Greenwich Real Estate Blog

Kaye Lewis

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Displaying blog entries 21-23 of 23

If You're Updating Your Home, Check This Out First!

Over the years, I've built and/or renovated too many homes and drawn upon my experience to assist builder clients, buyers and sellers alike. I'm really good at spending other people's money! But I love homes and although I'm not a decorator, I see so many beautiful homes in Greenwich and think I can help with some ideas that might be welcome.

One of the easiest and least expensive ways to freshen a home is with new paint, whether you're planning to sell or just want a "new look" for your own enjoyment. If you've ever come home to a painter who used a color you bought but hadn't previewed, only to be miserable with your selection---sound familiar?--you'll love this! Several websites offer you info and assistance, along with current fashion guidance... Here are some of the best new ones to check out:

bhg.com: a "color-a-room" guide allows you to design with paint, fabric, and flooring; print it out in color and/or email it as a URL to your designer, friends or contractor.

benjaminmoore.com: Use the personal color viewer to import images of your rooms, then transform them with your new color selections

hgtv.com: Experiment with Pick-a-Palette options, and check out tips from designers

Pantone.com: With interactive tools, spot trends, work with color opposites, and match colors

sherwinwilliams.com: Use a color visualizer tool to mix and match paint colors for interior and exterior walls and trim

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With a few cameras, some plugs and a simple box, you can have an internet-based monitoring system that lets you check on the kids, turn down the heat, close the garage door, whether you're at home, the office or 500 miles away. You can even place a sensor on the liquor cabinet door! It doesn't matter how old the wiring is, you can be in a 100-year-old house, it still works. Talk about peace of mind! Check out these home network options:

panasonic.com: Network cameras can be reviewed on their Consumer Products page

GEsecurity.com: Info is available for residential use, both single family homes and multiunit dwelings

bbfb.com/connectedlife: Best Buy offers a complete package, including entertainment options

SonyNewHome.com: Entertainment options with a range of extras at varying prices

NetGear.com: Offers home networking solutions over existing power lines; these are the same people who help with wireless networking for home computers.

Trade Associations can help you find experienced custom installers:

caba.org: The Continental Automated Buildings Association

cedia.net: Custom Electronics Design and Installation Association; click on the Homewoners tab
http://www.KayeLewis.com
http://www.KayeLewisHomes.com

All Real Estate Markets are Local, Especially Greenwich, CT

As a journalism and marketing major in college, hundreds of years ago, I was taught that a responsible journalist doesn't "spin" the news or inject their opinion into a news story.  Clearly, there's been a departure from my former school days in all categories of the news media, but never more evident than in the constant real estate news coverage.  I've never been a Brittany Spears fan, but frankly, whenever she or Paris Hilton's antics deflects the news media away from the national real estate scene's never ending tale of woes, I say a silent "you go girl!" 

Let me give you the "real skinny" on Greenwich real estate.  At my firm, we keep weekly info on inventory levels, sales contract activity and closings on all condos and single family homes reported on the Greenwich Multiple Listing Service.  (While there are home listed on other MLS's in Connecticut, anyone who doesn't list their Greenwich property on the Greenwich MLS is making an enormous mistake that will impact their success.  You can always add another MLS if you feel the need, but you MUST use the GMLS...it would be like trying to make an omelette without eggs!) 

Looking at the info this week, we have the following encouraging info:

Single Family Homes                2006             2007             % Chg

Active listings                            521              535                 3.48+ 

Under Contract                             67                65                  3.0-

Closed Sales                              472              526                11.4+

Condos                                     2006               2007            % Chg

Active Listings                           184               224               21.7+

Under Contract                             31                 27               13.0-

Closed Sales                              165               150                10.0-

Now, I ask you, "Does this seem like the sky is falling on the Greenwich real estate market?"  Granted, the condo market has more inventory than it needs and buyers have many choices, but with the Antares announcement that their units will remain rentals, the marketplace will regain strength in the not so distant future.  Single family homes continue with less than the robust sense of the local market between 2000 -2005, yet it's not all gloom and doom as the news media would have you believe. 

Frankly, it's a fantastic time to buy.  There are good values to be had in Greenwich right now.  The Greenwich schools are still some of the best in the nation, our taxes are the lowest in Connecticut and, of course, there's our proximity to New York City to consider along with 4 train stations for convenience.   

 From www.GreenwichTime.com:

By Kenneth Harney
Published August 10 2007

WASHINGTON - Though real estate sales and prices are flat or down in dozens of metropolitan areas, micro-markets within them are performing very differently: Prices and sales are up this year over last, and plenty of buyers still want to move in.

Call them real estate oases - neighborhoods and ZIP codes that defy national and regional downturns, and remain in demand as long as the local economy keeps generating jobs and rising incomes. Housing analysts say they can be found in most major markets whose local economies display moderate to strong fundamentals.

As a group, micro-markets share some key characteristics. They are often:

* Established neighborhoods convenient to the urban center’s employment and cultural attractions. They don’t require residents to make long commutes, sit in traffic for hours or worry about gas prices.

* Above median income - often well above - with home prices to match. Typically these are not entry-level, first-time buyer markets, nor do they have lots of new subdivision construction. Educational levels of residents exceed regional norms, local school systems are highly regarded and crime rates generally are low.

* Prime, not subprime, mortgage territories, with little to none of the negative neighborhood impacts of rising foreclosures caused by payment-shock loans going sour.

A few examples: In the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area, the ZIP codes 20815 (Bethesda-Chevy Chase, Md.) and 20015 (portions of Northwest D.C.) are avoiding most of the down-market trends in the larger metropolitan area that surrounds them. In the 20815 ZIP code, which borders the District of Columbia on the north, headlines about housing market distress don’t capture what’s happening on the ground.

Dollar volume of sales was up 22 percent from June 2006 versus June 2007, average selling prices were up 11.5 percent, and median selling prices were up 6 percent, according to multiple listing service data provided by veteran broker Dale Mattison of the Mattison Group at Long & Foster Realtors. The only hints of strain, he said, have been in total houses on the market - which were up by 9.7 percent - and average days on the market, which increased to 47 from last year’s 33.

Just across the D.C. line, in the contiguous 20015 ZIP code area, average sale prices were up 6.6 percent and median prices up 3.5 percent during the 12-month period, though total dollar volume of sales was down 2.5 percent.

Contrast these two micro-markets’ performances with the District as a whole, where dollar volume was down by more than 16 percent, the average sale price was down 6.8 percent, and the median price dropped by 3.5 percent.

In the Miami-South Dade metropolitan area in Florida, a number of oases exist. Communities such as Coral Gables are handling the downturn far better than more distant, lower-cost communities such as Homestead and Florida City, which have seen extensive new construction in recent years.

Maurice Veissi, owner of Veissi & Associates Realtors of Miami, tapped into MLS statistics and found that Coral Gables has seen average sales prices rise from $1.2 million in January to about $1.4 million as of June 30. In Homestead, the average sales price has remained relatively flat - around $320,000 - while prices in Florida City have declined on average. Inventories of unsold homes in the latter two areas exceed three years, Veissi said.

“In my 38 years in real estate, I have never seen a market where more expensive properties have stayed relatively healthy, while entry-level houses are the toughest to sell,” he said.

Other metropolitan areas where similar patterns can be found include San Francisco, where highly regarded in-town neighborhoods such as Pacific Heights and the Marina continue to outperform the metropolitan area and the state as a whole, with nearly 8 percent median price gains for the first six months of the year, according to John Asdourian of McGuire Real Estate.

In the sprawling Los Angeles metro area, close-in “high-end neighborhoods are more robust at the moment than entry-level,” said Pat “Ziggy” Zicarelli, chief executive officer of Style Realty, Inc. of Tarzana. Moderate-priced and distant communities - especially those where large numbers of buyers used creative financing to purchase more than they could afford - “are really struggling” and experiencing declines in prices, sometimes in the double digits for the first six months of the year.

The bottom line here? Real estate value patterns and sales performances are uniquely localized, right down to ZIP codes, neighborhoods and even individual streets. In the current national correction phase following the unprecedented boom years of 2001-2005, even adjacent micro-markets may be performing very differently.

Smart buyers and sellers know that, and adjust their strategies - on pricing, timing and bargaining - with a micro perspective, no matter what the metropolitan headlines may be.

For information on current market condition in Greenwich Real Estate, call Kaye Lewis & Associates at 203.622.2020, or Click Here to visit our website.

Contact Information

Photo of Kaye Lewis & Associates Real Estate
Kaye Lewis & Associates
Weichert Capital Properties
417 Main Street
Ridgefield CT 06877
Phone: 203-431-1400
Fax: 203-431-1388