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New York sees rise in real estate fakers | Pound Ridge Real Estate

The number of scammers posing as real estate agents is on the rise, prompting the New York State Division of Consumer Protection to issue a warning to apartment hunters.

Since January, the state agency has received 211 complaints from people, mostly immigrants or young people new to the state, conned out of cash by a fake rental agent, 121 of them in New York City, Real Estate Weekly reported.

And consumers are not the only ones getting duped. Clients with fake identities are not unheard of either, the news outlet said.

New York City-based independent broker Kathy Matson advised that the best way to do business, no matter which side of the deal you’re on, is through referrals.

Source: Real Estate Weekly

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/wire/new-york-sees-rise-in-real-estate-fakers/#sthash.MBq9TdOB.dpuf

 

 

New York sees rise in real estate fakers | Inman News.

Inside Tom Brady and Gisele Bündchen’s ‘French Chateau via the Pacific Coast Highway’ | Pound Ridge Real Estate

house-front.jpgPhoto by Roger Davies/Architectural Digest

When you’re really rich and beautiful and build a much-whispered-about 14,000-square-foot acid-washed limestone mansion from scratch, there’s no better place for a big reveal than the glossy pages of Architectural Digest. Despite an early slipup by the builder, who released photos of the project prematurely, the magazine continued apace and published New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady and supermodel Gisele Bündchen’s  new “French chateau via the Pacific Coast Highway” in its October issue.

The story, which dropped online this morning after editor in chief Margaret Russell made a Today Show appearance, makes clear that it’s actually “normal” home. None of those “lavish pleasure dome replete with sultry sirens and gridiron gods cavorting around the pool” nor “sprawling palace staffed with a battalion of liveried footmen proffering protein shakes on silver trays,” writes Mayer Rus. Rather, there’s just the regular plebeian driveway that “leads over a pond to a motor court paved in reclaimed cobblestones and then to a stone bridge spanning a koi-stocked moat that’s picturesque but not pompous”; an unassuming pool “laid out with two straight sides and one long, sinuous edge that helps give the impression of a nautral lake, particularly in the early-morning and late-afternoon light”; and just your average “custom-made wrought iron monkey bars” in the gym. Bündchen sums it up: “I want to live in a place that feels like a real home, where you can put your feet up on the couch and just relax.”

It was important for the Bündchen, whom interior designer Joan Behnke describes as an “earth mother”—”she’s drawn to certain things because of the energy they give off”—that the home incorporate as many reclaimed materials as possible, from the decking and floorboards to the tiles, bricks, doors, and marble fireplace surrounds. Well we have great post to read about choosing best decking supplier. In addition, composting, gray-water technology, solar panels, and eco-friendly construction materials were all factored into the overall design, which was completed by architect Richard Landry. (Brady tells Rus that he’s “all about team dynamics and putting the right people together,” presumably while huddling.) The neutral interiors are filled with pieces from RH and Christian Liaigre, Loro Piana fabrics, Tai Ping carpets, custom pieces, and, of course, a black-and-white photo of Gillette Stadium hanging over the fireplace in the master bath. Check it out below—and head to Racked National for a look at Bundchen’s utterly insane closet.

http://curbed.com/archives/2013/09/04

What $3,300/Month Can Rent You Around New York City | Pound Ridge Real Estate

Welcome back to Curbed Comparisons, a column that explores what one can rent for a set dollar amount in various New York City neighborhoods. Is one man’s studio another man’s townhouse? Let’s find out! Today’s price: $3,300/month.

↑ In Park Slope, a 1,050-square-foot full-floor apartment is available for $3,300/month. The unit is divided into a living room, a bedroom, an office, a dressing room, and there appear to be a number of closets. The kitchen is not pictured, but presumably exists since there’s a dishwasher. Charming original details abound.

↑ On the Lower East Side, a 2BR + office with a windowed kitchen (the window appears to face a wall, but still) is going for $3,200/month. One of the bedrooms looks like it gets a lot of light.

↑ This renovated 1BR in the West Village is asking $3,200/month. It features french doors and a fireplace (unclear if it’s usable or not).

↑ In Astoria, a 1,000-square-foot 2BR/2BA in a luxury building is going for $3,200/month. It includes a privat 600-square-foot terrace and the building has a shared roof deck and a gym with a jacuzzi.

 

 

 

 

http://ny.curbed.com/archives/2013/09/06/what_3300month_can_rent_you_around_new_york_city.php

Greenwich Teardown Trend Resumes in Earnest | Pound Ridge Homes

18 Lexington Ave. in April 2012 and Aug. 2013 as two condominiums. Credit: Leslie Yager

18 Lexington Ave. in April 2012 and Aug. 2013 as two condominiums. Credit: Leslie Yager
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  • 18 Lexington Ave. in April 2012 and Aug. 2013 as two condominiums. Credit: Leslie Yager
  • 13 Lexington Ave. in Dec. 2012 and Aug. 2013. Credit: Leslie Yager
  • 19 Connecticut Ave. was bought by a builder for $716,000 and renovated instead of demolished. In April 2013 it sold for $1.625. Credit: Leslie Yager
  • 18 Lexington is rented out for $10k/month for Unit A and $10,500/month for unit B. Credit: Leslie Yager
  • 137 Milbank in central Greenwich sold in 2010 for $1.175 and the new construction sold for $3.385 in Sept. 2012. Credit: Leslie Yager
  • 46 Connecticut Ave., on Sept. 2, 2013. Its days are numbered. Credit: Leslie Yager
  • Before and after photos of 34 Lincoln Ave. in central Greenwich. Credit: Leslie Yager

Oyster Festival Returns To Norwalk This Weekend | Pound Ridge Real Estate

The 36th annual Norwalk Seaport Association Oyster Festival will return Friday through Sunday, complete with the always-popular Oyster Slurping and Oyster Shucking contests.

The festival will again offer a wide range of activities for the whole family, including an Arts & Crafts Pavilion, the Kids Cove, with rides, games and child-centered entertainment, and a food court with everything from Italian to seafood. New this year for the adults is the Craft Beer Tasting Tent with more than 25 beers to sample and brewers to meet.

The festival also features entertainment by local musicians and national acts. On Friday, Max Creek brings its unique blend of rock, country, reggae, soul, and calypso.

Fans who missed Village People last year due to bad weather can catch them on Saturday night. Sunday’s headliner will be The Zoo, winner of MTV’s Ultimate Cover Band contest.

Returning this year is the Paul Bunyan Lumberjack Show featuring logrolling, ax throwing, tree climbing, dragster chain sawing and more. Joining them on the schedule is Eastern Action Sports Team providing visitors with BMX shows. The Arts and Crafts Pavilion hosts dozens of artists and crafters displaying a wide range of creative and practical items.

Taste-test some of the Festival’s culinary offerings such as barbecue, oysters, mussels and clams, and other food selections available at the Food Court. Food is prepared by dozens of local nonprofit organizations allowing them to raise funds for their charitable causes.

The event is held at Veterans Memorial Park, adjacent to Norwalk Harbor on Seaview Avenue in Norwalk. Admission for adults is $10 on Friday, $12 on Saturday and Sunday.

Children 5 to 12 years old are $5. U.S. military personnel on active duty are free. All entertainment is included in ticket prices. Tickets can be purchased online at the Norwalk Seaport Association’s website.

The annual festival supports the Norwalk Seaport Association, which has owned, restored and maintained the Sheffield Island Lighthouse since 1986. It is the official U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Friends group for the Norwalk Islands.

 

 

Oyster Festival Returns To Norwalk This Weekend | The Greenwich Daily Voice.

What’s It Like to Live Inside a Work of Art? | Pound Ridge Real Estate

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Architect Michael Haverland is in the news lately with the completion of Calvin Klein’s house on Meadow Lane in Southampton. Tucked away in Springs is an earlier house of his, done for clients David Steward and M. Pierre Friedrichs, which overlooks Accabonac Harbor. (You wonder if Calvin, who is reportedly annoyed that curious folk are peering into his glass house—hey, who could have foreseen that?—shouldn’t have taken inspiration from this house and asked for a solid façade to face the street.)

This house pays tribute to twentieth century architectural and design masters, names like Frank Lloyd Wright (a particular favorite of the owners), Mies van der Rohe, Robert Venturi (with whom Michael Haverland once interned), and Le Corbusier. One of the most striking features of the building is the textured concrete, a nod to Wright’s “textile block” houses built in the 1920s in Los Angeles. Once you’re inside, of course, most striking is the beautiful view of the outdoors.
So what is it like to live inside a work of art? We sat down with David Steward and found out.

 

 

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http://hamptons.curbed.com/archives/2013/09/04/whats_it_like_to_live_inside_a_work_of_art.php

Protecting our planet is an issue that resonates with a lot of people | Pound Ridge Real Estate

Melissa Seipel, HR Manager of Global Operations, replies:

Thank you so much for your interest in a career in conservation! You don’t mention your previous work experience or professional background, but we have over 3300 staff working in fifty states and thirty five countries in a wide variety of roles. While our science and conservation staff are critical to our mission, we couldn’t do it without the contributions of men and women in fields such as marketing, finance, legal, administrative and operations, information science, fundraising, human resources — and the list goes on! At our beautiful Pine Butte guest ranch in Montana, we also hire seasonal cooks and housekeepers. We post new positions often on www.nature.org/careers and you can create a “Job Search Agent” in the locations where you would like to work and receive and email you the moment that new jobs are posted. All positions list the “basic qualifications” required and while many do require four year or advanced degrees, a large number do not. We also depend heavily on the contributions of our volunteers. Volunteering is also a great way to get to know staff in the offices and learn about what potential needs they may have in the future. If you find that the positions you are most interested in do require degrees, you may also want to explore the many evening and online degree programs available geared towards working adults, many with financial aid available. It’s never too late to pursue your dreams!

 

 

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http://www.nature.org/ourscience/sciencefeatures/ask-the-conservationist-september-2013.xml?src=e.gp

 

Two Philadelphia University students created sophisticated interior furnishings with fungi | Pound Ridge Homes

 

 

Several years ago, forward-thinking Ecovative Design made headlines with its development of insulating and packaging materials made from mushrooms. What these mycological biocomposites lacked in aesthetic refinement they made up for in environmental performance, given their minimal-impact production.

Recently, Philadelphia University industrial design students demonstrated that fungi can be utilized to create more sophisticated interior furnishings. For their senior project, Merjan Tara Sisman and Brian McClellan created the “Living Room Project,” with a prototype chair and pendant light made from the mycelial roots of mushrooms. After discovering various ways in which to control root growth within prefabricated molds, Sisman and McClellan crafted objects of unexpected sturdiness and refinement.

The duo consider their design process—which is similar to that used by Ecovative—akin to a zero-energy type of 3D printing. “What I loved about mycelium was the fact that its act of growth became the design itself,” Sisman told The Philadelphia Inquirer. “It is actually beautiful. It is a pretty little smart thing that holds great potential.”

Blaine Brownell, AIA, is a regularly featured columnist whose stories appear on this website each week. His views and conclusions are not necessarily those of ARCHITECT magazine nor of the American Institute of Architects.

 

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http://www.architectmagazine.com/furniture/fungus-furniture.aspx?utm_source=newsletter&utm_content=jump&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=EBP_082713&day=2013-08-27

 

Grow Your Best Fall Garden Vegetables: What, When and How | Pound Ridge Real Estate

Right now, before you forget, put a rubber band around your wrist to remind  you of one gardening task that cannot be postponed: Planting seeds for fall  garden vegetables. As summer draws to a close, gardens everywhere can morph into  a tapestry of delicious greens, from tender lettuce to frost-proof spinach, with  a sprinkling of red mustard added for spice. In North America’s southern half,  as long as seeds germinate in late July or early August, fall gardens can grow  the best cabbage, broccoli, and cauliflower you’ve ever tasted. In colder  climates it’s prime time to sow carrots, rutabagas, and turnips to harvest in  the fall. Filling space vacated by spring crops with summer-sown vegetables will  keep your garden productive well into fall, and even winter.

Granted, the height of summer is not the best time to start tender seedlings  of anything. Hot days, sparse rain, and heavy pest pressure must be factored  into a sound planting plan, and then there’s the challenge of keeping fall  plantings on schedule. A great way you can get rid of pests and still add a decoration to your garden is to get a pest-free bird feeder from ballachy.com. But you can meet all of the basic requirements for a  successful, surprisingly low-maintenance fall garden by following the steps  outlined below. The time you invest now will pay off big time as you continue to  harvest fresh veggies from your garden long after frost has killed your tomatoes  and blackened your beans.

1. Starting Seeds

Count back 12 to 14 weeks from your average first fall frost date (see “Fall  Garden Planting Schedule” below) to plan your first task: starting seeds of  broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower, and kale indoors, where  germination conditions are better than they are in the garden. Some garden  centers carry a few cabbage family seedlings for fall planting, but don’t expect  a good selection. The only sure way to have vigorous young seedlings is to grow  your own, using the same procedures you would use in spring (see Start Your Own Seeds). As soon as the seedlings are three  weeks old, be ready to set them out during a period of cloudy weather.

If you’re already running late, you can try direct-seeding fast-growing  varieties of broccoli, kale or kohlrabi. Sow the seeds in shallow furrows  covered with half an inch of potting soil. Keep the soil moist until the  seedlings germinate, then thin them. The important thing is to get the plants up  and growing in time to catch the last waves of summer heat.

When is too late? The end of July marks the close of planting season for  cabbage family crops in northern areas (USDA Zones 6 and lower); August is  perfect in warmer climates. Be forewarned: If cabbage family crops are set out  after temperatures have cooled, they grow so slowly that they may not make a  crop. Fortunately, leafy greens (keep reading) do not have this problem.

2. Think Soil First

In addition to putting plenty of supernutritious food on your table, your  fall garden provides an opportunity to manage soil fertility, and even control  weeds. Rustic greens including arugula, mustard, and turnips make great  triple-use fall garden crops. They taste great, their broad leaves shade out  weeds, and nutrients they take up in fall are cycled back into the soil as the  winter-killed residue rots. If you have time, enrich the soil with compost or  aged manure to replenish micronutrients and give the plants a strong start.

You can also use vigorous leafy greens to “mop up” excess nitrogen left  behind by spring crops (the organic matter in soil can hold quite a bit of  nitrogen, but some leaches away during winter). Space that has recently been  vacated by snap beans or garden peas is often a great place to grow heavy  feeders such as spinach and cabbage family crops. When sown into corn stubble,  comparatively easy-to-please leafy greens such as lettuce and mustard are great  at finding hidden caches of nitrogen.

3. Try New Crops

Several of the best crops for your fall garden may not only be new to your  garden, but new to your kitchen, too. Set aside small spaces to experiment with  nutty arugula, crunchy Chinese cabbage, and super-cold-hardy mâche (corn salad).  Definitely put rutabaga on your “gotta try it” list: Dense and nutty “Swede  turnips” are really good (and easy!) when grown in the fall. Many Asian greens  have been specially selected for growing in fall, too. Examples include ‘Vitamin  Green’ spinach-mustard, supervigorous mizuna and glossy green tatsoi (also  spelled tah tsai), which is beautiful enough to use as flower bed edging.

As you consider the possibilities, veer toward open-pollinated varieties for  leafy greens, which are usually as good as — or better than — hybrids when grown  in home gardens. The unopened flower buds of collards and kale pass for the  gourmet vegetable called broccolini, and the young green seed pods of immature  turnips and all types of mustard are great in stir-fries and salads. Allow your  strongest plants to produce mature seeds. Collect some of the seeds for  replanting, and scatter others where you want future greens to grow. In my  garden, arugula, mizuna and turnips naturalize themselves with very little help  from me, as long as I leave a few plants to flower and set seed each year.

With broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, and their close cousins, hybrid  varieties generally excel in terms of fast, uniform growth, so this is one  veggie group for which the hybrid edge is a huge asset. Breeding work is  underway to develop better open-pollinated varieties for organic growers, but  for now, trusted hybrids such as ‘Belstar’ broccoli, ‘Gonzales’ cabbage or ‘Snow  Crown’ cauliflower are usually the best choices.

Finally, be sure to leave ample space for garlic, which is planted later on,  when you can smell winter in the air. Shallots, multiplying onions, and  perennial “nest” onions are also best planted in mid-fall, after the soil has  cooled. In short-season areas these alliums are planted in September; elsewhere  they are planted in October.

Read more: http://www.motherearthnews.com/print.aspx?id={E12AADD6-B599-46F9-AF14-D80638639472}#ixzz2dMdm4t2S

Huguette Clark’s Legendary Estate Inches Closer to Subdivision | Pound Ridge Real Estate

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The 52-acre Connecticut estate known as Le Beau Château—one of the many high-value real estate holdings of the late copper heiress Huguette Clark—may soon be subdivided under new ownership, after failing to sell intact. Currently listed for $15.9M, the estate was once publicly asking as much as $24M, but has seen swift price chops and some creative marketing following Clark’s 2011 death. Now the listing touts an approved “10-estate lot subdivision”—which the city signed off on back in 2008—along with the Voorhees, Gmelin and Walker-designed nine-bedroom mansion, which, curiously enough, Clark never moved into during her 60 years of ownership. Hopefully, the main house will not suffer demolition following a sale, but subdivision developers are generally not inclined to rehabilitate historic mansions.

 

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http://curbed.com/archives/2013/08/20/huguette-clarks-legendary-estate-now-ready-for-subdivision.php