Tag Archives: Armonk Homes

Armonk NY Homes

12 tiny, tricked-out homes | Armonk NY Homes

 

Fueled by backlash from the financial and housing crisis, these homes — typically sized 500 square feet or smaller — are having a moment. In April, the first Tiny House Conference in Charlotte, North Carolina, sold out, attracting some 170 attendees.

Tiny-house pioneer Dee Williams, who has spent the last decade in an 84-square-foot home in a friend’s backyard, has toured touring the nation to promote her memoir “The Big Tiny.” Even students at the Savannah College of Art and Design are getting into the game, building an entire floor of 135-square-foot homes inside an old school parking lot.

These home may be environmentally friendly — they force owners to reduce their possessions and, often, to use less power — but they’re not exactly cheap. Tiny houses typically cost between $200 to $400 per square foot. On a square-foot basis, that’s far pricier than the average American home-and tiny homes don’t include land.

 

 

read more…

 

http://realestate.msn.com/12-tiny-tricked-out-homes

Metro Atlanta home prices jumped 18% at end of ‘13 | Armonk Real Estate

 

Metro Atlanta’s housing market continued to rebound at the end of 2013, posting double-digit growth, according to the CoreLogic Case-Shiller Indexes.

The area’s house prices jumped 17.8 percent in the fourth quarter of 2013, compared with the fourth quarter of 2012. CoreLogic also predicts metro Atlanta’s home prices will increase 2.9 percent in the fourth quarter of 2014.

National home prices rose 11.3 percent in the fourth quarter, compared with the fourth quarter of 2012. Home prices nationwide were 20 percent above the trough reached in the fourth quarter of 2011, but remained 21 percent below the peak reached in the first quarter of 2006.

 

read more…

 

http://www.bizjournals.com/atlanta/news/2014/05/13/metro-atlanta-home-prices-jumped-18-at-end-of-13.html

Ogle the Woolworth Building’s Stunning, Rarely Open Lobby | Armonk Homes

 

before
after

 

[All photos by Bob Estremera.]

The Woolworth Building‘s opulent lobby is 101 years old, and while it’s not a nice, pretty centennial, it’s still pretty darn old, immaculately preserved, and positively beautiful. While it used to be open to the public, it’s not anymore due to security concerns, so it’s only ogle-able to the folks who work in the building—we’re looking at you, SHoP Architects. Meanwhile, there are occasional tours of the neo-Gothic, gilded-to-the-nines space. Architectural photographer extraordinaire Bob Estremera went on one last week hosted by Landmark Branding, and though he’d try something different from his last glimpse inside, taking a slew of shots in both color and sepia-infused black-and-white. Compare and contrast two views of the same scene, and marvel at how the architectural details pop in the bi-chrome version and how dazzling the full-on color ones are. It’s positively grotesque! No, really, there are tons of those carved faces and figures, all of which are unique—the workers had a lot of fun, apparently. And, FYI, whoever ends up living in the 34 condos amazing condos being constructed on the landmark’s upper floors will have a separate lobby, which just goes to show that even money can’t buy this kind of beauty… but working for a cool company can

Panoramic penthouse views from around the globe | Armonk Real Estate

 

It’s getting more crowded at the top.

Owning a piece of a skyscraper’s top floor — where your closest neighbors have feathers — is the pinnacle of real estate. Penthouses make up less than 1 percent of real estate listings, but their average price a square foot is 84 percent higher than that of similar, nonpenthouse units, according to an analysis by real estate website Zillow.

The word itself will cost you. Simply having the designation of “penthouse” in the listing can result in a sale premium of 5 percent to 10 percent, says Jonathan Miller, a New York City-based appraiser and president of Miller Samuel Inc.

Now, the word “penthouse” is being applied to all sorts of condos — even those on lower floors — and it’s not uncommon to see multiple penthouses stacked on top of one another. Echo Aventura, a new development in Miami by Property Markets Group and JDS Development, will sport 18 penthouse units when it is completed in 2015, and Trump Place at 120 Riverside Blvd. in Manhattan has 44 penthouses.

Here’s a look inside homes around the globe that feel like they’re on top of the world.

 

read more….

http://realestate.msn.com/panoramic-penthouse-views-from-around-the-globe

 

Take a Virtual Stroll Through Tokyo’s Bamboo Basket Bakery | Armonk NY Homes

 

Screen%20Shot%202014-05-08%20at%203.36.16%20PM.pngPhoto via Arch Daily

Built by pile o’ sticks guru Kengo Kuma—whose quirky, previous projects include high-design Starbucks locales and timber-lined dog huts—this bamboo basket-shaped bakery in Tokyo just might be the oddest, most flammable purveyor of sweets in all the land. Constructed using Kuma’s signature Japanese joint technique of “Jiigoku-Gumi,” the design team explains that the SunnyHills pineapple cake shop uses its interior and exterior wooden latticework to differentiate itself from its surroundings by appearing “completely different from a concrete box.” Inside, the space feels open and sunny, thanks to the filtered daylight streaming through the slatted walls. French architect and filmmaker Vincent Hecht has a video tour of the standout little building, below:

 

 

read more….

http://curbed.com/archives/2014/05/08/take-a-virtual-stroll-through-tokyos-bamboo-basket-bakery.php

Lending standards aren’t getting looser | Armonk Real Estate

 

Lending standards aren’t getting looser; the market is changing.

That’s the findings from a study by the Urban Institute.

Study authors Jun Zhu, Laurie Goodman and Bing Bai say that market composition change explains the decrease in average credit scores for conventional and Federal Housing Administration mortgages.

Despite rising home prices, the mortgage lending rules have remained tight, inhibiting housing demand and economic growth, they say.

The price of FHA mortgages compared to agency loans with private mortgage insurance have driven would-be FHA borrowers to the GSEs, according to the report.

“Our analysis shows credit scores on conventional mortgages sold to government-sponsored enterprises like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac averaged 752, down from 758 a year earlier. Credit scores on purchase loans backed by FHA declined even more, averaging 686, a 11-point drop down from 697,” the study says. “But pooling the loans together reveals that credit scores actually remained the same. The average credit score of all purchase loans stayed around 730 during the one-year period—no actual credit easing.”

 

 

read more….

 

http://www.housingwire.com/articles/29884-urban-institute-lending-standards-arent-getting-looser

Let customer feedback shape the evolution of your product and it will sell itself | Armonk Homes

 

A lot of companies are started out of frustration, trying to solve a problem that their founders don’t see an available solution for, says Onvedeo founder and CEO Boubou Guiro.

Guiro says that was certainly the case for him. As a would-be homebuyer, the time he squandered visiting properties that weren’t always as they were depicted online convinced him that the solution was a video marketing platformm scalable so that it was affordable enough for every broker and agent to employ on all their listings.

Now he’s passing along the insight he’s gained building the company. He advises his fellow entrepreneurs to keep testing their product, and evolving it based on customer feedback.

“I truly believe the product is going to be the best marketing and the best sales tool you’re going to get,” he says. “If people love your product, you don’t really need to do much after that, besides just making them aware of it.”

 

 

read more…

 

http://www.inman.com/2014/05/02/let-customer-feedback-shape-the-evolution-of-your-product-and-it-will-sell-itself/?utm_source=20140502&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=dailyheadlinesam

Cost of Solar Energy Plummets | Armonk Real Estate

If you’re thinking about switching to solar energy, now’s the time. Prices have never been lower, and in some areas, PV systems can now produce electricity at a cost that’s competitive with — or even lower than — conventional electricity from coal, nuclear or natural gas.

That’s right — the day we’ve all been waiting for has finally arrived. The cost of solar energy rivals electricity produced by much less environmentally friendly sources. What’s more, the cost of solar power will continue to fall while the price of conventional fuels spirals upward.

The cost of a residential solar power system has dropped about 40 percent in just the last two years, thanks to companies which come up with products which benefit not only them but also the entire of humanity. check out Renew Energy if you want to implement clean energy in your house & do your bit in saving the planet. Anyhow, as a result, the lifetime cost of solar electricity produced by these systems now competes with conventional electrical power plants. In places where electricity sells for a premium, it’s competitive even without subsidies. In New Jersey, for instance, conventional electricity costs about 17 cents per kilowatt-hour (kwh). A residential solar power system can produce electricity at or slightly lower than that price, without any incentives.

Families in many major cities are paying 10 to 12 cents per kwh for conventional power, and soon, many in the Midwest will pay up to 15 cents/kwh for conventional power. Meanwhile, in the Midwest, the unsubsidized cost of solar power is about 13.7 cents/kwh, and a 30 percent federal tax credit drives that cost down to 9.6 cents/kwh.

Rebates that are available from some utilities lower the price even more. In St. Louis, Ameren offers a $2 per watt rebate based on installed capacity. A 5 kilowatt system would receive a $10,000 rebate as soon as the system is up and running. This incentive drives the cost of solar energy down even further — to 7.1 cents/kwh. That’s much cheaper than conventional power. In addition, the cost of solar electricity will remain the same for the life of the system — at least 30 years, maybe longer. This provides a tremendous hedge against inflation.

Ameren and other U.S. utilities also are currently buying renewable energy credits from their customers, which help utilities meet state-mandated goals for renewable energy production. Ameren pays $50 for every 1,000 kwh of electricity a solar electric system will produce for 10 years, regardless of the amount of power consumed by the system owner. For instance, if a system is projected to generate 40,000 kwh in the first 10 years of operation, Ameren will pay the homeowner a one-time payment of $2,000. That lowers the lifetime cost of solar electricity to 4.3 cents/kwh.

Businesses throughout the country receive even more financial incentives. They can apply accelerated depreciation to solar power systems, which lowers the cost of solar energy by 15 to 30 percent, depending on the company’s tax bracket. Rural businesses can receive a 25 percent grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. It may actually be possible for some businesses to install a large solar power system at virtually no cost!

Read more: http://www.motherearthnews.com/print.aspx?id={EE23E927-2346-4418-94BA-365A69B8C933}#ixzz2zuQzbXTX

Inside Gentrification Pundit Spike Lee’s UES Home, Now $28.5M | Armonk Real Estate

 

19 images

Hot on the heels of reports that he might be moving out, director/self-appointed gentrification analyzer Spike Lee has switched brokers and chopped the price on his ridiculously fancy Upper East Side townhouse. Once asking $32 million with Sotheby’s, 153 East 63rd Street just re-entered the market with Brown Harris Stevens’ townhouse expert Paula Del Nunzio for a mere $28.5 million. The 7,000-square-foot house has five bedrooms, five bathrooms, and a glorious central courtyard. But perhaps more impressive is its celeb-studded provenance: he bought it from Jasper Johns in 1998 for $16.6 million, and the history extends back to the heiress for whom it was built.

 

 

read more…

http://ny.curbed.com/archives/2014/04/22/inside_gentrification_pundit_spike_lees_ues_home_now_285m.php

ZERO WASTE DAY in North Castle | Armonk Real Estate

 

 

& Prescription Take Back Day Saturday, April 26 

9:00 am – 3:00 pm

(rain or shine)

Behind Town Hall

15 Bedford Road, Armonk

 

E-Waste computers, TVs, CRTs, monitors, copiers, scanners, fax machines, VCRs, DVRs, cell phones…

 

Used Motor, Antifreeze and Cooking Oil –

used motor oil, oil filters, antifreeze and oily debris, used vegetable oil (from a deep fat fryer)

Paper Shredding – up to 6 total boxes of personal papers and/or hardcover books per household

 

Scrap Metals

metal file cabinets, hot water tanks and heaters, bed frames, treadmills, basketball hoops…

 

Household Furniture – sofas, tables, chairs, rugs, lamps, dressers, bookshelves, artwork…

 

Spring & Summer Clothing and Linens – clothing and shoes for men, women and children, and gently used linens

 

Adult & Children’s Bicycles – in good working condition

 

Dog & Cat Supplies – crates, blankets, towels, canned food, collars, leashes and balls (basketball, soccer, tennis and football)

 

Volunteers will help unload your donations.

NOTE: These items will NOT be accepted:

Bulk items

Compact fluorescent light bulbs 

Alkaline & button cell batteries

Paint cans

Tires

Hazardous household chemicals

Medications