Tag Archives: Mt Kisco Luxury Real Estate

Record $1.6 Billion Loan Approved To Build New Tappan Zee Bridge | Mt Kisco NY Homes

The Department of Transportation has approved a record loan of up to $1.6 billion for construction of a new Tappan Zee Bridge, Congresswoman Nita Lowey announced in a press release today.

The largest-ever loan is part of the DOT’s Transportation Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act (TIFIA) program.

“This is a huge milestone for the construction of a New Tappan Zee Bridge, a critical link in our region’s infrastructure system and lifeline for commuters and businesses,” Lowey said in the release. “I am excited that the DOT has approved the largest ever TIFIA loan for a transportation project and that the work on a new bridge can continue to move forward.

“The construction will continue to create jobs and help New York’s economy grow. I was very pleased to work closely with Gov. Cuomo and our federal delegation throughout this long process to bring a new Tappan Zee Bridge to the Lower Hudson Valley.”

 

 

 

http://mtkisco.dailyvoice.com/news/record-16-billion-loan-approved-build-new-tappan-zee-bridge

Video Shows Alleged Newspaper Swap Incident In Mount Kisco | Mt Kisco Homes

A video released today appears to show a distributor of the Hudson Valley Reporter swapping copies of that newspaper with The Examiner in an alleged incident that occurred on Friday at the newspaper racks outside the Mount Kisco Coach Diner.

The video link was provided to The Daily Voice by Adam Stone, the publisher of The Examiner, and was compiled by Matt DiBiase, a private investigator hired by Stone from Mahopac-based Colonial Investigative Associates. (The alleged incident occurs at the beginning of the 31-minute, 45-second video, which later includes the arrival of a police officer to investigate at about the 20-minute mark.)

Jim Palmer, the Mount Kisco village manager, confirmed to The Daily Voice on Friday that Michael Espinoza was arrested at approximately 6 a.m. that day and charged with criminal tampering.

The arrest has attracted national attention. Gawker linked to The Daily Voice’s original story.

Hudson Valley Reporter publisher Faith Ann Butcher referred inquiries regarding the alleged incident to her Carmel-based attorney, Raymond Cote, when she was contacted by The Daily Voice on Friday. Cote said it was too early in the process to comment.

 

http://mtkisco.dailyvoice.com/news/video-shows-alleged-newspaper-swap-incident

 

NBA’s Paul Pierce nabs $35K per month Franklin Tower pad | Mt Kisco Real Estate

Paul Pierce and Franklin Tower

Paul Pierce and Franklin Tower at 90 Franklin Street

NBA All-Star Paul Pierce has moved into a full-floor Tribeca loft at the Franklin Tower. The Boston Celtics legend, who jumped this year to the Brooklyn Nets, will move into a 5,000-square-foot home at 90 Franklin Street that was on the rental market asking $35,000 per month.

Pierce’s pad was listed with CORE Group’s Oliver Brown, who declined to comment to the New York Post, which first reported the story. The apartment has four bedrooms and 28 windows and includes a wood-burning fireplace, according to the listing.

The 18-story building is also home to Mariah Carey, who owns the penthouse, the Post said. [NYP, 1st item]  – Hiten Samtani

 

 

 

http://therealdeal.com/blog/2013/10/17/nbas-paul-pierce-nabs-35k-per-month-franklin-tower-pad/

Fireplace cooking may be a lost skill, but it’s one you can regain with a little practice | Mt Kisco Homes

Except for Scouts toasting  marshmallows or hotdogs on a stick over a camp  fire, the skills of open  fire cooking that fed our forebears for millennia are  largely forgotten. The wrought iron tools and cast-iron utensils that baked many  a venison stew, harbor-pollack chowder, or mess of ham and beans are relegated  to antique shops. But much of the terminology lives on in the names of  items  still found on the kitchen shelves of today, and much of the old  ironware is  still cast — more for its curio value than for use. In the  frantic hassle that  passes for modern life, it is good on a chilly fall  evening to light a grate  fire and take the time to try your hand at fireplace cooking the way  great-great-great-grandmother did. If the spit-roasted haunch turns out  cold  in the middle and the Yorkshire pudding burns you can always send  out for a  pizza or get some fish sticks out of the freezer and pop them  into the  microwave.

Any fireplace will happily cook while it heats — persuading your wood to do  double duty. Refer to pellet stove guide for it’s installation. You can wrap sweet corn,  potatoes, fresh-ca’ught trout, and apples  in tinfoil and bury it in the  ash bank just as you would in a camp fire. But  there’s no timer or  automatic thermostat to regulate a live fire for more  complex recipes.

It takes constant attention to bake bread in a Dutch oven that is sitting  in  coals, with more coals shoveled into its dished top so the loaf cooks through  and browns on top but doesn’t come out raw in the middle and  burnt to a char on  the bottom. To maintain a simmer in the stew pot  which is hanging by its bail  from the trammel hook, the crane must be  moved back and forth and the pot  adjusted up and down while hot coals  are continually moved around with a  scuttle and ash rake.

You can  have a crane that fits your fireplace wrought by a blacksmith or  welded  by a metal-working job shop. You can still find small stamped-steel coal  scuttles for sale, but you’ll have to fashion your own rake; they  haven’t been  manufactured for a hundred years and more. Some companies like Skilled Welding can make something simular to a rake as a special request but they can be expensive. You can make your own by brazing a 1/4″ x 2″ x 4″ plate of iron or ribbon  steel to a handle made from  a 2′ steel rod with a loop fashioned at the  end to hang it by. However, a small  hand hoe from the garden will do  fine so long as you don’t let the wooden  handle ignite.

Be sure to have on hand a more than ample supply of cooking wood: quarter and  eighth splits of extra-well-dried, dense hardwood sticks for a long fire and a  long-lived coal bed, plus plenty of shavings, splinters, and  small  kindling-size splits to liven the fire quickly if the biscuits  threaten to  fall. Best is a mixture of quick-igniting and hot-burning  softwoods such as  pine, and long-burning hardwoods such as hickory or  oak.

Open the windows so you don’t roast yourself along with  supper, and perk up  a banked or low, heating-type, hardwood-log fire  until it’s brisk enough to  maintain a deep bed of live coals. For  roasting on a spit, maintain a skirt of  live coals under the burning  logs so you can keep raking them out and under the  roast. For frying on a gridiron or skillet, simmering beans in a footed pot, or  baking in a  Dutch oven, you’ll also want to rake coals out onto the hearth and  keep  them replenished.

Roast Haunch of Beef and Yorkshire Pudding

You will need a spit: a revolving horizontal wrought iron rod with a pair  of  sliding meat keepers that is rigged to be raised and lowered over the fire or  fixed in place so you must continually replenish a coal bed  beneath it. The  motorized spits sold for charcoal grills are ready-made  for the use, though you  can have one made of wrought iron to the old  patterns by a blacksmith.

Skewer a whole beef loin or rack of  prime rib — bone in — and set in front  of a hot fire with a good skirt  of glowing coals. Keep the coal bed red. Place  a long, narrow pan  underneath to catch drippings or the fat in the roast will  melt, fall  into the coals, catch fire, and char the roast. Worse, some will  vaporize and rise up the flue with smoke, to accumulate and increase  danger of  a flue fire. Plus, your hearth will develop a permanent grease spot. Turn the  spit frequently and cook the meat to taste. (I cheat and use a meat thermometer,  cooking until it shows 130°F — rare, but not  still mooing, inside.) When the  roast is nearly done, rake coals out  around the pan to cook the Yorkshire  pudding. When grease is sizzling  brightly, add batter and cook until it rises  and browns on top. Turn the pan occasionally to even out the cooking. If you  have a reflector,  place it in front of the meat and the pudding pan if you  like. It will  distribute the heat and reduce need for turning.

Read more: http://www.motherearthnews.com/print.aspx?id={5BE839CB-8DB5-42D1-8031-27D76CA7794D}#ixzz2hnUx7syS

Everyone agrees: Even higher rates won’t impact affordability | Mt Kisco Real Estate

A panel of esteemed housing experts speaking at the ABS East 2013 conference underway in Miami disagreed on Robert Shiller’s recent call that U.S. housing is in a bubble.

Moderator Howard Esaki, managing director at Standard & Poor’s, who himself puts out regular morning emails encapsulating finance news, played a video on Bloomberg of Shiller talking of a housing bubble.

Shiller co-developed the S&P/Case-Shiller Composite-10 Home Price Index and actually said housing was looking bubbly. His words were later moderated in a column in the New York Times.

The panel elaborated on whether or not U.S. housing is actually in a bubble. No one believes it is.

Mark Fleming, chief economist of CoreLogic, said price appreciation is slowing down, and is only correcting for an overshoot in price collapse. He didn’t think it would return to the inflated pricing before the housing bust.

“We are certainly not in a housing bubble,” said Laurie Goodman who heads up a housing thinktank at the Urban Institute. Both Goodman and Fleming said housing could absorb higher interest rates and remain attractive. Goodman posited that even with a 6% interest rate, affordability would remain at 2000-2003 levels, which were pretty stable compared to 2006-2007.

“I don’t see interest rates going to 6% any time soon,” she added.

Esaki then addressed the crowd at ABS East, where attendance is at a record high (3,500+) with an estimated 1,000 investors, according to data released by organizer Information Management Network.

Esaki asked for a show of hands: “Do you think there is a housing bubble?”

Not a single hand went up.

Later an audience member pointed out that “no one raised their hand, so maybe we are.” The devil’s advocate then sat back down and the panel moved on to talk about the slim chance of near-term GSE reform.

 

 

http://www.housingwire.com/articles/27270-abs-east-panel-says-shiller-wrong-on-housing-bubble-call

 

When a duplex trumps a penthouse | Mt Kisco Real Estate

The term “duplex” may conjure up the image of a humble house in the suburbs with two front doors, but to Chicago luxury brokers, it means a two-story space in a high-rise condo tower with spectacular views of Lake Michigan.

The only way to get cathedral spaces and dramatic staircases is to buy two units and combine them into one, Koenig & Strey broker Nancy Joyce tells Michigan Avenue magazine. In an age where the term “penthouse” gets bandied about rather casually — it’s often applied to units that “aren’t necessarily bigger, grander or even on the top floor,” Baird & Warner broker Tom Gorman says — a case can be made that the “ultimate duplex” is actually “the gold standard of luxury living.”

Gorman says that a “good duplex is a hell of a lot harder to find than a good penthouse” — they’re often marketed as pocket listings. When Michigan Avenue checked in with the metro Chicago-area multiple listing service, Midwest Real Estate Data LLC (MRED), it found that 26 of 323 active listings in the lakefront and center city districts were marketed as penthouses, and eight as duplexes.

Source: michiganavemag.com.

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/wire/when-a-duplex-trumps-a-penthouse/#sthash.beZQwBgp.dpuf

Houston housing market on fire | Mt Kisco Real Estate

August marked the 27th month in a row that Houston home sales have increased on a monthly basis.

The number of home sales registered in the Houston Association of Realtors multiple listing service topped 7,000 for the fourth month in a row in August in the large Texas city, defying the typical fall slowdown in the housing market and matching a flurry of activity not seen since 2007.

 

 

Source: Houston Association of Realtors

read more at…

 

http://www.inman.com/wire/houston-housing-market-on-fire/#sthash.vHPktDW8.dpuf

New York Third Safest In Country For Traffic Fatalities | Mt Kisco Real Estate

WESTCHESTER COUNTY, N.Y.– New York State is the third safest area in the country when it comes to traffic fatalities, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

New York had 6.19 traffic-realted deaths per 100,000 people according to the NHTSA data. The only two areas with lower totals were Massachusetts with 4.79 traffic deaths per thousand and Washington, D.C. with just 3.97 traffic deaths per thousand.

The three most dangerous states to drive in were Arkansas, Mississippi and Wyoming.

 

 

http://mtkisco.dailyvoice.com/news/new-york-third-safest-country-traffic-fatalities

Mt Kisco Farmers Markets | Mt Kisco NY Real Estate

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Fresh Food from Local Sources – September 5-11th, 2013 Down to Earth Markets
PlumsonTree
What’s New and in Season This Week
Apples Taliaferro Farm Butternut Squash Rexcroft Farm Cider Donuts Migliorelli Farm Dandelion Greens John D. Madura Farms
Gala Apples Migliorelli Farm
Eggplant Rockland Farm Alliance Heirloom Tomatoes Alex’s Tomato Farm                                     Migliorelli Farm                                     Rexcroft Farm                                     Rockland Farm Alliance
Melons Alex’s Tomato Farm                                     Rexcroft Farm
Pumpkins Alex’s Tomato Farm Purple Peppers Rockland Farm Alliance Zucchini Varieties Rexcroft Farm
Click on a Market to see all vendor and event details…

Westchester                                     County     Ossining
Saturdays, 8:30 am-1:00 pm
Rockland                                     County
Croton
Sundays, 9:00 am-2:00 pm
Rye
Sundays, 8:30 am-2:00 pm
Piermont
Sundays, 9:30 am-3:00 pm
L Larchmont
Saturdays, 8:30 am-1:00 pm
Tarrytown/Sleepy Hollow
Patriot’s Park Farmers Market                                     Saturdays, 8:30 am-1:00 pm
Spring Valley
Wednesdays,                                     8:30 am-3:00 pm
New Rochelle
Now at Huguenot Park!                                     Fridays, 8:30 am-2:30 pm
Yonkers/Ridge Hill
*See announcement below!* Ridge Hill’s Farmers Market                                     Fridays, 12 noon-6:00 pm
Headed to the city soon? Visit a Down to Earth Farmers Market in NYC!
Announcements
Ridge Hill **NEW MARKET HOURS & LOCATION!**                                                  The seasons are changing and so are the hours of our farmers market at Westchester’s Ridge Hill. Rolling into the fall, the market will now be held from 12 noon to 6pm (still on Fridays).                         Also, we’ve moved to Second Street, in the middle of the Ridge Hill, near the playgrounds and at the Town Square. See you there!   Stay tuned to all market happenings via our Down to Earth Markets Facebook page                           and follow us on Twitter @DowntoEarthMkts.                                                
Farmer Profile: Rexcroft Farm of Athens, NY
IndianEggplant-Rexcroft
In addition to the popular favorites, Rexcroft Farm grows unique crops – ask them about their Caraflex Cabbage or Tuscan Orange Indian Eggplant (pictured above)

Seven generations ago, a schoolteacher and a farmer came from Europe to settle along the banks of the Hudson River. Together with their families, they were from England and Holland, and as they staked the land, they named it Rexcroft, meaning “King Farm” in Dutch.
Today, Dan and Nate King, descendants of these pioneers, continue to farm the land, as their family has done without interruption since the late 1700s. The name lives on, too, and now Rexcroft Farm thrives on nearly 400 acres near Athens, NY. They grow a vast range of produce, as well as raise cows, pigs, and chickens on the pasture. To hear Dan explain it, “I’ve been farming since I’ve been able to walk.”
For years, Dan’s father ran Rexcroft as a dairy farm. Yet as his six children grew up, none of them, including Dan, wanted to take it on. “With a dairy farm, you have to milk the cows twice a day, 365 days a year. There’s never a break. With vegetables, they can get overgrown by a day, but nobody’s going to die, unlike with the cows,” Dan says. So, the current generation transitioned away from dairy and into the bountiful harvests and livestock they cultivate today.
The Kings grow with long-term ecological health in mind. They employ integrated pest management, a technique that suppresses unwanted insects without relying on pesticides. They also run the farm with a wide open door policy, inviting people to visit the farm and learn how their food is grown. “We have people visit the farm, and we get to take them on a tour and say, ‘This is your food growing here. Here’s what we’re picking this week.’ People love it,” Dan says.
Come enjoy Rexcroft Farm and several other great vendors every Sunday from 9 am to 2 pm at Croton’s Down to Earth Farmers Market.

Day Vendors This Week Larchmont                         Calcutta Kitchens                         Kontoulis Family Olive Oil
Down to Earth Markets 173 Main Street Ossining, NY 10562 Phone: 914-923-4837

12 household toxins you should banish from your home | Mt Kisco Real Estate

Coal tar driveway sealant

            To save money, protect your health, and help the environment, give these toxic tenants an eviction notice.

The Dirt: If you plan to seal your blacktop driveway, avoid coal tar–based sealants. They contain polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, or PAHs, toxic compounds shown to cause cancer or other genetic mutations. When rainwater and other precipitation hit your driveway, the toxic chemicals run off into your yard and into your local drinking water supply. In fact, this situation has been compared to dumping quarts of motor oil right down a storm drain. The dust is often tracked into homes, too.

Better Alternative: Gravel and other porous materials are best for driveways because they allow rainwater to sink into the ground, where it gets filtered and doesn’t inundate water treatment plants. But if you do seal blacktop, pick asphalt sealant and stay away from any product that has coal tar in its name (or products simply called “driveway sealant”). Lowe’s and Home Depot have already banned the bad stuff, but smaller hardware stores may still carry it.