on a whole ‘nother level, and dealing with a pile of trash bags or Goodwill boxes may be the final straw. And out of sight is out of mind.
On our first workday, we sorted through the many boxes of Torey and David’s books. David decided to go digital with everything except art books. We sorted box by box into “keep,” “donate” and “sell” piles. I bagged everything up and loaded it all into my van. That evening David remembered an expensive philosophy book he wanted to hold on to, but that was it.

Mt. Kisco’s Rocky Hills Garden Open For Viewing | Mt Kisco Real Estate

Come stroll through Rocky Hills — The Garden of William and Henriette Suhr from noon to 4 p.m. Oct. 19. Photo Credit: Chelsea Pomales/Garden Design magazine.

 

 

The Garden Conservancy’s new “Open Days” program will include Rocky Hills — The Mt. Kisco garden of William and Henriette Suhr.

The garden will be open from noon to 4 p.m. Oct. 19. for the event. Rocky Hills, 95 Old Roaring Brook Road in Mt. Kisco, was started about 50 years ago and planting continues to this day. It features mature specimens of black walnut and ash, complemented by recent additions of weeping beech, dawn redwood, stewartia, dogwood and an impressive collection of magnolia and conifers.

Tree peonies and an extensive planting of rhododendrons and azaleas compete for attention with the carpet of bulbs throughout the 13 acres.

One can stroll along the hillside meadow and explore the ever-expanding rock garden, as well as the hills and terraces, walls and paths, fern woodlands, self-sown primula and natural brook that serves as the heart of the garden.

Working in partnership with individual garden owners, as well as public and private organizations, the conservancy provides horticultural, technical, management, and financial expertise to sustain these fragile treasures. It helps ensure long-term stewardship of these natural assets, which are essential to the aesthetic and cultural life of our communities. For more information, click here.

 

 

 

 

http://mtkisco.dailyvoice.com/lifestyle/mt-kiscos-rocky-hills-garden-open-viewing

Fireplace cooking may be a lost skill, but it’s one you can regain with a little practice | Mt Kisco Homes

Except for Scouts toasting  marshmallows or hotdogs on a stick over a camp  fire, the skills of open  fire cooking that fed our forebears for millennia are  largely forgotten. The wrought iron tools and cast-iron utensils that baked many  a venison stew, harbor-pollack chowder, or mess of ham and beans are relegated  to antique shops. But much of the terminology lives on in the names of  items  still found on the kitchen shelves of today, and much of the old  ironware is  still cast — more for its curio value than for use. In the  frantic hassle that  passes for modern life, it is good on a chilly fall  evening to light a grate  fire and take the time to try your hand at fireplace cooking the way  great-great-great-grandmother did. If the spit-roasted haunch turns out  cold  in the middle and the Yorkshire pudding burns you can always send  out for a  pizza or get some fish sticks out of the freezer and pop them  into the  microwave.

Any fireplace will happily cook while it heats — persuading your wood to do  double duty. Refer to pellet stove guide for it’s installation. You can wrap sweet corn,  potatoes, fresh-ca’ught trout, and apples  in tinfoil and bury it in the  ash bank just as you would in a camp fire. But  there’s no timer or  automatic thermostat to regulate a live fire for more  complex recipes.

It takes constant attention to bake bread in a Dutch oven that is sitting  in  coals, with more coals shoveled into its dished top so the loaf cooks through  and browns on top but doesn’t come out raw in the middle and  burnt to a char on  the bottom. To maintain a simmer in the stew pot  which is hanging by its bail  from the trammel hook, the crane must be  moved back and forth and the pot  adjusted up and down while hot coals  are continually moved around with a  scuttle and ash rake.

You can  have a crane that fits your fireplace wrought by a blacksmith or  welded  by a metal-working job shop. You can still find small stamped-steel coal  scuttles for sale, but you’ll have to fashion your own rake; they  haven’t been  manufactured for a hundred years and more. Some companies like Skilled Welding can make something simular to a rake as a special request but they can be expensive. You can make your own by brazing a 1/4″ x 2″ x 4″ plate of iron or ribbon  steel to a handle made from  a 2′ steel rod with a loop fashioned at the  end to hang it by. However, a small  hand hoe from the garden will do  fine so long as you don’t let the wooden  handle ignite.

Be sure to have on hand a more than ample supply of cooking wood: quarter and  eighth splits of extra-well-dried, dense hardwood sticks for a long fire and a  long-lived coal bed, plus plenty of shavings, splinters, and  small  kindling-size splits to liven the fire quickly if the biscuits  threaten to  fall. Best is a mixture of quick-igniting and hot-burning  softwoods such as  pine, and long-burning hardwoods such as hickory or  oak.

Open the windows so you don’t roast yourself along with  supper, and perk up  a banked or low, heating-type, hardwood-log fire  until it’s brisk enough to  maintain a deep bed of live coals. For  roasting on a spit, maintain a skirt of  live coals under the burning  logs so you can keep raking them out and under the  roast. For frying on a gridiron or skillet, simmering beans in a footed pot, or  baking in a  Dutch oven, you’ll also want to rake coals out onto the hearth and  keep  them replenished.

Roast Haunch of Beef and Yorkshire Pudding

You will need a spit: a revolving horizontal wrought iron rod with a pair  of  sliding meat keepers that is rigged to be raised and lowered over the fire or  fixed in place so you must continually replenish a coal bed  beneath it. The  motorized spits sold for charcoal grills are ready-made  for the use, though you  can have one made of wrought iron to the old  patterns by a blacksmith.

Skewer a whole beef loin or rack of  prime rib — bone in — and set in front  of a hot fire with a good skirt  of glowing coals. Keep the coal bed red. Place  a long, narrow pan  underneath to catch drippings or the fat in the roast will  melt, fall  into the coals, catch fire, and char the roast. Worse, some will  vaporize and rise up the flue with smoke, to accumulate and increase  danger of  a flue fire. Plus, your hearth will develop a permanent grease spot. Turn the  spit frequently and cook the meat to taste. (I cheat and use a meat thermometer,  cooking until it shows 130°F — rare, but not  still mooing, inside.) When the  roast is nearly done, rake coals out  around the pan to cook the Yorkshire  pudding. When grease is sizzling  brightly, add batter and cook until it rises  and browns on top. Turn the pan occasionally to even out the cooking. If you  have a reflector,  place it in front of the meat and the pudding pan if you  like. It will  distribute the heat and reduce need for turning.

Read more: http://www.motherearthnews.com/print.aspx?id={5BE839CB-8DB5-42D1-8031-27D76CA7794D}#ixzz2hnUx7syS

How The Shutdown Is Hurting The Housing Market | Mount Kisco Real Estate

As with so many other types of economic activity, the government shutdown is causing more fear than actual harm in the housing market thus far.

But that doesn’t mean things won’t start going wrong in the very near future.

Various federal agencies play greater or lesser roles in real estate transactions. With most of them sidelined, simple matters such as closing on mortgages are becoming more complicated.

“It’s going to add up pretty quickly, because loans can’t be closed in many cases,” says Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody’s Analytics, a financial research organization. “The damage is going to start to mount and in a few days it’s going to be a significant problem for the housing market.”

The market, which had grown more robust over the past couple of years, was starting to cool off this fall anyway, due to rising prices and interest rates.

If interest rates go up due to the fear or reality of a debt default — and the costs for short-term treasuries are already starting to spike — that would have major consequences for real estate sales.

“This government shutdown, which is an artificial obstacle to the recovery, is clearly not a good thing,” says Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors.

What’s Not Working

Anyone who has purchased or refinanced a house knows a lot of paperwork is involved. The tall stack of forms that buyers and sellers sign at closings is largely generated or required by federal agencies that may now be temporarily out of the game.

Still, real estate agents and mortgage lenders have thus far been able to work their way around many of the hurdles put up by the partial government shutdown.

 

 

 

http://www.npr.org/2013/10/08/230467533/how-the-shutdown-is-hurting-the-housing-market