Tag Archives: Armonk Luxury Homes for Sale

Homebuyers more likely to use real estate agents, even as Internet usage hits an all-time high | Armonk NY Homes

Use of the Internet among consumers in the homebuying process continues to grow, but those buyers are more, not less, likely to use a real estate agent, according to an annual survey from the National Association of Realtors.

NAR’s 2013 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers includes survey responses from 8,767 people who purchased a home between July 2012 and June 2013. The seller information in the report is from those buyers who also sold a home.

For those who purchased a home during that time period, the highest share ever – 92 percent — used the Internet to search for a home, up from 90 percent in last year’s survey and 71 percent in 2003.

use_of_internet_home_search_NAR_2013

Source: National Association of Realtors.

Just over 4 in 10 buyers (42 percent) started the homebuying process by looking for properties online (up from 35 percent in 2011) followed distantly by those whose first step was to contact a real estate agent (17 percent). Online websites and agents tied as the most common information sources homebuyers used in their search with 89 percent using each. Yard signs followed at 51 percent.

 

 

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/2013/11/04/homebuyers-more-likely-to-use-real-estate-agents-even-as-internet-usage-hits-an-all-time-high/#sthash.Me4tRDgv.dpuf

Armonk Sales up 39% | Median price up 18% | Armonk NY Real Estate

Armonk   NY Real Estate ReportRobReportBlog
20136 months ending 11/42012
74Sales53up 39%
$1,040,000.00median sold price$875,000.00up 18%
$255,000.00low sold price$150,000.00
$2,895,000.00high sold price$9,300,000.00
3857average size3515
$309.00ave. price per foot$352.00down 12%
179ave days on market187
$1,179,609.00average sold price$1,297,501.00

The 13 Most Haunted Buildings in New York City | Armonk NY Homes

halloweenmap_10_13.jpg

New York has been called the most haunted city in the world, and with good reason. Every single street is steeped in history, and in the four-hundred-plus years of cycles of expansion, construction, destruction, and rejuvenation, you’re bound to hear more than a few legends and tales of the otherwordly. So, in the spirit of Halloween, we’re proud to present this map of the most haunted buildings in town, from the southernmost tip of Staten Island, all the way up to the hills of Washington Heights. We’ve got ethereal authors, pesky poltergeists, creepy colonials, phantom flappers, and even a mysterious mayor or two. And hey, if a skeptic you remain, a lot of these locales are open to the public, so by all means, check them out yourself if you think you ain’t afraid of no ghost. You might just learn something too!

Special thanks to The Bowery Boys and Forgotten NY.

Efficiency Dos and Don’ts From an Energy Nerd | Armonk Real Estate

Although I used to be a builder, I now work as a reporter for an energy-efficiency newsletter. Joining the tribe of energy nerds has altered my perspective, making me single-minded and opinionated. Watching new-home builders in action, I can often be heard to mutter, “Why do they always build it that way?”

Of course, I realize that many of the builders I grumble about are actually familiar with energy-efficient construction techniques — they just can’t convince their clients that energy efficiency is worth the extra investment. Most builders are accustomed to juggling several balls at once: They need to satisfy their clients, keep the local building inspector happy, and make a profit. Sometimes, however, a builder gets lucky and lands a client who insists on a high-performance home and is willing to pay for it. To help you get ready for that day, here’s a list of dos and don’ts from an energy nerd’s perspective — starting with the don’ts.

Don’t Design a Complicated Roof For those who espouse the principle “form follows function,” the ideal roof is a simple gable over an unheated attic, much like the roof on the house we all drew in kindergarten. Unfortunately, designers these days are fond of complicated roofs — ones with enough valleys, dormers, and intersecting planes to make the home look from a distance like an entire Tuscan village.

Such roofs are difficult to insulate without resorting to spray polyurethane foam. Though spray foam is effective, it’s also expensive. In most cases, simple roofs are easier to insulate, easier to ventilate, and far less prone to ice dams than complicated roofs. Don’t Install a Hydronic Snow-Melt System Snow can be removed from a driveway with a shovel, a snow-blower, or a plow.

It can also be removed by burning great quantities of fuel to heat water circulating through buried pipes. In rare cases — for example, at the home of a handicapped client — a hydronic snow-melt system makes sense. In most homes, however, such systems are uncalled for.

In 60 years, when global climate change has made snow rare, history books will explain to our grand-children how hydronic snow-melt systems used to work. Our descendants will shake their heads, astonished that their ancestors burned fossil fuels so wantonly.

Don’t Build a Poorly Insulated Slab In a hot climate, an uninsulated slab in contact with cool soil can lower cooling costs. In a cold climate, though, slabs should be well-insulated. Some cold-climate builders, having learned that heat rises, install thick attic insulation while leaving their slabs uninsulated. But heat actually moves from warm to cold in all directions. While it’s true that in winter the soil beneath a slab is warmer than the outside air, a slab can still lose a significant amount of heat. In cold climates, a basement slab should be insulated with at least 2 inches of extruded polystyrene (XPS) under the entire slab. In different climates sheer curtains are very useful for control air accordingly. Due to the loose weave in sheer fabrics curtains offer little heat insulation. Sheer fabric for clothing offers very little in the way of warmth for the wearer, and for this reason is commonly worn in hot weather. It offers relatively low sun protection. Click here SmartSheer.com for more information.

For a slab-on-grade home in a cold climate, specify 3 or 4 inches of XPS under the entire slab, with additional vertical foam at the slab’s perimeter. Foil-faced bubble pack (R-1.3) is no substitute for adequate insulation; under a slab, it’s virtually useless.

http://www.jlconline.com/energy-efficiency/efficiency-dos-and-don-ts-from-an-energy-nerd.asp

Armonk Supervisor’s Update | Armonk Real Estate

Dear Neighbors

Road Repaving Update

 

We are nearing the end of our Town-wide road repaving program for this year. We have followed our Pavement Management Study findings completing approximately 10 miles of work this season. Pothole and patch jobs are handled separately by our Town Highway Department.

This week we should be finishing Banksville Road, Round Hill Road and Shippen Road. That will only leave Palmer Avenue and Castle Heights in North White Plains to be finished.  Our 2014 repaving program will be again based on the findings of our Pavement Management Study

 

Halloween Parade on Main Street

 

Last year due to Hurricane Sandy we saved Halloween by hosting an impromptu event on Main Street. It was such a success that many people asked if we could do it again this year. With the cooperation of our wonderful Town Police, the Byram Hills Pre-school Association and our enthusiastic store owners, I am happy to announce that we will be holding a Halloween Parade on Main Street, Thursday, October 31, 3:00 pm to 4:00 pm. Come and show off your costumes. Some stores will be welcoming our little ghosts and goblins with treats.  The participating store owners will have flyers in their establishments and several are planning special events for the parents.   Cider and donuts will also be available at the Hergenhan Recreation Center between 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm.   At 4:00 pm our police will transition over to School Street to handle traffic control for our traditional neighborhood Halloween event.

Sincerely,

Supervisor Howard Arden

Judge Dismisses Armonk Square Lawsuit | Armonk Real Estate

A lawsuit that alleged the town of North Castle made unauthorized and improper changes to the site plan of Armonk Square has been dismissed.

The Planning Board has already approved Armonk Square’s site plans for the construction of a supermarket, office space, retail space, and residential units.

In July, 37 Maple Avenue, a corporation managed by Armonk Developer Michael Fareri, challenged the town’s issuance of these certificates of occupancy. In a decision dated Oct.17, Acting State Supreme Court Justice Susan Cacace, wrote that the petitioner, 37 Maple Avenue, does have standing to bring this proceeding. The 2012 settlement clearly stated that the filing of a new Article 78 proceeding was not a remedy provided for in the stipulation.

The town also said that 37 Maple Avenue did not exhaust its administrative remedies by failing to appear before North Castle’s Zoning Board of Appeal as is required by law. Cacace said that the court agreed that the petitioner, 37 Maple Avenue, “failed to exhaust its administrative remedies as a condition precedent to the commencement of an action or special proceeding.”

Mark Miller, an attorney with Veneziano & Associates, representing Armonk Square , said, “We think the judge rendered exactly the right opinion based upon two actions.” The certificate of occupancy issued by the building Inspector says the buildings of Armonk Square are safe and fully compliant with town laws.

Miller said one action taken by 37 Maple Avenue was its failure to file a challenge with the Zoning Board of Appeals within 60 days of when the certificate of occupancy was issued. Miller adds that the settlement of a prior lawsuit prohibited 37 Maple Avenue from filing an Article 78 proceeding against Armonk Square for essentially for the same project.

The lawyer for 37 Maple Avenue, Alan Singer, a partner of Welby, Brady and Greenblatt, said his firm is contemplating filing a notice of appeal of the judgement in an appellate court. They have 30 days from Oct. 17 to do so.

Singer said the judgement barring a new Article 78 suit is wrong because the previous settlement prohibiting the filing of an Article 78 suit was part of a judgement about a different set of plans for Armonk Square.

Miller said Armonk Square’s parking requirements were established by the Town Board as a blend of several requirements by the central business zoning district. Miller says all of the environmental impacts were considered and addressed. “They can file an appeal and we are confident that the appellate division will make exactly the same finding.”

Miller said there was excellent cooperation between his firm and the town attorney, and Supervisor Howard Arden said that the cost of defending the town in this lawsuit was $15,300

 

 

http://armonk.dailyvoice.com/politics/judge-dismisses-armonk-square-lawsuit

Try Quick Hoops — Easy-to-Make Mini-Greenhouses | Armonk NY Homes

Gardeners through the ages have tried to extend summer. A sheltered  area in a winter vegetable garden used to protect plants from cold and wind can  often take plants past their normal season. Even the south side of a board fence  or a thick hedge, blocking the cold north winds, will provide a slightly more  benign climate. Old-time gardeners took advantage of these warm, sheltered spots  to keep the fresh harvest going as long as they could in their winter  gardens.

Quick Hoops

Harvesting winter fare is so satisfying that, after you try it, you’ll  probably want to extend your repertoire. But adding more cold frames to winter  gardens means more time and money spent acquiring them. That’s why we came up  with simpler, lighter, and less expensive structures we call quick hoops.  They’re just sheets of clear plastic or row cover material supported by 10-foot  lengths of pipe, bent into half circles and poked into the ground. Quick hoops  look like 3-foot-tall mini-greenhouses.

You can use two types of pipe material to build quick hoops. One is plastic  electrical conduit, which is cheap, lightweight and easy to bend by hand. This  option is fine in areas that receive no more than a few inches of snowfall. But  to support the amount of snow we get in Maine, we needed 1/2-inch galvanized  metal conduit, sold as “EMT” at most hardware stores. In addition to its  strength, the advantage of EMT is that, after bent, it holds its shape  permanently.

To give EMT a curved shape, bend it around a quick-hoop bending form. You  bolt the form to the top of a large, flat surface such as a sturdy picnic table.  You just insert one end of the pipe, pull it against the curved surface of the  form, slide it in farther, and pull again until you achieve the desired shape.  The form itself is reasonably priced and could even be purchased by a group of  friends and made available to everyone for use in year-round gardening. (Bending  forms are sold by Johnny’s Selected Seeds.)

If you take a 10-foot length of EMT and bend it into a half-circle bow, it  will have a 6-foot diameter. That 6-foot width will cover two of our  30-inch-wide beds with a 1-foot path between them. We make 10-inch-deep holes  with an iron bar on either side of the two beds, and insert the ends of the  conduit into them, placing one of these conduit bows every 5 feet along the  beds. Just three bows will cover a 10-foot-long area.

Then, we drape a 10-foot-wide piece of floating row cover material over the  bows. This spun-bonded, white polyester fabric lets in water and light, conveys  up to 4 degrees of frost protection and excludes insect pests. We cut it long  enough so that it can drape down to the ground, plus about 2 feet at the ends of  the structure. We then secure the edges of the row cover around the perimeter of  the structure with sandbags. These can be recycled plastic bags filled with  soil. Be gentle with the row-cover fabric, but try to secure it without any  slack so the wind is less likely to catch it and blow it around in your winter  vegetable garden.

Clearly, you can plant much more ground under quick hoops than under a cold  frame, and you can also grow and protect taller crops for more extensive winter  gardening. You might start seedlings in one covered bed and grow early salads in  another. Because spun-bonded floating row cover is self-venting, there’s no need  for automatic arms to prevent overheating. And the row cover lets in both  sunlight and water. Access to the crops is achieved by removing the sand bags  and folding back the cover.

Another trick is to add a layer of clear plastic over the row cover for extra  protection during extremely cold weather in winter gardens. With added plastic  in place on mini-greenhouses, you can overwinter crops such as spinach, lettuce,  and onions without worrying about the snow load, which can rip row-cover fabric.  The plastic layer can be held down with sandbags along the perimeter and ends,  just as with the row cover. But, because we live in a windy area, we also use  form-fitting plastic clips to secure the plastic to the bowed pipes. When the  temperature inside quick hoops can rise to 75 degrees Fahrenheit, you’ll need to  vent the plastic by opening the ends, or remove it entirely so only the  underlying row cover material remains.

 

 

 

Read more: http://www.motherearthnews.com/print.aspx?id={E8447B3F-0DB4-41F0-8152-4FFFCF39A4FA}#ixzz2j1Q8oOrO

Armonk-based IBM Transforms Mortgage Fulfillment Process | Armonk Real Estate

IBM Corp. has launched a new comprehensive digital-loan processing platform that will allow borrowers to engage in every aspect of the loan application process: applying online, uploading documents, acting on inquiries and monitoring loan approval status — all from their smartphone or tablet device.

“We believe delivering a transformational customer experience will differentiate future mortgage leaders from the pack,” Eric Ray, IBM general manager, Financial Services Sector said. “By partnering with IBM, lenders can out-maneuver the competition with a rich digital customer experience that gives borrowers the self service and transparency they desire.”

With the new IBM Digital Loan Platform solution, application forms are automatically aggregated and indexed to ensure consistency for efficient underwriting. As a result, both borrowers and lenders benefit from significantly compressed cycle times, lower origination costs, reduction in errors, and compliance enforcement.

 

 

Armonk-based IBM Transforms Mortgage Fulfillment Process | The Armonk Daily Voice.

Home sales close in on three-and-a-half year high | Armonk Real Estate

Home resales rose in April to the highest level in nearly 3-1/2 years and prices surged, offering the economy a buffer from the stiff headwinds posed by belt-tightening by Washington.

The National Association of Realtors said on Wednesday existing home sales advanced 0.6 percent to an annual rate of 4.97 million units, the highest level since November 2009.

The data underscored the housing market’s improving fortunes as it starts to regain its lost glory. Resales were 9.7 percent higher than the same period last year.

“It’s quite supportive of the overall economy,” said Michelle Meyer, a senior economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch in New York. “It’s a cushion against some of the other concerns in the economy.”

Economic activity appears to have slowed somewhat early in the second quarter as the effects of higher taxes and deep government spending cuts started filtering through.

Manufacturing, in particular, has been showing strains, but housing has held up surprisingly well, with the gains in home values helping to boost consumer confidence and retail sales.

The ripples from housing’s recovery have also extended to the jobs market, where construction employment has been rising.

That should limit the degree to which the economy slows this quarter. It expanded at a 2.5 percent annual pace in the first three months of the year.

U.S. stocks were narrowly mixed in afternoon trading. Treasury debt prices were lower while the dollar was higher against a basket of currencies.

PRICES SOAR

Tight supplies in some parts of the country have constrained the pace of home sales, but sellers are starting to wade back into the market, attracted by rising prices.

In April, the median home sales price increased 11 percent from a year ago to $192,800, the highest level since August 2008. It was the fifth consecutive month of double-digit gains.

With prices rising, more sellers put their properties on the market. The inventory of homes on the market rose 11.9 percent from March to 2.16 million.

That represented a 5.2 months’ supply at April’s sales pace, up from 4.7 months in March. It remained, however, below the 6.0 months that is normally considered a good balance between supply and demand.

The market has been helped by monetary stimulus from the Federal Reserve that has kept mortgage rates near record lows. On Wednesday, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke made clear he was not yet ready to retreat from the U.S. central bank’s monthly $85 billion asset purchase program.

Adding to signs that the housing recovery was becoming firmly established, distressed properties – which can weigh on prices because they typically sell at deep discounts – accounted for only 18 percent of sales last month.

That was the lowest since the Realtors group started monitoring them in October 2008. These properties, foreclosures and short sales, had made up 21 percent of sales in March.

In another bright sign, properties are selling faster. The median time on market for homes was 46 days in April, down from 62 days the prior month. That was the fewest days since the NAR started monitoring that number in May 2011. Before the market collapsed in 2006, it usually took about 90 days to sell a home.

 

Home sales close in on three-and-a-half year high | Reuters.

Metro-North Trains Should Be Up And Running By Wednesday Morning | Armonk NY Real Estate

Metro-North Railroad’s New Haven Line is scheduled to be back to normal by Wednesday morning, officials said Monday.

“We are confident that the reconstruction work, inspection and testing will be completed in time for a normal rush hour on Wednesday,” Metro-North President Howard Permut said in a statement Monday evening. “We are grateful for the tireless work of all departments and employees engaged in this huge task.”

Metro-North and the Connecticut Department of Transportation have to rebuild 2,000 feet of track after Friday’s derailment and collision on the Fairfield-Bridgeport border. The agencies also need to restring overhead catenary wires to restore electricity to the rail line and retest the track and the signals before trains can begin running.

Train ridership was way down Monday, with about 750 people riding shuttle trains and buses from towns north of the accident Monday, or about 20 percent of the usual number, Metro-North said. Overall, however, ridership on the New Haven Line was down 20 percent Monday. About 2,700 people total had used the Metro-North bus service by 3 p.m. Monday, it said.

Connecticut’s main highways did not see unusually high traffic Monday, Gov. Dannel Malloy said Monday. The Merritt Parkway’s car load was actually slightly below a typical Monday, while Interstate 95 was slightly slower, he said.

“Suffice it to say, the plan worked,” Transportation Commissioner James Redeker said Monday. “People listened, and we had support systems in place.”

For Tuesday, Metro-North will continue the system it set up for Monday’s commute, with trains running from New Haven to Bridgeport, buses taking commuters from Bridgeport and Fairfield to Westport, and trains running again from Westport to Grand Central. The full schedule and plan is available here.

The state will maintain its same procedures Tuesday morning that it did Monday. State Police and tow crews will be on call during rush hours to clear accidents quickly. The state Emergency Operations System will also be open to help manage the rush-hour commute.

On Sunday evening, Malloy had asked Connecticut residents to telecommute to work if possible, and carpool or vanpool if driving instead of taking the train. He asked commuters to take those same steps again Tuesday.

“This is tremendously good news,” Malloy said of Metro-North’s announcement. “However, this also means that we’re going to have one more day of great difficulty, and that’s tomorrow.”

 

Metro-North Trains Should Be Up And Running By Wednesday Morning | The Bedford Daily Voice.