Tag Archives: Cross River Homes

Rising Home Prices May Not Tell the Whole Story | Cross River Real Estate

 

Everyone knows rising home prices make it a sellers’ market. Sellers can afford to hold out for top dollar because buyers are rushing to beat higher prices.

Well, not exactly. Zillow.com, the home listing and data firm, has a more refined way of looking at it, defining a sellers’ market as “not necessarily one where home values are rising, but rather one in which homes are on the market for a shorter time, price cuts occur less frequently and homes are sold at prices very close to (or greater than) their last listing price.”

The buyers’ market is, as you’d expect, the opposite: “Homes for sale stay on the market longer, price cuts occur more frequently and homes are sold for less relative to their listing price.”

Prices may indeed be rising quickly in sellers’ markets and falling in buyers’ markets, but price change alone is not the key factor.

So whether you are a buyer or seller, with a little sleuthing you can figure out who has the negotiating edge. Lots of this data are under Zillow’s Local Info button.

Zillow’s approach makes for some intriguing conclusions about conditions as the spring selling season gets rolling. The West Coast is a seller’s market, while the Midwest and East Coast favor buyers. In the recent post-crisis years, the whole country tended to move in the same direction, but now, in a return to more typical behavior, local variations are reasserting themselves, Zillow says.

The hottest sellers’ markets: San Jose, Calif., and San Francisco; San Antonio, Texas; and Los Angeles. The hottest for buyers: Cleveland, Ohio; Philadelphia; Tampa, Fla.; and Chicago.

 

 

http://www.mainstreet.com/article/real-estate/rising-home-prices-may-not-tell-whole-story?puc=yahoo&cm_ven=YAHOO

Real Housewife Personally Drives Bulldozer Into 42 Star Island | Cross River Real Estate

 

42%20Star%20Island%20Drive%20-%20December%202008%20-%20Credit%20Ronny%20Lorist%20X.jpg[Photo Via Ronny Lorist]

Lisa Hochstein is having a great day. The Real Housewife of Miami and her hubby Lenny have finally won her battle to demolish historic 42 Star Island Drive and she celebrated by personally demolishing the house’s porte cochere, she told news reporters yesterday. The house’s sad demise was all over the evening news.  “I actually tore down this entire front area here, it was actually really fun. This is a fun job.” said Lisa, contemplated a career change no doubt. The house should take about three weeks to demolish in its entirety, and the new one won’t be finished for another two years.

 

http://miami.curbed.com/archives/2014/03/19/real-housewife-personally-drives-bulldozer-into-42-star-island.php

Would You Rather be Social or Interesting? | Cross River Realtor

 

The “Interest Graph” is not the “Social Graph”. But what does that mean  and why should you care?

Despite the rapid ascent of Interest-based platforms, such as Pinterest,  Sulia, WeHeartIt and Wanelo, we rarely see dialogue about the Interest Graph  except in a Social context. However, The Interest Graph and Social Graph are two  fundamentally different infrastructures with different underlying assumptions  for marketers.

Sure, they often overlap, but it’s time we come to appreciate their  differences, so that we can be more effective marketers on a social web driven  by people’s passions and interests.

So should you be social or interesting?

The social graph is about who you “know”

Friends, followers and connections represent some degree of familiarity,  ranging from a spouse to someone you met once at that thing you went to. If you  think in High School terms, the Social Graph is all about getting in with the  cool kids, so you can multiply your reach and borrow from their swagger.

The basic assumption of “Social  Marketing” is:

“If someone knows someone else,  they will be interested in similar things”

The interest graph is about “passions”

In high school, the “Interest Graph” is like clubs or sports teams- a group  of people coming together because they love to do the same thing. They may or  may not be friends, may or may not know each other, but they share a common  passion that brings them together. The more passionate they are the more likely  they are to create, share and comment.

The basic assumption of Interest  Marketing is thus:

“If someone is interested in  something, people who are interested in similar things will be interested in  that thing”

Social marketing is about reach

The more people who see your message, the further it will spread. This means  you will need to continue to grow your social networks on Twitter to remain  ahead of the competition. It’s about building an online distribution  network.

Read more at http://www.jeffbullas.com/2014/03/14/would-you-rather-be-social-or-interesting/#bLk7jqXUxfOvfP54.99

The Hidden Costs of Buying a Home | Cross River Homes

 

You’re looking for a house and see the perfect listing. It has a big number on it. For simplicity’s sake, say $200,000. If you’re like most prospective homeowners, you think you will soon be talking to a lender and getting a loan for this amount.

But as veteran homebuyers already know, you are going to pay much more than $200,000.

True, almost everything we buy has a hidden cost. You buy a toothbrush for a couple bucks, and since you’ll have to purchase toothpaste, the ownership cost of a toothbrush is more than $2 — especially if you throw in a toothbrush holder. Obviously, the hidden costs of buying a house are far more complex. And if you aren’t prepared for them, you may come away from the experience feeling as if you’ve been kicked in the teeth.

So if you’re thinking of buying your first house, be on the alert for these hidden costs.

 

http://news.yahoo.com/hidden-costs-buying-home-151852332.html

Hudson River Greenway plan wilts Riverdale | Cross River Real Estate

 

Residents of the affluent Bronx enclave of Riverdale have long dreamed about gaining easy access to their two-mile stretch of Hudson River shoreline.

No wonder, then, that they were thrilled by a recent proposal to connect that waterfront strip with the existing Hudson River Greenway. It was only when they looked at the fine print of that plan that some Riverdale residents said their dream had turned into a nightmare—into something that threatens the character of their leafy neighborhood while barely offering any additional river access.

As it stands, the Hudson River Greenway’s popular bicycle and pedestrian trail begins at Battery Park at the bottom of Manhattan and runs all the way up through Westchester County. Or at least it would if only a way could be found to close a three-mile-long gap along the waterfront in the Bronx and Yonkers, just to the north. To do that, the New York Metropolitan Transit Council, an organization of regional governments charged with studying transportation-related issues for New York City, Long Island and the lower Hudson Valley, is recommending an elaborate $75 million multistage plan.

The problem in Riverdale is that the tracks used by Metro-North and Amtrak run close to the water, making pedestrian access perilous.

Interim trail

The NYMTC’s plan, submitted to the community board in February, essentially dodged the problem. It calls for an interim path beginning just over the Henry Hudson Bridge and running north through local streets in Riverdale, affording users a visual but not a physical connection with the shore. Accommodating those cyclists and walkers would require some widening of roadways, installation of sidewalks where none exist and paving paths through Riverdale Park–steps that have many residents up in arms.

They note the area’s rich history, including the stately mansions built by generations of Manhattan moguls, as well as its historic churches and elite educational institutions, including the Riverdale Country School–the most expensive private school in New York City.

“What has been presented will change the visual character and bucolic nature of our neighborhood,” said Frank Anelante, chairman of the Riverdale-Spuyten Duyvil Coalition. “The reconstruction required would necessitate the taking of property from homeowners, obliterating front lawns and driveways.”

Gary Klingsberg, a resident of Palisade Avenue, a street along which a portion of the path would be built, said he recently walked the suggested route, from the Henry Hudson Bridge to Riverdale Park, and found the twists and turns of the terrain dangerous, with very little space to expand existing sidewalks without infringing on people’s property.

 

http://www.crainsnewyork.com/article/20140310/REAL_ESTATE/303099988/hudson-river-greenway-plan-wilts-riverdale#

Bring That Novel You’ve Been Working On to This Dapper Cabin | Cross River Real Estate

 

Writers-Shed-by-Weston-Surman-Deane-Architecture_dezeen_ss10.jpgPhoto via Dezeen

Some aspiring writers are holding off on their true calling until they’ve “done enough living.” Others have demanding day jobs, dogs to walk, Peace Lilies to water. Here’s another excuse to add to the pile: not having a super natty writing shed to type away in. This cabin, completed in April of 2013 and recently shortlisted for the 2014 Architects Journal Small Projects Award, would fit the bill rather nicely. Unlike the Walden-chic abodes of rural wordsmiths, this one’s an urban retreat, sitting in a backyard garden in the London borough of Hackney. Described by its designers, the firm Weston, Surman & Deane, as “a haven in the city; a fairy-tale hut” responding to their client’s “passion for children’s literature and mythologies,” it glows like a cottage in a treacly pastoral scene.

That nice orange hue was achieved by situating a sliding glass door behind a facade of cedar slats. For daytime writing sessions, there’s a large north-facing skylight. Heat is provided by a wood-burning stove, which can be fed with the wood kept in a thin storage area on the porch. Around the stove, there’s a staggered bookcase built from rectangular partitions of oiled chipboard, the largest of which frames a reclaimed sink with garden taps and a brass splash back.

 

http://curbed.com/archives/2014/03/03/bring-that-novel-youve-been-working-on-to-this-dapper-cabin.php