Tag Archives: san diego

Overpriced ‘Pinball’ Houses Bounce Buyers Over to Cheaper Properties

In the real estate brokerage field they’re known as “setups” or “pinball” homes, and this spring’s improving conditions in some markets might be stimulating more of them.

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A setup or pinball property is a house listed with an unrealistically high asking price that is visited by lots of agents and shoppers but that attracts no offers. The problem is this: Real estate agents, including even the listing agent, are using the overpriced house as a negative example to bounce buyers over to similar homes nearby that carry lower asking prices.

“It’s like a pinball machine,” says Debbie Cook, an agent with Long & Foster Real Estate in Silver Spring. The “setup” is the foil — the house that agents show clients in order to make other, more realistically priced listings look better. Maybe the sellers, encouraged by reports of rising sales and low mortgage rates, insisted on the aggressive asking price and wouldn’t list for anything less. Or maybe the sellers’ agent didn’t fully brief them about what the house could command in today’s conditions rather than lose the listing.

Read more at: http://www.washingtonpost.com/realestate/overpriced-pinball-houses-bounce-buyers-over-to-cheaper-properties/2012/06/14/gJQAFKhLdV_story.html

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House of Future Takes Green to Extreme

Sometime in the early 2000s, when I was a Los Angeles-based national correspondent at the Chicago Tribune, I was assigned to cover the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. What was most interesting to me was the product designers’ vision of the house of the future.

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The big idea then was accessing music, movies, sports, photos and the Internet from the TV. They were pushing the concept of having multiple screens throughout the house — including one embedded into the door of the refrigerator — so you wouldn’t have to miss a moment of that important game if you didn’t want to wait for the commercial to grab a snack.

Read more at: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/where-we-live/post/editors-column-house-of-future-takes-green-to-extreme/2012/06/15/gJQAF2U5eV_blog.html

That idea, of course, is long outdated, conceived before the widespread use of smart phones, which now allow you to do all that without spending thousands of dollars to rewire your house. Today’s house of the future focuses not on entertainment, but conservation.

For this week’s cover story, I got an exclusive look at a model home in Waldorf built by KB Home that is aimed at saving owners big bucks in electricity and water costs. The solar-powered, “net-zero” house is designed to produce more energy than it uses and save up to 50,000 gallons of water a year.

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

Make a Home from Shipping Containers

Tim Bessell has spent the last 25 years crafting surfboards for world-class athletes out of his understated shop near La Jolla’s Windansea Beach.

The 54-year-old Bessell, who grew up in La Jolla, says the thinning custom surfboard market in the United States and a lifelong appreciation for architecture have pushed him toward another passion: sea-container home building.

The idea is to take discarded, yet still-sturdy steel containers found at ports and convert them into habitable spaces. Container home advocates say this type of construction is more “green,” and over time, can be more cost-effective.

Bessell and business associate Claude Anthony Marengo hope to break ground soon on their first custom project in Pacific Beach, believed to be the city of San Diego’s first certified factory-made home constructed from steel shipping container material. The closest structure to that is the Periscope Project in downtown San Diego that hosts art shows and serves as office space.

Bessell spoke with the U-T San Diego about his current project, a three-story home slated to be done by September, how it will be built and the costs involved.

Read more at: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2012/may/07/tp-container-enthusiasm/

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only