Tag Archives: Westchester Homes for Sale

Westchester Homes for Sale

How Much For A One-Bedroom Condo In Long Island City? | Mt Kisco Real Estate

Where/What: A 1BR/1BA condo in Long Island City
Square feet: 842
Maintenance/CC: $636
The Skinny: The listing for this apartment touts its 14-foot-high ceilings, hardwood floors, and “oversized casement windows.” Perhaps as a result of the slightly awkward layout, there’s a smaller extra room (not pictured) with a washer/dryer that could be used as a slightly claustrophobic home office or for extra storage. You also get a dishwasher, as well as a ginormous bathroom with a monolithic tub and a tiled shower. The building itself has a roof deck, courtyard, and a gym with a pool and sauna. How much is the seller asking?

Pricespotter%20Floorplan%208_21.gif

· Pricespotter archives [Curbed]

 

 

How Much For A One-Bedroom Condo In Long Island City? – Pricespotter – Curbed NY.

New-home sales plummet | Chappaqua Real Estate

After hitting a five-year high in June, new-home sales plummeted in July, according to data released today by the U.S. Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development.

Sales of new single-family houses in July dropped a seasonally adjusted 13.4 percent month over month to an annual rate of 369,000, but were up 6.8 percent from a year before, according to the Census Bureau.

The median sales price of a new home sold in July was $257,200, the report said. The report added that the seasonally adjusted estimate of new houses for sale at the end of July was 171,000, representing a supply of 5.2 months at the current sales rate

 

read more…

 

http://www.inman.com/wire/new-home-sales-plummet/#sthash.cSmX6asa.dpuf

5 Cool Apps to Save You from Social Media Overload | Katonah Realtor

Do you need a break from  social media overload?5 Cool Apps to Save You from Social Media Overload

Your friends and colleagues  are constantly learning about something new, and it’s hard to keep up. The only  way to stay connected was to waste time going through piles of social media  websites, blogs and news feeds.

This torrent of data and  information is a big problem in life today. In order to be connected with the  world around you, keeping across it all and obtaining an understanding is  important.

Curation and control of this data explosion is necessary to keep your  sanity.

Luckily, developers have  been hard at work creating some pretty cool social news apps that will help you  to stop wasting time and to stay connected with what really matters.

Here are 5 cool apps to save you from what sometimes seems to be a social  media overload.

1. LikeHack

LikeHack  is available now and is an intuitive approach to social news. This social news  reader is designed for people who value their time, and it goes beyond a  glorified RSS feed and really delivers some interesting benefits.

LikeHack is appropriate for professional and people who need their news from  many places and quickly.It is designed for busy people because it saves and  stores posts you’ve shared and liked on Facebook and Twitter and learns what is  most interesting to you.

What do I really like about LikeHack?

  • Saves time by collecting everything for you
  • Helps to make sure you only see interesting content
  • Allows you to read the news even without internet access
  • Lets you only use one app for multiple sources of content

Facebook is a busy place, and it is easy to get overloaded and frustrated,  especially with friends posting everything they find online. LikeHack makes  sense of all the information going through your feeds and can figure out what  would be most interesting for you. While doing this, it is also able to get rid  of the annoying filler articles that take up space, which the BBC picked up on  when they wrote.

“Likehack filters out the noise to provide a digest of interesting stories  based on your typical sharing history.”

Lifehack 5 Apps that will change your social media

LikeHack offers a good selection of sources for news including Facebook and  Twitter, but also many industry blogs, which is almost obligatory nowadays.

Even though it is still in the beta stage, Likehack really does deliver what  it says. For social media specialists, entrepreneurs, and people who simply  value their time, Likehack is something worth trying.

 

 

read more…

 

 

http://www.jeffbullas.com/2013/08/19/5-cool-apps-to-save-you-from-social-media-overload/#kGpAlR6rRiDMORqq.99

Falling foreclosures: A sign of borrower heroism | Bedford Real Estate

Falling foreclosures are the result of heroic homeowners who have spent the past five years deleveraging, or paying down personal debts, says economics reporter Jon Hilsenrath with The Wall Street Journal.

CBS This Morning caught up with Hilsenrath to learn more about this deleveraging trend.

The news agency pulled the following excerpt from the interview:

“Americans have done something heroic, really, in the last five years,” Hilsenrath said. “Faced with all of this debt after the housing boom, they’ve made a lot of progress on paying it down. Almost one-eighth of the household consumer debt got basically paid down.”

                    Source: CBS News – WSJ

Fannie reconsiders low downpayment mortgages | Waccabuc Real Estate

Fannie-Mae.jpg

 

According to the Wall Street Journal, Fannie Mae is in talks to reduce portfolio risk. This gut-check prompted the GSE to consider scaling back on its purchases of minimum downpayment loans. The Wall Street Journal further notes that:

In recent months, a series of changes in the mortgage market have led to an uptick in low-down-payment loans available for sale to Fannie. That prompted a review of the company’s lending policies, and officials are said to be working on a plan to limit the company’s purchases of these loans.

                    Source: Wall Street Journal

 

Michael Palladino-Designed Mansion on 218 Acres Asks $15.9M | Bedford Corners Real Estate

20 images

Location: Santa Ynez, Calif. Price: $15,900,000 The Skinny: Designed by architect Michael Palladino, a design partner in Richard Meier & Partners Architects, this sprawling modernist mansion occupies a prime hilltop site amid 218 private acres of Santa Barbara wine country. Completed in 2005, the five-bed, five-bath spread is now listed for $15.9M, along with the aforementioned acreage, a separate guest suite, a two-bedroom cottage, a ranch manager’s house, an eight-stall horse barn, and extensive equestrian facilities. Though the current owner’s identity is disguised by a blind trust, the house is said to have been commissioned by Nancy Englander and Harold Williams, both former executives at the J. Paul Getty Trust and he the former chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission. That the pair picked Meier’s office for their residence shouldn’t come as much of a surprise, considering Williams headed up the team that selected Richard Meier as the architect of the Getty Center.

 

 

read more…

 

http://curbed.com/archives/2013/08/22/michael-palladinodesigned-mansion-on-218-acres-asks-159m.php

 

 

 

Preparing Gracie Mansion for a New (Live-In?) Mayor | Bedford Hills Real Estate

A convoy of vans and pickup trucks swarmed the house on Tuesday morning, a home-repair SWAT team armed with ladders and paint brushes, scaffolding and plywood.

By 9 a.m., the driveway was jam-packed, so four of the vehicles hopped the curb and unloaded equipment in a nearby park.

The beneficiary of all the frantic sprucing up: the next mayor.

As Michael R. Bloomberg prepares to leave office, his staff has ordered a last-minute gussying up of the stately home where he has never lived but where his successor undoubtedly will.

Workers from New York City’s parks department have descended on Gracie Mansion to repaint and re-wallpaper, not to mention fix railings and rooftops before the weather turns cold and a new occupant arrives.

Outside the house, a laborer described the work as the “big push by the mayor to leave the home in ——”

A passer-by jumped in to ask, Pristine condition?

Yes, the worker said. “Pristine.”

Gracie Mansion is no stranger to periodic work: at Mr. Bloomberg’s direction, it has undergone extensive remodeling and redecorating. Soon after his election, the mayor asked his adventurous longtime decorator, Jamie Drake, to make an effort at updating the house, originally built in 1799 and located at what is now 88th Street and East End Avenue.

A few months and $7 million later (all of the money was privately raised), the mansion had new floors, plumbing, lighting and ventilation, as well as fanciful touches like a four-post mahogany bed, an 1820s chandelier and fake-bamboo furniture.

This time, much of the work is on the outside. Workers will repoint the base of a chimney, repair a damaged section of fence, repaint shutters and replace security lighting on the roof.

City Hall on Tuesday called it routine summer maintenance, not unlike that in 2010, when the fake-marble floor in the foyer was restored, or 2008, when ultraviolet protection was applied to windows on the second floor.

The wear and tear has intensified since Mr. Bloomberg, who chose to remain in his town house on East 79th Street throughout his mayoralty, opened Gracie Mansion to the public in 2002 as a kind of living museum. “It’s 200 years old and now sees a couple hundred thousand visitors a year,” said Marc LaVorgna, a spokesman for Mr. Bloomberg, “so it requires a lot of regular maintenance like this.”

This, however, will be the last round of beautification during Mr. Bloomberg’s tenure, and it is extensive, bearing all the hallmarks of the mayor’s keen eye for detail: even the brick steps in the basement are to be repaired.

read more…

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/28/nyregion/preparing-gracie-mansion-for-a-new-live-in-mayor.html?_r=2&

Rising rates take toll on US housing recovery | Bedford NY Real Estate

Is HUD’s Section 8 housing program about to go on steroids? That’s the question a writer for the Baltimore Sun alluded to over the weekend while outlining the Obama administration’s planned attempt to use the Department of Housing and Urban Development to “track diversity in American neighborhoods” and back policies to change any areas that look discriminatory from a data standpoint.

The editorial claims a discrimination database could be implemented allowing officials to “seek changes in (local) zoning ordinances, housing finance, infrastructure policy and transportation in order to remedy the alleged segregation,” the publication said.

It seems interest rate shocks may have finally taken a toll on the U.S. housing recovery. After a busy week on Wall Street, a new government report showed a 12.4% drop in seasonally adjusted new single-family home sales. The decline prompted market analysts to assume potential homebuyers are beginning to feel the pinch of rising interest rates, the Motley Fool noted. Rates have been edging higher ever since the Fed began teasing the markets with the idea that a curtailment of QE3, or massive Treasury and MBS purchases, could come as early as September.

New York City and the entire state of New York may have lost as much as $100 million in damages stemming from mortgage document fraud, the New York Post claims. The paper reported on an unsealed lawsuit filed by a whistleblower over the weekend. The whistleblower claims dozens of banks and servicers violated the False Claims Act when dealing in mortgage-backed securities during the years 2004 and 2007. The suit has already been partly settled, but the Post says attorneys are still trying to figure out which mortgage-backed securities were purchased in New York to continue on with another critical part of the claim.

A group of students who paid thousands of dollars to learn the art of real estate investing from Donald Trump want a refund, Reuters reports. And it seems New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman is happy to oblige. The AG filed suit against Trump this past week, claiming Trump University, otherwise referred to as the Trump Entrepreneur Initiative, swindled students out of $40 million by offering courses in real estate investment that were costly and fell short of providing the type of education needed to enter the market as an effective investor.

The housing market has another week of key reports ahead of it, with the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index scheduled for release Tuesday, followed by the Pending Home Sales Index on Wednesday. Visit HW’s US Economic Calendar to track these reports and more.

Financial regulators in Arizona and the FDIC shut down Sunrise Bank of Arizona on Friday, Aug. 23, with all deposits transferred to First Fidelity Bank National Association. The former Sunrise branches will reopen as part of First Fidelity Bank.

The FDIC also announced the closing of Community South Bank in Parsons, Tenn., moving all brokered and account deposits to CB&S Bank Inc. in Russellville, Ala.

 

 

read more…

http://www.housingwire.com/articles/26414-rising-rates-take-toll-on-us-housing-recovery

 

LinkedIn Groups Get Makeover: This Week in Social Media | Cross River Realtor

Welcome to our weekly edition of what’s hot in social media news. To help you stay up to date with social media, here are some of the news items that caught our attention.

What’s New This Week?

LinkedIn Introduces New Look for Groups: LinkedIn brings “a new streamlined look that will give group managers and group members the ability to customize and visually differentiate their conversation space.”

This new look is rolling out to English-speaking members.

 

Facebook Updates Mobile Login: “With this new update, mobile apps using Facebook Login must now separately ask you for permission to post back to Facebook.”

Facebook “has been working directly with popular mobile apps to help them create great Facebook Login experiences.”

Twitter Announces Related Headlines: “You will see a new ‘Related headlines’ section on tweets that have been embedded on websites. This section, which you can view from the tweet’s permalink page, lists and links to websites where the tweet was embedded, making it easier to discover stories that provide more context.”

 

read more…

 

http://www.socialmediaexaminer.com/linkedin-groups-get-makeover/

5 Ways to Use Video to Improve Your Social Media Marketing | North Salem Real Estate

Are you thinking about adding videos to your social media mix?

Do you want to boost your awareness and increase engagement?

Social media networks provide a lot of video options.

From Google+ Hangouts to Twitter’s Vine and Facebook’s launch of Instagram Video, video is fast becoming an essential part of any business’s online marketing strategy.

In this post, I’m going to show you how to incorporate video from 5 platforms into your social media strategy.

#1: Vine Video

For those who aren’t into complex video production, Vine lets you create simple, six-second looping videos to share on Twitter and Facebook.

Showing off products at Walgreens in a Vine video.

 

Some brands on Vine include Xbox, HTC, Puma, Urban Outfitters and Walgreens.

Here are some ways businesses can use Vine to support strategic goals.

Tease or Demo a Product

In six seconds, you can show off the best features of your business’s products or tease a new product launch.
The Glitch Mob used Vine to tease the preview of their new album.

Preview an Event

Got an upcoming webinar or conference? Give people a quick snippet of what they can expect with a Vine video. Take them behind the scenes of the preparation and make video a part of your event marketing strategy.

Showcase Your Portfolio

Share a six-second video sweep of your latest interior design creations. It’s more powerful than a flat photo because potential customers experience your work in context.

Pulp Design Studio used Vine to showcase their new spring line of silk florals.

Take Fans Inside

Take your fans inside your office, your store, your restaurant or any other place they usually can’t go to help them get to know your business on a more personal level. Show employees at work, hanging out and having fun. Show that the people inside your company are passionate about what they do and customers will be more confident in your service.