Tag Archives: Chappaqua Homes

Chappaqua Homes

Come See Rural Maryland’s Craftiest, Swankiest Cabin | Chappaqua Real Estate

t1.jpgPhoto via Vicco von Voss

Over the last 10 years, German furniture maker Vicco von Voss has been building out his dream cabin in rural Maryland, one piece of timber at a time. Recently profiled in the New York Times, von Voss’s 1,400-square-foot, Frank Lloyd Wright-inspired house is a masterpiece of patient craftsmanship: each plank and beam was milled by hand, using fallen trees salvaged from the woods nearby.

A playful mix of straight edges and gratifying curves. >>

Assembling hundreds of varieties of trees, including the Eastern white pine, cherry, cypress, and swamp maple, von Voss added each design feature with care. Take, for example, how von Voss spent weeks crafting the cherry and yellow wood door to his daughter’s room, which now also has notches carved into them to record her growth. Or the fact that he had to let all of the meticulously scavenged wood age three years per inch to control how they expand and contract through the seasons. Check out more photos of the “results” below (the house is still a work-in-progress) and a slideshow of its construction process over here.

 

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http://curbed.com/archives/2014/12/01/vicco-von-voss-centreville-maryland-house.php

Always dreamed of having your own mountaintop chalet? | Chappaqua Real Estate

If you’ve ever wanted a ski home, now is your opportunity: superstar Tom Cruise just listed his getaway estate in mountain hot spot Telluride, CO. All you need is $59 million, and the 10,000-square-foot-home on 298 acres is yours.

If that’s a bit out of your price range, it doesn’t mean you can’t attain your goal of having your own mountain getaway. A ski home can be yours in five easy steps.

1. Understand the total cost of owning a ski home

First, determine what you can afford. To do so, have your lender look at the following:

  • Cash available for down payment, closing costs and reserves.
  • Total monthly cost on your existing home, plus the total monthly cost on the ski home (including principal, interest, taxes and insurance for both homes).
  • Total cost to manage the ski home, including homeowners’ association (HOA) dues.

You also need to consider budget items that lenders don’t use in their qualifying calculations, but that are still important for your own financial planning:

  • Gas, electric, cable TV and internet, if these items aren’t covered by the HOA dues.
  • Housewares such as dishes, cookware and linens.
  • Travel costs to reach your ski home for your desired number of visits each year.
  • Ski passes and outdoor gear (for winter and summer): skis, boots, poles, snowboards, mountain bikes, kayaks and more.
  • Property maintenance like snow removal, cleaning and general upkeep, if these items aren’t covered by the HOA dues.

2. Decide between second home or investment property

Before estimating your costs for the purchase transaction, you first need to consider how you intend to own the property and how much you intend to use it. There are two options:

  • Second home. In this scenario, you’d own your ski home with the intent of using it only for your family and friends. Mortgage rates for second homes are the same as they are for primary residences, so your rate will be the lowest it can be. Most lenders require as little as 20 percent down for a second home. Your full primary residence housing cost plus your full second home cost will be used to qualify your loan. The fine print of most lender terms on second homes prohibit renting the home.
  • Investment property. You’ll use this scenario if you intend to rent the home in addition to using it as a family property. Mortgage rates are .25 percent to .375 percent higher than second home rates, and minimum down payment requirements are 30 to 35 percent. You can use rental income to help qualify for the mortgage, and the extra income from renting the property when you’re not using it might also make owning a ski home more financially feasible.

3. Review monthly and transactional cost line items

Supposed you wanted to purchase a property in Telluride, CO selling for $525,000. Here’s how much it would cost to buy it as a second home versus an investment property.

  • Second home. If you put 30 percent down, your estimated total monthly cost would be $3,586, and your estimated total cash to close would be $177,750. The monthly cost estimates include $1,781 for a 30-year fixed mortgage at 4.125 percent, $1,625 HOA dues, $30 insurance and $150 property tax. The cash to close estimates include $157,500 for 30-percent down payment, $15,750 for 3-percent Telluride transfer tax, $2,500 lender fees and $2,000 title/escrow/inspection fees.
  • Investment property. If you put 30 percent down, your estimated monthly cost would be $3,667 (before any rental income you’d receive), and your estimated cash to close would also be $177,750. The monthly cost estimates are $1,862 for a 30-year fixed mortgage at 4.5 percent, and the same as above for HOA dues, insurance and property taxes. The cash to close breakdowns for a 30-percent down payment are the same as above.

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http://www.zillow.com/blog/buy-a-ski-home-in-5-easy-steps-165022/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+ZillowBlog+%28Zillow+Blog%29

Foreclosures spike as banks ramp up repossessions | Chappaqua Real Estate

More than five years after the foreclosure crisis began, the number of borrowers losing their homes is rising again.

Most of the troubled loans are not new; instead, the backlog of homes in the foreclosure process is finally starting to move more quickly. There was, however, a slight uptick in foreclosures on loans made in 2013 and 2014, a troubling turn.

Foreclosure filings, which include default notices, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions, were reported on 123,109 properties in October, according to RealtyTrac, a foreclosure sales and data company. That is a 15 percent increase from September, and the largest monthly increase since the peak of the crisis in March of 2010. The numbers are still down 8 percent from a year ago.

Foreclosure activity usually spikes in the months before the holiday season, as banks want to get as many done before implementing holiday moratoria. Over the past three years there has been an average 8 percent monthly uptick in foreclosure auctions in October.

“But the sheer magnitude of the increase this year demonstrates there is more than just a seasonal pattern at work,” said RealtyTrac vice president Daren Blomquist. “Distressed properties that have been in a holding pattern for years are finally being cleared for landing at the foreclosure auction.”

Since the crisis began, there has been a distinct difference in foreclosure volumes between states that require a judge in the process and those that do not. Now the difference is fading. Foreclosure auctions in judicial states rose 21 percent month-to-month, while those in non-judicial states rose 27 percent.

“There is still strong demand from the large institutional investors at the foreclosure auction in some markets, but even in markets with decreasing demand at the foreclosure auction, banks can be confident in selling REO [repossessed] properties quickly and at a good price,” Blomquist added. “That’s because there is still strong demand from buyers, particularly in the lower price ranges, combined with a dearth of distressed homes listed for sale.”

Strong buyer demand at foreclosure auctions has helped stem the number of properties being repossessed by banks. October, again, was an anomaly, with lenders taking ownership of nearly 28 thousand properties, up 22 percent from September. Still, repossessions were down 26 percent from a year ago.

“We see far more opportunity to buy than we have capital,” said Laurie Hawkes, president and COO of American Residential Properties, a Scottsdale, Arizona-based, single-family rental REIT in a September interview. “The fallacy is that the buying is over. It’s not.”

But it is slowing for large institutional investors, especially as home prices continue to rise. In some markets, however, where home prices have risen most in the recovery, banks would rather repossess the homes because they know they can sell them for a good price. As investors slow their buying, banks are getting more aggressive with long-delinquent borrowers.

Among the nation’s top 20 metropolitan housing markets, Miami, Tampa, Baltimore, Riverside-San Bernardino and Chicago had the highest foreclosure rates, according to RealtyTrac. Investors have been moving to these markets from former foreclosure hot spots, like Phoenix and Las Vegas.

 

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https://homes.yahoo.com/news/foreclosures-spike-banks-ramp-repossessions-114000770.html

Somebody Actually Lives on This Remote Pillar of Rock | Chappaqua Real Estate

08a7b805-03af-483a-be29-7a49eacb5825-2060x1322.jpegPhoto by Amos Chapple via The Guardian

The Katskhi Pillar, a towering limestone monolith in the Republic of Georgia with the ruins of two Byzantine churches on top of it, has so many legends swirling around it that it’s hard to tell which ones are fact, and which are (admittedly very appealing) fictions. In this case, however, the truth of the matter reads a lot like fiction: a survey of the cliff a few years back revealed a pair of monasteries dating from the sixth to ninth centuries, where members of an ascetic religious order called the Stylites lived until around 1400. In the ruins of the churches, researchers found three hermit cells, a crypt, and a wine cellar. To this day, the locals of the village of Katskhi venerate the rock formation as the “Pillar of Life,” a symbol of the cross where Jesus was crucified, and some believe the monastery on the surface was once connected by a long iron chain to the dome of another nearby church.

It was uninhabited for centuries. Then a monk moved there in 1993. >>

The first mention of the ancient monastery was in the 18th century, when a Georgian scholar and prince described it thusly: “There is a rock within the ravine standing like a pillar, considerably high. There is a small church on the top of the rock, but nobody is able to ascend it; nor know they how to do that.”

For centuries, it was uninhabited. In the 1990s, a local monk named Maxim Qavtaradze moved in and began to restore the vertiginous churches himself. He enters and leaves via a 131-foot iron ladder; it takes him about 20 minutes to climb. Qavtaradze had been motivated to change his life after a stint in prison, and actually slept in an old fridge for his first two years, until some supporters built him a cottage.

 

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http://curbed.com/archives/2014/11/05/katskhi-pillar-republic-of-georgia-natural-wonders.php

US House Prices Contribute to Global House Price Recovery | Chappaqua Real Estate

A previous blog post illustrated that US house prices are recording a range of annual gains with some areas of the country rising faster than others.

Similarly, in the context of the global economy, annual house price growth in the US has been faster than some countries while lagging other countries. The International Monetary Fund’s Global Housing Watch calculates a real seasonally adjusted house price index for 52 countries including the United States. House prices in these countries are used to calculate two separate global house price indexes. One global house price index assigns an equal weight to each country and the second global house price index is adjusted to account for the size of each country’s economic output (GDP).

Figure 1 below shows that the rate of growth recorded in the US places it in the 2nd quintile amongst countries for which house price data are available. According to the International Monetary Fund, real and seasonally adjusted annual house price growth in the US was estimated to be 3.6% between the second quarter of 2013 and the second quarter of 2014, thereby contributing to the 1.3% increase in real seasonally adjusted global house prices. The IMF comparison utilizes the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) house price index.

 

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http://eyeonhousing.org/2014/11/us-house-prices-contribute-to-global-recovery/

Mortgage Rates at 3.98% | Chappaqua Real Estate

Fred Mac today released the results of its Primary Mortgage Market Survey® (PMMS®), showing average fixed mortgage rates moving higher across the board this week and rebounding from the lowest rates of the year.

News Facts

  • 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) averaged 3.98 percent with an average 0.5 point for the week ending October 30, 2014, up from last week when it averaged 3.92 percent. A year ago at this time, the 30-year FRM averaged 4.10 percent.
  • 15-year FRM this week averaged 3.13 percent with an average 0.5 point, up from last week when it averaged 3.08 percent. A year ago at this time, the 15-year FRM averaged 3.20 percent.
  • 1-year Treasury-indexed ARM averaged 2.43 percent this week with an average 0.4 point, up from last week when it averaged 2.41 percent. At this time last year, the 1-year ARM averaged 2.51 percent.

Average commitment rates should be reported along with average fees and points to reflect the total upfront cost of obtaining the mortgage. Visit the following links for theRegional and National Mortgage Rate Details and Definitions. Borrowers may still pay closing costs which are not included in the survey.

Quotes
Attributed to Frank Nothaft, vice president and chief economist, Freddie Mac.

“Mortgage rates grew across the board this week, rebounding from the lowest rates of the year. New home sales grew at an annual rate of 467,000 sales in September, the fastest rate observed during the recovery. Meanwhile, the National S&P Case-Shiller House Price Index grew at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 0.4 percent in August.

Pending Sales Trend Up | Chappaqua Real Estate

Pending home sales increased 0.3% in September, suggesting continued steady improvement in existing sales. The Pending Home Sales Index (PHSI), a forward-looking indicator based on signed contracts reported by the National Association of Realtors (NAR), increased to 105.0 in September from 104.7 in August. The September reading was up 1.0% from the same month a year ago, and pending sales were up year-over-year for the first time in 11 months.

Pending Home Sales September 2014

The September PHSI increased modestly in the South and Northeast, but decreased slightly in the West and Midwest. Year-over-year, the West, Northeast and South increased 3.6%, 2.9% and 1.7% respectively, while the Midwest declined 4.0%.

Last week NAR reported a 2.4% increase in September existing home sales, and firming job and economic growth suggests that the existing home market will demonstrate steady growth throughout the fall. The housing recovery has moved towards higher ground reflected by a six-year high in September new homes sales.

 

 

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http://eyeonhousing.org/2014/10/pending-sales-trend-up/

American Horror Story: Floral Wallpaper | Chappaqua Real Estate

 

Floral House, not sane, stood by itself against its flowers, holding unimaginable horrors within…

What dark secrets lurk behind this house’s pleasant, unassuming exterior? Somehow, someone, possibly an escapee from a mental institution, committedunspeakable acts of wallpaper horror within. Not only the walls, but indeed the very ceilings are papered, closing in on you, yes, getting closer all the time… Not content, the interior desecrator added furniture upholstered in a contrasting floral. Then he or she slapped up a few Inuit plaques on the wall because why not and add a coffee table that looks like it’s going to get up and run away soon, and then it was time to wallpaper the next room.

Specifics: $895K for a 1900sf house with three wallpapered bedrooms and two rather nice baths. Plot is half an acre. House will probably be really nice after copious amounts of wallpaper stripper, holy water, and smudging sage.

 

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http://hamptons.curbed.com/archives/2014/10/21/american_horror_story_floral_wallpaper.php

 

Kitchen of the Week: Warm and Contemporary in the Mountains | Chappaqua Real Estate

When this Minnesota family of four travels to Jackson Hole, Wyoming, they dive into all that valley has to offer, from skiing to rodeos, and they wanted their ski home to reflect how they spend their time there. “We talked a lot about how they wanted to live as a family out here before we started,” says their interior designer, Jennifer Prugh Visosky. Then they opened up the social spaces for a warm, contemporary feel that fits the wooded surroundings.