New search page lets you know how your neighborhood home values are doing

The Post analysis, based on data from Black Knight Financial Services spanning 2004 through 2015, shows how the nation’s housing recovery has exacerbated inequality, leaving behind many Americans of moderate means. It also helps explain why the economic recovery feels incomplete, especially in neighborhoods where the value of housing — often the biggest family asset — has recovered little, if at all.

While a typical single-family home has gained less than 14 percent in value since 2004, homes in the most expensive neighborhoods have gained 21 percent. Regional factors such as the Western energy boom explain some differences, but in many cities the housing market’s arc has deepened disparities between the rich and everyone else, such as in Boston, where gentrifying urban neighborhoods have thrived and far-flung suburbs have fallen behind.

The findings of The Post’s analysis underscore another way in which the economy, despite its improvements over the past several years, continues to deliver better returns for some Americans than others.

In good times, housing converts income into wealth. It turns a paycheck into the next generation’s inheritance. But in neighborhoods that haven’t weathered the past decade as well, homes have become a source of debt, a physical trap and an obstacle to life’s other goals.

Enter your zip code at: https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/business/wonk/housing/overview/?hpid=hp_no-name_graphic-story-a%3Ahomepage%2Fstory

disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

 

California Green Building Codes – title 24 go mainstream

This effects remodeling too!

California’s are the strictest. “Although states on the East Coast are breathing down California’s neck, Title 24 is unparalleled in the rest of the country,” notes Asa Foss, LEED residential technical director with the U.S. Green Building Council.

What does this mean for anyone wanting to start a remodeling project here? “First, be aware of what Title 24 and the building code requires you to do,” Foss suggests. He is referring to the portion of the state’s building requirements commonly called CAL Green.

To assist their residents with achieving code compliance and sustainability, some cities in San Diego County have set up homeowner programs. “Our Build Green program provides resources at the permit counter to help homeowners design an efficient home, as well as community trainings like the one on May 11th at City Hall,” shares Lynn France, Chula Vista’s Office of Sustainability manager.

read more at: http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/2016/apr/30/tp-living-green-goes-mainstream-building-codes-s/?#article-copy

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

 

The least expensive way to update kitchen cabinets

Refinish or repainting cabinets (and replacing the knobs and pulls while you’re at it) is the easiest, fastest, least expensive way to get a new look. If you like the style and placement of your cabinets, but not their color, or if they look tired and are wearing a film of grease and dirt, refinish, said Jennifer Wagner, kitchen install merchant for The Home Depot.

You can restain and not cover the grain, said Wagner. “Restaining lets you take old yellow oak and turn it to cherry or espresso, or you can stain with a tint of color, like sage. You can also repaint dark wood sleek white or another color, like French blue.”

When I got my parents’ house ready to sell, I painted the 45-year-old walnut colored cabinets glossy white and added brushed nickel knobs. Wow, what a difference for not much cost.

If you like the basic layout of your kitchen but can’t stand the look of the cabinets, refacing gets you new door fronts, new drawers, and a whole new veneer, including shelf edges and cabinet sides. Plus, you can keep your counters, which you can’t if you replace your cabinets.

read more at: http://www.denverpost.com/homegarden/ci_29860383/replace-or-reface-least-expensive-way-update-kitchen