Category Archives: Real Estate

The Worst Home Improvements for the Money

The “10 Best Home Improvements” is an oft-cited list in newspapers and shelter magazines. But what about the worst improvements? Since the bad ones rarely rate a mention, here’s a look — realizing, of course, that we’re not talking about personal taste, need or comfort. This list, rather, comes from a strictly return-on-investment point of view.

Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com for your “added” value questions.

Swimming pools. Pools top everyone’s list of don’t-do-its, if only because not everyone wants one. So if you put a pool in your backyard, you are eliminating better than half your potential market, and you haven’t even put up a “For Sale” sign yet. You want to appeal to the largest buyer pool possible, no pun intended.

Beyond that, there’s the cost. The experts maintain that unless you are in a neighborhood where pools are an anticipated amenity, not an unexpected one, you’ll be lucky to recoup half the cost. Ditto for basketball and tennis courts.

Doug Rogers of Century 21 Millennium in Pineville, La., recently went on a listing appointment in a subdivision of $200,000 houses. Once he got there, the owners “couldn’t wait to show me” their new $45,000 pool. And, of course, they wanted to ask $260,000 for their otherwise ordinary house.

At closing, though, the pool netted them just $7,000, which means they took a loss of $38,000.

Better to join a country club or perhaps the YMCA. In Virginia, where pools are good only three months out of the year, John Statton of Re/Max Action Real Estate in Mechanicsville, Va., says you can join a local pool for $300 a year — without the increase in homeowners’ insurance that owning a pool brings.

Read more at: http://www.chicagotribune.com/classified/realestate/home/sc-cons-0411-bad-home-improvements-20130412,0,2176117.story

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

Disaster Proof Homes – Making Homes Safe from Natural Disasters

hurricane

One could say that Judy Gibbons started prepping for her latest endeavor as a real estate agent 46 years ago today.

That’s because on April 21, 1967, a 9-year-old Gibbons huddled under the basement steps of her Barrington home with her mother, four siblings and dog while a tornado swept away their home. It was one of six significant tornadoes to strike the Chicago area that day.

Have questions regarding what FEMA will cover?  Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com for FEMA questions; their appraisers are certified FEMA inspectors.

Now Gibbons, an agent at Hunter’s Fairway Sotheby’s International Realty, has partnered with a Roselle company that has spent 14 years coming up with a way to build homes that can withstand tornadoes, hurricanes and earthquakes. She’s trying to help R-Evolution Living commercialize its technique by helping the company find investors and government grants to build a prototype and eventually build homes for consumers.

Charles Roig, a longtime architect and owner of the company, and his twin brother, Daniel, a structural engineer, started working on the idea for disaster-proof homes 14 years ago. After more than 250 pages of structural calculations, they came up with a wood truss design and a patented wind-force resistance system that Charles Roig says can withstand winds of more than 200 mph that are associated with a category EF5 tornado.

Why spend so much time on such a project, when he’s busy designing regular homes?

“Every time I saw something on television and saw tornado destruction, it just ripped my guts out,” Roig said. “I couldn’t stop this.”

Gibbons likens the job of marketing disaster-proof houses to the early days of selling environmentally friendly homes because consumers have to buy into the concept before they’re willing to pay more for the features. She thinks collectors will be among the first to gravitate toward such a house.

Roig estimates one of his houses would cost 15 to 25 percent more than a conventionally built home. Most of the designs are single-story homes and contemporary in design.

Read more at: http://www.chicagotribune.com/classified/realestate/ct-mre-0421-podmolik-homefront-20130419,0,1217507.column

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

Navigate the New Rules of Real Estate

The Housing Horizon
One thing is certain, says Jed Kolko, chief economist and head of analytics for real estate site Trulia.com: “The rebound is real.” After U.S. home prices hit rock bottom in the first quarter of 2012 (plummeting nearly 30 percent since early 2008), they rose over the next nine months, according to the Case-Shiller home price index. The National Association of Realtors recently reported that the median existing home price in February was $173,600, up 11.6 percent from a year ago. And fewer listings are languishing, which means buyers are making choices faster. The median time it took to sell a house in January was 108 days, down from 119 days in January 2012, per realtor.com.

“When any housing recession recovers, it goes like gangbusters,” says real estate mogul Barbara Corcoran. “But this is the fastest comeback I’ve seen.”

Have values rebounded in Southern California?  Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com for your value questions.

Celia Chen, a housing analyst with Moody’s Analytics, expects to see continued growth for the next few years. If you’re ready to buy a home, this is a good time to do it, she says. But in today’s post-bubble market, how should we define “ready”?

“Home ownership makes sense only if you can buy toward the future you want for yourself and your family,” says Ilyce Glink, head of the financial website ThinkGlink.com and author of Buy, Close, Move In! “You shouldn’t buy a one-bedroom condo if you want to have kids in the next five years. If you’re looking to retire but the thought of monthly payments keeps you up at night, you’re far better off skipping the mortgage—even if interest rates are at 3 percent. And whoever you are, you should plan to be there for a minimum of 10 years.”That means staying not just in your home but also in the town and region. Think about the area schools and amenities, and how they’ll align with your needs over the next decade. Consider the stability of your current job, as well as your career prospects if your company were to close or lay off employees. In today’s job market, many workers find themselves having to relocate for new opportunities. In that scenario, a home—especially one that’s underwater or tough to sell—could become a millstone. During the Great Recession, the number of long-distance moves sank to record lows in part because many job seekers were trapped in a frozen housing market.

Read more at: http://www.parade.com/4295/katerockwood/navigate-the-new-rules-of-real-estate/

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only