Tag Archives: Armonk Real Estate

Armonk Real Estate

Police say NY man stole batteries from road signs | Armonk NY Realtor

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP) — Police say a man stole nearly 300 large batteries from portable signs along New York highways, knocking out warnings and information to motorists.

Westchester County police say Angel Velez of the Bronx has been charged with grand larceny and other crimes. They say the batteries were worth $60,000. The signs are typically used to warn motorists of temporary traffic patterns or safety hazards.

The batteries weigh 55 to 96 pounds. Police believe Velez sold them to recycling centers for about $20,000.

The thefts occurred along the state Thruway and several parkways in Westchester.

State police and New York City police are investigating whether Velez is responsible for similar thefts in Rockland and Orange counties and the Bronx.

A call to Legal Aid, which is representing Velez, was not immediately returned.

The aesthetics of real estate | Armonk NY Real Estate

Value is an aesthetic experience, says Krisstina Wise, broker-owner of the Austin, Texas, brokerage The GoodLife Team. It’s not just a product or service, she said, but how a brokerage makes a customer feel.

Wise and five other panelists will discuss how to make doing business in real estate “as easy as buying a latte” at Real Estate Connect New York City, which runs Jan. 16-18 at the Grand Hyatt New York. Wise will appear on an opening-day panel, “What does the industry need to do to make the ‘Latte Vision‘ happen?”


Krisstina Wise

Wise’s answer to that question revolves around value and her real estate raison d’etre: “To care, to make a difference.”

Customer experience, Wise says, should be a full one. An experience with a brokerage is analogous to walking into a coffee shop — it should be sensual, she said. Customers should “feel something.”

She scrubs that perspective against the 12-agent, two-office brokerage she founded in 2008 by asking questions like: What does our website look and feel like? Does our office space match our online presence? How quickly do we respond to leads? Do customers get more value than they expect?

“Real estate is about value,” Wise said. It’s not only about the quality of what customers get, she said, but also about the way they feel, which explains her brokerage’s six-point service manifesto and its clean, purple and sea green branding.

GoodLife Team branding from the brokerage’s website.

Wise spent her first 15 years as an agent with Austin-based Keller Williams Realty, one of the largest real estate franchisors in the U.S. By the time she set out on her own, she led a team of agents and was a national trainer.

Since then, The GoodLife Team has been held up as a model of the modern real estate brokerage for the transparent, innovative and forward-thinking way it operates.

In 2010, Inman News recognized The GoodLife Team as the most innovative brokerage of the year. This January, Apple profiled the brokerage for its incorporation of the iPad into its business.

In October, The GoodLife Team held an inaugural two-day conference, REiNVENTION, in Austin, that shed light on the brokerage’s inner workings, from marketing to technology to inspiration. Wise expects REiNVENTION to become a yearly event.

The conference was an opportunity to share with the real estate industry the working elements and systems of an actual working brokerage, Wise said. Sometimes it’s hard to know what practices that are taught on the conference circuit actually work, and how they work, because what’s being touted is not always what’s actually used by the person explaining a system or service.

REiNVENTION built on the momentum (and demand) from a mentor-like program Wise founded in 2010 in which she coaches and shares her insight with paying participants.

Real estate has fully entered the digital age, Wise said, and this has shifted the value propositions for agents and brokers, whether they like it or not.

“Brokerages have to get back to the basics of caring about the customer,” she said.

Providing value in a Web-based world is immensely complex, Wise said, which is why she maintains a single-minded focus on choosing technologies and systems that maximize agent productivity and client ease of use at The GoodLife Team.

She attends conferences around the country to find the best and most useful technology and systems to integrate into The GoodLife Team’s business, simplifying her agents’ lives so they can focus on serving their clients, she said.

The result, Wise said, is a six-part “G-core” real estate operating system The GoodLife Team works with:

  • Salesforce. The customer relationship management system is the hub, Wise said. All leads automatically enter the program.
  • Google Apps. All agents use Gmail for email, use collaborative Google calendars so everyone knows everyone else’s schedule, and Google Drive, which allows real-time collaborative sharing on brokerage documents. It’s part of a “nothing secret” way of operating, Wise said.
  • Evernote. All tasks for the brokerage are managed with the cloud-based project management software; agents can check off items on their to-do lists seen by everyone else in the brokerage.
  • Social media. The GoodLife Team has a Facebook business page, Twitter, YouTube and Pinterest accounts and a WordPress-powered blog that agents are encouraged to source for social media content.
  • Mobile. Every agent has an iPad and this January The GoodLife Team is launching a new mobile-optimized website.
  • Paperless. Last year, The GoodLife Team went completely paperless by integrating the paperless transaction management system Cartavi and e-signature platform DocuSign into its business. “Everything’s digital,” Wise said. “We have no file folders.”

Wise says she has a business philosophy of “failing forward.” Last year, The GoodLife Team went fully paperless. This year, she said, the challenge is to further simplify business operations.

“It’s a big vision,” she said, and “scary,” but “we have instances where we have three screwdrivers when only one is truly needed.”

When Wise has time to herself — which is not often, given that she’s also a wife and mother of two children — she enjoys reading the latest murder mysteries, running, and practicing the “art of doing nothing.”

Armonk Sales up 16% – Prices down 15% | RobReportBlog | Armonk NY Real Estate Report

Armonk Sales up 16% –  Prices down 15%  | RobReportBlogArmonk NY Real Estate Report  –  last six months

2012

50                       homes sold

$890,000       median sales price

$150,000       low

$3,753,750    high

3479                  ave. size

$329                  ave. price per foot

196                     ave. days on market

93.66%              ave. sold to ask price

$1,136,011      ave. sold price

Housing Prices Keep Slow, Steady Climb Up: Case-Shiller | Armonk Real Estate

Home prices increased in September in most major U.S. cities, more evidence of a housing recovery that is providing a lift to the fragile economy.

Sold sign

The Standard & Poor’s/Case Shiller national index measuring prices in 20 cities rose 3 percent in September compared with the same month a year ago. Prices also gained 3.6 percent in the July-September quarter compared with the same quarter in 2011. (Read More: Yes, Housing Starts Surge, but Rentals Are the Drivers)

Across the nation, prices increased in 18 of 20 cities.

Phoenix prices jumped 20.4 percent over that stretch to lead all cities. Prices in Atlanta showed a modest 0.1 percent increase, ending 26 straight consecutive year-over-year declines.

Prices also rose in September from August in 13 cities. Five metro regions posted declines, and two were unchanged. Monthly prices are not seasonally adjusted.

4 must-haves when installing a dishwasher | Armonk NY Real Estate

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Q: I live in a 1940s house with a kitchen that has never been updated. I’m tired of doing the dishes by hand and would really like to get a dishwasher. I don’t have a garbage disposal and don’t really want or need one. I compost all my organic food waste.

Is it possible to get a dishwasher or am I doomed to continue with washing dishes by hand. Do I have to spend big bucks to have the kitchen remodeled? I’m pretty handy so if possible I’d like to do this myself using the existing kitchen cabinets.

The counters are 25 inches deep with tile countertops, and the counter height is 35 inches. There are two side-by-side banks of drawers to one side of the sink measuring 26 inches between the stiles. This seems to be a perfect place for a dishwasher. What do you think?

A: Yes, you can have a dishwasher in your kitchen. Furthermore, you can do most of the work yourself and save a bunch of money. Four things are necessary for a built-in dishwasher: a place for it; a water supply line; a drain line; and power. We’ll take these in order.

Cabinet space: Standard under-counter dishwashers are 24 inches wide, 24 inches deep and approximately 35 inches high with adjustable legs. We’ve installed a dishwasher in an opening a little less than 34 inches tall. Based on your description, it sounds as if it’ll be a tight fit, but a fit nonetheless. There are narrower models and also single-drawer models with different dimensions available if the standard size won’t work. We’re sure that with a little research you can find one that will fit your space.

The drawer banks are an ideal location. It’s best to locate a dishwasher close to the sink for easy access to water and waste lines. Often 1940s vintage cabinets were built in place. Getting your opening should be as easy as removing the drawers, cutting out the cross rails and cutting out the bottom of the cabinet with a reciprocating saw.

Water supply: A dishwasher needs hot water. The closest source is the hot water supply under the sink. Replace the shutoff valve with a new one that connects both the sink and the dishwasher to the hot water line. The new valve, also known as an angle stop, will have a vertical outlet to be connected to the faucet and a horizontal outlet to supply hot water to the dishwasher. Use a long braided wire hose available at plumbing supply houses, hardware stores and home centers for the connection. You may need to drill a hole in the side of the cabinet to route the hose from the shutoff valve to the dishwasher opening.

Drain line: The dishwasher will come with a hose used to connect the dishwasher to the drain under the sink. Normally the hose is connected to an inlet in the garbage disposal. Because you don’t have one and don’t want one a little simple plumbing is in order. Water empties from the sink, through a strainer, into a tailpiece connected to a p-trap and then into the waste line. To connect the drain hose replace the straight tailpiece you have now with a tailpiece that looks like a “Y.” Secure the drainage hose to the “Y” with a hose clamp.

Depending on the local plumbing view PIC Plumbing Services near you,  to help install an air gap in the countertop. This will entail cutting a hole in the tile with a diamond-tipped hole saw attached to a drill. An air gap is a backflow preventer, keeping dirty water from re-entering the dishwasher. If an air gap is not required, the same thing can be accomplished by securing the drain line with a clamp at the top of the sink cabinet.

Here’s a YouTube video on drain lines and air gaps that we think is worth watching: .

Power: Local codes usually require a dishwasher to be on a separate circuit that may be shared with a garbage disposal. The size of the wire and the circuit breaker will depend on the load the dishwasher draws. To be safe, we use 12-gauge wire run to a duplex plug and protected by a 20-amp circuit breaker. If the electrical box is surface-mounted, use armored cable to run the line. This is the only part of the job that may not be appropriate for your do-it-yourself project. It depends on your experience and your level of comfort working with electrical wiring.

With the water, drainage and electrical in place, read the dishwasher manual for hookup instructions. In any case, because there is some question as to whether an air gap is required and there is new wiring involved, get a permit and have the job inspected.

New short-sale program offers relief for underwater homeowners | Armonk NY Real Estate

WASHINGTON — Though there are still some snares and drawbacks for participants, one of the federal government’s most important financial relief efforts for underwater homeowners started operating Nov. 1.

It’s a new short-sale program that targets the walking wounded among borrowers emerging from the housing downturn — owners who owe far more on their mortgages than their current home value but have stuck it out for years, resisted the temptation to strategically default and never fell seriously behind on their monthly payments.

Industry estimates put the number of underwater owners across the country at just under 11 million, or 22% of all homes with a mortgage. Of these, about 4.6 million have loans that are owned or securitized by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. Eighty percent of these Fannie-Freddie borrowers, in turn, are current on their mortgage payments and meet the baseline eligibility test for the new short-sale effort.