SIX Rotating Vendors & Music at Mamaroneck Winter Farmers Market; Join Us: Down to Earth Markets’ 2015 Learning Center; Vendors Offer Yummy Specials in both Ossining & Mamaroneck! January 29th-February 4th, 2015 DowntoEarthMarkets.com | ||||||
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Mamaroneck: Music at the Market This Saturday, January 31st, enjoy music by guitarist Ed Packer from 10 am to noon. Ossining: The 2015 Learning Center at Down to Earth Markets Down to Earth Markets is delighted to announce our 2015 Learning Center series. Once a month, we’ll invite local food makers to share their secrets to a class held in our office at 173 Main Street, 3rd Floor, in Ossining. The kick-off event is “Bake Up the Love with Christiane’s Backstube” on For additional events, visit our Down to Earth Markets Event Calendar. Stay tuned to all market happenings via our Down to Earth Markets Facebook page |
Tag Archives: Katonah Luxury Homes
Hip Hillside Spec Home | Katonah Real Estate
Location: Los Angeles, Calif.
Price: $1,849,000
One of a pair of “brother and sister residences” designed by Fung + Blatt architects and developed by Ground Up is on the market for the first time. But is this terraced spec home the brother or the sister?
This one’s called the Jem Residence, and the other is the Scout Residence. Which doesn’t really bring us any closer to answering the question, because to the extent that those words can be considered human names, neither is very gendered. Update: A commenter who advises me to “read a book” sometime says that these are characters from Harper Lee’s 1960 novel To Kill a Mockingbird, which I haven’t read. Jem is the brother and Scout is the sister. And here I thought Scout Willis was the only noteworthy Scout.
Anyway, this 2,170-square-foot three-bedroom home was built with “careful recognition and nod to the masters of mid-century and modernist architecture,” with large balconies and a very chic and chicly decorated interior, with folding glass doors a few raw concrete-block walls. The asking price is $1,849,000.
read more…
http://curbed.com/archives/2015/01/20/fung-blatt-jem-residence-for-sale.php
Castle in Scotland Gets 21st-Century Redo | Katonah Real Estate
All photos by Peter Lander Photography via Houzz
Until recently, this stunning 17th-century castle in the Scottish Highlands was drafty, run-down, and had no modern amenities. Built for the daughter of a Lord in 1620, the five-story, multi-turreted castle with a gabled roof had hosted the Duke of Cumberland’s troops on their way to the 1746 Battle of Culloden in grand style, but had fallen into neglect by the 19th century. By the time the Scottish firm Maxwell & Company was hired to turn it into a vacation home for a family of four, according to Houzz, the castle required a complete (and historically sensitive) restoration of its exterior and interiors.
It took three years to do all that, and install plumbing and electrical systems, but now the castle has 11 bedrooms and copious reception rooms decorated with period furniture, stained oak floors, and aristocratic objects like a portrait of the patriarch of Clan Mackintosh. The architects did such a through job of melding past and present that the nearly 400-year-old castle ended up winning an award for its “cohesion of design.” The post-renovation photos are amazing:
read more….
http://curbed.com/archives/2014/12/10/chilly-1620-castle-in-scotland-warms-up-with-a-renovation.php
Housing Costs Plunge for Owners, Soar for Renters | Katonah Real Estate
A much higher proportion of renters than homeowners are cost burdened by their housing expenses and the number is growing quickly due to rising rents and affordable home prices.
Last year, 39.6 million households spent more than 30 percent of their income on housing, down from 40.9 million in 2012 and a peak of 42.7 million in 2010. Still, just over a third of U.S. households (34 percent) were cost burdened in 2013, including about a quarter of all homeowners (26 percent) and half of all renters (49 percent), according to the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies.
Last year’s decline in the number of cost-burdened households, however, occurred almost exclusively among homeowners. Cost burdened households are those where housing costs exceed 30 percent of income.
Nearly 19 million owners were cost burdened in 2013, down from 20.3 million in 2012. The number of owners with severe cost burdens – paying more than 50 percent of income for housing – also slid, from 8.5 million in 2012 to 8.1 million in 2013. The easing of owner cost burdens is due in part to a dramatic decline in median homeowner housing costs. After surging during the housing bubble, inflation-adjusted owner costs have dropped to about 2.5 percent below their 2001 level (Figure 2). Owner burdens are also down due to a significant reduction in the overall number of homeowners – fully 294,000 fewer households in 2013 than 2012. This decline in the number of homeowners for the third straight year (and the fifth time since 2007) suggests that many burdened owners dropped out of ownership, moving into the costly rental market.
With many exiting ownership and new households forming, the number of renter households was up by 615,000 in 2013. Indeed, a major reason why renter cost burdens remain persistently high is that the overall number of renters continues to grow. Despite a slight decline in cost-burdened share, the sharp growth in renter households pushed the number with cost burdens up for the twelfth consecutive year, reaching 20.8 million in 2013. Of these, about 11.2 million were severely burdened in both years. Cost pressures also continue to drive burdens higher as over the past decade, renter costs have largely gone up, while renter incomes have declined. As Figure 2 shows, real median renter costs in 2013 were about five percent higher than in 2001 while, even with modest income gains in 2013, median incomes were nearly 11 percent lower. If past patterns hold and income growth remains stagnant, rental costs continue to climb, and affordable ownership stays out of reach, rental cost burdens will only continue to grow.
read more…
http://www.realestateeconomywatch.com/2014/11/housing-costs-plunge-for-owners-soar-for-renters-2/
Inside the Battery’s Century-Old Pier A | Katonah Real Estate
At the southernmost tip of West Street, a pier juts out into New York Harbor. Until just a few weeks ago, it was fenced in, and closed off to the public. But after a years-long renovation and restoration process, Pier A—a 128-year-old structure with a handsome clocktower that once served the docks and harbor police as well as the city’s fire department—is open to the public for the very first time in its long history. To say that the makeover has been hotly anticipated would be an understatement. Taking the pier from decrepit and abandoned to a three-story, flood-prepared building with beautifully-designed bars and restaurants (run by the Poulakakos group) as well as a visitor’s center, plus a public promenade, plaza, and ample seating, cost around $40 million, with the Economic Development Council footing most of the bill. But boy, is she pretty. And those views of the Statue of Liberty aren’t bad either, especially in the sunset.
Home prices up more than expected: S&P/Case-Shiller | #Katonah Real Estate
U.S. single-family home prices showed a stronger-than-expected rise in September on a yearly basis, but the rate of the increase decelerated from August, a closely watched survey showed on Tuesday.
“The overall trend in home price increases continues to slow down,” David M. Blitzer, managing director and chairman of the index committee at S&P Dow Jones Indices, said in a statement.
The S&P/Case Shiller composite index of 20 metropolitan areas gained 4.9 percent in September over September 2013. In August, it rose 5.6 percent on a yearly basis. A Reuters poll of economists forecast a 4.6 percent increase.
Economist Robert Shiller told CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street” the reading was not exciting, and he noted that the winter season is historically slow for home sales.
”We haven’t expected exciting growth for a while, but it does look like seasonally adjusted home prices are still growing,” he said.
On a seasonally adjusted monthly basis, prices in the 20 cities rose 0.3 percent in September. A Reuters poll of economists had forecast an increase of 0.1 percent.
read more…
http://www.cnbc.com/id/102214295
The Haunted Histories of 13 Famous New York City Places | Katonah Real Estate
New York City’s old townhouses and historic apartments hide plenty of dark, ghostly secrets, but many of the city’s most famous destinations have their own ghastly histories as well. Grand Central, the Empire State Building, Radio City Music Hall, even Central Park, all host their own otherworldly spirits, born from some gruesome part of history. Elise Gainer, the owner of Ghosts, Murders, and Mayhem Walking Tours, catalogued many of these horrific tales in her bookGhosts and Murders of Manhattan, and we mapped 13 of the most well-known sites for a historic, haunted Halloween tour.
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http://ny.curbed.com/archives/2014/10/31/the_haunted_histories_of_13_famous_new_york_city_places.php
Getting a Mortgage Is Growing Easier | Katonah Real Estate
The nation’s largest mortgage firms plan to once again buy loans where the borrowers put as little as 3% down.
Perhaps you thought the days of putting little money down for a home were gone. Well, not so fast. On Monday the CEO of Fannie Mae, Timothy Mayopoulos, announced that the housing giant planned to once again buy loans for which the borrowers put as little as 3% down. Mayopoulos told the crowd gathered at the Mortgage Bankers Association conference in Las Vegas that Fannie, which along with Freddie Mac supports the bulk of the mortgage market today, is working to finalize the details of the offering and gain regulatory approval to proceed. “We want this business,” he said.
So far no details have been announced about what income or credit score requirements borrowers making such small down payments will need to meet the group’s standards. Mayopoulos said more information would be released in the coming weeks. Both Fannie and Freddie previously purchased loans with 3% down but had stopped in recent years. Today the firms usually require at least a 5% down payment on most loans.
Melvin Watt, director of the Federal Housing Finance Authority, which regulates the two government enterprises, said his group was working with them to develop “sensible and responsible guidelines” for the 3% loans, in an effort “to increase access for creditworthy but lower-wealth borrowers.” He cited “compensating factors” in evaluating such borrowers, though he didn’t say what those factors would be.
A 3% down payment is not exactly nonexistent today. The Federal Housing Administration has been offering mortgages with as little as 3.5% down for years. Traditionally, most borrowers were lower income, and the amount they could borrow was capped, but today even higher income folks use FHA loans to buy homes in expensive areas (loan limits vary by state but typically top out at $625,500). In recent years, these mortgages—which come with higher fees than traditional loans, as well as pricey mortgage insurance—have accounted for a larger than normal share of the market.
Now Fannie seems intent to grab some of that business. The low-down-payment loan, Mayopoulos promised, “will also be competitively priced, including against FHA execution.”
In a related move, FHFA’s Watt also announced that the agency is working to provide more details on when the housing giants can force a lender to buy back a loan that goes bad, which he hopes will encourage banks to loosen their lending standards. Over the past few years Fannie and Freddie have required lenders to buy back millions of dollars of bad loans, “sometimes for seemingly minor issues, such as missing a piece of paperwork,” said Keith Gumbinger, vice president at mortgage information publisher HSH.com.
“This clarification might allow lenders to look at riskier borrowers with less fear of having to buy these loans back in the future,” he said. He noted, though, that any changes are likely to be incremental: “It might let a few more borrowers in at the margin, but it won’t be like flipping a light switch where FICO scores down to 640 are now in.”
It’s important to note that Fannie and Freddie can’t force banks to lower their lending standards. In fact, most banks today require tougher standards than the government agencies impose, partially because they are fearful of having to buy back loans that go bad. For example, Fannie and Freddie will buy loans with FICO scores as low as 620, but most banks require at least a 660 or 680, Gumbinger said.
Similarly, lenders could always decide not to offer 3% down loans, even though Fannie and Freddie have agreed to eventually start buying them again. So it remains to be seen whether and how much the rule changes, when they are formally announced in the next few weeks, will ease the way for borrowers.
read more…
https://time.com/money/3529857/low-down-payment-mortgage-fannie-mae-freddie-mac/?xid=yahoo_money
Homeowner’s Claims Can Send Premiums Sky High | Katonah Real Estate
Filing a single homeowner’s insurance claim can raise consumers’ annual insurance premiums by more than 30 percent, or hundreds of dollars each year, according to research by insuranceQuotes.com, a subsidiary of Bankrate Insurance.
Nationally, one claim leads to an average premium increase of nine percent. The states with the highest single claim increases are Wyoming (+32%), Connecticut (+21%), Arizona (+20%), New Mexico (+19%) and California (+18%).
In Texas, home insurers are not allowed to increase premiums after one claim. The next-lowest increases were observed in New York (+2%), Massachusetts (+2%), Florida (+3%) and Vermont (+4%).
A second claim brings the national average increase up to 20% (the highest increase from a second claim was Michigan’s 71%).
“Homeowners need to be really careful when filing claims,” said Laura Adams, insuranceQuotes.com’s senior analyst. “Even a denied claim can cause your premium to go up. Make sure to know your policy’s specific guidelines and only file a claim when absolutely necessary. Winning a small claim could actually cost you money in the long run.”
Nationally, liability claims are most likely to cause the greatest premium increases. A single liability claim causes premiums to rise by an average of 14%. Theft, vandalism and fire are not far behind. Medical claims (+2%) are the cheapest.
read more….
http://www.realestateeconomywatch.com/2014/10/8159/
5 mortgage myths dispelled | Katonah Real Estate
If the idea of buying a house both scares and excites you, that’s how it should be. If you’re only intimidated or only enthusiastic, you’re probably going into the mortgage-buying process ill-informed.
After all, in the years before the Great Recession, homebuyers weren’t intimidated at all. For quite a few years, many people purchased homes that were out of their price range and often on shaky credit, but since lenders didn’t seem concerned, homeowners weren’t either.
Now, the tide has turned, and prospective homeowners are understandably more leery about making what will likely be the largest purchase of their lives. But maybe they’re too leery. According to a survey of 2,017 adults released last month by Wells Fargo & Co., the country’s largest mortgage lender, many borrowers who can afford a home may be frightened off, believing that buying a house is something they simply can’t do.
If you’re on either end of the spectrum — squeamish about homebuying or ecstatic with no worries whatsoever — here are some misconceptions about mortgages that may bring you to the middle.
Your credit has to be perfect or near-perfect. Two-thirds of the Wells Fargo survey respondents believed you have to have a very good credit score to buy a house. While there’s no doubt that a high credit score will help you get a better loan, it isn’t a deal-breaker if your score is middling. If you have some credit blemishes and financial scrape-ups but for the most part pay your bills and make steady income, you probably don’t have much to worry about, experts say.
“While credit is scrutinized, some loan types will allow credit scores as low as 620,” says Gaye Rowland, senior vice president of SharePlus Bank, headquartered in Plano, Texas. “Other compensating factors such as larger down payments or low debt-to-income ratios can offset some negative credit information. Every situation is analyzed individually.”
You must have a down payment worth 20 percent of the purchase price. This, too, is a myth. More than 40 percent of Wells Fargo respondents believed the only way to buy a house was to give a lender at least 20 percent of the purchase price of a house.
Again, it helps to have a 20 percent down payment, particularly if you want to avoid paying monthly private mortgage insurance. But many banks and mortgage companies — especially now that the recession is several years in the rearview mirror — offer loans that don’t require a down payment anywhere close to 20 percent.
“We offer many programs that either have 100 percent financing or a 3.5 percent down payment,” says Alyssa Schwabe, a spokeswoman for GSF Mortgage, headquartered in Brookfield, Wisconsin.
read more…
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/5-mortgage-myths-dispelled-132946834.html#