Tag Archives: Bedford Corners NY Luxury Homes

Secrets to a Luxurious Bathroom Look | Bedford Corners Real Estate

Ever looked at a beautiful bathroom and wondered what takes its design to the next level? You’re not alone. Many homeowners want to know how some bathrooms get that mysterious designer je ne sais quoi. I’ll let you in on a few secrets. Because the overall material costs are low in a small space like a bathroom, it’s a great place to spurge a little on a few features. But it also helps to know where to spend and where to save. Here are a few of my favorite tricks for getting a nicely finished look for a lower cost.

Best big-city bargains | #BedfordCorners Real Estate

For your next home to be a good deal, it must be priced right today and show potential for appreciation tomorrow. Plus—oh, yeah—you have to want to live there.

To create this list of best-value big-city neighborhoods, we ranked places with over 500,000 in population on housing affordability, economic strength, home price forecasts, and livability using data from NeighborhoodScout, OnBoard Informatics, and CoreLogic. Then we looked for promising, well-priced neighborhoods in our top locales.

1. Charlotte, N.C.

View gallery

.

Photograph by Lissa Gotwals

Photograph by Lissa Gotwals

POPULATION: 777,310
MEDIAN HOME PRICE: $164,100
AVERAGE PROPERTY TAX: $2,450
MEDIAN FAMILY INCOME: $63,500
PROJECTED FIVE-YEAR JOB GROWTH: 6.5%

Neighborhood: Plaza Midwood

Just 10 minutes by car from the center of Charlotte, this artsy, bike-friendly neighborhood is an interesting mix of the gritty and the pretty: You’ll see tattoo parlors alongside antiques shops and beautiful historic architecture. Plaza Midwood features new businesses, such as a two-story Harris Teeter grocery store, plus popular restaurants like the Midwood Smokehouse barbecue joint.

Housing is a mix of standalone homes and new condos. Bigger, fancier houses run about $350,000, while smaller places will cost you about $200,000. “The area has held its value well over the years, even in the downturn of the market,” says local Realtor Leigh Bryant. (One caveat: Homeowners in designated historic areas must get approval for alterations ranging from replacing windows to removing shrubbery.)

Drawing the community together is a year-round calendar of public events, including concerts, road races, and a candlelight house tour. Says neighborhood association president Adam Richman: “We’re very diverse but tight-knit.”

Neighborhood: Mountain Island Lake

This low-density region 20 minutes north of the city center—known for outdoor activities and its eponymous lake—is rated one of the most family-friendly neighborhoods in the state by real estate data firm NeighborhoodScout. Convenient to the soon-to-be-completed I-485 beltway, Mountain Island Lake features pretty, spacious homes.

Housing associations within the area, such as Riverbend, provide community pools and parks, and the nearby 1,350-acre Latta Plantation Nature Preserve offers 16 miles of horse and hiking trails.

For those who want “more home” for a lower price, says local Realtor Francine Dupont, Mountain Island Lake is a thrifty alternative to Ballantyne, a southern Charlotte neighborhood often touted as the city’s most family-oriented. Home prices in the Mountain Island Lake area start around $150,000.

2. Phoenix, Ariz.

View gallery

.

Photograph by Mark Peterman

Photograph by Mark Peterman

POPULATION: 1,511,870
MEDIAN HOME PRICE: $199,100
AVERAGE PROPERTY TAX: $1,330
MEDIAN FAMILY INCOME: $56,800
PROJECTED FIVE-YEAR JOB GROWTH: 6.0%

Neighborhood: Arcadia Lite

Residents of this eastern Phoenix neighborhood enjoy the ambiance and amenities of adjacent Arcadia— one of Phoenix’s most expensive neighborhoods—at a fraction of the price, thanks in part to smaller lot sizes. Living in 1950s and 1960s ranch-style homes, residents rave about the Arcadia area’s restaurants and stores, like La Grande Orange Grocery, with its coffee bar and pizzeria.

Other perks are bike trails and, just blocks away, Camelback Mountain, where hikers can savor magnificent views. “We love the quiet neighborhood and seeing the great palm trees that line our way home,” says Lindsey Werk, who, with her husband, Evan, just moved here from Cincinnati.

Real estate agent Stephen Caniglia has a house under contract with a buyer who plans to modernize the home—part of an ongoing trend in the area of renovations and teardowns. Unrenovated, smaller homes—about 1,300 square feet—start at around $250,000, he says.

Neighborhood: Desert Ridge

Built in 1996 as the first part of a large planned community, the area that locals often call “Desert Ridge Original” is a family-friendly oasis in northeastern Phoenix.

One of its draws is its accessibility; Desert Ridge sits near the inter­section of two of Phoenix’s major freeways, 101 and 51. Other selling points are the public schools, the nature trails running through the community, and 10-acre Cashman Park, which just got a $500,000 face-lift.

Nearby are Desert Ridge Market­place, a major retail and entertainment center, and the new Mayo Clinic Hospital.

Kristi Jacques and her husband bought a home in Desert Ridge Original two years ago. Now expecting their third child, the couple have traded up to a bigger home a few blocks away. “We love our neighbors,” says Jacques, “and our kids love their school and Cashman Park.” David Tucker, a real estate agent who lives in Desert Ridge, says you can get a 1,500- to 2,200-square-foot home for less than $400,000.

3. Fort Worth, Texas

View gallery

.

Photograph by Elizabeth Girvan

Photograph by Elizabeth Girvan

POPULATION: 783,770
MEDIAN HOME PRICE: $120,600
AVERAGE PROPERTY TAX: $3,560
MEDIAN FAMILY INCOME: $59,800
PROJECTED FIVE-YEAR JOB GROWTH: 6.2%

Neighborhood: Near Southside

Historic homes and the convenient downtown location give this resurgent neighborhood its appeal. Houses and commercial spaces dating from the 1920s and 1930s are being rehabbed, and new condominiums, apartments, and offices are going up in vacant lots. The result: an urban village smack in the middle of a city experiencing above-average growth.

The main drag, West Magnolia Avenue, is home to a mix of locally owned restaurants, bars, coffee shops, boutiques, and live music and theater venues. Residents can jump on one of the new B-Cycle shared bikes and take a 15-minute ride to downtown Fort Worth.

The more-established Berkeley Place and Mistletoe Heights rank as the pricier areas, says realtor Will Northern, but in transitioning Fairmount and Ryan Place, both of which are south of Magnolia, a fixer-upper can be found for $175,000, or an already renovated bungalow for $275,000 or more.

Neighborhood: Ridglea Hills

Southwest of downtown, this older neighborhood combines quality of life and good public schools at a lower cost of entry than that of nearby Tanglewood, where demand has driven home prices up past $400,000. In recent years, residents have held a Halloween party for kids and a Fourth of July picnic, reports longtime resident Julie Miers. “Our neighborhood has really gotten revitalized with participation from the young families moving in,” she says.

Homes, predominantly brick, sit on large lots among rolling hills, and prices start around $175,000, says realtor Gaye Reed. Prices can be three times that for houses near the private Ridglea Country Club or the small, centrally located Luther Lake. Shops and restaurants lie on the border. Close by Ridglea Hills is access to Trinity Trails, Fort Worth’s network of cycling/walking paths; downtown Fort Worth, with its performance hall and lively nightlife, is a 15-minute drive away.

 

 

read more…

 

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/best-big-city-bargains-140451626.html

Luxury Meets Off the Grid in the Aspen Groves | Bedford Corners Real Estate

 

Image 55

 

2015 Colorow Rd, Edwards, CO
For sale: $7.995 million

A sleeker, smarter species of mountain real estate has emerged from the aspen groves of White River National Forest. It’s called Squaw Creek Estate.

“This home is very cutting edge,” said listing agent Matthew Blake of Ascent Sotheby’s International Realty.

For starters, a glass-ceiling elevator leads to an observatory with a research-grade telescope for taking in a commanding view of Gore Range, Lake Creek Valley and Finnegan’s Peak of the Sawatch Range.

“It’s one of the best places for [an observatory] on a ridge line,” Blake said.

The current owners also wanted to add more green features when they bought the property in 2008. Of note, they added solar panels and a geo-thermal pond, paying for half of the 10,561-square-foot home’s energy expenses.

“The gas and electric bills are less than a town home on the valley floor,” Blake said.

They also added a state-of-the-art greenhouse that provides year-round tropical produce including bananas, mangoes and spices. “It can be winter and feel like you’re in Hawaii,” Blake said.

In fact, even with Vail and Beaver Creek ski resorts just 30 minutes away, the home feels and operates like you’re off the grid.

 

 

read more…

 

https://homes.yahoo.com/news/house-week-luxury-meets-off-grid-aspen-groves-183325032.html

 

 

How hard is it to get a mortgage? | Bedford Corners Real Estate

Is it really that hard? Yes. And no. And mostly yes again. And maybe it should be.

And since January 10 when the CFPB’s Qualified Mortgage rule took effect, it is definitely harder. So yes.

But there’s more to the story than that, and it doesn’t mean only Patsy Pays Perfect can qualify anymore.

The Qualified Mortgage rule has definitely put the squeeze on would-be homebuyers seeking a mortgage. People with lower income, the self-employed, those with credit scores on the margin, and people whose income comes from tips, bonuses or other harder to document sources are definitely being are all facing an uphill battle.

Industry analysts say that anywhere from 10% on the low side to 20% on the high side of people who have a mortgage now would not qualify for a mortgage under today’s rules.

But the rules and standards for getting a mortgage were already tightening long before the CFPB put their screws to it. In fact, the industry had largely self-corrected – as if it had a choice – long before Washington put it in ink with heightened documentation and tighter standards.

Mortgage applications, the first step in the mortgage process, have been down this year almost consistently.

 

 

read more….

 

 

http://www.housingwire.com/blogs/1-rewired/post/31082-how-hard-is-it-to-get-a-mortgage

 

Three-in-One Waterfront Glass House Wants $3.75M | Bedford Corners Real Estate

 

25 images

Location: Henry Island, Wash.
Price: $3,750,000
The Skinny: The little glass house, it seems, will always be with us, but this contemporary home on Washington State’s Henry Island adds a unique wrinkle to the basic four-glass-walls template to set itself apart. Instead of designing one small glass house (or one gigantic windowed box) the architects here divided up the 2.700 square feet of living space into three separate modules, connected in the rear by a long, low-slung breezeway. The three bedrooms are spread out across the modules, with the largest of the glass compartments containing the living areas and kitchen. All of the rooms look out onto Nelson Bay and have sliding glass walls and doors to allow for—Pacific Northwest weather permitting—indoor/outdoor living. The 24-acre property comes with a private mooring buoy and docking rights, and is located just a short sail away from Roche Harbor. It’s asking $3.75M

 

 

read more…

 

 

http://curbed.com/archives/2014/08/13/three-waterfront-glass-houses-in-one-want-375m.php

Fannie Mae: Americans increasingly skeptical on housing | Bedford Corners Real Estate

 

Consumer attitudes about the direction of the economy overall have grown more negative and Americans’ attitudes toward the housing market remain mixed, according to results from the Fannie Mae July 2014 National Housing Survey.

The share of respondents who believe the economy is on the wrong track increased by 5 percentage points from last month to 59%.

The 12-month home price change that consumers expect declined again in July, falling to 2.3%, and the share of respondents who expect home prices to climb in the next year also continued on a downward trend, falling to 42%.

“The continued cautious sentiment expressed across the range of consumer indicators this month gives weight to our view that the first phase of the housing recovery is decelerating, and 2014 will be a year of mixed housing outcomes with home prices rising more slowly and home sales falling slightly,” said Doug Duncan, senior vice president and chief economist at Fannie Mae.

“We have always believed that for the housing recovery to be considered robust, we will need strong and sustained full-time job and income growth. Recent data indicating the creation of more than 200,000 jobs over each of the last six months, combined with this month’s improvement in the share of consumers reporting significantly higher household income than a year ago, does provide some reason for optimism. If these trends continue, they could lead to some upside in housing in 2015,” he said.

 

read more…

 

 

http://www.housingwire.com/articles/30959-americans-increasingly-skeptical-on-housing-economic-recovery

Banks aren’t being stingy on mortgage lending | Bedford Corners Real Estate

 

The general feeling in the mortgage markets is one of constricted lending.

Many reasons are given: tighter regulations, a high cost of origination, stronger underwriting standards.

Neil Cavuto in Fox Business says don’t blame the banks because you can’t get a mortgage.

After all, they’re not being stingy, they’re being smart, he argues:

My friends, banks aren’t being tight-fisted, they’re just returning to form — and I like to think a fiscally-prudent form at that. Their demands may seem out of the recent norm, but they are very much the historical norm. You have to have a good credit score, a good employment history, and likely a good amount of dough to put down to show you’ve got serious intent. What’s more, you have to prove that intent. You have to prove promise. You have to prove you’re not flipping through the process, you’re understanding the process and the responsibility that comes with owning a home.

These might seem like outrageous demands to some today. We’re just going back to the simple demands pre go-go days! For previous generations they were the way things were done — so what’s so dangerous about returning to those basic standards now?

 

read more…

Banks aren’t being stingy on mortgage lending

 

The greatest threat to the housing industry | Bedford Corners Real Estate

 

Monday Morning Cup of Coffee takes a look at news crossing HousingWire’s weekend desk, with more coverage to come on bigger issues.

As Independence Day festivities slide into the rearview mirror, it’s time for a sobering look a the housing industry, and Sober Look takes just that, looking at why home price gains have slowed.

One of the reasons cited is the continuing weakness in wage growth. As they note, the latest data seem to indicate that in spite of the overall improvements in job creation, wage growth remains subdued – hovering around 2% per year over the past three years or so.

Click the graph below to enlarge.

“And wage growth is a key determinant in home price valuation. Merrill Lynch for example shows that current home prices may already be above where they should be, based on Merrill’s fair value index that is driven to a large extent by wages,” the report says.

 

read more….

 

 

http://www.housingwire.com/blogs/1-rewired/post/30553-monday-morning-cup-of-coffee-the-greatest-threat-to-the-housing-industry

Mortgage apps continue slide after last week’s free fall | Bedford Corners Real Estate

 

Mortgage applications continued their decline after last week’s 9.2% free fall, dropping another 1% for the week ending June 20, according to data from the Mortgage Bankers Association’s Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey.

This comes despite mortgage rates continuing their decline, and a serious slowdown in home price appreciation.

The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, decreased 1% on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier to the lowest level since April 2014. On an unadjusted basis, the Index decreased 2% compared with the previous week.

The Refinance Index decreased 1% from the previous week to the lowest level since May 2014.

“Another dip in mortgage applications is particularly disappointing after the welcome news of increased home sales earlier this week,” said Quicken Loans vice president Bill Banfield. “While we have seen many of the indicators regain the footing they lost in the recession, housing cannot reach its stride until the employment picture attains stability.”

 

read more….

 

http://www.housingwire.com/articles/30431-mortgage-apps-continue-slide-after-last-weeks-free-fall

 

Freddie Mac: Housing Markets Lay an Egg | Bedford Corners Real Estate

 

Housing markets overall are largely flat compared to a month ago and especially since last year at this time. Of those markets that are improving or experiencing a stable range of housing activity, most are benefiting from the energy boom taking place along the country’s mid-section.

Freddie Mac’s Multi-Indicator Market Index (MiMi) reports that:

  • The national MiMi value stands at -3.06 points indicating a weak housing market overall with only a slight improvement (+0.03 points) from February to March and a 3-month flat trend (+0.05 points). However, on a year-over-year basis, the U.S. housing market has improved by 0.66 points. The nation’s all-time MiMi low of -4.49 was in November 2010 when the housing market was at its weakest.
  • Ten of the 50 states plus the District of Columbia are in their stable range with North Dakota, Wyoming, the District of Columbia, Alaska, and Louisiana ranking in the top five and unchanged from last month.
  • Four of the 50 metro areas are in their stable range, San Antonio, New Orleans, Austin and Houston.
  • The five most improving states month-over-month are Ohio (+0.12), Rhode Island (+0.11), Illinois (+0.10), Texas (+0.10) and South Carolina (+0.09). From one year ago the most improving states remained unchanged: Florida (+1.83), Nevada (+1.60), South Carolina (+0.99), California (+0.97) and Texas (+0.96).
  • The five most improving metro areas month-over-month are Cincinnati (+0.11), Columbus (+0.11), Houston (+0.10), Riverside (+0.10), and San Antonio (+0.10). From one year ago the most improving metros remained unchanged: Miami (+2.37), Orlando (+1.91), Las Vegas (+1.71), Tampa (+1.57), and Riverside (+1.44).
  • Overall, in March, 13 of the 50 states plus the District of Columbia are improving based on their three month trend, and 20 of the 50 metros show an improving trend.

 

read more….

 

http://www.realestateeconomywatch.com/2014/05/freddie-mac-housing-markets-lay-an-egg/